Betrayed by My Ex, Marked by His Alpha Emperor Brother

Chapter 101



Chapter 101

Elara’s POV

Cold hit me like a fist.

Not the gentle cold of winter mornings or palace drafts. This was violent—a wall of ice water slamming into my face, flooding my nose, my mouth, dragging me up from the black nothing I’d been floating in.

I choked. Gasped. Tried to cough the water out, but my body wouldn’t cooperate. My arms wouldn’t move. My legs—

Rope. Rough, thick, biting into my wrists so tight my fingers had gone numb. More around my ankles, lashing them to the legs of a chair. A wooden chair. Splintered. Old.

The room came into focus in pieces. Bare concrete walls stained with something dark. A single bulb hanging from a frayed wire overhead, swinging slightly, casting shadows that lurched and swayed like drunken things. The smell hit next—mildew, rot, and something sharper underneath. Sweat. Urine. The unmistakable reek of a place where bad things happened and no one cleaned up after.

My head was splitting. Whatever they’d used to drug me was still clinging to the edges of my consciousness, making the room tilt sideways every time I blinked.

"There she is."

The voice slithered out of the shadows to my left. Familiar. Horribly, impossibly familiar.

"Good morning, dear sister."

She stepped into the circle of sickly light, and for a moment I thought I was hallucinating. The drugs. The cold. My mind playing tricks.

But no. That face was real. Those sharp cheekbones. Those dark eyes glittering with something that went beyond hatred into territory I didn’t have a name for.

Isolde.

She looked different. Wrong. Her hair—once meticulously styled for court functions and garden parties—hung loose and tangled past her shoulders. Her clothes were rough, practical, stained at the hems with mud and something darker. But she wore them like armor. Like a statement.

And she was smiling. The kind of smile that had nothing to do with joy.

"You know," she said, circling my chair slowly, her boots scraping against the gritty floor, "I practiced what I’d say to you. Rehearsed it in my head for a long time. All these clever, devastating things." She stopped in front of me. Tilted her head. "But now that you’re here, tied up and bleeding, I realize I don’t need clever."

I tested the ropes again. Tight. Professional. Whoever had tied these knots knew what they were doing.

"Isolde." My voice came out cracked. Raw. I swallowed blood. "What is this?"

"This?" She spread her arms wide, gesturing at the filthy room like a hostess showing off a ballroom. "This is my kingdom, Ela. My domain. Isn’t it lovely?"

She laughed. The sound bounced off the concrete walls.

"The Rogue tribes, dear sister. They appreciate strength. Ambition. Things your precious palace courtiers wouldn’t recognize if it bit them." She leaned closer. Close enough that I could smell woodsmoke and something animal on her skin. "I am their new queen."

The words hit me, but I kept my face still. Showed nothing. Gave her nothing.

"You left court," I said flatly. "For this."

"I left a cage," she said, spreading her arms as if embracing the damp air, a wild, unrestrained gleam in her eyes. "No more suffocating corsets, no more bowing to snobs, no more pathetic noble rules. I am finally free to do whatever I want, whenever I want."

The slap came fast. Hard enough to snap my head sideways. Stars exploded behind my eyes. I tasted fresh blood where my teeth cut the inside of my cheek.

Isolde’s hand trembled at her side.

"That," she hissed, "was for stealing my life. For making me look like a fool in front of the entire court. Everyone whispering about poor Isolde, discarded for the little orphan who somehow caught the Emperor’s eye."

I turned my head back slowly. Blood dripped from the corner of my mouth onto my lap.

The second slap hit the other cheek. Harder. My vision went white, then red, then slowly resolved back into the swinging bulb and Isolde’s twisted face.

"And that," she breathed, "is for your pathetic little commoner act. Those wide innocent eyes. That trembling lip. And the Emperor fell for it. The most powerful Alpha in the empire, wrapped around your finger like a lovesick puppy."

I spat blood onto the floor between her boots. Looked up at her through the hair falling across my face.

"He loves me," I said fiercely. "That’s what you can’t stand."

Isolde stared at me for a second before bursting into a sharp, cruel bark of laughter. The mocking sound bounced off the concrete walls.

"Love?" she sneered, wiping a tear of mirth from her eye. "Oh, Ela, you are just as pathetic as you were back in the baron’s estate."

Heavy footsteps in the corridor outside. Multiple sets. The floorboards groaned under the weight.

Isolde’s smile returned. Wider this time. Hungrier.

"Ah," she said softly. "Right on time."

The door swung open on rusted hinges.

Three figures filled the frame. Massive. Broad-shouldered. Their bodies practically blocked out the dim light from the hallway. The smell hit me before I could make out their faces—stale sweat, unwashed skin, something feral underneath that made my stomach churn instinctively.

They stepped inside. The room shrank.

The one in front—the tallest, with a scar running from his temple to his jaw—looked me up and down with a slow, deliberate gaze that made my skin crawl. His lips peeled back from yellowed teeth.

"She’s even prettier than you said."

Isolde moved toward the door. She paused in the frame, one hand resting on the rusted metal. She didn’t look at me.

"Brothers," she said, her voice light and pleasant, as if she were introducing guests at a dinner party, "this is my dear stepsister. The Emperor’s precious little mate."

She turned then. Just enough for me to see her profile. The curve of her smile.

"Have your fun. Break her however you like," she instructed, her voice dropping cold and precise. "But keep her awake. Keep her conscious. I want her to remember every single second of what is to come."

The door closed behind her with a sharp click, leaving me alone with the three men as they slowly stepped forward to begin their work.


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