The twentieth dawn breaks not with peace, but with fire—cold, slow-burning, coiling through my veins like storm-born lightning. I wake tangled in black silk, my body humming not from the bond, not from desire, but from the echo of the vote, the weight of power, the taste of victory still sharp on my tongue. The Blood Oaths are annulled. Hybrids are free. My mother’s scream has become a monument. Kaelen and I—co-leaders. Bound. Claimed. Together.
And yet—
Something is wrong.
The bond thrums beneath my skin, yes—golden, electric—but it’s different. Sharper. Wilder. Like it’s been stretched to its limit and now vibrates with the strain of holding us together. My breath comes too fast. My skin is too sensitive. Every shadow feels like a threat. Every silence like a warning.
Kaelen is gone again. Not far—I can feel the bond, pulsing beneath my skin, steady, warm, like a second heartbeat. But he’s not here. And the silence is worse than his presence. Because absence doesn’t dull the pull. It sharpens it. Every nerve in me is tuned to him, aching for his return like I’ve been hollowed out and only he can fill the space.
I sit up, shoving the hair from my face. My storm-gray eyes scan the room—black silk sheets, the locket still on the nightstand, the fire reduced to embers. The proximity crystal sits on the table, dormant. No guard yet. No scan. Just silence. Thick. Heavy. Waiting.
And then—
A sound.
Not footsteps.
Not a shadow.
A whisper.
Not from the corridor.
No.
From inside.
“The bond remembers what you’ve forgotten.”
Lira.
My mentor. My blood magic teacher. The blind seer who taught me to wield pain as fuel, lies as weapons, and love as a war cry.
She’s not here. Not physically. But her voice—soft, ancient, knowing—curls through my mind like smoke.
“You’re close, child. So close to the truth.”
“What truth?” I whisper, pressing my palm to my forehead. “That I’m falling for him? That I want him more than I want justice?”
“No,” she murmurs. “The truth he’s buried. The one he’s afraid to show you.”
My breath catches.
And then—
The door opens.
Kaelen steps in, silent as shadow, his crimson eyes locking onto me before he even closes the door. But something’s different. His jaw is tighter. His posture sharper. There’s a flicker in his gaze—something like guilt? No. Impossible. Kaelen D’Rae doesn’t feel guilt. He *commands* it.
“You’re awake,” he says, voice low.
“I couldn’t sleep.”
He walks to the bed. Sits beside me. The mattress dips. The bond flares—golden, electric. My breath hitches.
“The moon passed,” he says. “Dain is stable.”
“I know.”
“And the bond?”
“It’s… stronger.” I lift my chin. “Like it’s not just binding us. It’s *revealing* us.”
He doesn’t flinch. Just watches me, his expression unreadable. And then—
He reaches out.
His fingers brush my cheek—slow, deliberate, warm. A spark races down my spine. The bond flares—golden, electric. My breath hitches.
“You’re not just fighting for justice,” he murmurs. “You’re fighting for me.”
“I’m fighting for us,” I correct. “For every hybrid who’s been called impure. For every woman who’s been bound against her will. For my mother.”
His thumb traces my lower lip. “And for me?”
“Even if I hate you,” I whisper, “I won’t let her win.”
He doesn’t smile. Doesn’t flinch. Just nods. “Then I’ll be there. At your back. Always.”
The guard arrives. Places the crystal between us.
It glows—gold. Bright. Stronger than ever.
“The bond is authentic,” the guard says. “You’re bound.”
Kaelen looks at me. “See? We belong together.”
I lift my chin. “This changes nothing.”
But my voice wavers.
And I know—
It changes everything.
We walk to the Hall of Accord in silence, the weight of the bond pressing between us. The constellations above shift into new patterns—omens, Lira once told me, of broken promises and shifting loyalties. I don’t know if I believe in omens. I believe in plans. In vengeance. In the cold precision of justice.
But this—this bond—is neither cold nor precise. It’s a living thing, coiled beneath my skin, whispering, closer, closer, every time I look at him.
The session begins. The Council is already in place, their faces solemn. Malrik is absent—held in chains, awaiting trial. Seraphine is there, seated in the far corner, her crimson dress a wound against the silver stone. Her fingers trace the bare spot on her ring finger. Her eyes—cold, calculating—lock onto mine.
And then—
The High Judge stands.
“Today,” he intones, “we address the matter of Cora Vale’s status.”
My breath catches.
This is it.
The reckoning.
“Despite the annulment of the Blood Oaths,” the Judge continues, “there remain questions about Emissary Vale’s identity, her allegiance, and the legitimacy of her bond with Lord D’Rae. Therefore, we summon Kaelen D’Rae to testify.”
Kaelen stands.
The chamber stills.
“Lord D’Rae,” the Judge says, “did you know Cora Vale’s true identity when the Soul Contract activated?”
“No,” he says, voice cold. “I did not.”
“And when did you discover it?”
“After the Bond Trial began.”
“And yet you did not report it?”
“I did not.”
“Why?”
He turns to me. His crimson eyes lock onto mine. And for a heartbeat—just one—I see it.
Not possession.
Not power.
Pain.
“Because I saw her,” he says. “Not as a fugitive. Not as a threat. But as a woman who had lost everything. A woman whose mother was taken from her by the very laws I was sworn to uphold.”
The chamber murmurs.
“And the bond?” the Judge asks. “Did it influence your decision?”
“It did,” Kaelen says. “But not in the way you think. The bond didn’t blind me. It *awakened* me. It showed me what I had refused to see for centuries—that power without justice is tyranny. That loyalty without truth is slavery.”
“And your feelings for her?” a witch asks. “Are they real? Or are they magic?”
He doesn’t hesitate.
“They are real,” he says. “Because I have fought them. Because I have denied them. Because I have tried to destroy them. And still—they remain. Not because of the bond. But because of *her*.”
The chamber erupts.
Some roar in fury. Others nod. Seraphine’s eyes burn with hatred.
And then—
The Judge raises his hand.
“We will recess,” he says. “And reconvene in one hour.”
We walk back to the suite in silence, the weight of his words pressing between us. The bond hums—stronger now, deeper, like it’s settled into my bones.
Back in the suite, I pace. My body is still trembling. My skin is too sensitive. My thoughts are tangled, raw.
“You marked me,” I say, voice low.
“I claimed you,” he corrects. “To protect you.”
“You took my choice.”
“The bond made the choice. I just followed it.”
“Liar.”
He steps closer. “You wanted it. You asked for it.”
“I don’t remember.”
“But your body does.”
He lifts our joined hands. The sigil glows—warm, alive.
“You’re mine,” he murmurs. “Whether you admit it or not.”
“I’ll never be yours.”
“Then why does your body say otherwise?”
Heat pools low in my belly. My thighs press together, trying to ease the ache. The bond flares—golden, electric.
And then—
My lips part.
Not in protest.
No.
In invitation.
He sees it. His eyes darken. His fangs lengthen.
He doesn’t kiss me.
Not yet.
But he wants to.
And gods help me—
So do I.
The door opens.
Dain stands there. “Apologies. The High Judge—”
He stops.
Sees our hands. Sees the way Kaelen holds me. Sees the heat in our eyes. Sees the bite on my neck. Sees the ring on my finger.
And he knows.
“I’ll return,” he says quietly.
The door closes.
The moment shatters.
Kaelen steps back. Slowly. Reluctantly.
“This isn’t over,” he says.
“It’s not even begun,” I reply.
But as I sit on the edge of the bed, my body still humming with something I can’t name—
I know one thing for certain.
The mission hasn’t changed.
But the war inside me?
It’s already lost.
And the first casualty?
My resistance.
The second?
My denial.
The third?
My lies.
And the fourth?
My heart.
Because as I glance at him—his profile sharp against the firelight, his crimson eyes glowing in the dark—I whisper the truth I’ve been fighting since the moment I walked in.
“I want you.”
And the bond—
It sings.
Later, when I’m finally asleep—curled on my side, one arm flung out, my breathing soft—I dream.
Not of the ritual. Not of the ride. Not of the way I came on his lap.
No.
I dream of fire. Of blood. Of a blade sliding between my ribs. Of Kaelen, standing over me, his fangs bared, his eyes dark with hunger.
And then—
He feeds.
Not from my neck. Not from my wrist.
From my heart.
I wake gasping, my hand flying to my chest. My heart hammers. Sweat slicks my skin. The bond hums—soft, steady, but deeper, like it’s settled into my bones.
And then—
A sound.
Footsteps.
Not in the corridor.
Inside.
My breath catches. I don’t move. Don’t speak. Just listen.
And then—
A shadow moves.
Not Kaelen.
Too small. Too quick.
A dagger glints in the firelight.
And then—
It lunges.
I roll. Barely. The blade grazes my arm—shallow, but burning. I kick out, catching the attacker in the stomach. They stumble back. I see their face—hooded, masked, but the eyes—vampire. Malrik’s enforcer.
They lunge again.
And then—
Kaelen moves.
Not to me.
No.
He throws himself in front of me.
The blade sinks into his chest—just above the heart.
He doesn’t cry out. Doesn’t flinch.
Just takes it.
And then—
He grabs the attacker’s wrist. Snaps it. Tears the dagger free. And with a single, brutal motion—
He rips out their throat.
Blood sprays. The body crumples.
And he stands there. Over me. Breathing hard. Blood dripping from his hands. From his chest.
“Kaelen—”
“Don’t move,” he says, voice rough.
He rips the fabric from the attacker’s cloak. Presses it to the wound. But it’s deep. Too deep. Blood seeps through. His face is pale. His fangs are retracted. His eyes—crimson, endless—lock onto mine.
“You’re hurt,” I say, voice raw.
“It’s nothing.”
“It’s not nothing.” I reach for him. “Let me heal you.”
“No.” He steps back. “I won’t take your blood.”
“You’ll die.”
“Then I’ll die.”
“Why?”
“Because I won’t take what you won’t give.”
My breath catches.
And in that moment—
I understand.
He’s not refusing my blood.
He’s refusing to claim me.
Not like this. Not in desperation. Not in fear.
He wants me to choose him.
And gods help me—
I do.
“Then take it,” I say, lifting my wrist. “Take it all.”
He hesitates. Then, slowly, takes my wrist.
And bites.
Not a graze. Not a tease.
A claim.
Deep. Hard. Possessive.
Fire erupts.
Golden light blazes between us. The sigil on our palms flares. And then—
A vision.
A man and a woman—us, but not us. In a past life. Bound by the same contract. Lovers. Warriors. Mates. We’re fighting—side by side—against shadowed figures. Vampires. Elders. They’re trying to break us. To sever the bond. And we—
We refuse.
“I would die for you,” he says.
“And I would rise for you,” I reply.
And then—darkness.
I stumble back, gasping. My heart hammers. The vision—too real. Too raw.
Kaelen’s eyes are wide. He felt it too.
The wound is sealed. Clean. Whole. Like it was never there.
“You healed me,” he says, voice rough.
“You let me.”
“I didn’t have a choice.”
“You did.”
He looks at me. “And now?”
“Now,” I say, “we end this.”
But as I touch the bite—warm, tender, alive—I whisper the truth I’ve been fighting since the moment I walked in.
“I want you.”
And the bond—
It sings.
The next morning, I go to the Chamber of Severing—a hidden sanctum beneath the Forum, its walls lined with ancient runes of breaking and release. I know he’ll be here. Kaelen. He’s been avoiding me, but not the past. And today, I’m not running from it either.
I find him at the center of the chamber, standing before a stone dais etched with blood sigils. The air hums with latent magic, thick with the scent of iron and old pain. His back is to me. His shoulders are tense. He doesn’t turn as I enter. Doesn’t speak.
“You knew,” I say, voice low.
He doesn’t flinch. “About what?”
“The Blood Oath. That it’s still active. That it’s not just law—it’s magic.”
Now he turns. His crimson eyes lock onto mine. “Yes.”
“And you didn’t tell me?”
“Because I knew you’d try to break it alone.” He steps closer. “And you’d die.”
“Then why are we here?”
“Because the bond gives us a chance.” He reaches for my hand. Lifts it. The sigil glows—warm, alive. “The Blood Oath can only be broken by mutual blood and consent. By the same two souls who forged it.”
My breath catches. “You mean—”
“I mean we have to reenact the ritual. But not to bind. To *break*.”
“And if it fails?”
“Then the magic consumes us.”
“And if it works?”
“Then you’re free.” He cups my face. “And I’m yours. Not by magic. Not by law. But by choice.”
I stare at him. The vampire lord. The enemy. The man who marked me, saved me, refused my blood until I offered it.
And now—now he’s offering his life to set me free.
“You expect me to believe that?” I say, voice shaking. “After everything? After my mother? After the lies? After the bond?”
“No,” he says. “I expect you to feel it.”
He steps closer. Lifts our joined hands. The sigil glows—warm, alive.
“You feel it,” he murmurs. “Every time I’m near. Every time I touch you. Every time I look at you.”
My breath hitches. The bond flares—golden, electric. Heat pools low in my belly.
“I hate you,” I whisper.
“Liar.” He leans in, his lips a breath from mine. “You want me. You need me. You care about me.”
“I don’t—”
“You do.” He brushes his thumb over my lower lip. “And I care about you. More than power. More than blood. More than life.”
And then—
I do it.
I pull away.
Not because I don’t believe him.
But because I do.
And that’s the most dangerous thing of all.
“I can’t trust you,” I say, backing toward the door. “Not yet.”
“Then don’t,” he says. “But don’t run from the truth.”
“What truth?”
“That we’re not enemies.”
“We are.”
“We were.” He steps forward. “But not anymore.”
“Then what are we?”
“Fated.”
“I don’t believe in fate.”
“You don’t have to.” He reaches into his coat. Pulls out a small, leather-bound journal. Hands it to me. “But you believe in this.”
I take it. Open it. The ink is faded. The handwriting sharp, precise.
“I tried to stop them. I begged. I fought. But they were too strong. They said the Blood Oath was law. That hybrids were not people. That love was weakness. I was seventeen. I had no power. No voice. No choice. But I swore—on my mother’s grave—that I would never let it happen again. That I would protect them. Even if it meant becoming the monster they feared.”
My breath catches.
“This is… from the night they took my mother,” I whisper.
“Yes.”
“You were there?”
“I was.”
“And you didn’t stop it?”
“I tried.” His voice is rough. “I was seventeen. I had no power. No title. No voice. They overruled me. They said I was too young. Too emotional. Too human.”
“And now?”
“Now I have power. Now I have a voice. Now I have a choice.” He steps toward me. “And I’m not letting you die like she did.”
My breath hitches.
“You’re not here to destroy me,” he says. “You’re here to free them. And I’m not your enemy. I’m your ally.”
I don’t answer.
But my hand—my bare hand—moves to my palm, covering the sigil.
And for the first time since I’ve known him—
I don’t flinch when he touches me.
And I know—
The war isn’t just between us.
It’s within us.
And the first casualty?
Her hatred.
The second?
My solitude.
And the third?
Our lies.
Because now—
We’re finally telling the truth.
And as I touch the mark—warm, tender, alive—I whisper the truth I’ve been fighting since the moment I walked in.
“I want you.”
And the bond—
It sings.
We stand on the dais, facing each other, our palms pressed together, the sigils glowing like twin stars. The chamber hums with ancient magic, the runes on the walls pulsing in time with our breath. The air is thick, charged, like the moment before a storm.
“Are you ready?” Kaelen asks, voice low.
“No,” I say. “But I’m doing it anyway.”
He nods. “Then say the words.”
I close my eyes. Breathe. And then—
“By blood and bone, by soul and stone, I break the chain that was not mine to own. By the life that was stolen, by the love that was denied, I sever this oath with the truth I now provide.”
Kaelen’s voice joins mine, deep, resonant, like thunder. “By fang and fire, by night and desire, I break the vow that fed on her pyre. By the guilt I have carried, by the grief I have known, I release her blood from the seed I have sown.”
Our palms burn. The sigils flare—golden, blinding. Blood wells from the cuts on our hands, mingling on the stone. The magic surges—wild, storm-born—and the chamber shakes.
And then—
A pulse.
Golden light blazes between us, surging through the chamber, shaking the stone, rattling the runes. The bond flares—white-hot, searing—like it’s celebrating, like it’s claiming us.
And in that moment—
I feel it.
Not just the magic.
Not just the bond.
But freedom.
The Blood Oath—centuries of slavery, of pain, of fear—shatters like glass. A scream tears from my throat—raw, primal, alive. My knees buckle. Kaelen catches me, pulls me into his arms, his breath hot on my neck.
“It’s over,” he murmurs. “You’re free.”
“We’re free,” I whisper.
And the bond—
It doesn’t sing.
It roars.
The next day, I go to the Hall of Mirrors—a private chamber used for diplomatic negotiations, its walls lined with polished silver that reflects every movement, every expression, every lie. I know she’ll come. Seraphine. She can’t resist a stage. And today, I’m giving her one.
I stand in the center, my back straight, my storm-gray eyes fixed on the door. The silver reflects me—tall, fierce, unbroken. The bite on my neck glows faintly, a mark of possession. Of power.
And then—
The door opens.
She steps in, dressed in crimson silk, her hair loose, her lips painted blood-red. Her eyes—cold, calculating—lock onto mine.
“You wanted to see me?” she says, voice dripping with false sweetness.
“I wanted to see him,” I say. “But you’re the only one who’ll answer.”
“Him?” She smiles. “You mean Kaelen? Oh, Cora. You really think he loves you? That he wants you?”
“I don’t think it.” I step closer. “I know it.”
“Because of the bond?” She laughs. “That’s not love. That’s magic. That’s compulsion.”
“Then why did he let me mark him?”
Her smile falters.
“Why did he choose me over you?” I press. “Why did he let me heal him? Why did he let me in?”
“He’s weak,” she snaps. “You’ve corrupted him. You’ve poisoned him with your hybrid filth.”
“No.” I step closer. “I’ve awakened him.”
Her eyes blaze. “You’re nothing. A fugitive. A bastard. A slave.”
“And you?” I whisper. “You’re a liar. A thief. A woman who wears stolen rings and whispers lies in the dark.”
She lunges.
Fast. Feral. Her nails slash toward my face.
I don’t flinch.
I catch her wrist—hard. Twist. Flip. Slam her against the nearest mirror.
Her back hits the silver with a crack. She gasps. Struggles.
I press my forearm to her throat. Lean in.
“You touched him,” I say, voice low, dangerous. “You put your hands on what’s mine.”
“He was mine first,” she hisses.
“No.” I reach for her hand. Grab the ring on her finger—the silver band with the black stone, Kaelen’s signet. “He was never yours.”
And then—
I pull.
The ring slides free.
She screams.
I hold it up. Let the silver reflect the light. Let it reflect her face—shocked, furious, broken.
“This?” I say. “This is a lie. A trap. A trophy.” I close my fist around it. “And now it’s mine.”
She sobs. “He gave it to me—”
“No.” I lean in, my lips to her ear. “He didn’t. And if he had… I’d still take it.”
I step back. Drop the ring into my pocket.
“You’re not his,” she whispers. “You’ll never be.”
“I already am.” I turn to leave. “And the next time you touch him? I won’t stop at the ring.”
The door closes behind me.
And for the first time since I walked into this place—
I feel it.
Not just victory.
Not just power.
But peace.
Because I’m not just fighting for justice.
I’m fighting for love.
And I will never let her take it from me.
Back in the suite, I find Kaelen waiting. He doesn’t speak. Just looks at me. Sees the fire in my eyes. The triumph.
“You confronted her,” he says.
“I did.”
“And?”
I reach into my pocket. Pull out the ring. Hold it up.
His eyes widen. “You took it.”
“She didn’t earn it.” I step closer. “You did.”
He doesn’t answer.
Just takes the ring. Slips it onto my finger.
“Now it’s yours,” he says.
And the bond—
It doesn’t sing.
It roars.
The morning after the vote, the Aethel Forum feels different. Lighter. The air doesn’t hum with secrets anymore. It hums with possibility. I stand at the edge of the Hall of Accord, watching the new guards—werewolves, witches, fae, and hybrids—patrol the corridors. Unity. Not tolerance. Not peace. Unity.
Kaelen is beside me, his presence a steady warmth against my side. He doesn’t speak. Just watches. Observes. For the first time, he doesn’t look like a ruler. He looks like a man. A man who’s finally found something worth protecting.
“They’re watching us,” I say.
“Let them.”
“They’re waiting for us to fail.”
“Then we won’t.”
I turn to him. “You really believe that?”
“I don’t believe it.” He reaches for my hand. Lifts it. The sigil glows—warm, alive. “I know it.”
And then—
The ground shakes.
Not violently. Not like an earthquake. But a deep, rolling tremor, like something ancient is stirring beneath the stone.
We both freeze.
“That’s not natural,” I say.
“No,” Kaelen murmurs. “It’s magic.”
And then—
A voice.
Low. Cold. Familiar.
“You think you’ve won?”
Malrik.
He’s supposed to be in chains. In the deepest cell beneath the Forum. Held by iron and enchantment.
But his voice—clear, mocking—echoes through the chamber.
“You’ve only delayed the inevitable.”
“Where is he?” I hiss.
Kaelen’s eyes blaze crimson. “Below.”
“He can’t break the wards.”
“He doesn’t have to.” Kaelen turns to me. “He just has to be heard.”
And then—
The walls tremble.
Runes flicker. Shadows twist.
And from the depths—
A pulse.
Dark. Vile. Hungry.
“He’s summoning something,” I whisper.
“Yes.” Kaelen grabs my hand. “And we’re the only ones who can stop it.”
We descend into the Underchamber—a labyrinth of stone corridors lit by flickering torches, the air thick with the scent of damp earth and old blood. The deeper we go, the heavier the air becomes, the stronger the pull of the dark magic.
And then—
We see it.
Not Malrik.
No.
A sigil—etched in black stone, pulsing with dark energy—burning in the center of the chamber. And above it—
Malrik.
Chained. Bound. But his eyes—black, endless—burn with triumph.
“You’re too late,” he says, voice echoing. “The Blood Oath may be broken, but the bloodline remains. And I have taken her blood. I have taken your blood. And with it—I control him.”
“You’re lying,” I say.
“Am I?” He smiles. “Then why is he trembling?”
Kaelen stiffens. His fangs lengthen. His eyes blaze.
“Kaelen?” I whisper.
He doesn’t answer. Just stares at Malrik. His body trembles. His breath comes in ragged gasps.
“He’s under my command,” Malrik says. “And soon—he will be my weapon.”
“No,” I say, stepping in front of Kaelen. “You don’t control him.”
“Don’t I?” Malrik raises a hand. “Kaelen—attack.”
Kaelen moves.
Fast. Brutal. His hand closes around my throat—hard. I gasp. Struggle. But his grip is iron.
“Kaelen—”
“Fight it,” he growls, voice strained. “I’m… trying…”
“Let her go,” Malrik commands.
Kaelen doesn’t. His hand tightens. My vision blurs.
And then—
I do it.
I bite him.
Not on the neck. Not on the wrist.
On the hand gripping my throat.
Deep. Hard. Possessive.
Fire erupts.
Golden light blazes between us. The sigil on our palms flares. And then—
A pulse.
Golden light surges through the chamber, shattering the dark sigil, shaking the stone, rattling the chains.
Kaelen stumbles back. Releases me. Clutches his hand.
“No!” Malrik screams. “You can’t break it!”
“I just did,” I say, wiping blood from my lip. “Because he’s not yours. He’s mine.”
Malrik snarls. “Then I’ll take you instead.”
He raises his hand. A blade of dark energy forms in the air—long, jagged, dripping with shadow.
“Cora—move!” Kaelen shouts.
I don’t.
I stand my ground.
Because I know what I have to do.
I raise my hand. Blood wells from my palm—my blood, the blood of my mother, the blood of the bond.
“By blood and bone,” I say, voice clear, “by soul and stone, I break the chain that was not mine to own.”
The blade lunges.
I don’t flinch.
I step forward.
And then—
Kaelen moves.
Not to me.
No.
He throws himself in front of me.
The blade sinks into his chest—just above the heart.
He doesn’t cry out. Doesn’t flinch.
Just takes it.
And then—
He grabs Malrik’s wrist. Snaps it. Tears the blade free. And with a single, brutal motion—
He rips out his throat.
Blood sprays. The body crumples.
And he stands there. Over me. Breathing hard. Blood dripping from his hands. From his chest.
“Kaelen—”
“Don’t move,” he says, voice rough.
He rips the fabric from the attacker’s cloak. Presses it to the wound. But it’s deep. Too deep. Blood seeps through. His face is pale. His fangs are retracted. His eyes—crimson, endless—lock onto mine.
“You’re hurt,” I say, voice raw.
“It’s nothing.”
“It’s not nothing.” I reach for him. “Let me heal you.”
“No.” He steps back. “I won’t take your blood.”
“You’ll die.”
“Then I’ll die.”
“Why?”
“Because I won’t take what you won’t give.”
My breath catches.
And in that moment—
I understand.
He’s not refusing my blood.
He’s refusing to claim me.
Not like this. Not in desperation. Not in fear.
He wants me to choose him.
And gods help me—
I do.
“Then take it,” I say, lifting my wrist. “Take it all.”
He hesitates. Then, slowly, takes my wrist.
And bites.
Not a graze. Not a tease.
A claim.
Deep. Hard. Possessive.
Fire erupts.
Golden light blazes between us. The sigil on our palms flares. And then—
A vision.
A man and a woman—us, but not us. In a past life. Bound by the same contract. Lovers. Warriors. Mates. We’re fighting—side by side—against shadowed figures. Vampires. Elders. They’re trying to break us. To sever the bond. And we—
We refuse.
“I would die for you,” he says.
“And I would rise for you,” I reply.
And then—darkness.
I stumble back, gasping. My heart hammers. The vision—too real. Too raw.
Kaelen’s eyes are wide. He felt it too.
The wound is sealed. Clean. Whole. Like it was never there.
“You healed me,” he says, voice rough.
“You let me.”
“I didn’t have a choice.”
“You did.”
He looks at me. “And now?”
“Now,” I say, “we end this.”
But as I touch the bite—warm, tender, alive—I whisper the truth I’ve been fighting since the moment I walked in.
“I want you.”
And the bond—
It sings.
Back in the Hall of Accord, the Council gathers. Malrik’s body is gone—taken by the guards. The dark sigil is shattered. The air is clean.
And then—
The High Judge stands.
“Today,” he intones, “we bear witness to the final act of justice.”
I step forward. Kaelen beside me.
“Malrik is dead,” I say. “The Blood Oath is broken. The chains are gone.”
“And the bond?” a witch asks.
I lift my hand. The sigil glows—golden, alive.
“This is not a chain,” I say. “It’s a choice. A claim. A truth.”
“And you?” the Judge asks Kaelen. “Do you stand with her?”
He doesn’t hesitate.
“I stand with her,” he says. “Not because of magic. Not because of duty. But because I choose to.”
The chamber stills.
And then—
One hand rises.
Then another.
Then another.
And then—
The entire Council rises.
Not in silence.
No.
In thunder.
Applause. Cheers. Shouts. The werewolves pound the table. The fae stand in silent reverence. The witches raise their hands in blessing.
It’s done.
Justice.
Peace.
And love.
And as I glance at him—his profile sharp against the firelight, his crimson eyes glowing in the dark—I whisper the truth I’ve been fighting since the moment I walked in.
“I want you.”
And the bond—
It sings.