I came here to kill you.
The thought is a blade I press between my ribs with every breath, sharp and familiar. It’s the only thing grounding me as I stand in the ritual chamber—the same one where my moonfire first erupted, where Vale forced me to train, where I first felt alive. The air hums with ancient energy. The lunar sigils on the floor glow faintly. The floating orbs of moonlight pulse like hearts.
But I’m not thinking about magic.
I’m not thinking about the Blood Moon Pact.
I’m not even thinking about revenge.
I’m thinking about the way he looked at me when he defied the Council. The way his golden eyes burned with something deeper than possession—*devotion*. The way he said, “You’re mine. And I don’t lose what’s mine,” like it wasn’t a threat, but a vow.
And I hate myself for it.
Because the woman who came to destroy him shouldn’t be trembling at the memory of his voice.
She should be planning his downfall.
But instead—
I kissed him.
And I don’t know how to stop.
—
It started with silence.
Not mine.
Not Vale’s.
But the world’s.
After he claimed me under Council law, after Thorne vanished like smoke, after the Oracle declared the motion denied, the Spire fell into a strange, uneasy hush. No whispers. No glances. No challenges. Just… stillness. Like the storm had passed, and now we were all waiting for the next thunderclap.
And I should have been satisfied.
I’d survived. I’d exposed Thorne’s lies. I’d forced the Council to see the truth. I’d proven I was the heir. And Vale—
He’d chosen me.
Not as a pawn. Not as a weapon. But as his.
And that was the problem.
Because every time I looked at him, every time he touched me, every time the bond flared with heat and need, I forgot why I came here.
I forgot my mother.
I forgot the Pact.
I forgot *me*.
So I ran.
Not from the Spire. Not from the Council.
From him.
—
I find Kael in the training grounds, sparring with a junior enforcer. He sees me, dismisses the other wolf with a nod, and walks over.
“You’re marked,” he says quietly.
“I know.”
“The whole Spire knows.”
“Good.”
He studies me. “Did you want it?”
“I don’t know.” My voice cracks. “I don’t know what I want anymore.”
He doesn’t press. Just watches me. “Lira came to me last night. She said you’d need this.” He pulls a small vial from his pocket—dark liquid, swirling with silver. Moon elixir. “It dulls the bond. Just for a few hours.”
I stare at it. “I don’t need it.”
“Then why are you shaking?”
I look down. My hands are trembling. Not from fear. Not from rage.
From *need*.
The bond is pulling me—toward the west wing. Toward *him*. Toward the man who defied the Council for me. The man who said he’d burn the world down to keep me. The man whose mark burns on my hip.
“I don’t want to go back,” I whisper.
“Then don’t.” He steps closer. “But don’t lie to yourself. You’re not fighting the bond. You’re fighting *him*. And you’re losing.”
“I can’t trust him.”
“You don’t have to.” He hands me the vial. “You just have to believe the truth.”
—
That night, I lock myself in the eastern wing—a forgotten suite of rooms tucked behind the archives, where the air is thick with dust and silence. No sconces. No moonlight. Just shadows and stone. I barricade the door with a heavy bookshelf, pull the curtains tight, and collapse onto the cold marble floor.
The bond screams.
Not heat. Not desire.
Pain.
It starts low—a throb in my chest, a tightness in my lungs. Then it climbs. My skin burns. My head pounds. My vision blurs. The fever from moon-sickness claws at my bones, worse than before, sharper, deeper. I press a hand to the mark on my hip—still glowing, still his—and it pulses, not with heat, but with loss.
Twenty-four hours apart.
That’s the rule.
That’s the curse.
And I don’t care.
Let it burn.
Let it kill me.
Because I don’t know how to face him.
Not after what I’ve done.
Not after what I’ve felt.
—
The hours pass.
I don’t sleep. I can’t. The fever keeps me awake, shivering, sweating, my body a battleground of magic and memory. I press my forehead to the stone, trying to breathe, trying to think.
But all I see is him.
His hands on my arm. His blood on my tongue. The way he looked at me when I kissed him—like I’d given him hope.
And I hate that I gave it.
Because hope is dangerous.
Hope is weakness.
Hope is what got my mother killed.
I close my eyes, trying to steady my breath. I came here to burn the Pact to ash. To expose the truth. To avenge my mother.
And I did.
But I didn’t do it alone.
I did it with him.
And that terrifies me more than any mission.
—
The door rattles.
Not hard. Not violent.
Just once.
Then silence.
I don’t move. Don’t breathe. Just lie there, listening.
And then—
A whisper.
“Hurricane.”
My breath stops.
It’s not Vale.
It’s Kael.
“I know you’re in there,” he says, voice low. “The bond’s screaming. You’re burning. Let me in.”
“Go away.”
“You’re feverish. You’re weak. You’re alone.”
“I’m not alone.” I press a hand to the mark. “I’m never alone.”
“But you’re pushing him away.”
“He doesn’t get to define us.”
“The bond does.”
I don’t answer.
Because he’s right.
And I don’t want to hear it.
“He’s outside,” Kael says. “He’s been there for hours. Silent. Still. Just… waiting.”
My stomach drops. “Why?”
“Because he knows you need space. But he won’t leave. Not until you’re safe.”
“He doesn’t get to protect me.”
“He doesn’t want to.” Kael’s voice softens. “He wants to fight with you. Stand beside you. Be your ally. Not your jailer. Not your savior. Your equal.”
My breath hitches.
“You came here to destroy him,” Kael says. “But you didn’t. You saved him. You saved yourself. And now you’re afraid of what that means.”
“I’m not afraid.”
“You are.” He pauses. “And so am I.”
“Of what?”
“Of what happens when you stop fighting. When you stop hating. When you finally let yourself want him.”
My hands clench. The fever climbs. My vision blurs.
“You’re not alone,” he says quietly. “Not anymore.”
And then—
He’s gone.
Not vanished. Not glamoured.
Just… gone.
Like he was never there.
But his words linger.
Like a wound.
Like a truth.
—
The fever worsens.
My body trembles. My skin burns. My breath comes in ragged gasps. I press my palm flat against the mark—just above the sigil on my hip, where the silver crescent burns like a brand beneath my skin. It’s complete now. Glowing. alive. A claiming. A binding. A truth I can’t deny.
And I don’t remember who claimed whom.
But I remember the way my body arched into his. The way I came in his arms. The way I wanted him.
And that terrifies me more than any mission.
Because the woman who came to destroy him now fears she’ll do anything to keep him.
And for the first time—
She’s not sure she wants to be saved.
—
The door opens.
Not forced.
Not broken.
Just… unlocked.
And then—
He steps in.
Vale.
Tall. Imperious. His golden eyes sharp, unreadable. He doesn’t speak. Doesn’t move. Just watches me—curled on the floor, feverish, trembling, my back to the wall.
“You shouldn’t be here,” I say, voice raw.
“You’re dying,” he says, voice low.
“Let me.”
“I won’t.” He crouches in front of me, slow, deliberate. His scent wraps around me—cold stone, old blood, moonlight. “You’re mine. And I don’t lose what’s mine.”
“I’m not yours.”
“Your body says otherwise.” His hand lifts, not to touch me, but to hover just above my cheek. “You’re burning. Your pulse is racing. Your breath is shallow. You’re wet.”
My thighs press together. The bond flares—hot, insistent. My core clenches, aching.
“It’s the fever,” I whisper.
“It’s me.” He leans in, his lips brushing my ear. “You want me. Not because of magic. Not because of fate. Because of me.”
“I hate you.”
“And yet you kissed me.”
My breath hitches.
He’s right.
And that’s the worst part.
“Why did you lie?” I ask, voice breaking. “Why didn’t you tell me the truth?”
“Because I was afraid.” He doesn’t look away. “Afraid that if you knew who I really was—if you knew I wasn’t the monster—you’d leave. You’d fight. You’d burn the Pact to ash—and I’d lose you.”
My chest tightens.
“And now?”
“Now I know I can’t keep you.” His thumb strokes my lower lip. “But I don’t want to. I want you to fight. I want you to burn it all down. I want you to be the queen you were born to be.”
My breath hitches.
“And what about us?” I whisper.
“We’re already bound.” He leans in, his lips brushing my ear. “Not by politics. Not by magic. By us.”
And then—
He kisses me.
Not a claiming.
Not a battle.
But a promise.
His mouth is soft. His touch is gentle. His fangs don’t graze my lip. His body doesn’t press into mine. He just… holds me. Like I’m fragile. Like I’m precious. Like I’m his.
And I don’t pull away.
Because I don’t know how.
Because I don’t want to.
Because the woman who came to destroy him now fears she’ll do anything to keep him.
And for the first time—
She’s not sure she wants to be saved.
—
He carries me back to his wing.
Not like a prisoner. Not like a possession.
Like a lover.
One arm under my knees, the other around my back, his body a wall of heat and power. I should have fought. Should have kicked. Should have screamed that I didn’t need his help, that I wasn’t some damsel to be rescued.
But I didn’t.
I let him.
I let my head rest against his chest. I let my fingers curl into the fabric of his coat. I let the bond hum between us, a low, insistent thrum that synced with his heartbeat, with his breath, with the way his body moved like a predator.
And when he sets me down on the bed, when he strips off my boots, when he pulls the covers over me, I don’t protest.
He doesn’t undress me. Doesn’t touch me beyond what’s necessary. Just watches me—his golden eyes sharp, unreadable—as I drift in and out of fevered sleep.
And then—
He sits beside me.
Not on the bed.
On the floor.
Back against the wall. Head bowed. Silent.
“Why are you here?” I whisper, voice weak.
“Because you’re mine,” he says, voice low. “And I don’t leave what’s mine.”
“You don’t have to guard me.”
“I’m not guarding you.” He lifts his head, his eyes locking onto mine. “I’m waiting for you.”
“For what?”
“For you to stop fighting.” He reaches for me—slow, giving me time to pull away. I don’t. His fingers brush the edge of the mark, just above my hip. Fire lances through me. My spine arches. A gasp tears from my throat. “For you to stop lying. For you to stop pretending you don’t feel what I feel.”
“And what do you feel?”
“Everything.” His hand slides up my spine, under my shirt, his palm hot against my skin. “The heat. The need. The pull. The way my chest tightens when you’re near. The way my fangs ache when you look at me. The way I’d burn the world down if you asked me to.”
My breath hitches.
“I want you,” he says, voice raw. “Not because of the bond. Not because of magic. Because of you. Because you’re fierce. Because you’re fire. Because you’re the only one who’s ever looked at me like I’m not a monster.”
My heart stutters.
“You are a monster,” I whisper.
“And yet you kissed me.”
“It was a mistake.”
“Liar.” He kisses me again—soft this time, almost tender. A contrast to the fire that had consumed us moments before. “You don’t make mistakes. You don’t act without purpose. You saved me. You kissed me. You marked me. That wasn’t a mistake. That was truth.”
I don’t answer.
Because he’s right.
And I don’t know how to fight it.
—
Later, I wake to silence.
The fever has broken.
The bond is quiet.
And he’s gone.
Not far. Just to the other side of the room. Standing at the window, his back to me, the moonlight silver on his shoulders.
“You’re awake,” he says, not turning.
“You’re still here.”
“I told you I wouldn’t leave.”
“Why?”
He turns. His eyes are gold fire, intense, unrelenting. “Because I love you.”
My breath stops.
He doesn’t flinch. Doesn’t look away. Just watches me. “I didn’t say it before. I didn’t know how. But now I do. I love you, Hurricane. Not because of the bond. Not because of fate. Because of you.”
My hands tremble.
“And if I don’t love you back?”
“Then you don’t.” He steps closer. “But I’ll still be here. Still fighting. Still waiting. Because you’re mine. And I don’t lose what’s mine.”
My breath hitches.
“You don’t get to define us,” I whisper.
“The bond does.” He reaches for me—slow, giving me time to pull away. I don’t. His fingers brush the edge of the mark, just above my hip. Fire lances through me. My spine arches. A gasp tears from my throat. “And it says we’re already bound. Not by politics. Not by magic. By us.”
And then—
I reach for him.
Not to push him away.
Not to fight.
But to hold on.
My fingers brush his chest.
Over the scar.
Over the truth.
And then—
I kiss him.
Not a claiming.
Not a battle.
But a promise.
And I know—
The game has changed.
The mission is no longer about revenge.
It’s about us.
And I will burn the world down to keep him.