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The Inquisitor's Pet: A Cage of Silver and Sins

Chapter 5 The Devil's Morning Service

Word Count: 1390    |    Released on: 31/12/2025

the soft, rhythmic friction

, and the heavy duvet carried that intoxicating, grounding scent of frost and cedarwood-his scent. I nuzzled i

in

striking the mahogany bedpost ech

ley, the magical overload, Linus Kerr, and this gods-for

, exposing a pale, rounded curve of skin. I didn't think to cove

ns like a grey blade, bisecting the dim bedroom. At the threshold

s dre

away. It wasn't merely the perfection of his physique-though his back was a mas

s the

y welts. Some had faded into thin silver lines; others remained a brutal, raised pink. They

e were not the result of a single battle. The spacing, the angles, the varying depth

y every living soul in Pyre City, was himself a

gaze on his ski

on with a slow, deliberate grace, hiding the history of his pain from view. Then came the meti

was arming himself. He was burying the man beneath the layers, f

ou seen

with an icy stare. The lethargy of the night had vanished, replaced b

eeks flushing hot. "Those scars..." The

is tone as flat as if he were discussing t

y the Cold-Iron, the crimson flush of my fever had faded, leaving my skin pale. Framed

tossed a black velvet box on

conservative cut-high collar, long sleeves-but the waist was cinched with a brutal precisi

es?" I frowned, loo

don't keep beggars in my house. Since you are no

is fingers tapping rhyth

wnstairs. Unless you'd like m

later, in th

seemed miles long, Linus sat reading the Morning Gazette. I had been placed at h

acon, soft-boiled eggs, perfectly browned to

erated my energy reserves. But then I looked

en looped and locked around the b

e like a dog at

p a piece of dry toast, nibbling at it with a vacant sta

Linus asked, not look

s removed for meals," I pointed out coldly.

ing over the high collar of the emerald dress that hid his mark. "And if I were you, Miss

umbling in my fingers

mor

ss the polished wood. I picked it up. The wax seal featured a burni

unning. If, by sunset today, she cannot provide new leads from the petrified corpse, I s

as elegant, yet i

ered the paper. "It seems yo

g. The yolk ran out like a pool of golden blood. "He suspects

ng into a sardonic smirk. "A ridiculous a

e table. "So, I'm not just your

than

wiped his mouth with a silk napkin. He rose and walke

, coiling the cold iron links into his pa

ting against the hard plane of his stomach. I looked

'Trophy'," Linus whispered into my ear, his

ay the part. You will prove to everyone that the contents

f you

ton at my throat, sending a fresh

you to ash. And I might just

ing my feverish skin. "Do we unde

d the copper tang of blood

d through gritted teeth

ing the weight of it on my tongue. He gave the chai

o visit your patient-t

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The Inquisitor's Pet: A Cage of Silver and Sins
The Inquisitor's Pet: A Cage of Silver and Sins
“Blurb: "Kneel," he whispered. "And I might just let you live." Lillian was a witch destined for the stake. Linus Vane was the High Inquisitor who lit the fires. He should have killed her. The law demanded it. The Church expected it. Instead, he did the unthinkable. He brought her home. Now, Lillian is no longer a fugitive running in the rain. She is a prisoner in Linus's cold, pristine penthouse. She wears his clothes. She sleeps in his room. And around her neck, she wears a collar of cold iron-a constant reminder that she belongs to him. Linus calls it "protective custody." Lillian calls it a gilded cage. He controls her every move. He forbids her from leaving his sight. But as the city burns and enemies close in, Lillian realizes the terrifying truth: The man who holds her leash is the only monster strong enough to keep her safe. And he doesn't intend to ever let her go.”