The silence after the vision wasn’t peace.
It was aftermath.
The kind that follows a storm—when the wind still hums in your ears, the air still crackles with leftover magic, and every breath feels like it could shatter the fragile calm. I sat up slowly, the black velvet sheets slipping from my shoulders, my body humming with the echo of the kiss, the fever, the truth. My lips were swollen. My thighs slick. My magic restless, coiled tight beneath my skin like a serpent that had tasted blood and wasn’t done hunting.
And the cursed mark on my wrist—
It was gold.
Not red. Not black.
Gold.
Steady. Calm. Whole.
But Kael was gone.
Not from the chamber.
Not from the Court.
From me.
I could feel it in the way the bond no longer surged with every heartbeat, every breath, every flicker of emotion. It was still there—pulsing, alive—but muted, distant, like a fire banked to embers. And the worst part?
I knew why.
Because I’d pulled away.
Not from fear.
Not from doubt.
But from choice.
I’d said, “Not like this.”
And he’d said, “Then take it.”
And I hadn’t.
Because I wasn’t ready to surrender—not to him, not to the bond, not to the truth that had been carved into my bloodline before I was born. I wasn’t ready to be the key. Not yet.
And now—
Now I was paying the price.
The door opened.
Not with a knock. Not with a warning.
Just silence, then movement.
Riven stepped inside, his golden eyes sharp with concern, his scent—pine and iron, warm and familiar—cutting through the cold. He didn’t speak. Didn’t bow. Just crossed the room in three strides and knelt beside the bed, his hand closing over mine.
“You’re awake,” he said, voice low.
“I’m not safe,” I said.
He didn’t argue. Just nodded. “No. But you’re alive.”
“And Kael?”
“He’s in the Chamber of Echoes,” Riven said. “The Council is in chaos. The Judge vanished after the vision. Lysandra’s been arrested. And Kael—” He hesitated. “He’s demanding a truth trial. Says the bond isn’t broken. Says the curse isn’t finished. Says the only way to end it is to face the Judge in open combat.”
My throat tightened.
Because he was right.
The vision had revealed the truth.
But truth didn’t kill curses.
Only blood did.
And magic.
And choice.
“And me?” I asked.
“They’re calling you a traitor,” Riven said. “Saying you used the bond to manipulate him. That you’re not his equal. That you’re just a weapon.”
I didn’t flinch.
Just sat there, my fingers tightening around his. “And you?”
“I know the truth,” he said. “Because I’ve known you since we were children. Since your mother was dragged away. Since you swore you’d burn the Court to the ground.” He leaned closer, his voice dropping. “And I know you’re not going to let him fight alone.”
My breath caught.
Because he was right.
And the worst part?
I didn’t want to.
Not anymore.
“Then help me,” I said, rising. “Help me get to him. Not as a prisoner. Not as a pawn. But as his equal.”
He studied me.
Then nodded.
And then—
We moved.
Through the corridors, past bioluminescent vines that pulsed crimson like living veins, past vampires in velvet coats who watched me with cold curiosity, past Fae in silken masks who whispered like serpents. We passed werewolves in ceremonial leathers, their golden eyes narrowed, their scents sharp with suspicion.
They knew.
Of course they knew.
The gala. The torn gown. The mating mark. The kiss.
“She’s his now.”
“The witch has surrendered.”
“The bond is complete.”
I let the whispers slide off me like water. Let them believe what they wanted. Let them think I’d given in, that I’d broken, that I’d traded vengeance for a vampire’s bed.
But they were wrong.
I hadn’t surrendered.
I’d chosen.
And now—
Now I was choosing again.
The Chamber of Echoes was in chaos.
Not the kind that came with blood or fire, but the quieter, sharper kind—the kind that followed a truth too long buried, a secret too powerful to contain. Vampires stood in tight clusters, their voices low and sharp. Fae drifted through the air like smoke, their masks glinting with frost. Werewolves prowled the edges, their growls low in their throats. And at the center—Kael.
He stood before the Blood Mirror, his storm-gray hair falling over his forehead, his coat torn, his hands stained with blood. His fangs were lengthened, his eyes—black, depthless—locked onto mine. He didn’t speak. Didn’t move. Just stood there, breathing hard, his chest rising and falling.
And the bond—our bond—surged, a wave of heat crashing through me. My breath hitched. My core clenched. My fingers tightened on Riven’s arm.
“You’re alive,” I said.
“So are you,” he said, stepping forward. His gaze swept the room—the shattered mirrors, the blood on the floor, the Council members still reeling from the vision. “I see you made a mess.”
“They started it,” I said.
He almost smiled.
But then his expression darkened. “The Judge is still out there. He’ll come for us. For the bond. For the truth.”
“Then let him,” I said. “We’ve faced worse.”
“And if he kills me?” he asked, stepping closer. “If he uses the curse to sever the bond? If he—”
“Then I’ll kill him,” I said, stepping into his space. “Not for revenge. Not for justice. But because I can’t live without you.”
His breath caught.
And the bond—our bond—surged, not in heat, not in hunger—but in something deeper.
Something like trust.
And then—
It hit.
Like a blade to the spine.
White-hot. Relentless. Consuming.
I gasped, clutching the edge of the stone table as the world tilted. My vision blurred. The bioluminescent vines along the ceiling pulsed a sickly, warning crimson, their light strobing like a dying heartbeat. The cursed mark on my wrist flared—black now, not gold, not red. A void. A hunger. A need.
Not for blood.
For him.
“Amber,” Kael said, his voice sharp, but I couldn’t answer. My body was on fire, every nerve alight, every muscle locked in agony. The bond was screaming—not in pain, not in resistance—but in absence. Like a limb torn from the body. Like a heart ripped from the chest.
I collapsed.
Not to the floor.
Into his arms.
He caught me effortlessly, one hand under my knees, the other cradling my back, lifting me as if I weighed nothing. His heat radiated through the thin fabric of my gown, seeping into my skin, into my bones, into the very core of me. The bond surged in response—relief, recognition, hunger—but it wasn’t enough.
Nothing was enough.
“The fever,” I gasped, my fingers clawing at his coat. “It’s back.”
“I know,” he said, his voice rough. “But this time, I’m not letting go.”
And then he was moving—fast, purposeful, his strides eating up the corridor. Vampires bowed their heads as we passed. Fae lowered their masks. Werewolves stepped aside. No one spoke. No one dared.
Because they knew.
The bond was breaking.
And only he could fix it.
He carried me through the archway into our chambers—the vast, black-veined stone room with bioluminescent vines pulsing crimson along the walls, the massive bed draped in black velvet, the hearth where witchfire flickered in a perpetual, silent flame. He didn’t set me down gently. Didn’t lay me on the bed with care.
He threw me.
Not hard. Not cruelly.
But with a force that left no room for denial. I landed on the mattress, my back arching, my breath catching as the impact sent a jolt through my body. The cursed mark flared—black, searing—and I cried out, curling into myself, my fingers clawing at the sheets.
And then—
He was on me.
Not on top. Not pinning me. But beside me, one hand framing my face, the other pressing against my lower back, his heat radiating through the thin fabric of my gown. His eyes—black, depthless—locked onto mine.
“The bond is dying,” he said. “And if it dies, you die with it.”
“Then let it die,” I spat, even as my body arched into his touch. “I came here to destroy you. To break the curse. To clear my mother’s name. If I die doing it, so be it.”
“Liar,” he said, his thumb brushing my lower lip. “You don’t want to die. You want to live. You want to love. You want to trust.”
“I don’t trust you,” I whispered.
“No,” he said. “But you’re starting to.”
And then—
The cursed mark flared again—hotter, deeper—and I screamed, my back arching off the bed, my fingers clawing at his arms. The pain wasn’t physical. It was deeper. It was the absence of him. The severing of the bond. The slow, suffocating death of everything I’d fought against, everything I’d denied, everything I’d come to want.
And he—
He didn’t flinch.
Just pulled me closer, until our bodies were flush, until his heat soaked into my skin, until his breath mingled with mine. His hand slid down, pressing against the small of my back, holding me to him.
“You have to let go,” he said, voice low. “You have to stop fighting. The bond isn’t a chain. It’s a bridge. And right now, you’re tearing it apart.”
“I didn’t ask for this,” I gasped. “I didn’t ask for you. I didn’t ask for any of this.”
“No,” he said. “But you have it. And if you keep resisting, it will kill you.”
“Then kill me,” I whispered. “If I can’t have justice, I’ll take death.”
“And what about me?” he said, his voice rough. “Do you think I’ll survive without you? Do you think I’ll go back to being the monster you thought I was?”
My breath caught.
Because he was right.
The bond wasn’t just killing me.
It was killing him.
And the worst part?
I didn’t want him to die.
Not anymore.
“I can’t,” I said, tears spilling down my cheeks. “I can’t stop hating. Stop fearing. Stop running.”
“You don’t have to stop,” he said, wiping my tears with his thumb. “You just have to stop doing it alone.”
And then—
The cursed mark flared—black, searing—and I screamed again, my body convulsing, my magic lashing out in wild bursts of violet flame that scorched the air, blackened the sheets. My core ached. My thighs clenched. My body was on fire—every nerve alight, every muscle taut with need.
And then—
I did the only thing I could.
I climbed onto him.
Not gently. Not carefully.
Hard.My knees straddled his hips, my hands framing his face, my breath coming fast. His eyes widened—black, depthless—but he didn’t stop me. Didn’t push me away. Just watched as I leaned down, my lips brushing his, my magic surging, the bond roaring to life.
“You want this,” he murmured, his hands gripping my hips, not to hold me down, but to hold on. “You want me.”
“I don’t,” I whispered, even as my hips rocked against his, seeking friction, seeking relief, seeking him.
“Liar,” he said, his fangs lengthening, just slightly, grazing my lower lip. “I can feel you. I can smell you. I can taste you.”
And then—
I kissed him.
Not gentle. Not slow.
Hard.My lips crashed against his, desperate, claiming. My fangs—dulled by half-Fae blood, but still sharp—grazed his lower lip. He growled, a sound deep in his chest, and took control, his tongue sliding into my mouth, hot and insistent. One hand tangled in my hair, the other gripping my hip, pulling me against him until there was no space, no air, no thought—just heat, and hunger, and the unbearable rightness of his mouth on mine.
The bond exploded.
Fire surged through my veins, not pain—ecstasy. Light flared behind my eyelids, blinding. Memories flooded in—
A child screaming.
A woman in chains.
A knife raised.
A curse carved into skin.
And then—
Him.
Younger. Blood on his hands. Eyes wide with horror.
Not as a killer.
As a witness.
As a prisoner.
And then—
Me.
Not as a daughter.
As a key.
And the curse—
Not as a punishment.
As a lock.
And the bond—
Not as a chain.
As a key.
The kiss broke. We were both gasping, our foreheads pressed together, our breath mingling. His fangs grazed my lip. My fingers clawed his shoulders. My thighs clenched around his hips, slick with arousal.
“Now do you believe me?” he whispered.
I didn’t answer.
Because I didn’t know what to believe anymore.
But I knew one thing—
The fever was gone.
The bond was whole.
And the truth—
It wasn’t what I thought.
It was worse.
And better.
And I wasn’t ready for it.
But I couldn’t run.
Not this time.
Because the lock was breaking.
And the key—
Was us.
His hands slid down, cupping my ass, fingers pressing into the curve of my hip. I gasped. My body arched into him. My core ached, empty, needing.
“You feel it,” he murmured, lips brushing my neck. “The pull. The hunger. The way your body knows me.”
“It’s magic,” I whispered. “Not fate.”
“Then why does it feel like both?”
He nipped my earlobe. I moaned. My hips rocked against his, seeking friction. My fingers dug into his shoulders. My breath came fast.
And then—
The cursed mark flared—gold.
Not black.
Gold.
And the bond—our bond—hummed, not with tension, not with resistance, but with completion.
And then—
I felt it.
The shift.
The line.
The moment where need became choice.
Where magic became desire.
Where survival became surrender.
My hips stilled. My breath slowed. My fingers loosened in his hair.
And I pulled back.
Just enough to look at him.
His eyes—black, depthless—searched mine, searching for the lie, the retreat, the fear.
But I didn’t look away.
“Not like this,” I whispered.
His breath caught.
“What?”
“Not like this,” I said again, my voice steady. “Not because the bond is breaking. Not because I’m desperate. Not because I’m afraid.” I shifted slightly, still straddling him, still feeling the hard length of his cock pressing against me, still aching with need. “I want you. But I want it to be real. I want it to be mine.”
He didn’t move.
Just watched me, his expression unreadable.
And then—
He smiled.
Not a wide smile. Not a mocking one.
But a real one. The first I’d ever seen.
“Then take it,” he said, voice rough. “Take what’s yours.”
And the bond—our bond—surged, not in heat, not in hunger—but in something deeper.
Something like peace.
And then—
Darkness.
Not unconsciousness.
Not sleep.
Just… nothing.
One second I was there, feeling everything—his hands on my body, his breath on my neck, his cock straining against the fabric of his trousers.
The next—
I was gone.
—
I woke to silence.
The bioluminescent vines pulsed a soft, steady crimson, their light gentle, almost soothing. The hearth’s witchfire flickered, casting long shadows across the room. The bed was warm. The sheets tangled.
And Kael was gone.
But his scent—cold stone, aged wine, the iron tang of blood—still clung to the pillow beside me. And the bond—our bond—hummed beneath my skin, not with tension, not with resistance, but with something deeper.
Something like peace.
I sat up slowly, my body aching in ways I couldn’t name. My thighs were slick. My core still throbbed. My lips were swollen from kissing.
And the cursed mark on my wrist—
It was gold.
Not red. Not black.
Gold.
And I knew—
The real battle hadn’t begun.
It was just about to.
But this time—
This time, I wasn’t fighting for revenge.
I was fighting for love.
And for the man I’d chosen.
And the curse—
It wasn’t what I thought.
It was worse.
And better.
And I wasn’t ready for it.
But I couldn’t run.
Not this time.
Because the lock was breaking.
And the key—
Was us.