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Marrying a Warhound (Cassian) novel Chapter 80

Chapter 80

ATASHA’S POV

I didn’t know how long he carried me slung over his shoulder. My head swam, the constant jolt of his stride making me dizzy. Just when I thought I might be sick from the motion, he finally stopped. Without warning, he shifted his grip and dumped me onto the snow like I was nothing.

The cold punched through my cloak at once, burning against my back as I hit the ground. Snow clung to my clothes and slid down my collar. I pushed up on my elbows, breath catching, and glared up at him.

Was he not planning to feed me to the beasts? My eyes darted around, and that was when I noticed where we were. The entrance of a cave loomed ahead, narrow and half–buried under

snow.

My grip on the dagger tightened. Was something waiting inside? Another beast? Was he planning to throw me in and let it finish me off?

“Inside…” Cassian said suddenly.

I froze. Since this madness began, he hadn’t spoken a word. Mendez had warned me. Once they turned, their minds slipped, speech became impossible. But now, his voice was sharp and

clear.

“Now…” he added.

I blinked, stunned. “Cassian, you can–ah!” The words broke off into a startled cry as his hand clamped around my arm. He yanked me up with no effort, then in one motion hurled me straight into the cave.

The impact knocked the breath from me, but I forced myself upright, dagger in hand. My eyes darted around the cave, every sense on edge. The space was narrow, the ceiling low, shadows stretching across the rock walls. It was dark, but I half–expected to see glowing eyes staring back at me from the black.

I crouched low, ready to strike at the first movement. My grip tightened, pulse hammering in

my ears.

But no beast came.

Instead, a long, guttural howl split through the night.

I spun toward the entrance just in time to see Cassian colliding with something massive in the snow outside. My breath caught. It looked like a wolf, but bigger, triple the size at least, its

body thick with muscle, fur bristling, eyes wide and crazed.

It hit Cassian like a boulder, knocking both of them into the snow. Only then did it sink in, he hadn’t thrown me in here to feed me to anything. He had thrown me here to keep me out of the way.

He didn’t want me to interfere. Or maybe he thought I’d only drag him down if I tried to fight.

toe, soaking into his clothes, dripping from his fingers. The head of the beast was still in his grip, its jaw slack, poison drooling into the snow.

And he was smiling.

A wide grin, stretching ear to ear was plastered on his face, his eyes still burning red. He looked less like a man and more like something that had crawled out of the dark to kill for the sake of it.

Then he turned towards the cave.

I stumbled backward until the cave wall stopped me. The rock was cold and damp against my spine, seeping through the fabric of my cloak. I pressed myself against it, but there was nowhere else to go. The stench of blood filled the cave, mixed with that bitter poison stink from the beast. It coated the back of my throat, making it hard to breathe.

Cassian moved closer. One step was enough to fill the cave with his presence. His size blocked most of the entrance, and the air itself felt heavier with him inside.

My grip on the dagger tightened, but the blade still trembled in my hand. I couldn’t stop it. Cassian stepped into the cave, his frame filling the narrow space. His boots crunched against the stone floor, each step closer, the blood dripping from him leaving dark streaks behind.

I pressed harder against the wall, unsure if I should raise the dagger or drop it. He closed the distance until only a few steps remained between us. My chest tightened, every muscle screaming to move, but I couldn’t.

Then he stopped.

Without a word, he lifted his arm. The severed head of the beast dangled from his grip, its jaw slack, poison–dark blood still leaking down its torn neck. He held it out toward me, like an offering or a warning.

My breath caught.

Then he smiled and said, “Food.”

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