The fortress exhaled.
Not in surrender. Not in relief. But in something quieter—like the land itself had been holding its breath since the night my mother died, and only now, after Lyria’s lie was burned away in the light of fae magic, could it finally let go. The sentinels moved with purpose, not tension. The elders whispered, but not in fear. And in the great hall, where the fire crackled and the maps of war still lay scattered across the stone table, Riven stood—his back straight, his gaze steady, his hand resting on the pommel of his blade like a promise.
And I—
I stood beside him.
Not as a prisoner. Not as a pawn. Not even as a reluctant ally.
As his equal.
The bond hummed between us, low and steady, a thrum beneath my skin. It wasn’t the fevered pull of the Chamber of Echoes. Not the sharp jolt of ignition. This was something deeper. Older. Like a current that had finally found its course, like a river that had broken through stone.
And yet—
I didn’t trust it.
I didn’t trust *him*.
Not completely.
Because Lyria’s lie hadn’t just been about the mark. It had been about *us*—about the truth of what we were, about the fragility of this thing between us. And even though the magic had spoken, even though the dagger had burned in her hand, even though the pack had seen her for what she was—
I still felt it.
The doubt.
The fear.
That one day, he’d look at me and see not a queen, not a warrior, not the woman who had saved him—but just another half-breed. Another abomination. Another mistake.
And I—
I wouldn’t survive that.
—
We didn’t speak as we walked back to the suite.
The corridors were quiet, the torches flickering low, the silver-lined walls blocking any trace of magic. Kael followed a few paces behind, his Beta instincts on high alert, his silence louder than any accusation. He didn’t ask if we were alright. Didn’t comment on the way Riven’s hand rested on the small of my back, possessive, protective.
He just watched.
And I knew—
He was waiting.
For the other shoe to drop.
For the fight.
For the moment when I remembered who I was supposed to be—avenger, destroyer, queen of ashes—and tore this fragile peace apart with my teeth.
And maybe he was right.
Because the moment the door closed behind us, I turned.
Not to Riven.
But to the fire.
“You let her get close,” I said, voice low. “You let her wear your ring. You let her whisper in your ear. You let her *touch* you.”
He didn’t flinch. “I was playing a game.”
“And what if you’d lost?” I asked. “What if the magic hadn’t burned her? What if the Council had believed her? What if—”
“Then I would’ve burned the Council,” he said. “And every vampire who stood with her.”
My breath caught.
“You say that now,” I said. “But you didn’t say it when she showed you the ring. You didn’t say it when she claimed you’d fed from her wrist. You didn’t say it when she said you’d *marked* her.”
“Because I was waiting,” he said. “Waiting for you to see it.”
“See what?”
“That I didn’t deny her,” he said. “Not at first. Not until *you* were ready. Because if I’d torn her apart the moment she arrived, if I’d called her a liar before the pack, before the Council—they’d have said I was protecting you. That I was weak. That I’d been *claimed*.”
“And now?”
“Now,” he said, stepping closer, “they see the truth. They see *us*. And they know—”
He reached up.
His fingers—warm, calloused—brushed my cheek, catching a strand of hair that had escaped my braid. His thumb traced the line of my jaw, slow, deliberate, like he was memorizing me.
“They know,” he said, “that you’re not just my mate. You’re my queen.”
My pulse jumped.
“Don’t,” I whispered. “Don’t say that. Not like it means something. Not like you get to decide who I am.”
“I don’t,” he said. “You do. But I see you, Tide. I see the woman who fought in the Chamber of Echoes. The woman who faced Lyria without flinching. The woman who carries the Key of Tides like it was born in her blood.”
“And what if I don’t want to be seen?” I asked. “What if I don’t want to be *known*?”
“Then you’re already too late,” he said. “Because I know you. I know the way your magic hums when you’re angry. I know the way your breath catches when you’re afraid. I know the way you bite your lip when you’re trying not to cry.”
My breath hitched.
“And I know,” he said, voice rough, “that you’re not what I expected.”
“Neither are you,” I whispered.
And then—
I slapped him.
Hard.
Not because I wanted to hurt him.
But because I needed to feel something real.
Something I could control.
His head snapped to the side. A red mark bloomed on his cheek. But he didn’t move. Didn’t flinch. Just stood there, his pale gold eyes locked onto mine, fierce and unbroken.
“Hit me again,” he said.
“What?”
“If it makes you feel better,” he said. “If it makes you feel in control. Hit me again.”
My hand trembled.
“You don’t get to do this,” I said. “You don’t get to stand there and look at me like I’m something precious. Like I’m something *yours*. Not after everything. Not after the lies. Not after the blood.”
“I do,” he said. “And I will. Every second. Every breath. Every heartbeat. And if you hate me for it, if you fight me for it, if you *burn* me for it—”
He stepped closer.
“I’ll still be here.”
My pulse roared.
And then—
I shoved him.
Hard.
He stumbled back, his boots scraping on the stone, his back hitting the wall with a thud. But he didn’t fight me. Didn’t grab my wrists. Didn’t pin me down.
Just let me.
“You don’t get to love me,” I said, voice breaking. “You don’t get to *want* me. Not after what you did. Not after what you are.”
“I never said I was good,” he said. “I never said I was clean. I’ve killed. I’ve lied. I’ve ruled with fire and blood. But I’ve never lied to *you*. Not when it mattered.”
“And Lyria?” I asked. “What about her?”
“She was a weapon,” he said. “A tool. A distraction. And I used her. Just like she used me. But I never touched her. Never bit her. Never claimed her. And if you don’t believe me—”
He reached for the collar of his tunic.
Yanked it down.
Exposing the scar—my mother’s sigil—burned into his chest. The mark of her knight. Her protector. Her *son* in all but blood.
“Then look,” he said. “Look at the truth. Look at the man who knelt before your mother. The man who swore to protect her child. The man who drank poison meant for you.”
My breath caught.
“You want proof?” he asked. “Then take it. Take everything. My body. My blood. My soul. But don’t you *dare* pretend you don’t feel this.”
He grabbed my wrist.
Pulled my hand to his chest.
Forced my fingers to trace the sigil, slow, deliberate, feeling the ridges of old magic, the warmth of his skin beneath.
And with each stroke, the bond hummed—stronger, deeper, *clearer*.
“You were never just my enemy,” I said, voice low. “You were my mother’s last hope. And now—”
“Now?” he asked.
“Now,” I said, “you’re mine.”
He didn’t smile.
But something in his eyes—something that had been frozen for ten years—began to thaw.
—
And then—
I kissed him.
Not soft. Not slow.
Hard. Deep. Full of everything I hadn’t said, everything I hadn’t done. My tongue swept into his mouth, claiming, demanding, and he answered like a man starved, his groan vibrating against my lips, his arms tightening around me, lifting me onto my toes.
The world narrowed.
There was no fortress. No pack. No Council. No war.
Just *us*.
His hands moved—down my back, over my hips, gripping me, holding me, *needing* me. Mine slid beneath his tunic, tracing the hard planes of his chest, the ridges of old scars, the heat of his skin. He shuddered, a low growl rumbling in his chest, and I felt it—his magic, his need, his *want*, pulsing against me, through me, *in* me.
And then—
The bond *flared*.
Not just magic. Not just fate.
Something deeper. Older. Like a door unlocking in my blood, like a memory rising from the dark.
I gasped.
Images—
My mother, standing in the moonlight, her silver hair flowing, her eyes fierce. Riven on one knee before her, his head bowed, his chest bared. Her hand presses to his skin, her magic flaring, the sigil burning into his flesh. “You are my shield,” she says. “My last hope. Protect my child when I am gone.”
And then—
Her voice, whispering in my mind: “He was never your enemy, Tide. He was your mother’s knight. Her protector. Her *son* in all but blood.”
And then—
Riven, on the floor of the High Court, pale, trembling, his body fighting off the backlash of fae magic. My hands on his chest, my magic humming beneath my skin. “Stay with me,” I whisper. “Don’t you dare leave now.”
And then—
His voice, rough, broken: “I knew what it would do to *you*. And that was enough.”
The visions came fast, one after another, a flood of memory and magic and truth. And with each one, the bond flared—hotter, stronger, *clearer*.
And then—
I felt it.
His pulse, racing beneath my fingers. His breath, ragged on my neck. His body, trembling, not from pain, but from *need*.
And mine—
My thighs clenched. My breath hitched. My magic surged, wild and electric, coiling low in my belly, pulling me toward him like gravity.
“Don’t stop,” I whispered.
He didn’t.
Just held me there, our mouths fused, our bodies pressed together, the bond thrumming between us like a storm breaking.
And then—
His thumb brushed my lip.
Just a touch. Light. Barely there.
But it burned.
And I knew—
This wasn’t just a kiss.
This wasn’t just magic.
This was *us*.
—
He lifted me.
One smooth motion, his arms sliding beneath my back, carrying me to the bed like I weighed nothing. He didn’t lay me down gently. Didn’t undress me slowly.
He *took*.
His hands tore at my tunic, buttons flying, fabric ripping, exposing my skin to the cold air. His mouth followed, hot and desperate, kissing my collarbone, my throat, the pulse in my neck. I arched into him, my fingers tangling in his hair, pulling him closer, needing more.
And then—
He stopped.
Just stared at me. Really stared.
My body bare beneath him, my skin glowing in the firelight, my magic humming beneath my skin. And I saw it—not just desire.
Awe.
“You’re beautiful,” he said, voice rough. “Not just your body. Not just your power. *You*. The way you fight. The way you lead. The way you *live*.”
My breath caught.
“I don’t want pretty words,” I said. “I want *you*.”
He didn’t answer.
Just lowered his head.
And kissed me—slow, deep, full of grief and hope and ten years of rage and longing. His tongue swept into my mouth, claiming, demanding, and I answered like a woman starved, my hands finding his chest, his hips, pulling him into me.
And then—
He entered me.
Not fast. Not rough.
Slow. Deep. Like he was memorizing every inch. I gasped, my back arching, my fingers digging into his shoulders. He stilled, his breath ragged on my neck, his body trembling.
“Tide,” he whispered.
“Don’t stop,” I said.
And he didn’t.
Just moved—slow at first, then faster, deeper, until the world narrowed to the sound of our breath, the heat of our skin, the pulse of the bond between us.
And then—
I came.
Not quietly. Not gently.
Hard. Shattering. Like a wave breaking against stone. My body clenched around him, my magic surging, wild and electric, coiling low in my belly, pulling me toward him like gravity.
And then—
He followed.
His groan vibrating against my lips, his body shuddering, his release hot and thick inside me. He collapsed onto me, his breath ragged, his heart pounding against my chest.
And then—
He rolled us.
Pulled me on top of him, my back to his chest, his arms wrapped around me, holding me close. His lips brushed my shoulder, slow, tender, like he was savoring me.
“I choose you,” I whispered.
He didn’t answer.
Just held me tighter.
And in that moment, I knew—
This wasn’t just makeup.
This wasn’t just sex.
This was *love*.
And I—
I wasn’t afraid anymore.
Because for the first time in ten years—
I was exactly where I was meant to be.