The first drop of blood fell at midnight.
Not mine. Not his. But hers.
A Fae envoy—gilded mask cracked, silver hair matted with frost—collapsed at the base of the eastern gate, her throat slit with surgical precision, her hands folded over a blackened rose. No scream. No struggle. Just silence. And blood. So much blood, pooling on the obsidian steps like ink spilled from a broken quill.
They found the mark carved into the stone beneath her: a spiral, jagged and ancient—the sigil of the Unseelie oathbreakers. Malrik’s mark.
And beneath it, a single word, written in her blood:
“Mine.”
I stood at the edge of the dais, barefoot, the silk of my gown brushing the floor, the ring on my finger cold despite the heat of the torches. The war room was packed—Fae elders in shattered masks, witches with trembling hands, werewolf alphas with claws out and eyes glowing. They didn’t look at me. Didn’t look at Kaelen. Just stared at the body, at the blood, at the word that wasn’t just a threat.
It was a challenge.
A declaration.
I am still here. And I will take what is yours.
Kaelen stepped up behind me, his presence a wall, his heat searing through the thin silk of my gown. He didn’t speak. Didn’t touch me. Just stood close enough that I could feel the low hum of his power vibrating through the stone, through my bones, through the silence.
“They’ll demand action,” I said, voice low.
“Let them.”
“They’ll demand blood.”
“Then they’ll get it.”
“Not ours.”
“No.” His hand lifted, slow, deliberate, and brushed the scar on my palm—the one from the night I’d broken the bond. The skin was healed, but the memory wasn’t. “His.”
My breath caught.
Because he wasn’t just saying it.
He meant it.
And worse—
I believed him.
“You don’t know where he is,” I said.
“No.” He stepped closer, his body pressing against mine, his fangs just visible when he exhaled. “But he wants us to think he’s weak. He wants us to believe he’s broken. And that’s when he strikes.”
“So we wait.”
“No.” His hand slid up, cupping the back of my neck, tilting my face up to his. “We bait.”
My pulse roared.
“You want to use me as—”
“I want to use us.” His voice dropped, rough, dangerous. “He thinks he can divide us. He thinks he can make them doubt. But he doesn’t understand—our bond isn’t magic. It’s choice. And choice is stronger than fear.”
“And if he kills me?”
“Then I burn the world until there’s nothing left to hide in.”
My breath hitched.
Not from fear.
From truth.
Because he wasn’t just speaking to me.
He was speaking to the man who had tried to save my mother.
To the man who had bled for me.
To the man who had stayed when the bond broke.
And I believed every word.
“Then let’s make it real,” I said.
He didn’t smile. Didn’t flinch. Just pressed his forehead to mine, our breaths syncing, our hearts beating in time. “No magic,” he said. “No bond. No fate. Just us.”
“Just us,” I whispered.
And then—
He kissed me.
Not soft. Not slow.
Hard. Hungry. Desperate.
His lips crushed mine, his fangs grazing my tongue, his hands finding my waist, pulling me against him. I gasped, my hands clutching his coat, my body arching into his. There was no bond. No magic. No fate.
Just us.
And it was enough.
He broke the kiss, just enough to speak, his breath hot against my lips. “Say it.”
“Say what?”
“That you’re mine.”
“I’m yours,” I whispered.
“Say it again.”
“I’m yours,” I gasped.
And then—
The world flared.
Not with gold.
Not with magic.
With heat.
With need.
With choice.
And then—
Silence.
Thick. Heavy. Perfect.
He pulled me closer, tucking me against his chest, his arm heavy around my waist.
“You’re mine,” he murmured.
“And you’re mine,” I whispered.
He kissed the top of my head.
And then—
The wind howled.
And I whispered—just loud enough for the shadows to hear:
“Next time, I won’t stop.”
—
The Council chamber was packed.
Fae elders behind their gilded masks, their glamour flickering with disbelief. Witches with hands raised, sigils half-formed, their eyes wide. Werewolf alphas with claws out, growling low in their throats—not in threat, but in recognition.
And at the center—him.
Riven.
Dressed in gray leathers, his claws sheathed, his eyes sharp. He didn’t smile. Didn’t greet us. Just stepped forward as we approached, his presence a wall.
“They’re waiting,” he said, voice low.
“We’re not here to perform,” Kaelen said, not slowing.
“No.” Riven fell into step beside us. “But they need to see it. To believe it.”
“They’ll believe it when we speak,” I said.
“Or when you prove it.”
I didn’t answer.
Just kept walking.
And then—
We were there.
The dais. The throne. The chalice, shattered from the night of the vision, its pieces still on the floor.
I stepped forward.
Not behind Kaelen.
Not beside him.
Ahead of him.
The Council watched. No whispers. No movement. Just silence—thick, heavy, waiting.
“You were wrong,” I said, voice calm. “You accused me of treason. You forged my blood. You used lies to divide us. But you were wrong.”
“The bond is broken,” a witch said, stepping forward. Elder Maeve’s replacement—her face young, her eyes sharp. “You are no longer bound.”
“No,” I said. “We are not bound by magic. Not by fate. Not by coercion.” I turned to Kaelen. “But we are bound by choice.”
He stepped up beside me, his shadow stretching behind us like a second army. “Sable is not my mate by blood. She is my equal by will. And if you doubt it—” he reached into his coat and pulled out a silver chalice—ancient, etched with runes, its surface glowing faintly “—then let the truth speak.”
The witch hesitated.
Then stepped forward.
Poured a drop of Kaelen’s blood into the chalice.
Then a drop of mine.
And then—
She spoke the words.
Low. Ancient. Female.
“Veritas sanguis. Veritas vinculum. Revelate.”
The chalice flared.
Not red.
Not black.
Gold.
And then—
The vision came.
Not like a dream. Not like a memory.
Like a wound tearing open.
—
We were there.
The Chamber of Severing. The dais. The runes. The blood on the stone. I stood at the center, my dagger in hand, the Lexicon Nullum open at my feet. And then—
Kaelen stepped forward—into the blood, into the magic, into the storm—and pressed his palm to mine.
Our blood mixed.
Not in dominance.
Not in possession.
In choice.
“Then break it,” he said, voice rough. “And if I stay—know that it’s not magic. Not fate. Not duty. It’s me. Choosing you. Again. And again. And again.”
And then—
I said the final words.
“I release you. I release me. I release the bond.”
The world exploded.
Not with sound.
Not with light.
With silence.
A silence so deep it felt like falling. Like drowning. like dying.
The bond—our bond—shattered.
Not with a scream.
Not with a roar.
With a whisper.
Goodbye.
And then—
Nothing.
No pull. No heat. No hum. No magic.
Just emptiness.
And pain.
I fell to my knees, my hands clutching my chest, my breath coming in ragged gasps.
And then—
A hand.
Warm.
Steady.
His.
Kaelen knelt beside me, his body pressing against mine, his heat searing through my clothes. He didn’t speak. Didn’t move. Just wrapped his arms around me, pulling me into his chest, holding me like I was something precious.
“You’re still here,” I whispered.
“I told you I would be.”
“And the bond?”
“Gone.”
“And you?”
“Still yours.”
—
The vision ended.
The chamber was silent.
Not a whisper. Not a breath. Not a single movement.
And then—
One by one.
The elders bowed.
Not to Kaelen.
Not to me.
To the choice.
The truth had spoken.
And it had said: She is not his. They are equal.
Riven stepped forward, his eyes wide, his breath fast, his heart pounding—not with fear, but with guilt.
“You broke the bond,” he said, voice rough. “And he stayed.”
“He chose me,” I said.
“And if he hadn’t?”
“Then I would have walked away.”
“And if you had?”
“Then he would have followed.”
He didn’t flinch. Just held my gaze—dark, intense, knowing.
“You’re not just his equal,” he said. “You’re his queen.”
“No.” I stepped forward, pressing my palm to his chest, over where his heart would have been, if he had one. “I’m not his queen. I’m me. And I’m not here to rule. I’m here to rebuild.”
And then—
I snapped my fingers.
A spark.
Just one.
But it was enough.
The air flared—gold, hot, unstoppable—a surge of energy that made the runes on the walls scream, the torches explode, the floor crack beneath our feet. The air burned with magic, thick and sweet, like blood and storm and fire.
And then—
Silence.
Thick. Heavy. Perfect.
Riven stepped back.
And the Council parted.
They didn’t speak.
Didn’t move.
Just let us pass.
Because they knew.
We were no longer bound.
We were free.
And we were together.
—
Later, I stood at the window of the war room, staring out at the frozen peaks, my palm wrapped in cloth, the wound still tender, still pulsing with magic. The Lexicon Nullum was gone—burned, its ashes scattered to the wind. The mirror was shattered. The chamber sealed.
And the bond—
Was broken.
But I didn’t feel empty.
I didn’t feel lost.
I felt free.
Kaelen stepped up behind me, his arms wrapping around my waist, his heat searing through my clothes. He didn’t speak. Just pressed a kiss to the nape of my neck, his fangs grazing my skin.
“You’re not afraid,” he murmured.
“Of what?”
“Of this. Of us. Of what we’ve become.”
I turned in his arms, my hands finding his chest, my fingers brushing the scar on his wrist—where I’d bitten him. It pulsed beneath my touch, warm and insistent, not with magic, but with memory.
“I was,” I whispered. “But not anymore.”
He cupped my face, his thumbs brushing my cheeks. “And if the war comes?”
“Then we face it.”
“And if they try to break us again?”
“Then we break them first.”
He smiled—slow, dangerous—and then he kissed me.
Not soft. Not slow.
Hard. Hungry. Desperate.
His lips crushed mine, his fangs grazing my tongue, his hands finding my waist, pulling me against him. I gasped, my hands clutching his coat, my body arching into his. There was no bond. No magic. No fate.
Just us.
And then—
He broke the kiss, just enough to speak, his breath hot against my lips. “Say it.”
“Say what?”
“That you’re mine.”
“I’m yours,” I whispered.
“Say it again.”
“I’m yours,” I gasped.
And then—
The world flared.
Not with gold.
Not with magic.
With heat.
With need.
With choice.
And then—
Silence.
Thick. Heavy. Perfect.
He pulled me closer, tucking me against his chest, his arm heavy around my waist.
“You’re mine,” he murmured.
“And you’re mine,” I whispered.
He kissed the top of my head.
And then—
The fire in the hearth snapped shut.
And I whispered—just loud enough for the shadows to hear:
“Next time, I won’t stop.”