The moment Lysara walked into the east parlor, I felt it—like a blade sliding between my ribs.
Not pain.
Regret.
She’d been waiting for this. Watching. Waiting for the crack in Sage’s armor, the moment of vulnerability, the second she could slip in and twist the knife. And she’d found it.
Not in the bond.
Not in the fever.
In *me.*
My past.
My lies.
My blood.
She stood there, draped in crimson silk like a queen of rot, her red-gold eyes locked on Sage, her voice a velvet whisper as she bared her neck, revealing the faint, fading bite mark just above her pulse. “He marked me,” she said. “Three times. Three feedings. A blood-bond. A *claim.* And he called me *mate.*”
Sage didn’t move. Didn’t speak. Just stood there, her jaw tight, her breath shallow, her dagger trembling in her hand.
But I felt it.
The way her heartbeat stuttered.
The way her magic flared beneath her skin, wild and uncontrolled.
The way her scent—storm and thyme—soured with jealousy, with hurt, with betrayal.
She didn’t look at me.
Didn’t need to.
Because she already believed the worst.
And I couldn’t blame her.
Because Lysara wasn’t lying.
Not entirely.
She *had* been my blood-consort. Three feedings. Political theater. A way to keep the vampire house in line. I’d bitten her. Called her *mate.* Told her whatever she needed to hear to keep her uncle, Prince Virell, from stirring war in the shadows.
But it had never been real.
Never been love.
Never been *choice.*
And now, she was using it to destroy the one woman who had ever made me feel like I wasn’t just a monster in a king’s coat.
“It wasn’t a claim,” I said, stepping between them, my body a shield. “It was politics. Power. A way to keep the vampire house in line.”
She laughed—soft, melodic. “And the nights in your bed? The whispers? The promises? The way he’d call my name when he came?”
Sage flinched.
Not visibly.
But I felt it—like a crack in the earth beneath my feet.
“You don’t have to believe me,” Lysara said, stepping around me, her eyes locked on Sage. “But ask him. Ask Kaelen if he ever called *you* mate.”
And that—
That was the knife.
Because I hadn’t.
Not yet.
Not because I didn’t want to.
But because I was waiting.
Waiting for her to *choose* it. To *choose* me. Not because the bond demanded it, not because the fever pulled her, but because she wanted to, needed to, *ached* to.
But Sage didn’t ask.
Didn’t speak.
Just turned and walked away.
And I let her go.
Because I knew—
She had to face this. Had to feel this. Had to *break* before she could rebuild.
And I wasn’t going to force her.
Not this time.
I followed at a distance, silent, shadowed, my presence a storm at her back. She didn’t go to the chambers. Didn’t seek refuge. Just walked—through the gardens, beneath the thorned chandeliers, past the bloodwine fountains—her steps sharp, her spine rigid, her face blank.
But I could feel it.
The way her heartbeat spiked when I stepped closer.
The way her breath hitched when I said her name.
The way her body still *wanted* me, even as her mind fought to reject me.
And when she finally stopped, standing beneath a silver-barked willow, her back to me, her shoulders stiff, I didn’t hesitate.
“She took the robe,” I said, stopping a few paces behind her. “I didn’t give it to her.”
She didn’t turn. “And the mark?”
“I bit her. Years ago. Before I knew what the bond was. Before I knew you.”
She turned then, storm-gray eyes burning into mine. “And the nights in your bed?”
“She was my blood-consort,” I admitted. “Three feedings. But no bond. No claim. No love.”
“But you called her mate.”
“A lie,” I said, stepping closer. “A game. And I ended it. I told her it was over. But she never accepted it.”
She studied me, searching. Not for deception—she’d have smelled it. But for truth. For weakness. For proof that I was just like every other predator in this Court.
And I let her see it.
Let her see the guilt. The weight of centuries spent ruling through fear, not trust. Let her see the way my wolf growled low in my chest, not in threat—but in grief.
“You don’t get to decide what I feel,” she said, voice shaking. “You don’t get to tell me not to care.”
“I don’t,” I said. “But I won’t let her use you. Use us. She’s trying to break you. To make you doubt. And if you let her—”
“Then what?” she snapped. “You’ll protect me? Claim me? Tell me I’m yours?”
“Yes,” I said, the word raw, stripped bare. “Because you are. Not because of the bond. Not because of politics. Because I chose you. Even when I didn’t know your name. Even when I didn’t know your face. I chose you.”
Her breath caught.
And for a heartbeat, I thought—
Thought she might believe me.
Thought she might stay.
But then she turned and walked away.
And I let her go.
Because I knew—
She had to choose me.
Not because the bond demanded it.
Not because I commanded it.
But because she wanted to.
I returned to my chambers, the silence pressing in. The bed still bore the imprint of her body, her scent woven into the fabric. I stood by the hearth, stoking the fire into embers, my mind racing. Lysara’s move was a distraction. A test. She wanted Sage to doubt. To run. To break.
And if she succeeded, Virell would win.
Because Sage was the key.
Not just to the bond.
To the truth.
I’d seen the ledger Corin gave her. The names. The dates. The payments to the hunters who slaughtered her coven. Virell had ordered it—not just to steal their magic, but to fear them. Witches with lycan blood were unpredictable. Uncontrollable. A threat to the balance.
But the ledger wasn’t enough.
Not for the Council.
They needed proof. Irrefutable proof. And that meant the vampire archives.
The private wing.
Virell’s study.
And Sage had the key.
I didn’t go to her. Didn’t summon her. Just waited. Watched. Let the bond hum between us, a silent thread pulling us closer, even when she fought it.
Two days passed.
She avoided me. Spoke only when necessary. Trained with Riven, studied the ledger, planned her next move. The fever came—sharp, brutal—but she came to me without hesitation, her body pressing to mine, her breath catching as I stripped us both bare, skin to skin, heart to heart. She didn’t speak. Didn’t kiss me. Just let me hold her through it, her leg sliding between mine, her hips grinding against me in her sleep.
And I didn’t stop her.
Didn’t pull away.
Just held her tighter.
Because I knew—
She was breaking.
Not from the fever.
From us.
And then, on the third night, she came to me.
Not for the fever.
For the mission.
She stood in the doorway, dressed in black, her dagger strapped to her thigh, her eyes sharp, her stance ready. “I’m going to the archives,” she said. “Tonight.”
I didn’t move from my chair. Just studied her. “You’ll be walking into a trap.”
“I know.”
“Virell knows you have the key. Lysara knows you’re coming. They’ll be waiting.”
“Then I’ll fight my way out.”
“And die,” I said, standing. “Or worse—get captured. And then they’ll have you. They’ll break you. They’ll use you to get to me.”
She lifted her chin. “I’m not your weakness.”
“No,” I agreed. “You’re my strength. And I won’t let you throw it away.”
“You don’t get to decide that for me.”
“No,” I said, stepping closer. “But I get to fight beside you.”
She stilled. “You’d risk the Council’s wrath? Your position? For me?”
“I’d risk everything,” I said, voice low. “Because if you die, I burn with you. And I’m not ready to die for a woman who won’t even admit she wants me.”
A flicker in her eyes. Not defiance. Not anger.
Want.
She didn’t answer. Just turned and walked out.
But I followed.
Always.
The eastern wing was quiet at this hour, the torchlight casting long, flickering shadows on the stone walls. We moved in silence, her steps light, mine silent, our presence a storm in the dark. The archives loomed ahead—a massive iron door etched with blood sigils, guarded by two vampire sentinels.
Sage didn’t hesitate.
She stepped forward, pressing the silver key to the lock. The sigils flared red. The door shuddered. Then—click.
It opened.
She glanced at me—just once—then slipped inside.
I followed.
The archives were a labyrinth of stone corridors, shelves carved into the walls, stacked with ancient tomes, bloodstained ledgers, and sealed scrolls. The air was thick with the scent of old paper and dried blood. Sage moved fast, scanning the labels, her magic flaring as she searched for Virell’s private records.
“Here,” she whispered, pulling a black-bound journal from the shelf.
I stepped beside her, my senses sharp. Something was wrong. Too quiet. Too easy.
Then—
A whisper.
A flicker of movement.
“Sage—”
Too late.
Shadows erupted from the walls—five vampires, silver daggers in hand, moving like smoke. They came for her first—fast, silent, lethal.
I moved.
Wolf-fast.
I shoved Sage behind me, my body a shield, my fangs bared. One vampire lunged—I caught his wrist, snapped it, drove my elbow into his throat. Another came from the left—my dagger was in my hand, slicing across his chest. Blood sprayed. He fell.
But there were too many.
One got past me.
He drove his dagger toward Sage’s back—
And I twisted, taking the blade in my side.
Silver.
The pain was instant—white-hot, searing, like fire in my veins. I roared, slamming my fist into the vampire’s face, breaking his nose, sending him crashing into the shelves. But the damage was done.
Silver-laced blood.
It burned through my system, weakening my wolf, dulling my senses. I staggered, my vision blurring, my strength fading.
“Kaelen!” Sage’s voice—sharp, panicked.
She moved then—like lightning. Her dagger flashed, slicing through the next vampire’s throat. She kicked another in the chest, sending him stumbling back. Her magic flared—witchfire erupting from her palms, slamming into the remaining two, knocking them to the ground.
Then silence.
Five bodies at our feet.
And me—bleeding, weakening, falling.
She caught me before I hit the ground, her arms wrapping around me, her face pale, her eyes wide with fear.
“No,” she whispered, pressing her hand to the wound. “No, no, no—”
Her magic surged—wild, untamed, pouring into me. The bond flared between us, a live wire sparking under my skin. I felt it—her fear, her need, her love—pouring into me like lifeblood.
“Don’t you dare die on me,” she said, voice raw. “Not after everything. Not now.”
I looked up at her—really looked at her—and saw it.
Not just the hunter.
Not just the avenger.
My mate.
And I realized—
I didn’t want to survive.
Not if it meant losing her.
So I reached up, my hand trembling, and cupped her face. “You’re stronger than this,” I said, voice rough. “Stronger than vengeance. Stronger than fear. You’re not just fire, Sage. You’re light.”
Her breath hitched. Tears spilled down her cheeks. “Don’t talk like you’re dying.”
“I’m not,” I said, forcing a smirk. “But if I am, I’m taking you with me.”
She laughed—broken, beautiful. “You’re impossible.”
Then she leaned down, pressing her forehead to mine. “Stay with me,” she whispered. “Please.”
And in that moment, I knew—
The bond wasn’t a curse.
It wasn’t a weapon.
It was a gift.
I closed my eyes, letting her magic flow into me, letting her strength become mine. The silver burned. The wound ached. But I wasn’t alone.
I had her.
And that was enough.
When I woke, I was in my chambers, the fire crackling in the hearth, the scent of pine and iron thick in the air. Sage sat beside the bed, her head resting on the mattress, her hand still pressed to my side, her magic a steady pulse beneath my skin.
She was asleep.
Exhausted.
But she hadn’t left.
I reached out, brushing a strand of hair from her face. Her breath hitched. Her eyes fluttered open.
“You’re awake,” she whispered.
“You stayed,” I said.
She didn’t answer. Just looked at me—really looked at me—and I saw it.
Not just the hunter.
Not just the avenger.
My mate.
And I knew—
The war wasn’t over.
But the battle?
The battle had just begun.
Now, as I stood in the training yard, watching Sage spar with Riven, I could see the shift.
Not just in her stance.
Not just in her speed.
In her *eyes.*
They were sharper. Clearer. No longer clouded by vengeance, by fear, by the endless war inside her.
She was learning to trust.
Not just me.
Herself.
And it terrified her.
But it thrilled me.
Because I’d spent centuries ruling through fear. Through control. Through isolation.
And then she’d walked in—wild, untamed, *free*—and shattered everything I thought I knew.
And now, she was mine.
Not because of the bond.
Not because of politics.
Because she had *chosen* me.
And I would spend the rest of my life proving I was worthy of that choice.
When she finally noticed me, she didn’t flinch. Just lowered her dagger, her chest rising and falling with exertion, her scent—storm and thyme—cutting through the air.
“You’re healed,” she said, voice flat.
“Almost,” I said, stepping closer. “But not enough to spar with you.”
She smirked. “Afraid I’ll win?”
“Afraid I’ll lose control,” I said, stepping into her space, my voice low. “Afraid I’ll pin you to the ground and kiss you until you forget your own name.”
Her breath hitched. Her pupils dilated. “You wouldn’t dare.”
“Try me,” I said, lifting a hand to her face, my thumb brushing her lower lip. “You’re mine, Sage. Whether you admit it or not.”
She didn’t pull away.
Didn’t fight.
Just turned her head, her lips brushing my palm, and whispered—
“Prove it.”
And I would.
Every damn day.