The silence after the illusion shattered was heavier than stone.
Not the absence of sound—no, the air still hummed with residual magic, the thorns on the walls twitching like live wires, their barbs glistening with dew. The sigil on the floor, where the Blood Concordance ritual had just concluded, pulsed faintly, its crimson light dimming like a dying ember. No, the silence was deeper. A breath held. A war not yet begun.
Veylan had been here.
Not in flesh. Not in blood.
But in intent.
His presence lingered like poison in the air, a shadow that didn’t belong, a whisper that slithered through the cracks in the magic. He’d come not to fight—but to watch. To see if we would break. To see if the bond would consume us. To see if we would falter.
And we hadn’t.
I turned to Cassian.
He stood bare from the waist up, his gold eyes blazing, his chest rising and falling too fast. The mark on his neck—the thorned rose—still glowed faintly, warm against his skin. His coat was gone, his shirt open, the scars on his chest exposed to the world. The thorns on his sleeves were retracted, the vines beneath his skin coiled and silent. But I could feel them. Feel him. The way his breath hitched when I shifted, the way his pulse jumped when my hand brushed his.
“It was a test,” I said, my voice low. “He wanted to see if the bond was stable. If we were weak.”
He didn’t look away. Just stepped closer, his hand brushing my cheek. A whisper of touch. Fire raced across my skin. The bond pulsed, a live wire, feeding on proximity, on breath, on the way our bodies knew each other.
“And?”
“We passed,” I said.
He nodded. Cold. Sharp. Like a man who already knew the ending.
“Then he’ll come in force,” I said. “No more illusions. No more games.”
“He already has,” Cassian said, turning toward the shattered doors. “The spire is empty. The sentries are gone. The surveillance sigils—dormant. He’s gathering his forces. Preparing for the final strike.”
“And we let him.”
“No,” he said, stepping in front of me, his body shielding mine. “We lure him.”
I didn’t flinch. Just pressed my palm flat against his chest, right over his heart. The sigil beneath my skin flared—hot, insistent. The bond roared, a surge of heat that made my knees weak.
“Then we stop hiding,” I said. “We stop running. We stop waiting.”
“We burn it all down,” he finished.
I nodded. Cold. Sharp. Like a woman who already knew the ending.
And then—
I reached for the hem of my leather pants.
And pulled them down.
Not slowly.
Not seductively.
With purpose.
He didn’t move. Just watched as I stepped out of them, standing before him bare, my skin glowing in the dim light, my storm-gray eyes holding his. My body was a weapon—lean, strong, marked with scars of my own. And between my thighs—wet, aching, ready.
“Do it,” I said, voice low. “Before I change my mind.”
His breath punched out of him.
Not from desire.
Not from need.
From truth.
I wasn’t offering myself.
I was claiming him.
And he was mine.
He stepped forward, his hands trembling. Not from fear.
From need.
His fingers brushed my hip, my thigh, the curve of my ass. The bond screamed, a surge of heat, of hunger, of something deeper—desire, raw and unchecked. My cock was hard, aching, desperate to be inside her.
But I didn’t.
Just pressed my palm flat against her stomach, feeling the heat of her skin, the way her body trembled, not from cold, but from want.
“This isn’t about pleasure,” I said, voice rough. “It’s about magic.”
“Then make it quick,” she whispered.
I slid my hand higher, until my thumb brushed the peak of her breast. A jolt of pleasure shot through her. Her breath hitched. Her hips rocked forward, seeking friction.
“You want this,” I said. “You want me.”
“Liar,” she whispered.
But she was. And worse—I knew.
My hand slid down, gripping her ass, pulling her against me. She moaned, the sound low, desperate, shameful. My cock pressed against her thigh, hard, aching, needing.
And then—
The chamber changed.
Not slowly. Not subtly.
Violently.
The thorns on the walls twisted, their barbs lengthening, their vines coiling like serpents. The air thickened, charged with something ancient, something hungry. The sigils on the dais flared—black, then crimson—reacting to the intrusion.
And the bond—
It didn’t just pulse.
It exploded.
Fire. Not metaphor. Fire. It ripped through my veins, molten and electric, surging from the point of contact straight to my core. My breath punched out of me. My knees buckled. I would have fallen if she hadn’t caught me.
Heat. So much heat. My skin burned. My blood sang. My pulse roared in my ears, a drumbeat of pure, animal need. Between my thighs—wet. Aching. My nipples tightened against the fabric of my gown, sensitive, throbbing.
And worse—her. I could feel her. Not just her hand on mine. Her thoughts, her hunger, her cold, controlled rage. A flicker of shock. A surge of something darker—desire, raw and unchecked. It slammed into me like a fist.
“What’s happening?” I gasped.
“The ritual,” she said, her voice strained. “It’s—beginning.”
“But we haven’t—”
“It doesn’t matter,” she said, her storm-gray eyes blazing. “The magic knows. It knows we’re ready. It’s starting on its own.”
“Then we have to—”
“—complete it,” I said, stepping closer. “Not as lovers. Not as enemies. As siblings. As heirs. The ritual doesn’t require passion. It requires blood. And truth.”
“And if we do it… what happens?”
“The magic stabilizes. The bond dissolves. We live.”
“And the throne?”
“Still ours.”
“And Veylan?”
“Dies,” she said. “Or kneels. Either way, he loses.”
I exhaled, long and slow. Then I nodded. “Then we do it. But not like this. Not forced. Not trapped.”
“Then how?”
“On our terms,” she said. “Not the magic’s. Ours.”
She looked at me, her storm-gray eyes holding mine. “You’re not afraid.”
“I’m not stupid,” I said. “I know what’s coming.”
“And you’re still willing?”
“I’m not willing,” I said. “I’m ready.”
And then—
She reached for my hand.
And pressed it to her chest.
Over her heart.
Where the sigil still pulsed—hot, insistent.
“Begin,” she said.
And the ritual—
It answered.
The thorns on the walls exploded outward, their vines lashing like whips, their barbs slicing through the air. The sigils on the dais flared brighter, pulsing in time with the bond. The air grew hotter, thicker, harder to breathe.
And in the center of it all—
A sigil.
Not drawn in blood.
Not carved in stone.
But grown from the floor, from the roots of the ancient tree, from the blood in our veins.
A circle of thorned roses, their petals black as night, their centers glowing with crimson light. And in the center—
Two names.
Interwoven.
Bound.
Seraphina Vey. Cassian D’Lune.
But not just names.
Truth.
And then—
The magic spoke.
Not in words.
Not in sound.
But in images.
Flashes of memory. Of blood. Of fire. Of a woman with storm-gray eyes, her hands pressed to the chest of a newborn child, whispering a name into the dark.
“Seraphina.”
And then—
Another child.
Born in shadows.
“Cassian.”
And then—
The same woman, kneeling before a Fae king, her voice steady, her eyes unflinching.
“You will not take my children. You will not erase them. They will rise. And they will burn your throne to ash.”
And then—
Darkness.
Silence.
And then—
Light.
The ritual was over.
The sigil faded.
The thorns retracted.
The air cooled.
And we were still standing.
Still alive.
Still connected.
“It worked,” I whispered.
“Not completely,” Cassian said, his voice rough. “The bond is stable. The pain is gone. But the magic—it’s not just a curse anymore. It’s a weapon.”
“And what now?”
“Now,” he said, stepping closer, “we find Veylan. And we make him pay.”
But before we could move—
The doors of the chamber slammed open.
Not by hand.
Not by magic.
By force.
And there—
Standing in the archway—
Was Veylan.
His eyes were black. Not with magic. Not with power.
With void.
His skin was pale, almost translucent, his veins visible beneath, pulsing with dark liquid. His hair hung in limp strands, his body trembling, his breath shallow.
And in his hand—
A dagger of living thorn.
“You think you’ve won?” he hissed, his voice dripping with venom. “You’ve only delayed the inevitable.”
“Let her go,” Cassian growled, stepping in front of me, his body shielding mine.
“Oh, I will,” Veylan said, stepping forward. “After I take what’s mine.”
And then—
He lunged.
But I was faster.
I reached for the knife at my hip.
And plunged it into his heart.
—
He gasped.
His eyes widened.
And then—
He smiled.
“You’re not ready,” he whispered. “You’ll never be ready.”
And then—
He dissolved into ash.
Not dead.
Just gone.
“An illusion,” Cassian said, turning to me. “He’s testing us.”
“Then let’s give him a real fight,” I said, my voice low, cold.
And the bond—
It didn’t flare.
It roared.
—
We didn’t go to the throne room.
Didn’t risk the sentries, the surveillance sigils, the spies who might report back to Veylan. Instead, we went to the one place no one would expect—the Obsidian Spire.
The heart of his power.
The seat of his lies.
The spire rose like a spear from the center of Elderglen, its black stone slick with dew, its surface etched with sigils that pulsed with dark magic. No guards. No sentries. Just silence. Too silent. The wind didn’t stir the thorns. The air didn’t hum with magic. It was dead. Empty. A tomb waiting to be filled.
And we walked right in.
Not with stealth.
Not with silence.
With fire.
I called the thorns.
Not the ones on the walls.
Not the ones in the palace.
The ones in the stone.
Deep beneath the foundation, where the roots of the ancient trees twisted through the bedrock, where the oldest magic still pulsed in slow, steady waves. I pressed my palm to the floor, my blood dripping onto the stone, and I called.
Not with words.
Not with magic.
With blood.
And they answered.
Black vines, thick as arms, erupted from the floor, bursting through the stone like serpents. They coiled around me, not to bind, not to punish—but to carry. To lift. To move. I let them take me, let them pull me through the earth, through the walls, through the sealed doors, until I stood in the chamber, just behind Veylan.
He didn’t see me.
Didn’t hear me.
Too focused on the dais. Too sure of his victory.
Too blind to see the truth.
“You should have killed me when you had the chance,” I said, voice low.
He turned.
His eyes widened.
And then—
Chaos.
I didn’t give him time to react.
The thorns moved like lightning.
One moment, he was standing. The next—silence. Vines wrapped around his throat, his chest, his limbs, squeezing until the fight left him. Until the light in his eyes dimmed. Until he was nothing but a husk, dissolving into the stone floor like ash in the wind.
But not dead.
Not yet.
Just contained.
Seraphina dropped from the ceiling.
Not with grace. Not with silence.
With fire.
She landed in a crouch, her knife already in hand, her storm-gray eyes blazing. She didn’t speak. Just stepped past me to Veylan.
“He’s not gone,” she said, pressing her hand to his chest. “The magic… it’s still in him…”
“Then we burn it out,” I said, pressing my palm flat against his back. “With fire. With blood. With truth.”
And then—
She began to chant.
Not in Fae. Not in human.
In the old tongue. The language of blood and moon. The words spilled from her lips like a river, each one a blade, each one a spark. The sigil on his chest flared—black, then crimson—reacting to the intrusion. He screamed, his body convulsing, his veins pulsing with dark liquid.
“He’s losing him,” I said, my voice tight.
“No,” she said. “I’m claiming him.”
And she was.
With every word, the magic cracked. With every breath, the bond flared. With every pulse, the truth burned brighter.
And then—
The sigil shattered.
Not with a bang. Not with a flash.
With a sigh.
Like a curse finally released.
Veylan collapsed into her arms, his breath shallow, his body trembling. But he was free.
And alive.
“You did it,” I said.
“We did,” she said, looking up at me, her storm-gray eyes holding mine. “But it’s not over.”
And it wasn’t.
Because the spire shook.
Not from an earthquake.
Not from magic.
From laughter.
“You think you’ve won?” Veylan’s voice echoed through the chamber, smooth as oil, sharp as a blade. “You’ve only delayed the inevitable.”
I turned.
But the vines were empty.
He was gone.
“He’s not in the spire,” I said, sniffing the air. “He’s in the city. Moving fast.”
“Then we hunt him,” she said, standing, Veylan in her arms. “And we finish this.”
“Not like this,” I said. “Not with him injured. Not with the bond still unstable.”
“Then what?”
“We go to the throne,” I said. “And we burn it to the ground.”
She looked at me, her eyes blazing. “You’re not afraid.”
“I’m not stupid,” I said. “I know what’s coming.”
“And you’re still willing?”
“I’m not willing,” I said. “I’m ready.”
And then—
We left the spire.
Not as fugitives.
Not as rebels.
As heirs.
—
The city was silent.
Too silent.
No birds. No wind. No distant howls from the Moonpacks. Just the slow, steady drip of poisoned water from the rooftops, the creak of ancient thorns, the whisper of shadows.
And the bond—
It wasn’t quiet.
It was waiting.
We moved through the streets like ghosts, our steps silent, our breath shallow. The thorns on the walls twitched as we passed, their barbs glistening like wet teeth. The air hummed with magic, thick with the scent of sap and decay.
And the thread between us—
It didn’t flare.
It roared.
We didn’t go to the healing wing.
Didn’t risk the healers, the priests, the spies who might report back to Veylan.
Instead, we went to the one place no one would expect—Dain’s lair.
Beneath the Blood Market, in a forgotten tunnel sealed with blood and thorn, where the air was thick with the scent of iron and decay, where the walls were lined with vials of stolen magic and bones of the forgotten.
Dain was waiting.
He didn’t speak. Just stepped aside, his onyx eyes sharp, his expression unreadable. We laid Veylan on a stone slab, his body trembling, his breath shallow.
“He’s free,” she said. “But the magic is still in him.”
“Then we burn it out,” Dain said, reaching for a vial of dark liquid. “With fire. With blood. With truth.”
She looked at me.
I nodded.
And then—
We began.
Not with words.
Not with spells.
With touch.
She pressed her hand to his chest. I pressed mine to his back. Dain uncorked the vial and poured the witch blood over our hands. The magic flared—black, then crimson—reacting to the intrusion.
And the bond—
It didn’t just pulse.
It consumed us.
—
Outside, the storm raged.
And somewhere, deep in the heart of the city, a wolf howled.
The full moon was coming.
And the bond was growing stronger.
But so was I.
And so was she.
And together—
We would burn it all down.