Belén Téllez learned early that hunger had a sound. It was not always a stomach growling. Sometimes it was a mother coughing behind a closed door while children pretended not to hear.
Sometimes it was the scrape of an empty pot against a wooden table. Sometimes it was her father counting debts under his breath while refusing to meet anyone’s eyes.
The northern lands around Black Raven were dry that year. The corn came up thin. The goats gave less milk. Every family in the valley knew winter would arrive with teeth.
Belén was young, strong, and quiet. That made her valuable in the eyes of men who treated people like sacks of grain and debts like scripture.
When the collector came, he did not raise his voice. That was what made the room feel even smaller. His black ledger lay open on the table like a grave.
Her father owed 18 months of debt. There were 4 sacks of corn left in the shed. Her brothers were already thin enough for their wrists to look like twigs.
The collector looked at Belén, then at the ledger. He did not ask what she wanted. Men like him rarely asked questions that might make them feel human.
— A young she-wolf is worth more than all your animals together, — he said, and the words settled across the table like dust.
Belén waited for someone to object. Her father lowered his eyes. Her mother coughed behind a cloth and did not rise from the bed.
No woman could survive one night near the Alpha King… But when the maid woke on his chest, 40 guard wolves knelt before her.
That sentence would one day move through the northern villages like a fever. But before it became a rumor, it was only a girl standing in silence.
She arrived at the Black Raven Fortress three days later. The castle rose between dry mountains, black stone cutting into a pale sky, its towers narrow and severe.
The wind around it made a sound like crying. Belén heard it before she saw the gates. She smelled iron, smoke, wet stone, and something animal beneath the cold.
Dalia, the head of service, met her with a stare that had probably once belonged to a softer woman. There was no welcome in it.
— You are not here to suffer prettily. You are here to obey, — Dalia said, handing her a gray uniform and pointing toward the servants’ quarters.
The room they gave Belén was hardly larger than a storage closet. The bed was narrow. The blanket scratched. The stone floor kept the cold even after the fires were lit.
Before Belén slept, Dalia gave her the rule that every servant in the fortress seemed to carry like a second heartbeat.
— Never cross into the west wing.
Belén did not ask why. She had learned that poor girls survived longer when they did not make powerful people explain themselves.
But Teresa told her anyway. Teresa worked in the laundry, where secrets stuck to sheets and blood never came out completely on the first wash.
That night, they stood over basins of gray water, rubbing dried stains from linen until their fingers wrinkled and burned.
— That is where Gael Varela lives, — Teresa whispered.
Belén knew the name. Everyone did. Gael Varela was the Alpha King of Black Raven, twenty-seven years old, ruler of lands, troops, borders, and old fears.
He had inherited power young and held it with a strength no rival dared test. Stories about him traveled farther than his soldiers.
Some said he could hear a lie from across a hall. Others said his wolf could smell fear through stone. Most lowered their voices before saying his name.
Teresa’s hands slowed in the water.
— They say his wolf does not sleep. It has been awake inside him for almost a year. His strength never turns off. His presence breaks the mind.
Belén looked toward the laundry door. The west wing was on the other side of the fortress, but suddenly it felt close enough to breathe against her neck.
— Breaks the mind? — she asked.
Teresa nodded. Her face had gone pale.
— They brought him three women to be his Luna. One died. The other two live, but they no longer speak. They only tremble when they hear his name.
Belén’s first thought was of her mother. A woman could be alive and still be gone. She had seen that truth long before the fortress.
— Did he hurt them? — Belén asked.
Teresa looked down into the stained water.
— Not with his hands.
That answer followed Belén for days. It stood beside her while she scrubbed corridors. It walked behind her while she carried water.
For two weeks, she avoided the west wing completely. She kept her eyes on the floors, on trays, on laundry baskets, on anything that would not punish her for looking.
Black Raven was full of wolves who passed servants like furniture. They spoke around Belén, over her, through her, as if being sold had made her less alive.
Still, she worked. Before dawn. After midnight. Until her shoulders burned and her knees trembled when she climbed stairs.
The fortress had its own rhythm. Guards changed at the bells. Servants moved like shadows. Dalia noticed everything. Fear lived in the corners and was fed daily.
Then Verena Alcázar arrived from Monterra, and the air changed.
Verena came with polished silver jewels, a blue dress, and the kind of smile that made people check themselves for wounds after she passed.
She was beautiful in a deliberate way. Every curl, every fold of fabric, every glance seemed chosen to remind the room that she expected to be obeyed.
Everyone understood why she had come. She wanted to marry Gael. She wanted to become Luna of Black Raven. If Gael’s curse finished breaking him, she wanted the throne left behind.
Rodrigo Varela, Gael’s beta, watched her with caution. He said little, but his silence was not weak. It was the silence of a man counting danger.
Verena noticed Belén almost immediately. That was another kind of danger. Powerful women who needed smaller women beneath them were often crueler than men with ledgers.
The confrontation happened in the main hall. Belén was cleaning the stone floor, her hands raw from lye, when Verena lifted a crystal goblet and let it fall.
The sound cracked through the room. Crystal scattered around Belén’s knees, flashing in the candlelight like tiny teeth.
— Pick it up, maid, — Verena said.
Belén lowered herself to the floor. She reached for the nearest shard, but Verena placed her slipper over it at the same moment.
The glass drove into Belén’s palm. Pain ran hot and bright up her arm. Blood gathered quickly, red against the dust.
Belén’s jaw locked. For one breath, she imagined standing, imagined throwing the broken crystal at Verena’s perfect smile, imagined making the whole hall remember she had teeth too.
She did not move that way. She did not give them a reason to call her savage. Instead, she lifted her face.
— If you wanted my blood, you could have asked. Everything here seems to be bought.
The hall froze. A servant stopped with a tray tilted in both hands. One guard fixed his gaze on the wall. A candle guttered and kept burning.
Rodrigo closed his eyes. It was the look of someone who knew a punishment had just been invited into the room.
Nobody moved.
Verena’s smile widened, but the warmth never reached her eyes.
— Such a brave tongue for someone sold by her own family.
That struck deeper than the glass. Belén felt it hit the place she had been refusing to touch since the day her father lowered his eyes.
But an entire fortress was not going to teach her that silence was mercy. She had already learned silence could sell a daughter.
— And such a desperate crown for someone who needs to humiliate maids to feel like a Luna, — Belén said.
The punishment came that night. Dalia was waiting in the dormitory, standing beside Belén’s narrow bed with her arms folded.
She did not shout. In Black Raven, quiet voices often carried the worst orders.
— Tomorrow, you clean the west wing, — Dalia said.
Belén felt the cold floor through the thin soles of her shoes.
— They said no one could enter.
— You are not entering his room. Only the corridor. If you hear something, you do not run. If he smells fear, you are lost.
Belén slept badly. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Teresa’s face over the laundry basin. One died. Two still alive, but no longer speaking.
At dawn, she crossed the forbidden door.
The west wing did not belong to the same fortress. The rest of Black Raven was harsh but ordered. This place looked like something had tried to tear its way out.
Furniture lay broken. Curtains hung in strips. Deep claw marks raked the stone walls. The air smelled of metal, fever, wet forest, and old pain.
Belén moved slowly. Every brush of her skirt sounded too loud. Every breath seemed to come back to her from the corridor twice as heavy.
Then she heard him.
A breath. Slow. Heavy. Not sleeping. Not peaceful. The sound of someone holding himself together by force.
A door stood open only a few inches. On the floor outside it sat a tray of untouched food. The meat had gone cold. The bread had hardened.
No one had dared bring it closer.
Belén stood there with a rag in one hand, feeling the pulse in her injured palm. She could walk away. She should walk away.
For one sharp second, she imagined doing exactly that. Turning back. Saving herself. Letting the powerful devour one another behind locked doors.
Then she remembered the black ledger. She remembered her father’s lowered eyes. She remembered how silence had sold her first.
She picked up the tray.
The door opened with a low scrape.
Gael Varela sat against the wall, shirtless, scarred, and still as a weapon left in the dark. His hair fell loose around a face sharpened by exhaustion.
His eyes were gold. Not amber. Not brown touched by fire. Gold, like an animal staring from behind a human skull.
Belén could not move. For several seconds, neither could he. The room held them both inside one long breath.
Then he spoke.
— Leave.
His voice was low and broken, almost unrecognizable as a king’s. It sounded less like command than warning.
Belén swallowed. The tray felt suddenly heavier.
— You have not eaten.
His pupils sharpened.
— Leave before my wolf decides for me.
A smarter woman might have obeyed. A woman less tired, less angry, less familiar with being treated as an object might have dropped the tray and run.
But Belén saw the chain snapped beside the bed. She saw the tremor in his hands. She saw the truth no one in the fortress had bothered to say aloud.
Gael Varela was dangerous. But he was not waiting for victims.
He was trapped inside himself.
Belén lowered the tray to the floor.
— Then tell your wolf to eat too.
Gael lifted his eyes. For the first time since she had entered, the rhythm of his breathing changed.
After that, Belén returned. She always carried food. She always had an excuse: dust, linens, spilled water, Dalia’s orders.
She never came too close. Gael never touched her. The distance between them remained measured, tense, and strangely honest.
Some days he said nothing. Some days his wolf looked through his eyes so fiercely that Belén left the tray and backed away without turning her back.
Other days, his voice returned in fragments. He asked her name once. She answered. He repeated it as if testing whether the sound hurt him.
In the corridor, small things began appearing after she left.
A blanket, on the morning after he saw her shiver.
A jar of ointment, after he noticed blood reopening across her palm.
A white flower, impossible to grow between those stones.
Belén did not ask how he got it. In Black Raven, questions could be traps. But she kept the flower pressed under her thin pillow anyway.
Teresa noticed first. Servants always notice what nobles think is invisible. She saw the ointment. She saw Belén stop flinching when the west wing bells sounded.
— Be careful, — Teresa whispered. — People here punish what they cannot control.
She was right. Verena watched. Dalia watched. Rodrigo watched too, but his watchfulness felt different. Less hungry. More afraid.
The seventeenth night began badly. Belén had worked 21 hours straight because Verena had decided the guest rooms needed polishing twice.
By the time Belén reached the west wing, fever burned behind her eyes. Her body felt hollow. Her injured palm throbbed under its bandage.
The corridor was colder than usual. The torches bent in a draft she could not feel. Somewhere beyond the walls, a wolf howled and then stopped abruptly.
Gael’s door was open.
Not a few inches. Not enough for a tray.
All the way.
Belén froze at the threshold. Inside, the destroyed bed lay in pieces. The broken chain had been dragged across the floor, leaving marks in the dust.
Gael stood beside it, breathing hard, his eyes completely gold. There was almost no human left in his face, and yet he looked at Belén as if she were the only fixed point in the room.
Behind her, boots sounded in the corridor. One pair. Then more. Then so many the stone seemed to tremble.
Rodrigo appeared first, pale with terror.
Behind him came the guard wolves of Black Raven. Forty of them, filling the hall in dark armor, their bodies tense, their heads lifting toward Gael and Belén.
Belén did not move. Her hand tightened around the tray until pain flashed through the cut beneath her bandage.
Rodrigo’s voice came out as a whisper.
— Do not move… his wolf has just chosen you.
Then the impossible happened. One guard lowered to one knee. Then another. Then another. The sound moved down the corridor like thunder being swallowed.
Forty wolves knelt.
Not to Verena. Not to Dalia. Not to the rules of Black Raven.
To the sold maid standing at the open door.
That was the moment Verena arrived at the end of the hall.
She had come dressed in pale blue silk, silver at her throat, rage hidden beneath elegance. But elegance could not survive what she saw.
Gael’s wolf had chosen Belén in front of the guard.
Verena’s smile disappeared.
The full truth did not come out that night. Truth rarely arrives politely. It clawed its way forward over the next days, through old reports, broken testimony, and a terrified servant who finally spoke.
The three women brought before Gael had not been destroyed by his hands. They had been placed near him during his worst episodes, then denied the protections Rodrigo had ordered.
Someone had wanted the court to believe Gael was beyond saving. Someone had wanted every possible Luna removed, frightened, or silenced before she could bond to him.
The evidence pointed closer than anyone wanted to look. Messages. Keys. Altered guard rotations. Sedatives removed from the healer’s cabinet at exactly the wrong times.
Verena had not created Gael’s curse, but she had learned how to use it. Monterra wanted Black Raven weakened. Verena wanted its crown.
Dalia had obeyed orders she should have questioned. Others had looked away because looking away was easier than standing between ambition and a cursed king.
Rodrigo nearly broke when he understood how much had happened under his watch. He had guarded Gael’s body while enemies moved through the household like smoke.
Belén did not forgive everyone. Forgiveness was not a blanket she could throw over rot and call the room clean.
She did something harder. She stayed still long enough for the truth to be named, then stood beside Gael while the fortress decided whether it still had a soul.
Gael’s wolf did not become gentle overnight. Curses do not vanish because someone brave enters a room. Healing was slower than rumor and less beautiful.
But Belén had never mistaken pain for monstrosity. She knew what it meant to be trapped by other people’s choices. She knew what silence could cost.
The white flower remained pressed beneath her pillow until the day Gael asked whether she had kept it.
Belén told him yes.
He looked away first, which was how she knew the king was still more man than beast.
Verena was sent back to Monterra under guard, stripped of the influence she had tried to turn into a crown. Those who helped her were named before the court.
Dalia kept her position only after kneeling before the servants, not the nobles, and admitting that obedience without conscience had made her cruel.
As for Belén’s family, the ledger was burned. The debt was declared void. Her brothers received food for the winter, but Belén did not return home.
A house that sells a daughter cannot become home again merely because the door remains standing.
Years later, people would tell the story differently. Some made it romantic. Some made it frightening. Some claimed Belén had magic in her blood.
The truth was quieter and sharper.
Belén Téllez had been sold by silence. So when she found a man everyone feared starving behind a forbidden door, she refused to let silence sell him too.
And in Black Raven, that refusal changed everything.