I don’t sleep.
Not after the solar. Not after the truth—ripped from him like a confession carved in blood and silence. The fire has burned low again, casting flickering shadows across the stone floor, the same shadows that have watched me rage, weep, kiss him, and finally—choose him. His arm is still around me, heavy and warm, his chest a solid wall against my back. I can feel his heartbeat—steady, strong, alive—and the rhythm of his breath, slow and even. He’s asleep. Finally.
But I’m not.
The bond hums beneath my skin, no longer a curse, no longer a weapon—but a living thing, pulsing with something I can’t name. Something warm. Something real. But it’s also heavy. Thick. Like a fever has taken root in my blood, spreading through my veins, tightening in my core. The mark on my spine flares with every heartbeat, a dull throb, a constant reminder of what I’ve done—what I’ve let him do. I told myself it was the ritual. The Blood Moon. The magic. But the truth is, I didn’t just submit. I participated. I moaned. I clawed his back. I screamed his name. I let him mark me.
And I’d do it again.
The thought doesn’t terrify me anymore.
It thrills me.
I press my fingers to the bite on my shoulder. It still burns. Still throbs. Still thinks. The crescent-shaped mark pulses faintly beneath my skin, a silent echo of the claiming, of the way he thrust inside me until I came apart, of the way the bond sang not with magic, not with politics, but with something deeper. Something real.
The satchel is gone.
Stolen.
By Solene.
But we have something stronger now.
Truth.
And allies.
Elias is here. Alive. Not dead. Not gone. And he’s standing with us. Not just for me. Not just for the bond. But for the future. For the world Solene wants to twist into her own image of purity and control.
Kaelen is here. With his pack. With his loyalty. With the weight of the northern forests behind him.
And now—
We have the original Moonstone Treaty.
Sealed. Intact. Unbroken.
Proof that Solene forged the documents. That she lied. That she’s been manipulating the truth for ten years.
And Valenir is free.
My mentor. My protector. The man who called me *little star*. The man who once knelt before Solene to save me, only to be bound by her magic. Now he stands beside us—clear-eyed, broken, but loyal. He remembers. He knows. And he’s ready to fight.
And Vaelen—
He’s not the monster I thought he was.
He’s the boy who loved me at six. The man who let me hate him to keep me alive. The vampire who’s loved me for centuries.
And I—
I’m the witch who finally believes him.
A soft knock at the door.
“Who is it?” I whisper, not moving.
“Dain,” the voice says, low. “There’s a broadcast. From the central spire. Solene’s voice. It’s… everywhere.”
I sit up so fast the room spins. Vaelen stirs, murmuring my name, but I’m already sliding from the bed, pulling on my boots, tucking the silver dagger into my boot. My lockpick goes back into my hair. The bite on my shoulder burns, a sharp reminder of what I’ve done—what I’ve let him do.
“What’s she saying?” I ask, voice tight.
“That the bond is a lie,” Dain says. “That it’s not real. That it’s magic. Compulsion. Control. And that you’re being used. That he’s using you to destabilize the Council. That you’re not his mate—you’re his weapon.”
My fingers tighten around the hilt of the dagger.
“And the city?” I ask.
“In chaos,” he says. “The markets are closing. The wards are flickering. The people—they’re afraid. They’re turning on each other. Werewolves are blaming vampires. Witches are accusing fae. And the humans—”
“Are being used,” I say, stepping into the hall. “Again.”
Vaelen is behind me, dressed in black, his coat fastened at the throat, his fangs retracted but his eyes glowing faintly in the dim light. He doesn’t speak. Just falls into step beside me, his presence a solid wall at my side.
“She’s trying to break us,” he says, voice low. “Not just from each other. From our people. From the truth.”
“And she’s winning,” I say. “Because they believe her. They believe the bond is a lie. That love between species is impossible. That peace is weakness.”
“Then we show them it’s not,” he says. “We go to the spire. We face her. And we prove—once and for all—that the bond is real. That we are real.”
I don’t answer. Just move.
Down the hall. Past the silent guards. Past the flickering blue flames. The castle is too quiet. No whispers. No footsteps. Just the low hum of the wards and the pounding of my heart.
And then—
Music.
Low. Primal. A deep, resonant beat that echoes the pulse of the bond. It pulses through the stone, up my feet, into my chest.
She’s here.
Solene.
“She’s broadcasting from the spire,” I say, drawing my dagger. “And she’s not alone.”
Vaelen steps beside me, fangs bared, eyes glowing crimson. “Then let her come.”
Kaelen shifts into half-form—claws extending, fangs lengthening, his growl a low rumble in his chest. “We fight together.”
“We fight as one,” I say.
And the bond—
It sings.
Not with pain.
Not with fear.
With power.
---
The central spire rises above the Midnight Court like a blade of obsidian, its peak piercing the storm-heavy sky. The air is thick with the scent of ozone and old magic, with the faint, metallic tang of fear. The broadcast pulses from the spire’s crown—a deep, resonant voice that echoes through the city, twisting through the streets, seeping into homes, into minds.
“People of the Midnight Court,” Solene’s voice says, smooth, warm, like honey laced with poison. “You have been lied to. The bond between Cascade and Vaelen is not love. It is not fate. It is magic. A compulsion. A control. A weapon forged in blood and deception.”
I climb the spire’s winding stairs, silent, weapons drawn. Vaelen is behind me, Kaelen to my right, Dain behind. The bond hums beneath my skin, a constant thrum of awareness, of need. It’s not just him. It’s us. All of us. Connected. Aligned. Ready.
“They say it’s real,” she continues. “That it’s destiny. But destiny does not force a woman to her knees. Destiny does not make a man sacrifice his people for one woman. Destiny does not consume.”
My breath catches. My hand tightens around the hilt of my dagger.
“The bond is a corruption,” she says. “A sickness. And if we do not break it, it will destroy us all. The Council will fall. The treaties will burn. And the humans—our most loyal servants—will rise against us.”
“She’s using fear,” Vaelen murmurs. “Twisting the truth to turn them against us.”
“And it’s working,” I say. “Because they want to believe her. They want to believe love like this is impossible. That peace is a lie.”
“Then we prove it’s not,” he says. “We show them the truth.”
“With what?” I ask. “Blood? Magic? A public claiming?”
“With this,” he says, and he takes my hand.
The bond screams.
A jolt of heat spirals through me, tightening in my core. Not arousal. Not fear.
Truth.
“They don’t need to see us fight,” he says. “They need to see us choose each other. Again. And again. And again.”
I look at him—really look.
At the man who kept his promise.
At the man who let me hate him to keep me alive.
At the man who’s loved me for centuries.
And I know—
This isn’t vengeance.
This isn’t duty.
This is truth.
“Then let’s give it to them,” I say.
---
We reach the spire’s crown.
The entrance groans open.
And she steps in.
Solene.
Draped in black, her silver hair pulled back, her eyes sharp with ambition. But there’s something different. A hardness. A coldness. A lie beneath the surface.
She sees me.
And for the first time—
She smiles.
“Cascade,” she says, voice smooth, warm. “You’ve grown.”
“So have you,” I say, stepping forward. “In lies.”
She doesn’t flinch. Just watches me. “You don’t see it. But I do. The bond is a curse. A corruption. It’s not love. It’s magic. Compulsion. Control.”
“No,” I say. “It’s not. The bond doesn’t make me love him. It makes me see him. Really see him. The man who let me hate him to keep me alive. The man who’s loved me for centuries.”
“And what about me?” she whispers. “Did I not love you? Did I not train you? Did I not give everything to protect you?”
“You did,” I say. “And I love you. But love isn’t control. Love isn’t manipulation. Love isn’t forcing someone to see the world your way.”
She shakes her head. “You’re blinded. By him. By the bond.”
“And you’re blinded,” I say. “By grief. By fear. By the lies you’ve told yourself for ten years.”
Her hand flies to her dagger.
“Solene,” I say, voice low. “Put it down.”
“I have to break it,” she whispers. “Before it consumes you. Before it destroys everything.”
“You don’t get to decide that,” I say. “Not for me. Not for him. Not for the bond.”
“I do,” she says. “Because I’m the only one who sees the truth.”
And then—
She moves.
Fast.
Her dagger flashes—silver, cursed, dripping with venom.
But she doesn’t go for me.
She goes for him.
“Vaelen—!”
I don’t think.
I don’t hesitate.
I step in front of him.
The blade sinks into my side—just below the ribs, deep, twisting.
But I don’t fall.
I can’t.
Because he’s behind me.
And I’m all that’s between him and death.
“Cascade—!”
His voice. Raw. Desperate. Shattered.
I turn. Slowly. Painfully. Blood drips from my side, pooling at my feet. My breath comes in short, sharp gasps. My vision blurs.
But I’m still standing.
And Solene—
She’s frozen.
Because Vaelen is there—his hand around her throat, his fangs bared, his eyes glowing crimson.
“You don’t get to touch her,” he growls. “Not again. Not ever.”
He throws her back. She hits the wall, the blade skittering away.
And then—
Silence.
Just the drip of blood. The low hum of the wards. The pounding of my heart.
And him.
His arms around me. Pulling me close. Supporting my weight. His body warm against my back, his breath hot on my neck.
“You idiot,” he whispers. “You idiot. Why would you do that?”
I try to speak. Can’t.
The venom is spreading. My knees buckle. I fall to one knee, then the other. My vision blurs. My hands clench the stone.
And then—
He’s there.
His arms around me. Lifting me. Carrying me.
Not like a prisoner.
Not like a burden.
Like something precious.
Like something hers.
---
The world comes back in fragments.
Firelight.
Stone walls.
The scent of moon-bloom and iron and something sweet, something his.
And him.
He’s beside me—kneeling on the floor, his hands pressing to the wound in my side, his magic flaring, his breath coming fast. Blood drips from his fingertip, smeared across the blade of his dagger. He whispers the words—“Sanguis pura, sanguis vera”—and the magic flows into me, slow, steady, agonizing.
The venom burns. My body rebels. My muscles spasm.
But I don’t pull away.
Because he’s here.
Because his hands are on me.
Because the bond—
It sings.
Not with pain.
Not with fear.
With need.
“You’re not supposed to do this,” I rasp. “Blood magic… it takes from you.”
“Shut up,” he says, not looking at me. “You took a poisoned blade for me. The least I can do is keep you from dying.”
“And if it kills you?” I ask.
“Then it kills me,” he says, voice flat. “But I’d rather die saving you than live knowing I let you die.”
My breath hitches.
He doesn’t see it. Doesn’t feel it. But I do.
Because those words—
They’re the truth.
And the truth is more dangerous than any blade.
Minutes pass. Hours. I don’t know. The venom retreats, slow, grudging, but it’s leaving. My strength returns. My magic stabilizes.
And then—
He stops.
His hand falls away. His breath comes fast. His face is pale. His lips are colorless.
“You’re drained,” I say, sitting up slowly. “You gave too much.”
“I gave enough,” he says, wiping his hand on his trousers. “You’re alive. That’s what matters.”
“And you?” I ask. “Are you alive?”
He glares at me. “Don’t patronize me.”
“I’m not,” I say, reaching for him. “I’m asking.”
He doesn’t pull away.
My hand frames his face. My thumb brushes his cheek. His skin is cold. His breath hitches.
“You could’ve died,” I say, voice rough. “Because of me.”
“And you did,” he says. “Because of me. So I’d say we’re even.”
“We’re not,” I say. “Because I’d do it again. A hundred times. A thousand. I’d take every blade meant for you. I’d burn in every fire. I’d bleed in every war. Just to keep you alive.”
He stares at me. “Why?”
“Because I love you,” I say. “Not because of the bond. Not because of the Council. Not because of fate. Because of you. The man who let me hate him to keep me alive. The man who’s loved me for centuries. The man who’s standing here, naked, vulnerable, and still waiting for me to choose him.”
His breath hitches.
And then—
I rise onto my knees.
And I kiss him.
Not fierce. Not angry.
Soft.
Slow.
Real.
His lips part beneath mine. His hands find my waist, pulling me closer. The bond erupts—white-hot, all-consuming, a tidal wave of magic and emotion that throws us both back onto the floor.
But this time—
I don’t fight it.
I let it in.
I let him in.
And when we break apart, breathless, trembling, his forehead resting against mine, I whisper the words I never thought I’d say:
“I believe you.”
He closes his eyes, as if the words are a physical pain.
Then he opens them.
And for the first time—
I see it.
Not just hunger.
Not just possession.
Hope.
“Then stay with me,” he says. “Not because of the Council. Not because of the bond. But because you want to.”
I look at him—really look.
At the man who kept his promise.
At the man who let me hate him to keep me alive.
At the man who’s loved me for centuries.
And I know—
This isn’t vengeance.
This isn’t duty.
This is truth.
“I want to,” I whisper.
And the bond—
It sings.
---
Later, we return to his chambers, the guards silent, watchful, as we pass. The fire is lit, the bed turned down, the satchel still hidden beneath the floorboard. He doesn’t sleep on the floor.
He lies beside me.
Close.
Our thighs brush.
The bond screams.
But this time—
Neither of us pulls away.
“You should rest,” he murmurs, his fingers tracing the mark on my spine. “Tomorrow, we confront Solene. We make her see the truth.”
“And if she doesn’t?” I ask.
“Then we fight,” he says. “But not to destroy her. To save her.”
I turn my head, looking up at him. “You’re impossible.”
He smirks. Slow. Dangerous. “And you’re the only woman who’s ever made me feel alive.”
I close my eyes. Breathe.
And for the first time in ten years—
I let myself rest.
Not because I’m weak.
Not because I’m trapped.
But because I choose to.
Because I want to.
Because—
Despite everything—
Despite the lies, the betrayal, the blood—
I believe him.
And the bond—
It sings.