BackMarked by Onyx

Chapter 44 – Reformed Tribunal

ONYX

The first thing I feel is the weight of silence.

Not the hollow quiet of absence. Not the breathless hush before a storm. This is different—thicker, heavier, like the air after lightning has split the sky and left only scorched earth in its wake. It presses against my skin, coils in my chest, hums in the blood beneath my veins. I’ve spent my life learning to read the currents of power, to sense the shifts in loyalty, the flickers of betrayal. And right now, the Spire is holding its breath.

Because something has changed.

Not the Council. Not the elders. Not even the war that’s been raging in the shadows for decades.

Me.

I stand at the head of the Chamber—barefoot, bare-chested, my leathers torn at the shoulder from battle, my fire dagger strapped to my hip, its sigils pulsing faintly. The air is thick with old magic, the stone cracked beneath my feet, the wards flaring as I pass. Above, the Spire’s vaulted ceiling has been sealed again, torches burning with cold fire, casting long shadows across the obsidian dais. The elders are gathered. The matriarchs. The enforcers. The vampires, their eyes dark with something I can’t name. The fae, their faces masks of cold amusement. And the werewolves—Kaelen’s pack—watching, silent, their breaths steady, their claws out.

And then—

There’s him.

Kaelen.

Not at my side. Not behind me. Not even beside the elders.

He’s at the far end of the Chamber, arms crossed, shirtless, his leathers laced low on his hips, his mark glowing faintly above his heart. His eyes are gold, wild, possessed. But not with rage. Not with fire.

With me.

He doesn’t speak. Doesn’t move. Just watches. And I know—

This isn’t just a council session.

It’s a reckoning.

And I’m not here to survive.

I’m here to rule.

“You don’t have to do this,” Rhys says, stepping beside me. His voice is low, rough, but I hear the tremor beneath it. “You’ve already proven yourself. The Tribunal fire accepted you. The Blood Trial is over. Silas is dead. Lysandra is exiled. The Veil is stable. You don’t need to stand here like some warlord demanding dominion.”

I don’t look at him. Just tighten my grip on the hilt, the leather warm against my palm, the sigils pulsing with heat. “I don’t need to,” I say. “But I want to.”

“They’ll resist,” he says. “The elders. The fae. Even some of Kaelen’s pack. They don’t like change. They don’t like hybrids. They don’t like women who burn too bright.”

“Then they’ll burn with me,” I say, stepping forward. “Or get out of my way.”

Rhys doesn’t stop me. Just watches as I walk—barefoot, silent, my leathers black against the stone, my fire dancing in my veins. The elders part as I pass. The vampires lean in, whispering. The fae smile, slow and cruel. But no one speaks. No one moves. They know.

They see.

This is not a Council divided.

This is a Council remade.

I reach the dais. Turn. Face them.

And for the first time, I don’t feel like an intruder. A threat. A weapon.

I feel like home.

“The Tribunal is broken,” I say, voice low, rough, dangerous. “It was used to frame me. To exile me. To erase my name. To burn my coven. And for what? To protect a murderer? To hide a lie? To maintain a balance built on blood and betrayal?”

A murmur ripples through the chamber. Not shock. Not outrage.

Truth.

“No more,” I say. “From this moment, the Hybrid Tribunal is reformed. No more trials in silence. No more verdicts without evidence. No more exiles without defense. From now on, every hybrid, every mixed-blood, every outcast will have a voice. A choice. A chance.

The High Elder rises—ancient, stooped, his eyes dark with power. “You overstep, witch. The Tribunal is not yours to command.”

“It is now,” I say, stepping forward. “Because I am not just Onyx of the Ashen Circle. I am not just a hybrid. I am not just a mate.” I lift my hand, press it to the mark above my collarbone. “I am the woman who stood in the ashes of her coven and refused to die. I am the woman who walked into the lion’s den and burned it down. I am the woman who faced Silas Nocturne and ended him. And I am the woman who will not let this Council bury the truth again.”

He doesn’t flinch. Just stares. “And what of the balance? The Veil? The peace we’ve maintained for centuries?”

“Peace built on lies is no peace at all,” I say. “It’s a prison. And I’m done being its prisoner.”

And then—

I call the fire.

Not from my hands.

From the ground.

Cracks split the stone beneath my feet. Flames burst from below, twisting, rising, wrapping around the dais, sealing it in a ring of fire. The elders don’t move. Don’t scream. Just watch as the flames rise, as the heat shimmers, as the sigils beneath my feet flare to life.

And then—

The Trial Flame answers.

It erupts from the center of the Chamber—a pillar of white-hot fire, ancient, alive, awake. It spirals upward, twisting, roaring, its voice a low, resonant hum that shakes the stone. And it doesn’t burn me.

It chooses me.

“You see?” I say, stepping into the fire. “It knows me. It knows my blood. It knows my truth. And it will not be silenced.”

The High Elder steps back. “This is madness.”

“No,” I say. “This is justice.”

And then—

I turn to Kaelen.

He hasn’t moved. Just watches, his chest rising, falling, his fangs bared. But his eyes—gold-flecked, wild, mine—hold something else.

Pride.

“The Tribunal is reformed,” I say. “And it will be co-led. By me. And by him.” I point to Kaelen. “No more unilateral rule. No more enforcers without accountability. No more secrets. From this moment, the Hybrid Tribunal answers to the people. To the truth. To us.

He doesn’t speak. Just steps forward—slow, deliberate, like a predator claiming its territory. The fire parts for him. The Trial Flame pulses. And when he reaches me, he doesn’t touch me. Doesn’t kiss me. Just stands beside me, his shoulder brushing mine, his heat a wall of dominance.

And then—

He speaks.

“It’s done,” he says, voice rough, final. “The Tribunal is reformed. The Witch Circles are reinstated. The Blood Accords are revised. And the Hybrid Code is rewritten. From this moment, no hybrid will be tried without representation. No mixed-blood will be exiled without trial. And no one—” His gaze sweeps the Chamber. “No one will burn for a crime they did not commit.”

The silence is absolute.

Not resistance.

Not defiance.

Acceptance.

Later, in the private war room—stone walls etched with ancient wards, maps spread across the table, candles flickering with cold fire—I stand by the hearth, my fingers brushing the flames, my fire dancing in my eyes.

Kaelen paces—slow, deliberate, like a caged wolf. His leathers are half-laced, his chest bare, his mark glowing faintly. He doesn’t look at me. Doesn’t speak. Just moves, his boots silent on the stone, his breath steady, his fangs bared.

And I know—

This isn’t over.

Not for him.

“You didn’t have to do that,” he says, finally stopping. “You didn’t have to burn the dais. You didn’t have to force their hand.”

“I did,” I say, turning to him. “Because they wouldn’t have changed otherwise. They would’ve buried it. Again. Just like they buried me.”

He doesn’t flinch. Just stares. “And what if they come for you? What if the fae turn? What if the vampires rise?”

“Then we burn them,” I say, stepping forward. “Together.”

He doesn’t move. Just watches as I close the distance, as I press my palm to his chest, just above his heart. His skin is hot, his muscles taut, his breath hitching. “You’re not just my Alpha,” I say, voice soft. “You’re my balance. My fire. My mate.

He closes his eyes. “And you’re mine.”

“Not possession,” I say. “Not control. Choice.

He opens his eyes. Gold-flecked. Wild. Mine.

“Then choose me,” he says, voice rough. “Not as your mate. Not as your Alpha. But as your partner. Your equal. Your king.

I smile. Slow. Sweet. Deadly.

“You already are,” I say, rising on my toes, my lips brushing his. “Now prove it.”

And then—

He does.

His mouth crashes against mine, hard, deep, relentless. His hands grip my waist, pulling me against him, his cock hardening against my belly. The bond flares—fire, heat, magic surging through us, tying us together, fusing us. I moan, low and broken, my fingers tangling in his hair, my body arching into his.

And then—

He breaks the kiss.

“Later,” he growls, pressing his forehead to mine. “I’m not done with you yet.”

“Good,” I say, running my fingers down his chest, over his stomach, to the apex of his thighs. “Because I’m not done with you either.”

He catches my wrist, pulls it away, his eyes blazing. “You’re playing with fire.”

“I am fire,” I say, stepping back. “And you’re just getting started.”

The next morning, I wake in the Alpha’s chambers—again.

Kaelen is beside me, shirtless, his leathers half-laced, one arm slung low across my waist, the other curled beneath my head. His breath is warm on my neck, his heartbeat steady beneath my palm. He’s asleep. Or pretending to be.

I don’t move. Don’t speak. Just lie here, letting the sensation of his body settle into me like a long-lost limb. The fire in my blood is still raw, still pulsing with the aftermath of battle, of betrayal, of truth. I can still taste Silas’s blood on my fangs. Still feel the way his body crumpled when I drove the fire dagger through his heart. Still hear the way the Council erupted—not in outrage, not in horror, but in silence. The silence of a world that had just seen a monster fall… and didn’t know whether to mourn or rejoice.

And then—

I remember.

The shadows. The portal. The hands dragging me down. The cold cell. The slow, steady drain of my magic. Rhys’s blood potion. Kaelen’s rage flooding through the bond like a wildfire.

And then—

The Trial.

The way I fought. The way I weaved. The way I called the fire from the ground. The way I pinned Silas, my knee on his chest, my hand on his throat, my fangs bared.

And then—

The truth.

“You were never supposed to survive,” he’d said. “You were meant to die with them. A sacrifice. A warning. But then—” He’d smiled. “You were marked.”

“By Kaelen,” I’d said.

“No,” he’d whispered. “By us.

And now—

Now I don’t know what’s real.

Was I marked by Kaelen that night, in the ashes of my coven? Or was it something else? Something darker? Something planted?

I press my palm to the mark above my collarbone. It pulses—warm, alive, mine. But is it?

I slip from the furs.

Kaelen stirs, a low growl rumbling in his chest, but I press a hand to his forearm, just above the pulse, and whisper, “It’s okay. I’m not leaving.”

He stills. Doesn’t open his eyes. Just exhales, long and deep, and relaxes again.

I pull on my leathers—black, fitted, battle-ready—and lace my boots. No robe. No silk. No symbols of the mate bond. Just steel and fire and fury. The fire dagger rests against the wall, its sigils glowing faintly. I take it. Slide it into the sheath at my hip.

And I walk.

Not to the Council Chamber. Not to the war room. Not even to the Trial Grounds.

To the Archives.

The Archives are deep beneath the Spire—carved into the oldest stone, lined with shelves of ancient tomes, scrolls sealed in blood, data crystals humming with forgotten power. The air is thick with the scent of parchment, old magic, and something else—something sharp, metallic. Blood. Not fresh. Not spilled in violence. But drained. Stored. Used.

I move like a shadow, my boots making no sound on the stone, my leathers whispering against my skin. The bond hums behind me, a tether pulling me back, but I don’t look. Don’t stop. Just walk, one step after another, my breath steady, my heart a slow, heavy drum.

I don’t hate him.

Not yet.

But I don’t trust him.

And without trust, love is just a weapon.

I find it in Sub-level 7—a sealed vault, its door etched with the sigil of the High Tribunal. The lock is blood-based. I press my palm to the scanner. It hesitates. Then flashes green.

They’ve updated the records.

They’ve added me.

And they’ve marked me as cleared.

The door opens.

Inside—rows of crystal drives, each labeled with a name, a date, a crime. I move to the back, to the oldest section, where the dust is thickest, the air coldest. And there—

Case #7743: Onyx of the Ashen Circle. Charge: Coven Massacre. Verdict: Guilty. Sentence: Exile. Status: Closed.

I insert the crystal into the reader.

And watch.

The footage is grainy. Old. But clear enough.

There I am—twenty-nine years old, my hair wild, my face streaked with soot and blood, my leathers torn. I’m standing in the courtyard, flames rising behind me, my hands raised, my mouth moving. Accusing. Begging. Burning.

And then—

The elders enter. The matriarchs. The enforcers. And Kaelen.

He’s not in full armor. Not even in his coat. Just in black leathers, his hair a wild cascade down his back, his mark glowing faintly above his collarbone. He doesn’t look at me. Doesn’t speak. Just stands beside the High Elder, his face unreadable, his body a wall of heat and dominance.

“You stand accused,” the High Elder says, “of the massacre of the Ashen Circle, of violating the Blood Accord, of consorting with enemy forces, and of bearing an unauthorized mate-mark.”

I scream. Deny. Plead.

And then—

They show the “evidence.”

A blood pact—forged in my name, sealed with my sigil, authorizing the destruction of the coven.

Except I never signed it.

Never saw it.

And when I say so—when I beg them to check the sigil, to verify the blood, to listen—Kaelen finally speaks.

“The mark is real,” he says, voice rough. “The blood is hers. The pact is valid. She’s guilty.”

And just like that—

It’s over.

They drag me away.

And he doesn’t move.

Doesn’t flinch.

Doesn’t even look at me.

I rip the crystal from the reader.

My hands don’t shake.

My breath is steady.

But inside, something is burning.

Not rage.

Not fear.

Truth.

And it’s hot.

I don’t go back to the chambers.

Don’t return to his arms. Don’t crawl into the furs and pretend this never happened.

I go to the Trial Grounds.

And I wait.

He finds me at dawn.

Barefoot. Bare-chested. Leathers laced tight. His eyes are gold, wild, possessed. But not with anger. Not with fire.

With me.

“You’re awake,” he says, voice rough.

“So are you,” I say, not turning.

He doesn’t speak. Doesn’t move. Just watches me, his gaze sharp, searching. “You went to the Archives.”

“I did,” I say.

“And you saw the footage.”

“I did.”

He swallows. “Then you know.”

“I know you called me guilty,” I say, stepping closer. “I know you sealed my fate. I know you let them take me.”

“I was following the law,” he says, voice rough.

“You were following a lie,” I say, stepping into his space. “The blood pact was forged. The sigil was faked. And you—” I press a finger to his chest, just above the mark. “You didn’t even question it.”

“I had no reason to,” he says. “The evidence was clear.”

“And what about the bond?” I say, my voice breaking. “What about the way your body recognized mine? What about the way the mark flared when you touched me? Didn’t that tell you something?”

He doesn’t answer.

Just looks at me.

And for the first time, I see it—not just the warrior, not just the Alpha, not just the fire.

But the man who’s afraid.

Afraid of being wrong.

Afraid of breaking the law.

Afraid of losing control.

“You didn’t defend me,” I say, stepping back. “You didn’t even look at me. You just stood there and let them destroy me.”

“I couldn’t interfere,” he says, voice breaking. “Not as Alpha. Not as enforcer.”

“But you could have,” I say. “As a man. As my mate. As someone who saw me.”

He doesn’t answer.

Just stares at me, his eyes gold, wild, possessed.

And then—

I turn.

And walk away.

But before I can speak—

The siren blares.

Deep. Resonant. Cutting through the night like a blade.

I freeze.

The moment shatters.

Not from the Spire.

Not from the Council.

From the bond.

It screams—fire, heat, magic—ripping through me, not in pleasure, not in desire, but in agony. My knees buckle. My breath catches. My vision whites out.

And then—

I see it.

Kaelen.

On the ground.

Blood.

So much blood.

And Silas’s voice, cold, smooth, triumphant.

“You should have stayed with him, little witch. Now you’ll watch him die.”

My breath hitches.

“Kaelen—”

And I run.

The first thing I feel is the taste of blood.

Not mine.

His.

It floods my mouth—copper, iron, thick with the wild, untamed fire of his magic, of his wolf, of the bond that’s screaming through me like a live wire. I didn’t bite him. I didn’t draw blood. But I taste it. I feel it. The warm gush down his throat. The way his body jerks as the blade finds its mark. The way his breath hitches, then stills—just for a second—before he growls, low and broken, like a man trying to hold himself together.

I taste it because I’m him.

And he’s dying.

I don’t think. Don’t plan. Don’t hesitate.

I run.

Not toward the Council Chamber. Not toward the Alpha’s quarters. Not toward safety.

Toward him.

The bond tears through me, not as a tether, not as a promise, but as a wound—raw, bleeding, alive. It pulls me forward, faster, harder, my boots slamming against the stone, my breath ragged, my fangs bared. The corridors blur—torchlight flickering, shadows twisting, the wards pulsing like a heartbeat. I don’t care who sees me. Don’t care who hears. Don’t care if I’m walking into a trap.

If he’s bleeding, I’ll burn the Spire to the ground to reach him.

I find him in the eastern antechamber—just past the Blood Tribunal archives, where the stone turns darker, the air colder, the magic older. He’s on his knees, one hand braced against the floor, the other clutching his side, where a silver dagger is buried deep, its hilt carved with the sigil of House Nocturne. Blood seeps between his fingers, black in the dim light, spreading across the stone like a stain.

And standing over him—

Silas.

Not in robes. Not in ceremonial armor. Just in black leather, his hair slicked back, his eyes dark, his smile slow and cruel. He holds another blade—this one longer, serrated, poisoned. And he’s not alone.

Four enforcers. Vampires. All armed. All watching.

“You’re too late, little witch,” Silas says, not turning. “He’s already dying. And you—” He finally looks at me, his gaze sliding over my leathers, my fire dagger still in hand, my fangs bared. “You’re walking into your own grave.”

“Let him go,” I say, voice low, rough, dangerous.

“Or what?” he says, stepping over Kaelen, his boot pressing into the Alpha’s shoulder, forcing him lower. “You’ll burn me? You’ll fight? You’ll scream and cry and beg for his life?” He laughs—soft, cold, like glass breaking. “You already did that five years ago. And look where it got you.”

My blood turns to fire.

Not just rage. Not just fury.

Rage.

Because he’s right.

I did scream. I did cry. I did beg.

And they burned my coven anyway.

“Onyx,” Kaelen growls, lifting his head. His face is pale, his eyes gold, wild, possessed. “Don’t—”

“Don’t what?” I say, stepping forward. “Don’t save you? Don’t fight for you? Don’t burn this man alive for touching you?”

“It’s a trap,” he says, blood trickling from the corner of his mouth. “He wants you. He’s using me to get to you.”

“I know,” I say, not breaking stride. “And I don’t care.”

Silas smiles. “So predictable. So weak. Love makes you stupid, witch. It makes you blind. It makes you—”

“It makes me strong,” I say, and I move.

Not with fire. Not with magic.

With my body.

I lunge—fast, silent, deadly—and my fire dagger finds the throat of the first enforcer. He doesn’t even scream. Just gurgles, blood spraying as he falls. The second comes at me with a stake. I twist, duck, drive my elbow into his ribs, feel them crack, then slam my palm into his nose, hear it shatter. He stumbles back. I don’t wait. Drive the dagger into his heart.

The third charges.

I don’t flinch.

Step into him, grab his wrist, twist, hear the bone snap, then kick his knee out, feel it give. He drops. I drive the dagger into his neck.

The fourth hesitates.

Smart man.

But not smart enough.

I throw the dagger.

It spins through the air, hilt over blade, and strikes him in the temple. He drops like a stone.

And then—

It’s just me and Silas.

And Kaelen, bleeding on the floor.

“You always were good with a blade,” Silas says, not moving. “But you’re still a fool.”

“And you’re still a murderer,” I say, stepping over the bodies. “And tonight, you die.”

He smiles. “You think I came here to fight you? To kill you myself?” He steps back. “I came to take you.”

And then—

The floor opens.

Not stone. Not trapdoor.

A portal.

Black. Swirling. Hungry.

And before I can move, before I can scream, before I can reach Kaelen—

Hands grab me from below.

Not human. Not vampire. Not werewolf.

Shadows.

They wrap around my legs, my waist, my arms, pulling me down, dragging me into the void. I fight. Kick. Scream. Try to summon fire—but the magic won’t come. The bond screams. Kaelen roars. His hand reaches for me, bloodied, desperate—

And then—

I’m gone.

The first thing I feel is the cold.

Not the chill of stone. Not the bite of winter.

Something deeper. Older. Darker.

It seeps into my bones, my blood, my magic, like a poison. I’m in a cell—circular, low-ceilinged, walls of black stone etched with sigils that pulse faintly blue. No torches. No windows. Just a single iron door, sealed with silver and blood. The air is thick with the scent of damp earth, old magic, and something else—something sharp, metallic. Blood. Not mine. Not fresh. But drained. Stored. Used.

And then—

I feel it.

The bond.

Not screaming. Not flaring.

Weak.

Like a flame about to die.

My mark pulses above my collarbone—not warm, not alive, but dim. And I know.

Kaelen is alive.

But barely.

And I’m not with him.

I don’t panic.

Don’t scream. Don’t cry.

Just sit.

Lean against the wall. Close my eyes. Breathe.

I’ve been in worse places. Fought worse enemies. Survived worse pain.

This is just another fire to walk through.

But then—

The door opens.

Not with a creak. Not with a groan.

With a whisper.

And he walks in.

Silas.

Not alone this time.

Two figures follow—hooded, cloaked, their faces hidden. They carry a device—a cylinder of black metal, etched with the same sigils as the walls, its core glowing faintly red.

“Welcome home, Onyx,” he says, stepping forward. “Or should I say—welcome back to where it all began?”

My breath hitches.

Because I know this place.

Not from maps. Not from dreams.

From memory.

This is where they held me the night my coven burned.

This is where they took my magic.

This is where they marked me.

“You don’t remember much, do you?” he says, circling me. “The fire. The screams. The way they dragged you out of the ashes. The way you begged for death.”

“I remember enough,” I say, not moving. “I remember you giving the order. I remember the blood pact. I remember the lies.”

“And yet,” he says, crouching in front of me, “you don’t remember the most important part.”

“Which is?”

“That you were never supposed to survive,” he says, voice soft. “You were meant to die with them. A sacrifice. A warning. But then—” He smiles. “You were marked.”

My chest tightens.

“By Kaelen,” I say.

“No,” he says. “By us.

And then—

He nods.

The cloaked figures step forward. One places the device against my chest, just above the bond mark. The other begins to chant—low, resonant, ancient.

And then—

Pain.

Not fire. Not silver. Not steel.

Magic.

It tears through me—cold, sharp, invasive. I feel it in my veins, in my blood, in the core of my magic—ripping, tearing, draining. I scream. Arch. Thrash. But the device holds me, the sigils flare, and the magic—my fire, my fae blood, my soul—is pulled from me, siphoned into the cylinder.

And then—

It stops.

I collapse, gasping, my body trembling, my magic a hollow ache.

“Impressive,” Silas says, taking the cylinder. It glows brighter now, red pulsing like a heartbeat. “Hybrid magic is rare. Unstable. But when harnessed—” He smiles. “It can break the Veil.”

“You’ll never get away with this,” I say, voice weak.

“I already have,” he says. “And soon, the world will see. The humans will know. The supernaturals will fall. And you—” He leans down, his breath hot on my ear. “You’ll be the spark that lights the fire.”

And then—

He’s gone.

The door seals.

And I’m alone.

The hours pass.

Or maybe days.

Time doesn’t matter here.

Just pain. Just cold. Just the slow, steady drain of my magic, my fire, my self.

They come every few hours—Silas and his cloaked attendants. They place the device against my chest. They chant. They drain.

And each time, it gets harder to fight.

Harder to breathe.

Harder to remember who I am.

But I do.

I remember.

I remember the coven. The fire. The night I was marked.

I remember Kaelen—his hands on my body, his mouth on mine, his voice breaking as he whispered, “I want you.”

I remember the bond—fire, heat, magic—screaming between us, not in pain, but in truth.

And I remember what I told him.

Before I left.

“I trusted you.”

And I did.

Even after the lie.

Even after the betrayal.

Because love isn’t just trust.

It’s choice.

And I chose him.

And now—

I have to get back to him.

The next time they come, I’m ready.

Not with fire. Not with magic.

With illusion.

It’s weak. Flickering. But it’s enough.

As the cloaked figure places the device against my chest, I weave a glamor—just a whisper, just a flicker—making it seem like the magic is flowing, like I’m helpless, like I’m broken.

But I’m not.

Not yet.

And when they leave, the device humming with stolen power, I press my hand to the stone wall, feel the sigils beneath my fingers, and begin to burn.

Not with fire.

With memory.

I think of the Trial Flame. The Ritual Fire. The way it welcomed me. The way it chose me.

And then—

I push.

Not against the stone. Not against the sigils.

Against the bond.

It’s weak. Flickering. But it’s there.

And I pull.

Not for strength. Not for power.

For him.

And then—

I feel it.

Not his voice. Not his touch.

His rage.

It floods me—hot, wild, unstoppable. His pain. His fury. His need. His love. His truth.

And I know.

He’s alive.

And he’s coming.

But before I can speak—

The door opens.

Not Silas.

Not his attendants.

One of the cloaked figures—taller, broader, moving differently.

And when he pulls back his hood—

It’s Rhys.

His face is pale, his eyes wide, his voice low. “Onyx,” he says. “I don’t have much time. They’re watching.”

“Rhys,” I say, voice weak. “How—”

“I’ve been working from the inside,” he says, stepping closer. “I knew Silas was planning this. I knew he’d take you. I just didn’t know when.” He kneels, pressing a hand to the sigils on the wall. “I can’t free you. Not yet. But I can give you this.”

He pulls a small vial from his coat—dark liquid, swirling like smoke.

“What is it?” I ask.

“A blood potion,” he says. “From Kaelen. It won’t restore your magic. But it’ll keep you alive. It’ll keep the bond strong.”

My breath hitches.

“He’s alive?”

“Barely,” Rhys says. “But he’s fighting. He’s tearing the Spire apart looking for you. And if you die—” He swallows. “He will too.”

I take the vial. Uncork it. Drink.

The blood is hot. Thick. His.

And as it slides down my throat, I feel it—

The bond.

Not weak.

Not dying.

Alive.

And I know—

He’s coming.

And when he does—

I’ll be ready.

But before I can speak—

The siren blares.

Deep. Resonant. Cutting through the silence like a blade.

I freeze.

The moment shatters.

Rhys’s eyes widen. “They know,” he says. “They know I’m here.”

“Go,” I say. “Now.”

He hesitates. “Onyx—”

Go.

And he does.

The door seals.

And I’m alone again.

But not for long.

Because the bond—fire, heat, magic—flares.

Not in pain.

Not in fear.

In hope.

And I know—

He’s coming.

And when he does—

I’ll be ready.

Because I’m not the fire.

I’m the inferno.

And I’m just getting started.