The first time I sit on the throne not as a symbol, not as a compromise, but as a sovereign with real power thrumming beneath my fingertips—the weight of it doesn’t crush me.
It grounds me.
Not the obsidian seat beneath me, cool and carved with runes that pulse faintly with ancient magic. Not the crown resting on my brow, light as breath but heavy with meaning. Not even the bond humming beneath my skin, steady and strong, a second heartbeat syncing with Cassian’s. It’s the silence that follows our entrance into the Council Chamber—the kind that isn’t fear, isn’t tension, isn’t the brittle quiet before a storm.
It’s respect.
The vaulted ceiling opens to the morning sky, sunlight spilling through stained glass cleansed of war imagery, painting the dais in fractured hues of bone and ash. The ancient pacts and blood oaths have been replaced—etched in silver and obsidian—the binding of Cassian and me, our joined sigils pulsing faintly with power. The D’Vaire crest, once solitary and cold, now entwined with the Elspeth rose: storm-wreathed, thorned, unbroken.
The chamber is full.
But not with enemies.
With allies.
Vampire elders in black silk, their fangs just barely visible, their eyes sharp but no longer hostile. Werewolf alphas in leather and silver, their amber eyes burning with restraint, not rage. Fae nobles behind jeweled masks, their voices smooth as poisoned silk, but now laced with something new—curiosity. Witches in hooded robes, their fingers stained with ink and blood, their magic quiet but present, their storm-gray eyes alight with something I haven’t seen in years.
Hope.
And in the center—
—the thrones.
Side by side. Forged in obsidian and silver, etched with runes that pulse with ancient magic. Mine. His. Ours.
We ascend the dais together—slow, deliberate, unflinching. No guards. No fanfare. No declaration. Just the bond humming between us—not screaming, not burning, but alive. Like it’s finally found its purpose. Like it’s no longer a curse, but a covenant.
Cassian’s hand finds mine, his fingers lacing with mine, his presence like a wall of heat and shadow. His gold eyes burn into mine, not with possession, but with trust. Because he knows. He knows I’m not here to destroy. Not to conquer. Not to avenge.
I’m here to build.
And as we sit—side by side, hand in hand, the bond syncing with every breath—the silence that follows isn’t tense.
It’s full.
Like the world is holding its breath.
—
The first decree is mine.
Not Cassian’s. Not the vampires’. Not even the Fae Sovereign’s, though she sits at the edge of the dais, her ancient presence radiating centuries of magic, her jeweled mask hiding her expression. But her silence is permission. And her nod—small, final—is acceptance.
I rise, my storm-gray eyes scanning the chamber, my voice steady, rough, carrying through the air like a vow.
“The Supernatural Accord stands,” I say, my fingers tightening around the arm of the throne. “But it is no longer a fragile peace. It is a pact. A union. And today, we rewrite its laws—not to control, not to dominate, but to protect.”
A murmur ripples through the chamber. Not protest. Not outrage.
But recognition.
“Blood pacts,” I continue, my voice low, dangerous, “will no longer be binding without consent. No more forced oaths. No more stolen blood. No more binding through violence or deception. If a pact is made—” I stop, my storm-gray eyes locking onto the vampire elders. “—it will be witnessed. It will be recorded. And it will be revocable.”
The elder on the left rises—ancient, powerful, his fangs bared, his voice a low growl. “You would strip us of our power? Of our tradition?”
My chest tightens.
Because I know.
I know what blood means to them. The intimacy. The dominance. The legacy. But I also know what it’s been used for—enslavement, coercion, the silencing of dissent.
“No,” I say, stepping forward, my boots silent on the stone. “I would evolve it. The old ways are dead. The lies are buried. And the future—” I stop, my gaze sweeping the chamber. “—is not built on blood debts. It’s built on choice.”
He doesn’t flinch.
Just sits, his fangs still bared, his eyes blazing.
And then—
—the werewolf alpha rises. Massive, silver-streaked hair, amber eyes burning. “And what of the hybrids? The half-breeds? The ones who’ve been cast out, caged, hunted?”
My chest tightens.
Because I know.
I know their stories. I’ve seen their scars. I’ve felt their fear.
“They are not outcasts,” I say, my voice steady, rough. “They are not abominations. They are people. And they will be recognized. No more second-class status. No more forced treaties. No more public claiming without consent. And if a claim is made—” I stop, my storm-gray eyes locking onto his. “—it will be honored. Or it will be null.”
He doesn’t flinch.
Just nods, once, and sits.
And then—
—the Fae councilor rises. A woman behind a mask of emerald and gold, her voice smooth as poisoned silk. “And the glamours? The truth exchanges? The favors owed?”
I don’t answer.
Just turn to Cassian.
He rises, his coat open, his fangs just barely visible, his gold eyes burning. “They remain,” he says, his voice low, dangerous. “But they will be regulated. No more forced kisses. No more stolen truths. No more using glamour to manipulate, to control, to enslave. And if a favor is owed—” He stops, his gold eyes burning into hers. “—it will be honored. Or the debt will be repaid in blood.”
She doesn’t answer.
Just sits, her mask hiding her expression.
And then—
—I speak again.
“And humans?” I ask, turning to the witch triarch. “They are not prey. Not tools. Not slaves. They are people. And they will be protected. The blood bars will be shut. The glamour dens dismantled. The fight rings burned to the ground.”
A gasp ripples through the chamber.
“You cannot outlaw centuries of tradition,” a vampire elder hisses, rising, his fangs bared. “We are not beasts. We are not monsters. We are—”
“You are evolving,” Cassian says, stepping forward, his voice low, dangerous. “Or you are exiled. The court will not be a hunting ground. The city will not be a slaughterhouse. And if you cannot control your hunger—” He stops, his gold eyes burning into his. “—then you will be caged.”
He doesn’t flinch.
Just sits, his fangs still bared, his eyes blazing.
And then—
—the silence returns.
Not tense.
Not fragile.
But full.
Because they see it now.
Not just the bond.
Not just the power.
But the unity.
The equality.
The love.
—
After the Council, we retreat to the war room.
Not for battle.
Not for strategy.
But for truth.
The long obsidian table reflects the moonlight, its surface polished to a mirror sheen. The walls are lined with ancient tomes, grimoires bound in leather and iron, their pages stained with ink and blood. And at the center—
—us.
Cassian. Elara. Mira. And me.
We sit in a circle, our hands clasped, our bodies close, the bond humming between us—not just mine and Cassian’s, but ours. A network of loyalty, of love, of choice. The sigils on our arms flare—white fire racing across our skin, syncing, harmonizing—and for the first time, I feel it.
Not just power.
Not just magic.
But family.
“The trials begin tomorrow,” Elara says, spreading the folder across the table. “Names. Dates. Transactions. All pointing to Fae councilors, Lycan alphas, even a few witches. And at the center—” She stops, her green eyes locking onto mine. “—the mark of the Obsidian Court.”
“They’re using my name,” Cassian says, his voice low, dangerous. “To hide their crimes. To justify their violence. To tear us apart.”
“Then we expose them,” Mira says, rising, her storm-gray eyes blazing. “We release the files. We hold the trials. We let the world see the truth.”
“And if they come for us?” Elara asks, her green eyes burning.
“Then we burn them,” I say, rising, my hand finding Cassian’s. “Not with vengeance. Not with blood. But with truth. With justice. With love.”
He turns to me—really turns—and for the first time, I see it.
Not just pride.
Not just love.
But belief.
“You’re ready,” he says.
“I’ll never be ready,” I say, voice low. “But I’ll fight anyway.”
He nods, stepping closer. “Then you’re already stronger than most.”
—
Later, in the privacy of our chambers, I stand at the window, barefoot, my breath fogging the glass, my storm-gray eyes locked on the horizon. The moon is still high, its light spilling through the stained glass, painting the walls in bone and ash. The bond hums beneath my skin—steady, strong, ours—but it’s not the same as before. It doesn’t scream. Doesn’t burn. Doesn’t demand.
It harmonizes.
Cassian steps behind me, his presence like a wall of heat and shadow. His hands find my waist, pulling me back against him, his breath warm against my neck. “You’re thinking,” he says, his fangs grazing my pulse.
“I’m remembering,” I say, pressing my palm to the sigils on my arms. They glow faintly, like embers banked in ash. “The first time I saw you. You were standing over a black altar, blood dripping from your fangs, my mother’s locket in your grip.”
He doesn’t flinch.
Just presses his lips to my shoulder, his fangs grazing my skin, not to bite, not to mark, but to feel. “And you thought I was the monster.”
“I did,” I say, turning in his arms, my storm-gray eyes locking onto his. “But you weren’t. You were the one who saved me. From the curse. From the lie. From myself.”
His chest tightens.
“And you saved me,” he says, cupping my face, his thumb brushing my cheek. “From centuries of war. From loneliness. From the throne I never wanted.”
“And now?” I ask, rising on my toes, my lips brushing his. “Now that we have it?”
He smiles—small, rare, real—and pulls me close, his breath warm against my neck. “Now we rule it. Together. Not as prince and witch. Not as vampire and scion. But as us.”
I kiss him—soft, slow, deliberate—not in passion, not in hunger, but in truth. Not a claiming. Not a vow. But a promise. The bond hums—white fire racing through our veins, sigils flaring in unison, a storm of light and blood and truth.
When we finally pull apart, our breaths are ragged, our lips swollen, our eyes locked.
“You were my curse,” I whisper, pressing my palm to his chest, where his heart beats—strong, steady, mine.
He kisses me, his fangs grazing my lip. “And you,” he says, “are my salvation.”
And as we stand there, in the quiet, in the moonlight, in the truth—
—I know.
This isn’t just love.
This isn’t just fate.
This is forever.
And I’ll burn the world before I let anyone take it from me.