I woke with a new bite mark.
Not on my wrist—the one Vex had claimed in front of the Council, the one that still throbbed with every beat of my heart.
Not on my shoulder—the one he’d left in the heat of our almost-kiss, sharp and deep and *blissful*, a pleasure-pain that had made me cry out.
Not on my inner thigh—the hidden one I still didn’t remember getting.
This one was on my neck.
Just below my ear. Small. Precise. *Permanent*.
I sat up too fast, the sheets tangling around my legs, my breath coming in sharp gasps. The room was dim, lit only by the faint pulse of runes along the obsidian pillars, the air thick with the scent of him—smoke, iron, that dark sweetness that had haunted me since the Oath bound us. Vex lay beside me, on his back, one arm flung over his eyes, his chest rising and falling in slow, measured breaths. He hadn’t touched me since the ritual. Not really. After the heat cycle had surged, after we’d kissed in the bath, after I’d whispered *“Don’t stop,”* he’d carried me to the bed, laid me down, and turned away without a word.
No kiss.
No claim.
No *anything*.
Just silence.
And now—
Now I had a bite mark I didn’t remember getting.
Again.
I pressed my fingers to it—tender, swollen, still warm. My sigils flared beneath my skin, responding to the touch, to the bond’s insistent pull. My core ached—deep, dull, unrelenting—a reminder of how close we’d come, how *right* it had felt, even as my mind screamed that it was wrong.
Had we…?
Had I let him…?
Or had he—
No.
I would have remembered.
Wouldn’t I?
I slid out of bed, wincing as my bare feet touched the cold stone floor. My robe was crumpled on the floor where he’d torn it off me—where *I’d* let him tear it off me—and I snatched it up, wrapping it tightly around myself, as if it could shield me from the memories.
From the truth.
From the way my body still hummed with need, even now.
Across the room, Vex stirred.
“Where are you going?” His voice was rough, sleep-roughened, but alert.
“To wash,” I said, not looking at him. “I need to clear my head.”
He didn’t respond.
I walked to the bathing chamber, my steps slow, deliberate, trying to steady my breathing, trying to push down the flood of sensations that still lingered—his hands on my hips, his mouth on my neck, the way he’d whispered my name like it was sacred.
Avalanche.
Not Lira.
Never Lira.
He’d known all along.
I stepped into the room, the air thick with the scent of sandalwood and something sharper—ozone, maybe, or the residue of magic. The tub was empty now, the water drained, the runes along its rim still faintly glowing. I turned the taps, letting the water rush in, steam rising in thick, curling tendrils.
I didn’t undress.
I just sat on the edge, my hands gripping the stone, my head bowed.
What had I done?
I’d let him touch me. Let him inside me. Let him *feel* me in ways no one ever had.
And worse—I’d *wanted* it.
Not just the release. Not just the survival.
But *him*.
His strength. His control. The way he’d looked at me—like he saw *me*, not just the mission, not just the vengeance, but the woman beneath.
And that?
That was the most dangerous thing of all.
Because if I started seeing him as more than a monster…
If I started believing he might not have killed my mother…
Then what was I even fighting for?
I pressed my fingers to the bite mark again—still warm, still tender. My breath hitched. My thighs pressed together. And then—
It hit me.
The plan.
The *real* plan.
I hadn’t come here just to kill him.
I’d come here to *avenge* him.
Not from him.
From *Nyx*.
Because she’d framed him. She’d made the world believe he’d slaughtered my mother, that he’d seized the Crown for himself, that he was the monster who’d started the Crimson Schism. And he’d let it happen—because it was easier than the truth. Because it kept the peace. Because he’d *protected* me, even then, even when I was just a child, even when he didn’t know I existed.
And now—
Now I was falling for him.
And the worst part?
I didn’t even know if I could stop.
The door opened behind me.
I didn’t turn.
“You can’t run from it,” Vex said, stepping inside. He was dressed now—black trousers, no shirt, his chest still bare, scars tracing his ribs like old battles. His hair was tousled, his eyes still shadowed with exhaustion, but alert. Watching me.
“I’m not running,” I said. “I’m cleansing.”
“With your clothes on?”
“It’s symbolic.”
He exhaled, stepping closer. “The bond-heat will return. It always does. The first climax stabilizes it, but it doesn’t erase it. We’ll need to suppress it again. And again. Until the magic settles.”
I clenched my jaw. “Then we’ll do the ritual. Hands on skin. Controlled. Nothing more.”
“You think you can keep it clinical?” he asked, voice low. “You think you can pretend last night didn’t change anything?”
“It didn’t,” I said, lifting my chin. “It was survival. Nothing more.”
He stepped closer, close enough that I could feel the heat of him, close enough that his scent wrapped around me like a vice.
“Liar,” he murmured. “Your pulse just jumped. Your breath hitched. Your skin flushed. The bond feels every lie, Avalanche. And right now, it’s screaming the truth.”
I didn’t move.
“Then let it scream,” I said. “I don’t care.”
He reached out, slow, giving me time to stop him.
I didn’t.
His fingers brushed my wrist, just above the pulse point.
Fire.
It exploded through me, sudden and sharp, my sigils flaring beneath my skin, heat pooling low in my belly, my thighs pressing together. My breath came in a gasp, my back arching involuntarily.
“See?” he said, voice rough. “You can’t lie to it. You can’t lie to *me*.”
I jerked my hand back. “Don’t touch me.”
“Then don’t provoke me,” he said, stepping back. “You think I don’t feel it too? The heat? The need? The way my fangs drop when you look at me? The way my blood sings when you say my name?”
I looked away. “Then suffer.”
He laughed—short, dark. “I already am.”
The water was rising, steam filling the room, the air thick, suffocating. I stood, turning the taps off, the tub now half-full, shimmering with that faint, starlight glow.
“We’ll do the ritual,” I said, my voice tight. “Now. Before it gets worse.”
He nodded, already moving to the other side of the tub. “Clothes stay on. Physical contact only where necessary. We ground the heat. We breathe. We survive.”
“And nothing more,” I added.
“Nothing more,” he agreed.
I stepped into the water, wincing at the heat—almost scalding, but I welcomed it. Let it burn. Let it punish me for the way my body still craved his touch. For the way my core still throbbed with need.
Vex followed, stepping in across from me, the water rising to his waist. He sat on the submerged ledge, his chest still bare, water sluicing down his skin, catching in the grooves of his muscles, the scars, the dark trail of hair leading below the waterline.
I looked away.
“Sit,” he said.
I did, lowering myself until the water reached my collarbones. The steam curled around us, the room dim, the floating candles casting long, shifting shadows on the walls. It felt too intimate. Too quiet. Too much.
“Hands on the ledge,” he said. “Palms down. I’ll place mine over yours. We sync our breathing. We ground the heat.”
I obeyed, placing my hands on the cool stone, fingers spread. He reached out, his palms settling over mine, his skin hot against mine, his fingers long, calloused, strong.
The bond flared.
Heat surged through me, sudden and sharp, my sigils glowing beneath my skin, my breath hitching. My thighs pressed together, a whimper catching in my throat.
“Breathe,” he said, voice low. “In. Out. With me.”
I tried. In. Out. But every breath pulled me deeper into him, into the heat, into the need.
His thumbs moved, just slightly, stroking the backs of my hands. My hips jerked forward. A moan escaped me.
“Don’t,” I gasped. “Don’t make me—”
“I’m not,” he said. “You’re doing this to yourself. Your body knows what it wants.”
“I hate you,” I whispered.
“I know,” he said. “But your heart doesn’t.”
We stayed like that—hands on hands, breath syncing, heat slowly ebbing. It wasn’t enough. It would never be enough. But it was control. It was survival.
And then—
His leg brushed mine under the water.
Just a graze. Accidental. On purpose?
I didn’t know.
But the contact sent fire through me, white-hot, my back arching, a moan tearing from my throat. My sigils blazed, crimson light painting the walls. His breath hitched. His thumbs pressed harder against my hands, his fingers tightening.
“Avalanche,” he said, voice raw.
“Don’t,” I gasped. “Don’t say my name like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like you *mean* it.”
He was silent for a long moment. Then—
“Because I do.”
The words hit me like a blade.
I looked up, meeting his gaze.
His eyes were red. His fangs bared. But his expression—God, his expression—wasn’t lust. Not cruelty. Not triumph.
Pain.
And something else.
Something that looked too much like *longing*.
My breath caught.
And then—
His hand slid from mine, moving down, his fingers brushing my hip just above the waterline.
“No,” I whispered, but I didn’t pull away.
“Just grounding,” he said, voice rough. “Just the ritual.”
But it wasn’t.
And we both knew it.
His thumb stroked the curve of my hip, slow, deliberate, and I felt it—*felt him*—in every part of me. The bond pulsed between us, a living thing, feeding on the touch, on the heat, on the need.
My thighs pressed together, a deep, insistent throb between them. My breath came in gasps. My skin burned.
“Vex,” I whispered, my voice breaking.
“I know,” he said. “I feel it too.”
His other hand moved, sliding up my arm, over my shoulder, to my neck, his fingers brushing my pulse. My head fell back, a moan escaping me.
“We can’t,” I gasped. “We said—”
“I know what we said,” he said, leaning closer, his breath hot against my skin. “But the bond doesn’t care about promises. It only cares about truth.”
“And what’s the truth?” I whispered.
He didn’t answer.
He just kissed me.
Slow. Deep. Aching.
And this time, I didn’t fight.
This time, I kissed him back.
Because the truth?
It wasn’t just the bond.
It wasn’t just the magic.
It was *me*.
I wanted him.
And if I was going to survive this—
Then I had to stop lying.
To myself.
And to him.
My hands fisted in his hair, yanking him closer, my tongue tangling with his, my body pressing against his, every inch of me screaming for more.
And when he lifted me, carrying me from the water, I didn’t resist.
Because survival wasn’t just about staying alive.
It was about staying *me*.
And right now?
The only way to do that—
Was to stop pretending.
That I didn’t want him.
That I didn’t need him.
That I wasn’t already falling.
Across the room, the clock began to tick.
Another day.
Another battle.
Another lie.
And I wasn’t sure which one I’d lose first.
But one thing was certain.
I couldn’t do this alone.
And maybe—just maybe—I didn’t have to.
Maybe I could let him in.
Just a little.
Just enough to survive.
And as his mouth moved to my neck, his fangs grazing my skin, I didn’t pull away.
I arched into him.
And I whispered the words I never thought I’d say.
“Don’t stop.”