The first thing I feel when the alarm shatters the silence is the taste of war on the wind.
Not the siren—though it wails through the palace like a dying wolf, high and sharp and endless. Not the tremor beneath my feet—though the stone shudders as if the mountain itself is convulsing. No, this taste is older. Colder. It slithers down my throat, metallic and bitter, like blood left too long in the sun. The bond hums beneath my skin—low, steady, awake—but it doesn’t flare. Doesn’t scream. Just knows. Like I do.
They’re coming.
And they’re not here to talk.
Kaelen is already moving—boots on stone, blade in hand, his body a furnace in the dim light of our chambers. He doesn’t speak. Doesn’t look at me. Just grabs his coat, his armor, the silver dagger at his belt. The scar across his throat catches the torchlight, a jagged line of old fire and older guilt. I rise, silent, my magic flaring at my fingertips, my own blade already in hand. The gown from last night is gone—burned, maybe, or left in the ballroom like a discarded lie. I wear leather now. Dark. Fitted. Built for blood.
“You don’t have to do this,” he says, pausing at the door, his golden eyes molten, feral, hers.
“Yes,” I say, stepping beside him. “I do.”
He doesn’t argue. Just nods, once, and we move.
The halls are chaos—werewolf guards shouting, Fae nobles fleeing, vampire lords vanishing into shadows. The scent of fear is thick, cloying, mixed with iron and ozone. We reach the war chamber just as Dain bursts through the east door, his face bloodied, his blade dripping.
“They’re scaling the cliffs,” he growls. “Shadow-walkers. Hundreds. Armed with cursed steel. They’ve breached the outer wards.”
Kaelen doesn’t flinch. Just turns to me. “You should stay here.”
“And let you fight alone?” I press my palm to his chest, over his heart. “I’m not your weakness. I’m your weapon.”
He doesn’t answer.
Just cups my jaw, his thumb brushing my lower lip. “Then stay close.”
We move fast—through the palace, down the spiraling stairwell, into the Undercroft. The air grows thick, the scent of blood and iron sharp in my nose. The skimmer waits at the platform, its engine humming. Dain boards first, blade at his side. Kael follows, silent, watchful. Kaelen helps me in, his hand lingering on my waist, his breath hot on my neck.
“You don’t have to do this,” he murmurs.
“Yes,” I say. “I do. This isn’t just about the Heartstone. It’s about justice. About rewriting the rules. About proving that hybrids aren’t mistakes. That we’re *stronger* because of what we are.”
He doesn’t answer.
Just pulls me close, his lips brushing my temple. “Then I’ll burn the world to keep you safe.”
The skimmer lifts, cutting through the mist, the cliffs rising ahead like jagged teeth. The Fae assault is already underway—arrows of light slicing through the air, curses exploding against the wards, shadow-walkers scaling the stone like spiders. The eastern gate is breached. Flames lick the towers. The sky is black with smoke.
“They’re targeting the vault,” Kael says, his voice low. “The Heartstone.”
“And us,” I say. “This isn’t just an attack. It’s a purge.”
Kaelen doesn’t look at me. Just grips his blade tighter. “Then we make sure they fail.”
We land on the platform, the wind howling, the air thick with old magic and fresh blood. We disembark—Dain first, then Kael, then Kaelen, then me. The battle is already raging—werewolves fighting shadow-walkers, Fae archers raining cursed arrows, vampire lords feeding on the fallen. The ground is slick with blood. The air hums with power.
And then—
I see her.
Queen Isolde stands at the edge of the cliff, her gown a cascade of silver and black, her eyes like ice. She doesn’t move. Doesn’t speak. Just watches. And I know—
This is personal.
“You think love makes you strong?” she purrs, her voice carrying over the wind. “Love is weakness. Bonding is *slavery*. And you—” she points at me—“are nothing but a stain. A mistake. A *ghost*.”
My magic flares—wild, bright, *hers*—crackling at my fingertips. “And you’re nothing but a coward. You burned my coven. You marked me with fire. But I survived. And now—” I step forward, my voice rising—“I have an army.”
She laughs. Sharp. Bitter. “You have *no one*.”
“No,” I say. “I have *him*.”
I turn.
Kaelen breaks free—tearing through the shadows, his body a furnace, his eyes molten gold. He charges, fangs bared, claws at his fingertips. Isolde raises her hand, but he’s faster. He slams into her, knocking her back, his growl shaking the cliffside.
“She’s not alone,” he snarls. “And if you touch her—” he pins her to the ground, his fangs at her throat—“I’ll rip out her heart.”
“And what of the Council?” she hisses. “The truce? The peace?”
“Peace built on lies is no peace,” I say, stepping forward. “And I’m done protecting a throne that feeds on the bones of the innocent.”
She doesn’t flinch. “Then you’re no queen.”
“No,” I say. “I’m something better. I’m a woman who loves him. And I’ll tear the sky apart before I let you take him.”
The Heartstone pulses.
Not from magic. Not from force.
From the bond.
It explodes—a surge of heat, of light, of merging—our powers fusing, our breaths tangling, our bodies remembering what our minds have denied. Gold floods the battlefield—then silver, then deep, blood-red. The runes on the ground flare—then *crack*. The cliff trembles. The air shudders.
And Isolde—
She *staggers*.
Not from fear.
From *recognition*.
Because she sees it now.
Not just the bond.
Not just the magic.
The truth.
That we are not broken.
We are unbreakable.
She lowers her hand.
“You think this changes anything?” she hisses.
“No,” I say, pulling Kaelen closer. “It *is* the change.”
She doesn’t answer.
Just turns and walks into the shadows, her gown trailing like smoke.
The battle rages on—shadow-walkers falling, wards reactivating, the eastern gate sealing. But the tide has turned. We’re winning.
And then—
A flicker.
Not wind. Not shadow.
Memory.
I freeze. The battlefield shifts—walls cracking, light flaring—and suddenly, I’m not on the cliff.
I’m in the coven.
The fire is everywhere. The roof collapses. Women scream. Children cry. My mother stands at the center, her arms raised, her voice chanting the final spell. And then—
She sees me.
“Nebula!” she screams. “Run!”
But I can’t move.
I’m frozen. Trapped. Drowning in the past.
“Nebula,” Kaelen’s voice cuts through the vision. “Look at me.”
I do.
He’s in front of me, his golden eyes molten, his hand gripping mine. “You’re not there. You’re *here*. With me.”
The vision shatters.
We’re back on the battlefield.
But the bond flares—not with heat, not with desire.
With truth.
“It’s testing us,” I say, breathless. “The battlefield. It wants us to fail. To turn on each other.”
“Then we don’t,” Dain says. “We move. Together.”
We do.
Deeper into the fight. Past traps of illusion, of fear, of guilt. We fight—Dain against shadow-walkers, Kael against cursed runes, Kaelen and me back-to-back, our magic merging, our bodies remembering what our minds have denied. Fire and fang. Witch-light and wolf-sight. We are not just a team.
We are a weapon.
And then—
We reach the vault.
The door is shattered. The runes cracked. Inside, the Heartstone floats—pulsing faintly, its light dim, its power fading. Around it, a circle of blood and ash. And standing before it—
Lysara.
She turns, her gown a cascade of blood-red silk, her eyes like ice. “Nebula,” she purrs. “How *dare* you return.”
“You’re not taking it,” I say, stepping forward.
“And you’re not stopping me,” she says. “Not when your mate is about to die.”
She raises a dagger—black, cursed, etched with Fae runes.
And then—
She lunges.
Not at the Heartstone.
At Kaelen.
I move—faster than thought, faster than magic. I step in front of him, my body a wall of heat, my arms outstretched.
The blade sinks into my chest.
Deep.
Final.
“Nebula!” Kaelen screams, catching me before I fall.
I look up. Lysara is gone. Vanished. But her laughter echoes in the chamber, sharp, bitter, *victorious*.
“You idiot,” I sob, pressing my mouth to the wound, my magic flaring, my tears mixing with my blood. “You can’t die. I haven’t forgiven you yet.”
He smiles.
Weak. Fading.
“Then don’t,” I whisper. “Don’t forgive me. Just… live.”
And then—
The bond screams.
Not in pain.
Not in heat.
In love.
I press my palms to the wound, over the cursed steel, and let my magic burn.
Not wild. Not uncontrolled.
Precise.
Every witch knows the cost of healing. Blood for blood. Breath for breath. Life for life. And I don’t care. I’d give every drop if it meant he stayed with me.
My magic flares—wild, bright, hers—crackling up my arms like lightning, searing through my veins, flooding into his body. I feel the curse resist—cold, sharp, ancient—but I push harder, deeper, forcing my power into the wound, into his heart, into the very core of his being. The sigil on my wrist burns—hot, alive, awake—and the bond screams in protest, not from pain, but from the sheer force of what I’m doing.
I’m not just healing him.
I’m rebirthing him.
“Nebula,” he gasps, his fingers twitching, his eyes fluttering open. “Stop… you’ll die…”
“And if I do,” I say, my voice rough, raw, “then we die together. But I’m not letting you go. Not now. Not ever.”
I lean down, press my lips to his—not in passion, not in desire, but in ritual. My breath flows into his, mine into his, our magic merging, our souls tangling. The bond explodes—a surge of heat, of light, of merging—our powers fusing, our breaths tangling, our bodies remembering what our minds have denied.
And then—
I feel it.
The curse breaking.
Not all at once. Not easily. But piece by piece, thread by thread, it unravels, consumed by the heat of my magic, by the truth of the bond, by the sheer, stubborn force of my love. His heartbeat steadies. His breath deepens. His skin warms beneath my hands.
But I don’t stop.
I can’t.
Because I know what’s coming.
The fever.
It’s already rising—low in my gut, a slow, insistent pulse that thrums in time with the bond. Without the blood oaths to stabilize it, without the Heartstone’s light to calm it, the bond-heat will consume us. And this time, there’s no ritual. No delay. No choice.
It’s happening.
Now.
“Nebula,” Kaelen murmurs, his voice stronger, his eyes clearer. “The fever…”
“I know,” I say, pressing my forehead to his. “And I don’t care.”
“You should.” His hand finds mine, his fingers interlacing with mine. “You don’t have to do this. Not like this.”
“But I want to,” I say, lifting my head, my dark eyes blazing. “Not because the bond demands it. Not because the fever drives me. But because I do.”
He doesn’t answer.
Just cups my jaw, his thumb brushing my lower lip. “Then let me be the one to take care of you.”
And then—
He flips us.
Not with force. Not with dominance.
With care.
One moment, I’m above him. The next, he’s over me, his body a furnace, his presence a wall of heat, his golden eyes molten, feral, hers. He doesn’t crush me. Doesn’t pin me. Just lowers himself slowly, carefully, like I’m something fragile. Something precious.
“You don’t have to be gentle,” I whisper, my hands sliding up his chest, over the fresh scar where the blade pierced him. “I’m not breakable.”
“No,” he says, his voice rough. “You’re unbreakable. But you’re also mine. And I’m not going to take you like a man starved. I’m going to love you.”
And then—
He kisses me.
Not furious. Not desperate.
Slow.
His lips brush mine, gentle, searching, like he’s testing the truth of his words. I don’t deepen it. Don’t pull him closer. Just let him kiss me—let him take what he needs. His hands slide beneath my tunic—warm, rough, claiming—and I arch into his touch, my back hitting the stone, my magic flaring, my body trembling.
He doesn’t rush.
Doesn’t tear at my clothes.
Just peels them away—layer by layer—his fingers tracing every scar, every curve, every place where fire once burned. When he reaches the burn on my side—the one from the coven fire—he doesn’t flinch. Doesn’t look away. Just leans down and kisses it. Soft. Reverent. Like it’s a sacred thing.
And I break.
Not from pain. Not from grief.
From love.
Tears spill down my cheeks, hot and silent, and he catches them with his thumb, his eyes never leaving mine. “You carry your fire like armor,” he murmurs. “Let me carry it with you.”
And then—
He moves lower.
His lips trail down my stomach, over the curve of my hip, his breath hot against my skin. His hands slide under my thighs, lifting me, and I gasp, my fingers tangling in his hair, my magic flaring—wild, bright, hers—crackling up his arms like lightning.
“Kaelen,” I breathe, my voice shaking. “I want—”
“I know,” he says, his voice muffled against my skin. “And you’ll have it. All of it. Every part of me.”
And then—
He tastes me.
Not tentative. Not careful.
Claiming.
His tongue flicks over my clit, slow, deliberate, and I cry out, my back arching, my hips lifting off the stone. He groans, low and feral, his hands gripping my thighs, holding me in place as he devours me—slow, deep, relentless. The bond burns—not with pain, not with fever.
With need.
My magic flares—uncontrolled, wild, hers—and the chamber trembles, the runes on the walls glowing faintly, the Heartstone pulsing above us. I don’t care. I don’t think. I just feel—the heat of his mouth, the pressure of his tongue, the way his fingers slide inside me, stretching me, filling me, making me his.
“Kaelen,” I sob, my fingers tightening in his hair. “I’m—”
“Let go,” he growls, his voice vibrating against my skin. “Let me feel you.”
And I do.
I come—hard, shattering, loud—my magic exploding in a wave of light and heat, the bond screaming in triumph. He doesn’t stop. Just drinks me in, his tongue circling my clit, his fingers curling inside me, pushing me higher, deeper, until I’m trembling, sobbing, begging for mercy.
And then—
He rises.
Slow. Controlled. His body a wall of heat, his eyes molten gold, his cock hard, thick, ready. He doesn’t push inside. Doesn’t force it.
Just waits.
“Nebula,” he says, his voice rough. “Say it. Tell me you want this.”
I don’t hesitate.
“I want you,” I say, my voice raw. “Not because of the bond. Not because of the fever. But because I do. Because you’re mine. Because I’m yours. Because I love you.”
And then—
He enters me.
Slow. Deep. Complete.
I gasp, my body stretching to take him, my magic flaring, the bond screaming in triumph. He doesn’t move. Just stays there, buried inside me, his forehead pressed to mine, his breath mingling with mine.
“Look at me,” he whispers.
I do.
And for the first time, I see it—
Not the Alpha King.
Not the cold, controlled ruler.
But the man.
Broken. Weeping. Mine.
He begins to move—slow, deep, deliberate—each thrust a promise, each stroke a vow. I wrap my legs around his waist, pulling him deeper, needing him closer. My magic flares—wild, bright, hers—crackling up his arms like lightning. His growls low in his chest, his hips grinding against mine, his arousal unmistakable, pressing into my core.
“You’re not just my mate,” I whisper, my fingers brushing his jaw. “You’re my revolution.”
He doesn’t answer.
Just kisses me—soft, slow, hers.
And the bond—
It doesn’t scream.
It sings.
Not in magic.
Not in power.
In love.