The vial still burns in my hand—warm, alive, humming with the weight of my mother’s blood and the truth it carries. But the silence after my return is different now. Not heavy. Not still. It’s charged, like the air before a storm, like the moment before a blade finds its mark.
Cassian hasn’t moved. Still kneeling, still watching me, his storm-gray eyes unreadable, his presence a wall of shadow and heat. The bond thrums beneath my skin—steady, strong, no longer a scream, but a song. A promise. A home.
And then—
He reaches out.
Not for the vial.
Not for my hand.
For my hip.
His fingers brush the sigil—just a whisper, a tease—and heat floods my core, sharp and sudden. I gasp, staggering back, but the connection holds. His heartbeat slams into mine. His breath fills my lungs. And beneath it—his need, raw and undeniable, echoing in my core.
“You feel that,” he murmurs. “Don’t you? The way your body answers me. Even now.”
“It’s not just the bond,” I say, voice low. “It’s us.”
He smiles—just a flicker, gone too soon. “Finally.”
And then—
The air shifts.
Not violently. Not destructively.
But enough.
Enough to make the torches flicker. Enough to make the sigils on the walls glow. Enough to make the vial in my hand pulse with golden light.
“What was that?” I ask.
He doesn’t answer.
Because the scent hits us first.
Jasmine.
Blood-wine.
And something else.
Something familiar.
My scent.
But not from me.
From her.
Lysara.
She steps into the shattered doorway—tall, elegant, her silver hair loose, her lips curved in a smirk. She wears a gown of black silk, clinging to her body like a second skin, and around her neck—
A vial.
Crystal. Glowing faintly with golden light.
Just like mine.
But it’s not mine.
It’s hers.
And it’s filled with my scent.
“You’re stronger together than I anticipated,” she says, voice smooth, amused. “But not strong enough.”
My breath catches. “Where did you get that?”
She lifts the vial, letting it dangle from a silver chain. “Oh, Gold. Did you really think you were the only one Mira would protect? That you were the only one worthy of her blood?”
“That’s not your blood,” I say, stepping forward. “That’s mine.”
“Is it?” She tilts her head. “Or is it just a glamour? A lie? A trick?”
My magic flares—instinctive, violent, beautiful. Fire erupts from my hands—gold and crimson, swirling like a storm. The sigils on the walls glow. The air crackles. The ground trembles.
But Lysara doesn’t flinch.
She just smiles.
And then—
She presses the vial to her chest.
And the bond screams.
Not from me.
Not from Cassian.
From her.
A surge of energy rips through the room, a wave of power so strong it knocks me back, my fire dying in my palms. I stumble, catching myself against the wall, my breath ragged.
“What the hell was that?” I hiss.
“The truth,” she says, smiling. “The Fae High Court recognizes bonds. And now—”
She turns—slow, deliberate—and walks down the corridor, her heels clicking against the stone. “They recognize mine.”
And then she’s gone.
Vanished.
Like smoke.
Like a lie.
The room is silent. The air still. The bond hums, raw and frayed. And then—
Cassian moves.
Fast. Furious. Shadows writhing around him like living things. He’s across the room in a heartbeat, slamming his fist into the wall, cracking the stone.
“She stole your scent,” he growls. “She used it to forge a bond. A false bond.”
“But how?” I ask, stepping forward. “The vial—Mira said it was protected. That only I could use it.”
“She didn’t steal the vial,” he says, turning to me. “She stole you. Your scent. Your essence. She must have taken it during one of our rituals. During the blood oath. During the claiming dance.”
My stomach drops. “And now the Fae Court thinks she’s your mate.”
“Yes,” he says. “And if the bond isn’t broken—”
“Then ours will be,” I finish. “We’ll be severed. The connection will die.”
He doesn’t answer.
Just watches me, his eyes dark, his jaw tight.
And in that moment, I see it.
Not just the lie.
The truth.
Malrik didn’t just frame Cassian.
He’s been using Lysara all along.
And now?
He’s coming for us.
For us.
“We have to stop her,” I say.
“We will,” he says. “But not like this. Not blind. Not broken.”
“Then how?”
He steps closer, his hand brushing my hip, his fingers tracing the sigil. “With the truth. With this.”
Heat floods my core.
I gasp, stepping back, but the connection holds. His heartbeat slams into mine. His breath fills my lungs. And beneath it—his need, raw and undeniable, echoing in my core.
“You feel that,” he murmurs. “Don’t you? The way your body answers me. Even now.”
“It’s not just the bond,” I say. “It’s us.”
He smiles—dark, dangerous. “Good.”
And then—
The ground shakes.
Not violently. Not destructively.
But enough.
Enough to make the torches flicker. Enough to make the sigils on the walls glow. Enough to make the vial in my hand pulse with golden light.
“What was that?” I ask.
He doesn’t answer.
Because the air shifts—thick, heavy, wrong. The scent of jasmine and blood-wine floods the room. The temperature drops. And then—
A voice, smooth as silk, echoes from the shadows.
“You’re stronger together than I anticipated.”
Malrik.
He steps into the light—tall, elegant, his ice-blue eyes gleaming with amusement. He wears a tailored black coat, his hair silver-streaked, his smile sharp as a blade.
“I’d say congratulations,” he continues, “but I’m afraid I’ll have to kill you both.”
My fire erupts—instinctive, violent, beautiful. I lunge, not at his chest, not at his heart.
At his throat.
He doesn’t dodge.
He doesn’t block.
He just… smiles.
And then—
He vanishes.
Not in shadow.
Not in smoke.
In glamour.
One moment he’s there. The next—
He’s behind me.
His hand wraps around my wrist, twisting, forcing the fire to die. His breath is cold against my ear. “You’re not ready,” he whispers. “But you will be.”
Cassian moves—fast, furious, shadows writhing around him like living things. He lunges, fangs bared, but Malrik flicks his wrist, and Cassian stumbles, like he’s hit an invisible wall.
“Don’t,” Malrik says, voice calm. “Or I’ll snap her neck before you can blink.”
Cassian freezes.
But his eyes—
They burn.
“Let her go,” he growls.
“Or what?” Malrik asks. “You’ll kill me? You can’t. Not without breaking the bond. And you’d never risk her life for that.”
He’s right.
And it terrifies me.
“You framed Cassian,” I say, struggling against his grip. “You killed my parents.”
“And I’ll do it again,” he says. “And again. Until the Silvershade line is extinct. Until the sigil is destroyed. Until the truth dies with you.”
“You’re afraid of me,” I say.
“Afraid?” He laughs—soft, cruel. “No, Gold. I’m excited. Because when I break you, when I make you scream, when I watch you die in his arms—I’ll finally be free.”
And then—
He releases me.
Shoves me forward, into Cassian’s arms. And before we can react—
He’s gone.
Vanished.
Like smoke.
Like a lie.
The room is silent. The air still. The bond hums, raw and frayed. And then—
Cassian pulls me against him, his arms tight, his voice low. “You’re not dying,” he says. “Not today. Not ever.”
“He’s going to come for us,” I whisper.
“Let him,” he says. “Because when he does—”
“We’ll be ready,” I finish.
He looks down at me—really looks—and for the first time, I see it.
Not just possession.
Not just hunger.
Hope.
And I know—
Whatever comes next—
We’ll face it together.
Because the truth—
The terrible, undeniable truth—
Is that I didn’t stop the kiss because I hate him.
I stopped it because I don’t.
And that’s not a weakness.
It’s my greatest strength.
And when Malrik makes his move—
When the real war comes—
I won’t run.
I won’t hide.
I’ll stand.
With him.
Because if the bond is a prison—
Then I’ll wear it like a crown.
And if it’s a promise—
Then I’ll keep it with my life.
Even if it costs me everything.
—
The silence that follows is deeper than sleep, heavier than stone. I don’t know how long we sit like that—Cassian’s arms around me, my back to his chest, his heartbeat a steady drum beneath my palm. The sigil on my hip pulses, not with fire, not with pain, but with a low, resonant hum, like a lullaby sung in blood and bone. The bond is no longer a scream. It’s a song. And for the first time, I’m not afraid to listen.
But peace never lasts.
Not for me.
Not in this world.
A whisper cuts through the stillness—soft, insistent, like a breath against my mind.
Gold.
I stiffen. Cassian feels it—he always does—and his arms tighten around me.
“What is it?” he murmurs.
I don’t answer. I can’t. Because the voice comes again—clearer this time, threaded with urgency.
Gold. You must come. Now.
Mira.
My mentor. My mother’s sister. The woman who raised me after the fire, who taught me to fight, to cast, to survive. The only person I’ve ever trusted.
And she’s calling me through the Veil.
Not with words. Not with magic. With something deeper. Something only blood can carry.
“It’s Mira,” I whisper. “She’s summoning me.”
Cassian goes still. “The elder witch? The one who trained you?”
“Yes.”
“She’s dangerous.”
“She’s family.”
He exhales, slow and careful. “Then go. But I’m coming with you.”
“No.”
“Gold—”
“She called me,” I say, turning in his arms to face him. “Not you. If she wanted you there, she would’ve summoned you too.”
His jaw tightens. “And if it’s a trap?”
“Then it’s my trap to walk into.”
He stares at me—really stares—and for a moment, I see the war in his eyes. Possession warring with trust. Control battling surrender. And then, slowly, he nods.
“Go,” he says. “But if you’re not back in an hour, I’m coming for you. No matter what.”
I press my palm to his chest, feeling his heartbeat beneath my fingers. “You don’t have to protect me.”
“I know,” he says. “But I want to.”
I don’t answer. I just lean in, pressing my lips to his—soft, brief, a promise—and then I rise, stepping back.
The room is still dark, the air thick with the scent of shadow and blood. I close my eyes, pressing my hands together, fingers interlaced, and whisper the summoning phrase—“Sanguis et flamma, ad me veni.”
Fire erupts in my palms—gold and crimson, swirling like a storm. The sigil on my hip burns, not with pain, but with power. And then—
The world tears.
One moment I’m in the Obsidian Court. The next—
I’m standing in a forest.
Not just any forest.
The Veilwood.
The sacred grove of the Coven of the Veil, hidden deep in the Carpathians, where the trees grow tall and black, their bark etched with ancient sigils, their roots drinking from ley lines of raw magic. The air is thick with the scent of damp earth and crushed herbs, the hum of energy so strong it vibrates in my teeth. Moonlight filters through the canopy, casting silver streaks across the moss-covered ground.
And there she is.
Mira.
She stands beneath an ancient oak, her silver hair loose, her robes the color of storm clouds, her eyes—gold-flecked, just like mine—locked onto mine. She looks older than I remember. Tired. Worn. But her presence is a mountain—unshakable, immovable.
“You came,” she says.
“You summoned me.”
“I had to.”
“Why?”
She steps forward, her bare feet silent on the moss. “Because the lie is unraveling. And you’re standing at the center of it.”
My breath catches. “What lie?”
“The one you’ve been chasing,” she says. “The one that brought you to the Obsidian Court. The one that made you want to kill Cassian D’Vraeth.”
“He had my parents killed,” I say, voice hard. “I saw the order. I felt their last breaths.”
“No,” she says. “You felt a forgery. A glamour. A lie crafted by someone far more dangerous than Cassian.”
“Malrik,” I whisper.
She nods. “He framed Cassian. Used the Purifiers as his blade. Made it look like the vampires were responsible. But it was never about your parents.”
“Then what was it about?”
“You,” she says. “Your bloodline. The Silvershade sigil. It’s not just a mark. It’s a key. And Malrik wants it destroyed.”
My hand flies to my hip. “Why?”
“Because it can break his power,” she says. “It can shatter the glamours he uses to control the Fae Court. It can expose the lies he’s woven for centuries.”
My pulse spikes. “And Cassian?”
“He’s not your enemy,” she says. “He’s your ally. Your mate. Your truth.”
“He’s a vampire king,” I say, but my voice wavers. “He’s cold. Ruthless. He kills without hesitation.”
“And yet,” she says, stepping closer, “he offered his life for you. He let you press a blade to his throat. He bled for you. He chose you.”
I press a hand to my chest, feeling the bond hum beneath my ribs. “I know.”
“Then stop fighting it,” she says. “Stop pretending you don’t feel him. Stop denying what your body, your magic, your soul knows is true.”
“I made a vow,” I whisper.
“And you kept it,” she says. “You avenged your parents. You faced the man you thought killed them. And you found the truth.”
“What truth?”
“That vengeance isn’t justice,” she says. “That love isn’t weakness. That sometimes, the person you’re meant to destroy is the one you’re meant to save.”
Tears burn in my eyes. “I don’t know how to stop hating.”
“You don’t have to,” she says. “You just have to choose something stronger.”
And then—
She reaches into the folds of her robe and pulls out a small vial—crystal, glowing faintly with golden light.
“What is that?” I ask.
“Your mother’s blood,” she says. “Preserved. Protected. Waiting for the day you were ready.”
My breath catches. “Why now?”
“Because Malrik is moving,” she says. “He’ll come for you soon. And when he does, you’ll need more than fire. You’ll need truth.”
She presses the vial into my hand. It’s warm. Alive. And the moment my fingers close around it, the sigil on my hip flares—a surge of energy that makes me gasp.
“Use it,” she says. “When the time comes. It will show you what you need to see.”
“And if I’m wrong?” I whisper. “If Cassian is the monster I thought he was?”
“Then you’ll know,” she says. “And you’ll have the power to destroy him.”
“But I don’t want to destroy him,” I say, voice breaking. “I want to believe in him.”
She smiles—just a flicker, gone too soon. “Then do it. Not for him. Not for me. For you.”
And then—
She steps back.
“Go,” she says. “He’s waiting.”
“Mira—”
“Go.”
I don’t argue. I just close my eyes, clutching the vial, and whisper the return phrase—“Flamma et sanguis, redde me.”
Fire erupts around me—gold and crimson, swirling like a storm. The world tears again.
And then—
I’m back.
In the Obsidian Court.
In my chambers.
And Cassian is still there—kneeling where I left him, his storm-gray eyes locked onto mine, his presence a wall of shadow and heat.
“You’re back,” he says.
“I’m back,” I say.
And then—
I step forward.
Not to fight.
Not to run.
To kneel.
I drop to my knees in front of him, the vial clutched in my hand, my breath unsteady.
“I believe you,” I whisper.
He doesn’t move. Doesn’t speak. Just watches me, like I’m a storm he’s trying to read.
“I believe in us,” I say. “In the bond. In the truth. In you.”
And then—
I press the vial to his chest.
“And I’m not alone.”
He looks down at it—then up at me.
And for the first time—
I see it.
Not triumph.
Not possession.
Hope.
And I know—
Whatever comes next—
We’ll face it together.