The summons from the Blood Moon Coven came not in words, but in blood.
Three days after the chalice had awakened, after the Council had knelt and the truth had been etched into stone, a single drop of crimson appeared on the highest sill of the West Spire—my blood, spilled but not by my hand. The scent was unmistakable: old magic, ancient pain, and beneath it, a whisper of hope. The chalice had screamed when I touched it. The runes had flared. And Elara—pale, breathless—had gasped as a vision tore through her: me, kneeling in a circle of runes, Kaelen before me not as my prisoner, but as my equal, our bond not a chain, but a crown.
Now, we stood at the edge of the Blackveil Forest, where the trees grew so close their branches wove into a canopy of shadow, and the air hummed with forgotten power. The Blood Moon hung low, a swollen eye in the sky, its crimson light bleeding through the leaves like a wound. Kaelen stood beside me, his presence a wall, his heat searing through the thin fabric of my shirt, his breath warm at my neck. He didn’t speak. Didn’t touch me. Just stayed near—close enough that I could feel the bond humming between us, low and insistent, a tether wound tight around my ribs.
And I—
I didn’t pull away.
Because if I did…
I’d have to admit how much I needed him.
Elara stepped forward, her silver hair flowing like moonlight, her eyes sharp as daggers. She didn’t bow. Didn’t kneel. Just looked at me, her gaze lingering on the chalice, then on me. “This is no ordinary trial,” she said, her voice like silk over steel. “The Hollow Throne isn’t a seat. It’s a test. A trial of blood, memory, and surrender. If you fail, the chalice will reject you. If you succeed—” she hesitated—“you become more than Heir. You become Sovereign.”
“And Kaelen?” I asked, my voice quiet, but carrying.
“He walks with you,” she said. “But the throne chooses alone.”
My breath caught.
Not from fear.
From understanding.
The chalice wasn’t just a weapon. It wasn’t just a voice. It was a gateway. And if I wanted to control it—if I wanted to use it to expose the rest of the lies, to dismantle the Council, to protect what we’d built—I had to give it a piece of myself.
“Then I’ll give it,” I said, stepping forward.
“No,” Kaelen growled, his voice low, dangerous. “You don’t know what it’ll take.”
“I do.” I turned to him, my storm-gray eyes meeting his amber ones. “It’ll take everything. But I’m not doing this for me. I’m doing it for Lira. For my mother. For the truth.”
He didn’t flinch. Just looked at me—into the fear, the hunger, the need—and I saw it.
The crack.
The moment he stopped seeing me as a weapon.
And started seeing me as his.
“Then I’ll be there,” he said, voice rough. “To carry you back.”
And then—
We stepped into the forest.
The air changed instantly—thicker, older, charged with something deep and primal. The trees loomed like sentinels, their bark etched with runes that pulsed faintly in the dim light. The ground beneath my boots was soft, damp with moss and memory. And ahead—through the shifting veil of shadow—a throne.
Not of gold. Not of stone.
Of bone.
Twisted, ancient, rising from the earth like a root from some forgotten beast. Its back arched high, its arms carved into claws, its seat stained dark with centuries of sacrifice. The Hollow Throne.
And at its base—blood.
Fresh. Crimson. Pooled in a perfect circle, its edges marked with sigils that glowed faintly in the Blood Moon’s light.
“Step into the circle,” Elara said, her voice barely above a whisper. “The trial begins when your blood touches the earth.”
I didn’t hesitate.
I stepped forward.
The moment my boot touched the blood, the runes flared—crimson, violent, hungry. The air warped. The torches roared. The sigils pulsed in time with my heartbeat. And then—
Darkness.
Not absence. Not void.
Memory.
I was back in the Fae High Court, the night the ritual began. The Blood Moon stained the snow like spilled secrets. My boots were silent on ancient stone, my pulse steady. I carried no weapon—only truth, and a sister’s ashes in a silver locket. I had come to burn the council down.
But I hadn’t.
I’d come to burn myself down.
Because I wasn’t just avenging Lira.
I was punishing myself.
For surviving.
For not being there.
For not being strong enough.
And then—
The ritual began.
A surge of magic slammed into me—the Blood Moon Claim, long forbidden, now reawakened. My body arched as fire licks through my veins, my scream merging with a howl that shook the towers. Across the chamber, Kaelen, the Wolf King, snarled, his amber eyes blazing. He didn’t summon this. No one did. The blood moon chose them.
And I—
I hated him.
Not because he’d killed Lira.
But because he’d made me feel.
Because the bond had cracked me open.
Because his touch made me burn.
Because his scent drove me feral.
Because every time our skin met, magic flared—uncontrolled, dangerous, intoxicating.
And I—
I didn’t want to want him.
But I did.
Not just his body.
Not just his power.
Him.
And that terrified me.
Because if I wanted him…
Then I wasn’t just a weapon.
I wasn’t just an avenger.
I was a woman.
And I didn’t know how to be that.
The vision shifted.
Me, waking half-naked, Kaelen’s hand on my hip. Panicking. Fleeing. Him pinning me against the wall: *“You want to hate me? Fine. But don’t lie—you’re wet for me.”* Me slapping him… then kissing him, desperate, angry, aching.
That night, in a storm-lit tower, he corners her—raging, possessive, desperate—and she slaps him… then kisses him back with teeth and fire.
By dawn, her mission is compromised. By the full moon, her heart may be too.
And I—
I’d told myself it was a mistake.
A weakness.
A betrayal of Lira.
But it wasn’t.
It was the first time I’d been honest.
With myself.
With the bond.
With him.
The vision shifted again.
Me, standing before the Council, the chalice in my hand, my voice rising in a spell of truth, the runes blazing as the magic poured out, exposing every lie, every betrayal, every murder. Kaelen at my side, not as my captor, not as my enemy—but as my equal. Our bond not a chain, but a crown. Our union not a curse, but a reign.
And then—
Me, biting Kaelen back.
Not deep. Not hard.
Just enough.
A mark. A promise. A vow.
And as the bond flared between us, stronger than ever, I knew one thing for certain.
He wasn’t my prisoner.
He wasn’t my pawn.
He wasn’t even just my mate.
He was my king.
And I was his queen.
The darkness shattered.
I gasped, my body arching, my core clenching, my breath coming in short, desperate gasps. My skin burned where the chalice touched me. My pulse thundered in my ears. My thighs trembled.
And Kaelen—
He was there.
His arms around me, his chest rising and falling against my back, his heat searing through the thin fabric of my shirt. He didn’t speak. Didn’t try to fix it. Just held me, his breath warm at my neck, his presence a wall against the darkness.
And then—
I let go.
Not of Lira.
Not of the mission.
Of the lie.
The lie that I had to do this alone.
The lie that love made me weak.
The lie that vengeance was the only way to honor her.
And when I looked up, Elara was smiling.
“You have passed the first trial,” she said, her voice low. “You have surrendered your fear. Your doubt. Your need to control. And in doing so, you have claimed your power.”
I didn’t speak. Just looked at Kaelen.
And he looked at me.
And in that moment—
There were no lies.
No vengeance.
No war.
Just us.
And the truth.
“The Blood Moon Heir is no longer hidden,” Elara said, stepping back. “She has risen. And with her—the coven.”
A murmur ran through the chamber—soft, reverent, awed.
And then—
The torches flared.
The sigils blazed.
The runes pulsed.
And the Blood Moon—
The Blood Moon blazed above, its crimson light no longer a stain.
But a crown.
Elara stepped forward, her storm-gray eyes burning into mine. “You are not tainted,” she said, her voice quiet, but carrying. “You are not weak. You are seen.”
“Always,” I said, stepping forward, my hand closing over hers, my fingers intertwining with hers, my grip firm, steady, real. The bond flared—hot, bright, not with fire, not with vision, but with truth. And the chamber fell silent.
And then—
I turned to Kaelen.
He didn’t speak. Just stepped forward, his presence a wall, his scent overwhelming—pine, smoke, male. His hand closed over mine, his fingers intertwining with mine, his grip firm, steady, real. The bond flared—hot, bright, not with fire, not with vision, but with truth. And the chamber fell silent.
“You don’t have to do this,” I whispered. “You could walk away. Rule alone. Be free.”
“And if I did,” he said, his voice low, rough, “would you still look at me like that?”
“Like what?”
“Like I’m the only water in a desert. Like I’m the only truth in a world of lies. Like I’m yours.”
My breath caught.
And then—
I kissed him.
Not soft. Not slow.
Hard. Deep. Public.
My lips met his, claiming, tasting, devouring. His hands flew to my waist, pulling me closer, his body arching into mine, his core clenching, needy. The bond flared—not with fire, not with vision—but with power. And the chamber fell silent.
When I pulled back, my eyes glistened. “You’re mine,” I murmured, so only he could hear. “And I’m yours. No matter what they say.”
And then—
Elara stepped forward.
Her storm-gray eyes burned into mine. “The reign begins,” she said. “And it begins with truth.”
I didn’t answer. Just turned, my boots silent on the stone, the chalice a familiar weight in my hand, the locket at my throat warm against my skin. I didn’t stop until I was at the center of the chamber, the spiral beneath my feet, the torches flaring as I raised the chalice.
And then—
I spoke.
Not in my voice.
In hers.
The voice of the Blood Moon Heir—ancient, resonant, commanding. Words I didn’t know spilled from my lips, in a language older than the packs, older than the Fae, older than the vampire houses. The runes on the walls blazed crimson. The torches flared. The sigils pulsed in time with my voice.
And then—
The vision came.
Not for me.
For them.
The Fae lord with eyes like storm clouds gasped, his body stiffening, his eyes widening. I saw it in his face—the truth unfolding behind his eyes. Me, standing before the Council, the chalice in my hand, my voice rising in a spell of truth, the runes blazing as the magic poured out, exposing every lie, every betrayal, every murder. Kaelen at my side, not as my captor, not as my enemy—but as my equal. Our bond not a chain, but a crown. Our union not a curse, but a reign.
And then—
One by one, they dropped to their knees.
Not in submission.
In recognition.
Even Thorne, the werewolf elder who had once sneered at my half-blood status, knelt, his head bowed, his breath ragged. The chamber erupted—not in protest, but in awe.
And then—
I lowered my hand.
The runes dimmed. The torches returned to their steady glow. The vision faded.
And I—
I turned to the kneeling Coven.
“You called me nothing,” I said, my voice quiet, but carrying. “But the magic knows me. The Blood Moon knows me. And if you are wise, you will learn to know me too.”
The elder witch looked up, her gaze steady. “We see you, Blood Moon Heir.”
“Then rise,” I said. “And serve.”
They did.
And when they stood, the chamber was silent.
But it wasn’t the silence of fear.
It was the silence of respect.
Kaelen stepped forward, his hand closing over mine, his fingers intertwining with mine, his grip firm, steady, real. The bond flared—hot, bright, not with fire, but with light. And the chamber fell silent.
“You were magnificent,” he murmured.
“I was terrified,” I whispered back.
“And yet you stood.”
“Because you were beside me.”
He didn’t smile. Just looked at me—into the fear, the hunger, the need—and I saw it.
The crack.
The moment he stopped seeing me as a weapon.
And started seeing me as his.
And then—
The fire crackled.
The Blood Moon glowed.
And for the first time since this nightmare began…
I wasn’t alone.
And I never wanted to be again.