The dream came again.
Not the one of my sister’s death—the red moon, the shattered glass of the scrying mirror, the scream that had torn through my chest like a blade. No. This was different. Older. Deeper. A whisper in the dark, a hand on my shoulder, a voice that wasn’t quite mine, but still *knew* me.
“*Find us,*” it said. “*Before they do.*”
I woke with a gasp, my fangs bared, my golden eyes flashing open in the dark. The royal chambers were silent, the torches low, the air thick with the scent of crushed moonstone and old magic. Kael lay beside me, his breathing slow and even, his silver eyes closed, his chest rising and falling beneath the wolf’s claw mark. He looked… peaceful. Not in the way of victory. Not in the way of rest. But in the way of someone who had finally stopped fighting.
I envied him.
Because I hadn’t.
I slipped from the bed, barefoot on the cold stone, my gown whispering against the floor. The sigil on my neck pulsed faintly, warm and alive, a brand not of pain, but of power. The spiral over my heart throbbed beneath my skin, a second heartbeat, steady and sure. I pressed my palm to it, grounding myself, reminding my body that I was not just a queen. Not just a mate. Not just a weapon.
I was Blair.
And I was still searching.
The dream had come every night since Mirela’s exile. Since she’d handed me the journal, its pages brittle with age, its ink faded but still legible. The journal of Nyx. My mentor. My mother in all but blood. The woman who had taught me to etch sigils into my skin, to channel magic through pain, to fight with fire and fang and fury.
And the woman who had died for the truth.
I had read the journal once. Twice. A hundred times. And every time, the same passage had leapt from the page, like a spell etched in blood:
“*There is a coven no one speaks of. Not in the halls of the Nine. Not in the whispers of the Bloodlines. They are the Forgotten. The Exiled. The Ones Who Wait. They live beneath the earth, in the ruins of the old temple, where the blood of the first witches still sings in the stone. They are warrior-witches, hybrids like Blair. And they are the only ones who can break the final seal on the Blood Vault.*”
I hadn’t believed it at first.
But then the dreams had started.
And now—now I knew.
They were real.
And they were calling me.
I moved through the palace like a shadow, silent and swift. The guards didn’t stop me. They didn’t even look. They knew better. The Feral Queen did not ask permission. She took what she needed.
The Blood Vault was sealed behind three layers of magic, each one stronger than the last. The first was a blood-lock—only a hybrid with both were and witch blood could open it. The second was a truth-rune—only someone who spoke the name of the one they loved could pass. The third was a silence-seal—only a voice that had never lied could break it.
I had opened the first two.
The third remained.
And now, I knew why.
Because I had lied.
Not to others.
To myself.
I reached the vault, the obsidian door looming before me, etched with runes that pulsed faintly in the dark. I placed my palm against it, whispering the words that had become my truth:
“I am Blair of the North Clan. Daughter of Seraphina. Heir to the Blood Vault. Mate to Kael. And I speak without lies.”
The door shuddered.
But did not open.
Because it knew.
Because I did.
I had not spoken the truth when I said I didn’t love him.
I had not spoken the truth when I said I hated him.
And the seal—it could not be broken by a heart that still denied its own fire.
I stepped back, my breath unsteady, my fangs bared. I had faced armies. I had faced death. I had faced the man I thought had murdered my sister.
But this—this was harder.
Because this was not a battle of blood or magic.
This was a battle of the soul.
“You’re up early.”
Kael’s voice came from behind me, low and rough, like velvet over steel. I didn’t turn. Didn’t need to. The bond flared beneath my skin, heat surging wild and uncontrolled. My breath caught. My knees weakened. My core clenched, wet and aching, as if my body had already decided, already *submitted*.
“I couldn’t sleep,” I said, my voice steady.
“You’ve been having the dream again,” he said, stepping beside me. He wasn’t in armor. No dagger at his hip. No fangs bared. Just a black tunic, his chest bare where the wolf’s claw mark glowed faintly beneath the fabric. He looked… human. Not in weakness. Not in softness. But in stillness. In surrender.
“You don’t know what I dream,” I said.
“I know enough,” he said, pressing his palm to the sigil on my neck. It flared silver-hot beneath my skin, and the bond *screamed*, a surge of pleasure so intense it made my vision blur. “I feel it. In the way you tense when you sleep. In the way your fangs bite your lip. In the way your body arches, like you’re reaching for something you can’t name.”
My breath came too fast.
My body trembled.
My core throbbed, empty, *aching*, as if my body had already decided, already *submitted*.
“Say it,” he growled, stepping closer, his breath hot against my ear. “Say you’re mine.”
“No,” I gasped, even as my hips rocked forward, seeking friction, seeking *more*.
He didn’t pull back. Just pressed his thumb to the sigil on my neck, making it flare silver-hot beneath my skin. The bond *screamed*, a surge of pleasure so intense it made my vision blur.
“Say it,” he demanded, his breath hot against my ear. “Or I’ll make you scream it.”
My breath came too fast. My body trembled. My core throbbed, empty, *aching*, as if my body had already decided, already *submitted*.
And then—
I shoved him back.
Hard.
He stumbled, his silver eyes dark, his chest heaving, his fangs bared. Blood smeared his lip—the mark I’d left. And the bond—oh, *Gods*, the bond—wasn’t just a thread.
It was a *chain*.
Forged in blood. Sealed in magic. *Unbreakable*.
“You don’t get to do this,” I said, voice shaking. “You don’t get to touch me like I’m yours. You don’t get to *claim* me.”
“You already did,” he said, stepping closer. “The night you bit me in the archives. The night you saved my life in the crypt. The night you let me press your hand to my chest and let the court *feel* us.”
I didn’t answer.
Because he was right.
And that was the most dangerous thing of all.
“I hate you,” I whispered.
“Then hate me,” he said, closing the distance between us. “But don’t you *dare* pull away.”
And then he was on me.
Not gentle. Not careful.
Relentless.
His mouth crashed into mine, hard and demanding, his fangs scraping my lip, drawing blood. I gasped, my body arching into his, my hands flying to his chest, not to push him away—but to *pull* him closer. His other hand tangled in my hair, yanking my head back, deepening the kiss, his tongue clashing with mine in a war of control and surrender.
The bond exploded.
Heat surged—wild, uncontrollable, consuming. My breath came in a gasp. My knees weakened. My core clenched, wet and aching, as if my body had already decided, already submitted. His scent wrapped around me like a drug. His hands—strong, possessive—gripped my hips, anchoring me, claiming me. And the world—oh, Gods, the world—burned.
I bit him.
Not in defense. Not in rage.
In claim.
My fangs sank into his lower lip, drawing blood, and he groaned, a sound so deep and primal it vibrated through my bones. He didn’t pull back. Just kissed me harder, his hands sliding under my gown, his fingers brushing the sigils on my ribs, making them flare white-hot beneath my skin.
“You’re mine,” he growled against my mouth. “Say it.”
“No,” I gasped, breaking the kiss, my voice raw. “I’m not—”
His hand moved—fast, firm, relentless—sliding between my thighs, pressing against the heat already pooling there. I whimpered, a sound I didn’t recognize, a sound of need. His thumb brushed my clit through the fabric, and the bond screamed, a tidal wave of pleasure that made my vision blur.
“Say it,” he demanded, his breath hot against my ear. “Or I’ll make you scream it.”
My breath came too fast. My body trembled. My core clutched, wet and desperate, as if my body had already decided, already submitted.
And then—
I shoved him back.
Hard.
He stumbled, his silver eyes dark, his chest heaving, his fangs bared. Blood smeared his lip—the mark I’d left. And the bond—oh, Gods, the bond—wasn’t just a thread.
It was a chain.
Forged in blood. Sealed in magic. Unbreakable.
“You don’t get to do this,” I said, voice shaking. “You don’t get to touch me like I’m yours. You don’t get to claim me.”
“You already did,” he said, stepping closer. “The night you bit me in the archives. The night you saved my life in the crypt. The night you let me press your hand to my chest and let the court feel us.”
I didn’t answer.
Because he was right.
And that was the most dangerous thing of all.
“I hate you,” I whispered.
“Then hate me,” he said, closing the distance between us. “But don’t you dare pull away.”
And then he was on me.
Not gentle. Not careful.
Relentless.
His mouth crashed into mine again, his hands tearing at my clothes, ripping the gown open, fabric scattering across the stone. I didn’t fight him. Didn’t resist. Just let him—let him strip me bare, let him press me against the wall, let him spread my thighs with his knee, let him grind against me, hard and demanding, his cock straining against his pants, the heat of him searing through the fabric.
“You want this,” he growled, his teeth scraping my neck. “You want me inside you. You want me to claim you. To mark you. To make you scream.”
“No,” I gasped, even as my hips rocked against his, seeking friction, seeking more.
“Liar,” he said, his hand sliding between my thighs, fingers slipping beneath my panties, finding me wet, ready, aching. He stroked me—slow, then fast, then furious—two fingers sliding inside, curling, pressing against that spot that made my back arch, my breath catch, my core clench around him.
“You’re so tight,” he groaned, adding a third finger, stretching me, filling me, making me whimper. “So fucking wet for me. You’ve been thinking about this. Dreaming about it. Needing it.”
“I don’t—”
He curled his fingers, pressing harder, and I screamed, my body convulsing around him, my orgasm crashing through me like a storm. He didn’t stop. Just kept stroking, kept pressing, kept claiming me, until I was trembling, sobbing, my nails digging into his shoulders.
And then—
He pulled his fingers out.
Slow. Deliberate. Taunting.
“Not yet,” he said, stepping back, his eyes dark, his chest rising and falling. “I’m not done with you.”
My breath came too fast. My body trembled. My core throbbed, empty, aching, as if my body had already decided, already submitted.
He unbuckled his belt. Unzipped his pants. Freed his cock—thick, veined, lethal—and stroked it once, twice, his thumb brushing the tip, smearing the precum across the head.
“Look at me,” he said, voice rough.
I did.
And the bond—oh, Gods, the bond—sang.
Not a warning. Not a hunger.
A recognition.
He stepped forward. Spread my thighs wider. Pressed the head of his cock against my entrance. And then—
He thrust.
Hard. Deep. Relentless.
I screamed—not in pain, but in relief, in release, in the sheer, unbearable rightness of it. He filled me—completely, utterly, irrevocably—and the bond exploded, a tidal wave of power and recognition that crashed through every cell in my body. I could feel him—his pulse, his breath, his soul—as if it were my own. His skin burned under mine. His breath came fast, shallow, matching my own. His silver eyes locked onto mine, wide, wild, terrified.
And then he moved.
Slow at first. Deep. Controlled. Each thrust a punishment, a claim, a truth. And then faster. Harder. Furious. His hips slammed into mine, the wall behind me cracking under the force, dust raining from the ceiling. His hands gripped my hips, anchoring me, possessing me. His fangs scraped my neck, drawing blood, and he groaned, a sound so deep and primal it vibrated through my bones.
“Say it,” he growled, his thrusts relentless. “Say you’re mine.”
“No,” I gasped, even as my body clenched around him, my second orgasm building, white-hot and unstoppable.
“Say it,” he demanded, thrusting harder, deeper, relentless. “Or I’ll make you scream it.”
And then—
I came.
Not a wave. Not a ripple.
A tsunami.
My body convulsed around him, my back arching, my nails digging into his shoulders, my scream echoing through the vaults. He didn’t stop. Just kept thrusting, kept claiming me, until I was sobbing, trembling, my voice breaking on his name.
And then—
He came.
With a roar that shook the stones, his fangs sinking into my neck, his cock pulsing inside me, his release flooding me, hot and thick and mine. The bond—oh, Gods, the bond—magnified, a tidal wave of power and recognition that crashed through every cell in my body. I could feel him—his pulse, his breath, his soul—as if it were my own. His skin burned under mine. His breath came fast, shallow, matching my own. His silver eyes locked onto mine, wide, wild, terrified.
And then—
He collapsed.
Not from exhaustion. Not from pleasure.
From the bond.
He dropped onto me, his body heavy, his breath ragged, his fangs still buried in my neck. The mark on his chest—the wolf’s claw—flared, then dimmed, then flared again, like it was struggling to stay alive. The sigil on my neck pulsed, silver and hot, as if the magic itself was answering his claim.
And I—
I didn’t move.
Didn’t speak.
Just lay there, my body still humming with the aftermath of his touch, of his thrusts, of his claim. My tears fell—silent, hot, unstoppable—tracking down my temples, soaking into the stone.
Not from pain.
Not from fear.
From grief.
For my sister.
For the years I’d lost.
For the man I’d hated who’d been innocent all along.
And for the terrifying, unbearable truth—
I didn’t hate him anymore.
I loved him.
And that was the most dangerous thing of all.
I finally lifted my head, my fangs sliding from his neck, my tongue flicking over the wound, sealing it. My golden eyes met his, dark, unfocused, filled with something I couldn’t name.
“Blair,” he whispered, voice rough. “I—”
“Don’t,” I said, turning my head away. “Don’t say it. Don’t apologize. Just… don’t.”
He didn’t argue.
Just rolled off me, lying beside me on the cold stone, his chest heaving, his hand finding mine, fingers tangling. The bond hummed between us, a living thing, feeding on the contact, on the heat, on the raw, unfiltered need that still flooded my body.
And then—
“You’re crying,” he said, voice quiet.
I didn’t answer.
Just let the tears fall.
And he—
He didn’t wipe them away.
Just held my hand.
“There’s something I need to do,” I said, sitting up, my body aching, my breath unsteady.
He looked at me. Said nothing.
“The Forgotten Coven,” I said. “They’re real. They’re beneath the old temple. And they’re the only ones who can break the final seal.”
His breath caught.
“You’re going to them.”
“Yes,” I said, standing. “Alone.”
He didn’t argue. Didn’t demand. Just sat up, wincing as he moved, his fangs still slightly bared, his hand never leaving mine.
“Then take this,” he said, pressing a silver locket into my palm. It was warm. Alive. Etched with the same spiral sigil that pulsed over my heart. “It’s tied to the bond. If you’re in danger, it will call me. And I will come. No matter the cost.”
I didn’t thank him.
Just pressed the locket to my chest, feeling the sigil flare beneath my skin.
And the bond—oh, Gods, the bond—sang.
Feral Claim
The night Blair’s sister died, the moon turned red over the Midnight Court.
Now, five years later, Blair walks through its obsidian gates—witch sigils carved into her ribs, wolf fangs sharpened under her tongue, a stolen key to the Blood Vault burning in her pocket. She is not here to negotiate. She is here to burn the vampire throne to ash and wear its ashes like a crown.
But the land remembers. The moment her boots touch the cursed soil, the earth shudders. A pulse of primordial magic—long dormant, tied to the first pact between vampire and were—explodes through her veins. Her breath catches. Her blood sings. And across the city, in his tower of bone and shadow, Kael, the exiled prince returned to reclaim his father’s empire, drops to one knee, fangs bared, as the scent of *her* floods his mind like a drug.
They meet in the war council chamber, masked as allies. One look. One breath. And the air between them crackles with violence and something worse: recognition.
When a rogue attack forces them into a cursed ritual to survive, their hands are bound in blood, their lips a breath apart. The spell demands truth. It demands touch. And when Kael’s thumb brushes her pulse, Blair feels it—the mate bond, roaring to life like a starving beast. She slaps him. He pins her. And in the silence that follows, she whispers the truth no one knows: *“I came here to kill you.”*
But the bond doesn’t care about revenge. It only knows hunger. And by Chapter 9, after a rival’s betrayal, a near-fatal ambush, and a night of fevered closeness in a collapsing crypt, Blair will save Kael’s life—and hate herself for it. Because the body remembers what the mind denies: they are fated. They are fire. And they are already falling.