Chapter 2
TWO
Lord Skarreth didn’t need to part the crowd. The crowd handled that itself, parting before him like tall grass under the edge of a sharpened scythe. The station’s commercial ring curved ahead of him in a long, glittering arc, and the crowd slunk back as he walked through.
Not all at once. In stages. In ripples—a Corvathi merchant glancing up from his counter, recognition landing like a slap, his body shifting away.
A pair of dockworkers mid-argument stepping apart, their quarrel evaporating into silence as the space between them widened to let him pass.
A mother—Thessari, blue-skinned, her crest flattened in alarm—pulling her child against her leg with one hand while the other pressed the boy’s face into her hip.
Don’t look.
Skarreth’s ice-blue eyes swept across them without pausing on any single face.
His spine was straight. His pace was unhurried.
His hands were clasped behind his back, and the black brocade of his coat—threaded with silver, cut close to his shoulders and falling to his knees—whispered against itself with every stride.
A vendor three stalls ahead saw him coming and stopped mid-sentence, the haggling price dying on his lips. The customer he’d been serving turned to see what had stolen the man’s attention, saw Skarreth, and found somewhere else to be.
The stall after that sold salvaged tech—cables, connectors, outdated data cores piled in bins.
The Corvathi trader running it had his back turned, sorting inventory, and didn’t see Skarreth until the shadow fell across his merchandise.
The trader spun, and his elbow caught a display rack.
The whole assembly went over sideways with a crash of scattering components that rang through the suddenly quiet market like a gunshot.
“My lord—I apologize—I didn’t—”
But Skarreth had already passed. The apology hit empty air, bounced off the back of that black coat, and died.
Three Corvathi security contractors loitering near a junction straightened when they saw him. One touched the weapon on his belt—not threatening, reflexive, the way a person checks a lock when they hear a strange noise. Skarreth’s gaze passed over the group without acknowledgment. The hand dropped.
Whispers moved ahead of him. They always did.
He could track his own reputation through a crowd by watching the wave of turned heads and lowered voices that preceded him—a wave of fear pushing through the market like displaced water.
By the time he reached any given point, the people there already knew.
Already had the stories loaded and ready. Already had his name on their tongues.
Lord Skarreth.
A food cart stood near the market’s inner curve.
Two Thessari females stood beside it, one holding a skewer of charred, glistening meat, the other clutching a drink she’d stopped sipping.
They watched him approach the way small animals watch a raptor circle—frozen, calculating the distance to safety.
The one with the skewer leaned toward her companion. The words came out in a murmur pitched for privacy, but the market had gone so quiet around his passage that the sound carried further than she’d intended.
“They say he hunts them.”
The words reached across the silence with perfect clarity, and he absorbed them the way he absorbed everything in this life—without expression, without hesitation, without letting them touch anything that hadn’t been cauterized years ago.
He did not slow. Did not turn. Did not let anything shift behind the mask of his face—not his expression, not the rhythm of his breathing, not the angle of his chin. His ice-blue eyes held their forward focus. His stride stayed the same as it had since he’d stepped onto this level of the station.
The Thessari female realized her words had carried. She went rigid, the skewer trembling between her fingers. Skarreth passed within arm’s reach of her. The air displaced by his movement stirred the fine cilia along her crest.
He did not look at her. He did not need to. The fear was already complete.
The auction house rose ahead—a converted cargo bay three levels tall, its entrance flanked by two armed guards who recognized him before he was within thirty meters. One spoke into a comm unit. The other straightened her posture so sharply that her armor clicked.
The doors opened before he reached them.
Skarreth walked through without breaking stride, and the market behind him exhaled—a collective release of held breath, loosened shoulders, unclenched hands. The vendors found their voices. The children were released. The Corvathi trader knelt to collect his scattered components.
The doors closed, and the corridor’s stolen silence rushed to fill the space where he had been.
He took his customary seat in the elevated gallery: front row, center, where everyone could see him and where the lots on the block would have nowhere to hide from his gaze.
The chair was upholstered in Thessari leather.
He settled into it the way a predator settles into a vantage point—choosing the angle, measuring the distances, already knowing the outcome.
The auctioneer was a Corvathi named Drenn—mid-level, ambitious, desperate to impress the room’s wealthiest patron.
He kept glancing at Skarreth’s gallery with a smile that was three parts greed and one part genuine terror.
Skarreth rewarded him with nothing. Not a nod, not a glance.
The absence of attention from Lord Skarreth was itself a currency—one Drenn would spend the entire evening trying to earn.
The first lots were unremarkable. A pair of Kessler laborers—broad-backed, dead-eyed. He studied them with the dispassion of a collector cataloguing inferior goods and made a dismissive gesture with two fingers. Drenn’s hopeful expression crumbled.
A Thessari female followed—young, trained in domestic service, her gills sutured shut in a modification that made him go still for half a second before the mask resealed over it. She sold to a textile merchant. He let her go.
Two more lots. A Corvathi adolescent with a defiant jaw—purchased by a mining consortium.
Then a matched pair of a species he didn’t recognize, huddled together, sold as a unit to a woman whose dead eyes suggested a brothel operation in the outer systems. He sat in his leather chair and radiated menace and ennui.
Then they dragged the human woman onto the block.
A human. He hadn’t seen one of them this far on the galaxy’s edge before. It had been over a year since the last human he’d attempted to purchase had escaped in a slave guild attack by freedom fighters. He’d barely escaped the uprising.
The human before him was small by his standards, as all humans were, with dark hair that had come loose, falling in uneven waves against her neck and shoulders, catching the harsh auction-house lighting in a way that softened nothing about her.
Her clothes were disheveled but quality.
Practical layering that spoke of independent travel, of someone who dressed for mobility rather than appearance.
Her wrists were bound in front of her with standard restraints, the magnetic kind that hummed faintly under the fluorescent strips, and the surrounding skin was already reddening from friction—she’d been pulling against them. Recently. Repeatedly.
Her scent reached him across thirty feet of auction-house air: adrenaline, sweat, and beneath those, buried like a vein of ore in dark rock, the sharp mineral bite of graphite and linseed oil. She smelled like pigment ground into skin.
The handler shoved her forward, and she stumbled but then caught herself. Instead of dropping her gaze—instead of curling inward the way most new captives did, the way biology and terror conspired to make a body small—she straightened.
Her chin came up.
Her shoulders squared.
And she looked directly into the elevated gallery where Lord Skarreth sat in his expensive chair.
Her dark brown eyes locked onto his with a fury so raw and undiluted that something in his chest snagged.
Not broke. Not shifted. Snagged—like cloth caught on a nail, a tiny tearing sound that existed only inside the architecture of his ribs.
The beast stirred.
Not the hunt-surge. Not the calculated predatory response he deployed for intimidation.
Something deeper—older—a low seismic shift beneath the bedrock of his control that had nothing to do with strategy or rescue tallies or the mathematics of incomplete mercy.
It turned its attention toward the woman on the block and simply wanted, with the wordless, gravitational certainty of a thing that predated reason.
The sensation was so unfamiliar it took him a full second to categorize it—a pull, low and gravitational, centered somewhere in the base of his skull and radiating downward through his spine.
She was small and fragile and human, and the beast inside him looked at her standing defiant in her magnetic restraints and recognized something it had no business recognizing.
Mine, it said. That one. Her. The thought was irrational.
Dangerous. Entirely irrelevant to his plans.
He killed it. Drowned it the way he drowned everything—with ice, with the mask, with the cold arithmetic of operational necessity.
She didn’t know who he was. She didn’t care. She stared at the wealthiest, most terrifying being in the room with the expression of someone who intended to remember his face for the sole purpose of one day making him regret it.
He raised one hand. Two fingers extended.
“The human.”
Drenn’s head snapped toward the gallery. The greed in his expression ignited like a gas flame.
“Lot seventeen, my lord—a female, captured in the Kael-Voss corridor, no prior ownership records, uncatalogued abilities—”