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Now reading: Chapter 430 MIREYA from My Sister Stole My Mate, And I Let Her, a Fantasy novel by regalsoul.

MIREYA’S POV

I didn’t rember the exact mont everything went wrong.

For a long ti, all I had were disjointed fragnts—sensations that didn’t quite connect, like scattered story pieces I was left to collect and piece together myself.

The sll of sun-ward dust.

Laughter—mine, I think.

My sister’s voice, calling after with annoyance and fondness intertwined: “Don’t go too far.”

I had gone anyway.

It was supposed to be a short trip. A simple errand just beyond the boundary of familiar territory, the kind that didn’t require a second thought.

I rembered the sky being clear that day, the kind of blue that made everything feel endless, open, safe.

I rembered thinking I’d be back before sunset.

The next mory ca like a rupture.

Rough hands.

Too many.

The world tilted as sothing slamd into the back of my head. The sound hadn’t even registered properly before the ground was gone beneath , and darkness followed.

When I woke, it was to pain.

And voices. Low. Transactional.

“...good condition.”

“Pretty enough.”

“Should fetch a good price.”

I didn’t understand at first. My thoughts were thick and slow, as if wading through honey. My wrists burned when I moved—that’s when I realized they were bound.

The room was dim. Not dark, but deliberately shadowed, like whoever owned it preferred things hidden.

A man stood near the door, arms crossed, watching with the kind of detached interest one might give an object they were considering purchasing.

“She’s awake,” he said.

Another voice answered from sowhere behind him. “Good. We’ll move her tonight.”

"Where?" My voice was rough.

The man by the door smiled in a way that reminded of a shark docuntary I’d once watched.

“You’ll see.”

Everything moved too quickly after that—new restraints, a sack pulled over my head, the world reduced to sound and motion and the sharp, suffocating scent of suppressants.

By the ti I saw light again, it wasn’t freedom waiting on the other side; it was a different kind of cage.

Won lined the walls—so silent, others in tears. The air was thick with perfu that couldn’t mask the sourness beneath.

Days blurred. Or maybe it was weeks.

Ti stopped aning anything when there was nothing to asure it against.

They fed us, kept us clean, watched us like inventory.

I learned quickly not to speak unless spoken to.

Learned even faster that resistance didn’t change outcos. It only brought hurt.

Day in and day out, our numbers fluctuated. So days they took. Other days, they brought in fresh faces.

And then they ca for .

“Move,” the guard who ca for snapped, not bothering to hide his irritation.

“I am moving,” I hissed.

He shoved . “Not fast enough.”

I stumbled, almost smacking my head against the door we’d angled towards.

He knocked once.

“Enter,” a deep voice called out.

He pushed it open.

“Delivery,” he said.

Delivery.

The word landed inside , cold and leaden, sinking into a pit of dread that made my whole body clench.

I lifted my head as I was shoved inside—and everything went still.

It hit like sothing inside my chest had been yanked forward without warning, as if a thread I hadn’t known existed had abruptly pulled taut.

My breath caught as the bluest blue gaze snapped to mine.

And in that mont, everything locked into place.

Mate.

The word didn’t co from thought.

It ca from instinct.

“Boss?” the guard called out when the man in the room—his boss, apparently—didn’t move.

“Leave,” he said, his voice barely above a whisper.

The guard didn’t argue.

The door closed behind him with a soft click that sounded far too final.

Silence settled. Heavy. Charged.

I couldn’t look away.

Neither could he.

“What’s your na?” he asked.

His voice was low and controlled, like everything about him existed behind restraint.

“M-mireya.”

He repeated it under his breath, like testing how it felt. “Mireya.”

My heart actually skipped a beat.

“Damian,” he said.

That was how I t my mate.

At first, I thought the bond ant sothing. I thought it might save .

And for a while, I convinced myself that it had.

He didn’t treat like the others.

Didn’t touch the way the n at the brothel the won were sold to had planned to.

He took care of .

Gave a room that wasn’t a cell. Clothes that actually kept warm and didn’t put on display. Food that didn’t taste like mold and rot.

And sotis, he was gentle.

Enough that I started to believe there was sothing there I could reach.

“You don’t have to do this,” I told him once when we were alone.

His gaze lifted from whatever docunt he’d been reading, settling on with uninterrupted focus.

“Do what?”

“This,” I said, gesturing vaguely, aning everything and nothing all at once. “Whatever this is.”

A faint smile touched his lips. It didn’t reach his eyes.

“You’ll have to be more specific.”

“You know what I an.”

He studied for a long mont, his piercing blue gaze unsettling.

Then he stood and crossed the room.

Every instinct in said to step back.

I didn’t. I held my ground.

“Be careful,” he said quietly, stopping in front of . “You’re starting to sound like you think you understand things you don’t.”

“I understand enough.”

His hand lifted.

I couldn’t help it; I flinched.

But instead of striking, he brushed his fingers lightly along my jaw, tilting my face up.

The touch was gentle. Tender

“You don’t,” he murmured. “And you’re better off not knowing. You just sit pretty and stay safe.”

It was monts like that that made it easy to delude myself. Easy to pretend I was in so sort of loving relationship.

But it got harder to pretend.

To pretend I didn’t hear screams of abused won day in and out.

To pretend I didn’t see Damian wiping blood off his hands on more than one occasion.

To pretend that I hadn’t slipped out of bed one fateful night and watched him rip a guard’s throat out.

That was the first ti I tried to run.

It wasn’t the last.

Each attempt ended the sa way.

Failure.

Capture.

And afterward, punishnt.

It wasn’t physical—he could never bring himself to hit .

My punishnt was isolation. Restriction. Starvation.

The world shrank, everything tightening and squeezing until the very act of drawing breath felt stolen, like even my lungs no longer belonged to .

“You’re doing this to yourself,” Damian told once, after dragging back.

“You could just let go.”

“No.”

“Why?”

His grip tightened on my arm.

“Because you’re mine.”

I’d dread my whole life of hearing that sentence from my mate. Soone who loved wholeheartedly, who would die before seeing hurt.

Fate had a sick sense of humor.

I was on my knees before him, my wrists and ankles bound by silver, when he ca up with the idea.

“You want freedom?” he asked, his tone conversational. “I’ll give it to you."

That got my attention. “You will?”

He gave a small cold smile. He took a sip from the glass of scotch in his hand before he spoke again.

“I’ll put you up for auction.”

I blanched. “What?”

He shrugged. “If soone bids on you, then you’ll be free.”

It sounded simple.

It wasn’t.

Because no one touched what belonged to Damian Rooke.

No one crossed that line.

And even when soone dared to place a bid, they never followed through.

There was always a better deal.

A safer option.

A smarter choice.

Or a mysterious "accident."

And I remained.

Displayed.

Circulated.

Untouchable.

Until her.

She didn’t hesitate, didn’t back down.

She saw the line and tap-danced all over it.

Even now, standing in the quiet aftermath of escape, I couldn’t quite understand it.

Why ?

Why that risk?

“You never have to go back there.”

Her voice echoed in my mind.

I looked down at my hands.

They were steady. They bore no chains.

That felt unnatural, like my skin was too loose.

For so long, everything had been asured in control—what I showed, what I hid, what I allowed to slip through.

Now, there was space.

Too much of it.

Seraphina and Kieran.

Together, they felt like sothing solid in a world that had been anything but.

“I owe you,” I said quietly. “I’ll repay it. However you need.”

That was the only thing I had left to offer.

“But before that...”

The words caught.

Sothing like hope—a fragile thing—quivered in my chest, daring to take root again after so long buried under fear.

“I need to go ho. I have a sister, and I need to let her know I’m alive. I need to go ho to Olivia.”

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