BackAzure’s Claim: Blood and Moon

Chapter 19 - Rescue Plan

AZURE

The journal pulsed against my ribs like a second heart.

Not with magic. Not with enchantment. But with memory—a low, insistent thrum beneath the worn leather, as if the pages themselves were alive, breathing, waiting. I sat across from Kaelen in the war room, the runes beneath the floorboards humming softly, the world outside a blur of shadow and storm. The silence between us wasn’t empty. It was charged—thick with the weight of what we’d done, what we’d stolen, what we were about to uncover.

And yet—

All I could feel was the book.

My father’s handwriting was etched into the cover—Elias Vael, Keeper of the Lunar Line—in a script so familiar it made my throat ache. I hadn’t seen his hand in twenty years. Not since the night they came for him. Not since the night I watched them drag him screaming into the dark, his voice calling my name until it was swallowed by silence.

And now he was here.

In ink. In truth. In secrets.

“You’re not going to open it,” Kaelen said, voice low.

I didn’t look up. Just kept my fingers tracing the runes along the spine—lunar sigils, old as the first moonrise, pulsing faintly under my touch. “I am.”

“Then do it.”

“I need a moment.”

“You don’t.” He leaned forward, his ice-blue eyes locking onto mine. “You’ve spent twenty years running from this. From him. From what he was. From what you are. But you’re not running anymore, Azure. You’re here. And that book? It’s not just the truth. It’s your blood. Your name. Your legacy.”

My breath caught.

“So open it,” he said, voice a growl. “And stop pretending you’re not afraid.”

I swallowed. Hard.

Because he was right.

I was afraid.

Not of the truth.

Not of the lies.

But of what I might find—what if my father wasn’t the hero I’d buried in my memory? What if he’d been the one who’d summoned the Devourer? What if he’d betrayed the witches, sealed the Covenant, doomed us all? What if the rage that had fueled me, the mission that had kept me alive—was built on a lie?

And worse—

What if he’d known about the bond?

What if he’d known about Kaelen?

I took a slow breath. Then another. And then—

I opened the journal.

The first page was blank. The second—dated twenty years ago, the night before the Lunar Purge—was filled with hurried script, the ink smudged in places, as if written in haste, in fear.

They’re coming for us. The Council has been lied to. The Devourer wasn’t summoned by the witches—it was unleashed by the Seelie. Vexis orchestrated the massacre, framed our bloodline, and forged the Covenant to steal our power. They’ve already taken Lysara. I don’t know if she’s alive. I don’t know if she’s dead. But I know this—Azure must never return. If she does, they’ll kill her. And if they can’t kill her, they’ll bind her to a monster.

My hands trembled.

Not from shock.

Not from grief.

From relief.

He hadn’t betrayed us.

He’d tried to stop it.

And he’d known. About Vexis. About the lie. About me.

I flipped the page.

I’ve hidden the Blood Moon Key beneath the Archives’ inner sanctum. Only a true heir can retrieve it. Only a true heir can break the Covenant. But the bond… it’s older than the Covenant. Older than the war. It was written in the stars, sealed in blood, and buried beneath prophecy. If Azure ever meets the one—Kaelen Thorne, Alpha of the Thornes—she must not hate him. She must not destroy him. She must see him. Because he is not her enemy. He is her other half. And if she kills him, she kills herself.

My breath stopped.

Across from me, Kaelen went still.

Not from shock.

Not from anger.

From recognition.

He hadn’t known. Not really. Not until now.

But he’d felt it. The bond. The pull. The way his body had moved toward mine like it had been starved for years. The way his dreams were filled with my name. The way his heart raced when I looked at him like he was already dead.

And now—

It had a name.

Fated.

“Keep reading,” he said, voice rough.

I did.

The Covenant was never about peace. It was about control. Vexis needed a scapegoat, a sacrifice, a way to drain the lunar line’s power and bind it to the Seelie throne. The ritual required a blood offering—mine. But they took Lysara instead. They burned her alive, not because she was guilty, but because she was strong. And now they’re coming for Azure. If she returns, if she claims her birthright, if she breaks the Covenant—she must do it with him at her side. Not as enemies. Not as rivals. As one. Because only a true bond, sealed in love and blood, can shatter the lie.

My vision blurred.

Not from tears.

Not from pain.

From truth.

My mother hadn’t summoned the Devourer.

She’d been trying to stop it.

And Kaelen—

He hadn’t signed the Covenant to destroy us.

He’d been used.

Like me.

Like my father.

Like everyone who’d ever believed the lie.

“Azure.”

I didn’t look up. Just kept reading, flipping through the pages—more warnings, more secrets, more proof. My father had known everything. The Fae spies. The vampire betrayals. The werewolf elders who’d turned a blind eye. And Kaelen—

He was never meant to be her enemy. He was meant to be her shield. Her sword. Her equal. But if she sees only vengeance, if she lets hate blind her, she will destroy the only man who can save her—and with him, the last hope of our bloodline.

I closed the journal.

Not gently.

Not carefully.

Like I was sealing a tomb.

And then—

I looked at him.

Really looked.

Not at the Alpha. Not at the monster who’d signed the Covenant. Not at the man who’d torn Mira’s lies apart like paper.

At Kaelen.

His face was shadowed, his eyes sharp, his presence like a storm contained. But beneath it—something else.

Pain.

Regret.

Hope.

“You knew,” I said, voice breaking. “About the bond. About us. You felt it.”

“I didn’t know,” he said, voice low. “I didn’t believe in fate. I didn’t believe in magic. I only believed in power. In control. In survival.”

“And now?”

He reached out—slow, deliberate—not to touch me, but to brush his fingers along the hidden sigil on my collarbone—one, two, three times—until it glowed faintly beneath his touch. “Now I know the bond isn’t just magic. It’s not just fever. It’s not just need.” He leaned forward, his voice dropping to a growl. “It’s truth.”

My breath caught.

“And I know this,” he added. “I didn’t sign the Covenant to destroy your mother. I signed it because I was lied to. Because I thought I was stopping a war. Protecting my pack. Protecting everyone.”

“And then?”

“Then I saw her eyes.” He exhaled, slow, pained. “At the pyre. She wasn’t afraid. She wasn’t begging. She was casting. And the runes on the ground—they weren’t summoning magic. They were binding magic. Draining it. Stealing it.”

My pulse spiked.

“I realized too late,” he said. “The Covenant wasn’t to stop her. It was to take her power. To give it to someone else.”

“Vexis.”

He nodded. “And now?” He reached out, not to touch me, but to take the journal from my hands. “Now I think you already know.”

I stared at him. The anger was still there. The mission. The need for vengeance.

But beneath it—something else.

Doubt.

And worse—hope.

“You expect me to believe this?” I whispered. “That you’re some tragic hero who made a mistake?”

“No.” He set the journal aside, then leaned forward, his eyes burning into mine. “I expect you to fight me. Not because you hate me. But because you believe in something. And if that something is justice, then maybe—just maybe—we’re not enemies.”

I didn’t answer.

But I didn’t look away.

And then—

The carriage jolted.

Not from a bump. Not from the road.

From impact.

The runes beneath the floorboards flared silver. The walls trembled. The air thickened with the scent of ozone and decay.

“We’re under attack,” Kaelen said, voice low, dangerous.

Before I could respond, the door was ripped open.

Not by force.

By magic.

A figure stood in the opening—tall, cloaked in shimmering silk, their face hidden beneath a veil of illusion. But I knew them.

I’d know that scent anywhere.

Rosewater. Iron. Lies.

“Mira,” I said, voice flat.

She laughed—low, musical, false. “Did you really think I’d let you walk away with the journal?” She stepped inside, her heels clicking against the wood, her presence like a blade wrapped in velvet. “Did you really think I’d let you uncover the truth?”

“You’re working for Vexis,” Kaelen said, not rising. Just sitting there, his presence like a storm. “You’ve been spying on us from the beginning.”

“And you,” she said, turning to him, “let me wear your cloak. You let me whisper in your ear. You let me touch you.”

“I let you think you had power,” he said, voice cold. “But you were never mine. You were never welcome. And if you ever come near me again, if you ever speak to her, if you ever breathe in this direction—I’ll have you exiled. Not for wearing my cloak. Not for breaking into my suite. But for threatening the woman who is mine.”

She didn’t flinch. Just smiled. “And what if I don’t care?” She reached into her cloak—and pulled out a dagger. Black steel. Moon-forged. The same kind Kaelen had given me. “What if I take her now? What if I carve the truth out of her flesh?”

“You’ll die first,” I said, drawing my own blade.

She laughed again. “You think you can stop me? You think you’re strong enough?”

“I know I am.”

And then—

We moved.

Not with magic. Not with ritual.

With steel.

She lunged—fast, precise, aiming for my throat. I twisted, parried, spun, slashing across her ribs. She hissed but didn’t stop, countering with a low sweep meant to take out my knees. I jumped, landed, and came in high, driving the blade toward her heart.

She dodged—just enough.

The tip grazed her chest, drawing a thin line of blood.

And then—

Kaelen was there.

Not between us.

Behind her.

One hand closed around her wrist. The other gripped her throat.

“You should’ve run when you had the chance,” he growled.

She didn’t struggle. Just turned her head slightly, her smile widening. “And miss the chance to see you break?” She looked at me. “He’ll do it, you know. When he finds out the truth about your father. When he realizes the man he thinks was a martyr was actually the one who started the war.”

My breath caught.

“No,” she whispered. “He didn’t just try to stop Vexis. He helped him. He wanted the power for himself. And when your mother refused to join him, he handed her over to the Council.”

Lies.

They had to be lies.

But the journal—

My father’s words—

Had he hidden something?

Had he—

“Don’t listen to her,” Kaelen said, voice low, dangerous. “She’s trying to break us.”

“And you,” Mira said, turning back to him, “think you’re her savior? Think you’re her fated mate? You’re not. You’re just her fever. Her last meal. And when she realizes the truth—that her father was the real monster—she’ll destroy you too.”

“Enough.”

And then—

He snapped her neck.

Not slowly. Not painfully.

Fast. Clean. Final.

Her body went limp. He let it fall, the dagger clattering to the floor.

And then—

He turned to me.

Not with pity.

Not with fear.

With truth.

“You believe her,” he said.

“I don’t know what to believe.”

“Then believe this.” He reached out, not to touch me, but to take my hand—hot, rough, unyielding. “I don’t care who your father was. I don’t care what he did. I only care about you. About the woman who fought me in the sparring ring. Who kissed me in the Grand Hall. Who dreams of me with her name on her lips.”

My breath caught.

“You’re not your father’s sins,” he said, voice a growl. “You’re not your mother’s death. You’re not your mission. You’re mine. And I’m not letting you go.”

And then—

The carriage stopped.

We were back at the enclave.

The storm had passed.

The moon was high.

And the war—

It had just begun.

---

We didn’t speak as we returned to the suite.

The enclave was quiet, the torches burning low, the air thick with the scent of stone and shadow. His hand found mine—hot, rough, unyielding. I didn’t pull away. Didn’t question it. Just let him lead me through the corridors, past the guards, past the whispers, past the weight of what we’d just done.

What *I’d* just done.

I’d killed Mira. Not with magic. Not with ritual. With steel. With skill. With rage.

And yet—

It wasn’t satisfaction I felt.

It was doubt.

Because her last words—

Your father was the real monster.

Had she been lying?

Or had she been telling the truth?

We reached the suite. He opened the door, stepped inside, and finally let go. I followed, closing the door behind me, pressing my palm to the wood to reinforce the silence ward. The room was as we’d left it—moonlight streaming through the balcony doors, the bed still dominating the center of the chamber, the torn cloak lying in a heap on the floor.

He didn’t look at it.

Just walked to the hearth, where a single flame burned low. He didn’t need warmth. He needed control. I could see it in the set of his shoulders, the tension in his jaw, the way his fingers curled into fists at his sides.

“You’re shaking,” he said, not turning.

“I’m fine.”

“You’re not.” He turned then, his eyes locking onto mine. “You felt it. The journal. The truth. The lie.”

I didn’t answer.

Because he was right.

The truth had set me free.

And now—

I was more trapped than ever.

“Then let me show you,” he said, stepping closer. “Not with words. Not with magic. But with this.”

He reached out, his fingers brushing the sigil on my collarbone—one, two, three times—until it glowed faintly beneath his touch. Then he leaned down, his lips hovering just above mine.

“Like this.”

And then he kissed me.

Not a collision. Not a claim.

A surrender.

My hands slid to his chest, into his hair, pulling him down. His growl vibrated through me, his body pressing into mine, his arms caging me in. The bond exploded—magic and fang and fire, crashing through us like a storm. The torches flared. The runes pulsed. The moonlight poured through the balcony doors, wrapping around us like a living thing.

And then—

He broke the kiss.

Not gently. Not slowly.

Like he was being torn away.

“Don’t,” I whispered, my voice raw. “Don’t stop.”

He pressed his forehead to mine, his breath ragged, his eyes dark with need. “I won’t. But not like this. Not with the Summit tomorrow. Not until you know—”

“I know,” I said, cutting him off. “I know you’re not lying. I know she’s a liar. I know the bond is real.” I cupped his face, my thumbs brushing his cheekbones. “And I know I hate you.”

He smiled. Slow. Dangerous. “Good. Hate me. But don’t stop wanting me.”

“I don’t.”

He kissed me again—soft, deep, a promise. Then he pulled back, his hands sliding down my arms, my fingers lacing with mine.

“Come on,” he said. “Let’s go to bed.”

My breath caught.

“Not like that,” he said, reading my thoughts. “Not yet. But I’m not letting you sleep alone. Not tonight. Not ever again.”

He led me to the smaller chamber—the one they’d designated as mine. The bed was narrow, the sheets cold. He didn’t climb in after me. Just sat on the edge, his presence like a storm contained.

Then he reached out, his fingers brushing the sigil on my collarbone one last time.

“Sleep well, little witch,” he murmured. “The war’s just beginning.”

I didn’t answer.

But as I closed my eyes, his scent still on my skin, his heat still in my bones, his voice still in my ears—

I knew one thing for certain.

The mission wasn’t over.

But the enemy?

He wasn’t just across the table.

He was in my blood.

And for the first time since I’d walked into this cursed hall—

I wasn’t sure I wanted to destroy him.

Because what if the real enemy wasn’t Kaelen?

What if it was me?

---

The summons came at dawn.

Not by messenger. Not by scroll.

By magic.

A silver scroll appeared on the war table, sealed with the sigil of the Seelie Court—a crescent moon cradled in a rose. I didn’t need to open it to know who it was from.

Vexis.

Kaelen reached for it first, but I stopped him—my hand closing over his, hot and unyielding. “Let me.”

He didn’t argue. Just stepped back, his presence like a storm, his silence a vow.

I broke the seal.

The parchment unrolled, the ink shimmering faintly, the words forming not in script, but in memory.

Envoy Azure,

You wear his shirt, but you do not wear his truth. You claim his bond, but you do not claim his guilt. You seek justice, but you do not seek your father’s sins.

He did not try to stop the Covenant.

He helped forge it.

He wanted the power of the lunar line for himself. When your mother refused to join him, he betrayed her. He gave her to the Council. He watched her burn.

And now? Now he hides in the shadows, feeding you lies, poisoning your mission with false hope.

But I know the truth.

And if you do not surrender the journal by moonrise, I will reveal it to the Council. I will show them the recordings. The blood oaths. The proof.

And when they see what you truly are—

A daughter of betrayal—

A heir to lies—

You will be stripped of your title, your magic, your life.

And Kaelen Thorne?

He will watch you burn.

Just like your mother.

—Lord Vexis, High Justiciar of the Seelie Court

The parchment burst into silver flame, the ashes drifting to the floor like snow.

Silence.

Thick. Heavy. watchful.

“He’s lying,” Kaelen said, voice low.

“He might not be.”

“You believe him?”

“I don’t know what to believe.”

“Then believe this.” He stepped forward, his eyes burning into mine. “I don’t care who your father was. I don’t care what he did. I only care about you. About the woman who fought me in the sparring ring. Who kissed me in the Grand Hall. Who dreams of me with her name on her lips.”

My breath caught.

“You’re not your father’s sins,” he said, voice a growl. “You’re not your mother’s death. You’re not your mission. You’re mine. And I’m not letting you go.”

And then—

The door opened.

Taryn stood there, her dark hair pulled back, her expression unreadable. But her voice—low, calm—held a note of something else. Not judgment. Not pity. Urgency.

“The Council is calling an emergency session,” she said. “They’ve received a message. From Vexis. He’s claiming you’re a traitor. That you stole the journal. That you’re using witchcraft to manipulate the bond.”

My blood turned to ice.

“And?” Kaelen said.

“And they’re demanding proof of loyalty. By moonrise.”

“What kind of proof?”

“A blood oath.”

My breath caught.

Not from fear.

Not from anger.

From truth.

A blood oath wasn’t just a vow. It was a binding. A psychic link. A compulsion. If I swore it, if I drank from Kaelen’s wrist and let him drink from mine, the Council would see every secret, every lie, every hidden thought.

And if they saw the journal?

If they saw my father’s words?

If they saw my doubt?

They’d execute me for treason.

“You don’t have to do it,” Kaelen said, reading my thoughts.

“I do.” I met his gaze, steady, unflinching. “Because if I don’t, they’ll exile you. They’ll say you’ve been bewitched. That the bond is false. And then Vexis will have won.”

He didn’t flinch. Just reached out, his fingers brushing the sigil on my collarbone—one, two, three times—until it glowed faintly beneath his touch. “Then we do it together.”

“You don’t have to—”

“Yes.” His voice dropped to a growl. “I do. Because if you die, I die. And I’m not ready to burn yet.”

The bond flared—a surge of heat low in my belly, a whisper of memory: his mouth on my neck, her nails in his back, the moon above us—

I shoved it down.

But I didn’t look away.

Let him see me. Let him see the cold, sharp edge of me—the part that had survived twenty years in the shadows. Let him see the weapon. The ghost. The daughter with a mother’s last scream still echoing in her bones.

And then—

He reached out.

Not to touch me.

Not to claim.

To hand me a dagger.

Black steel. Moon-forged. The blade etched with runes that pulsed faintly in the dark. The hilt wrapped in leather, worn smooth from use.

“For protection,” he said.

I took it. “I don’t need your gifts.”

“No.” He leaned back, his eyes burning into mine. “But you’ll take it anyway.”

And I did.

---

The Grand Hall was packed.

Not just the Council. Not just the human liaisons. Every werewolf, vampire, and Fae within the enclave had come to witness the blood oath. The silver fire had been rekindled, the braziers glowing faintly, the runes on the ceiling pulsing with dormant power. The air was thick with tension—thick, electric, watchful.

Kaelen and I entered together.

Not side by side. Not hand in hand. But close enough that the bond hummed between us, a low, insistent thrum, like a second heartbeat. I wore the same charcoal-gray cloak as before, the hood down, my hair loose, my face blank. He was dressed in full ceremonial armor—black leather etched with silver runes, the tattered remains of his cloak draped over one shoulder like a war banner.

Whispers broke out as we approached the dais.

“Did you see her face last night?” a Fae lord murmured.

“He’s claimed her,” a vampire hissed. “The bond’s complete.”

“Not yet,” said a werewolf Beta. “But it will be.”

I didn’t react. Didn’t flinch. Let them think what they wanted. Let them spread their rumors. I had a mission. A purpose. A mother’s last scream still echoing in my bones.

And yet—

When Kaelen’s hand brushed mine as we ascended the dais, my skin burned.

When he took his place at the head of the Lycan table, his presence like a storm, my breath caught.

And when the High Priestess called the chamber to order, her voice echoing through the hall, I felt it—

The pull.

Not just magic. Not just the bond.

Need.

“The emergency session begins,” the High Priestess intoned. “By ancient law, a blood oath shall be sworn between Envoy Azure and Alpha Kaelen to verify loyalty and bond integrity. You will both drink from each other’s wrist. You will speak your truths. And you will submit to psychic review.”

Murmurs. Outrage. But no one challenged her. Not openly.

Then it was my turn.

“I swear,” I said, voice steady, “to serve the Council with truth and honor. To uphold the Accord. To protect the enclave. And to stand beside Kaelen Thorne—not as his pawn, not as his pet, but as his equal.”

Gasps. Whispers. A few outright sneers.

And then—

Kaelen stepped forward.

“I swear,” he said, voice low, commanding, “to stand with Azure—not as her master, not as her Alpha, but as her mate. To protect her. To fight for her. To die for her. And if the Council seeks to harm her, if they seek to exile her, if they seek to silence her—” His ice-blue eyes locked onto the High Priestess. “—I will burn this hall to the ground before I let them touch her.”

The chamber erupted.

Before anyone could respond, he reached for the dagger at his belt—slid it across his palm. Blood welled, dark and rich, dripping onto the stone.

And then—

He offered his wrist to me.

Not gently. Not carefully.

>Like a challenge.

I didn’t hesitate.

I took it.

And I drank.

The blood was hot. Metallic. Thick with power. And then—

The visions came.

Not of battle. Not of blood.

Of me.

Me in the sparring ring, my hair falling around us like a curtain. Me in the healing chamber, my body arching into his touch. Me in the Grand Hall, my lips swollen from his kiss. Me in the carriage, my hands sliding into his hair, pulling him down like I was starving.

And then—

My name on my own lips.

Kaelen.

The chamber gasped.

Not from shock.

Not from horror.

From truth.

And then—

It was my turn.

I slit my palm. Offered it to him.

He didn’t hesitate.

He drank.

And then—

The visions came.

Not of vengeance. Not of rage.

Of him.

Him standing at the pyre, his face shadowed, his voice a whisper—I’m sorry. Him in the archives, his hand brushing the sigil on my collarbone—you’re mine. Him in the healing chamber, his fingers sliding between my thighs—you’re losing. Him in the war room, his lips brushing mine—you’re not your father’s sins.

And then—

My voice, raw, breaking—I hate you.

And his reply—Good. Hate me. But don’t stop wanting me.

The chamber fell silent.

No whispers. No murmurs. Just the crackle of the silver fire, the pulse of the runes, the echo of our truths in the vast, vaulted space.

And then—

The High Priestess spoke.

“The bond is true. The loyalty is sworn. The oath is sealed.”

But I didn’t feel relief.

Because I knew—

Vexis wasn’t done.

And the real war?

It had just begun.