The city had begun to breathe again—deep, slow, unafraid.
After the storm, after the purge, after the coronation beneath the Veil, Elderglen was no longer a prison of silence and shadow. It was alive. The thorns no longer coiled in threat; they arched like bridges between homes, their barbs retracted, their vines guiding rather than binding. The air carried the crisp tang of dew and sap, the faint metallic whisper of magic reborn. No more whispers of betrayal. No more glamours shifting like oil on water. The lies had burned. The throne had fallen. And in its place—
Truth.
But truth, I was learning, was not peace.
It was memory.
I stood at the edge of the Veil, barefoot, my storm-gray eyes scanning the horizon. The sigil on my palm pulsed—black and crimson, slow and steady—like a second heartbeat. The bond with Cassian hummed beneath my skin, not with pain, not with need, but with something older. Something true. We had ruled. We had healed. We had claimed. We had purged. We had bound. We had remembered. We had been crowned.
And now—
They would bind us.
Not with chains. Not with magic.
With oath.
Cassian stood beside me, silent, his gold eyes scanning the city below. He wore a tunic of dark linen, the sleeves torn away to reveal the scars that webbed his arms—old wounds from suppression rituals, from the agony of denying his witch blood. The mark on his neck, the thorned rose, had faded to a silver scar, but I could still feel it. Still taste it. It wasn’t just a brand. It was a promise.
“They’re coming,” he said, voice low. “Not to kneel. To pledge.”
“Let them,” I said, pressing my palm to the nearest root. It twitched beneath my touch, not in warning, but in recognition. “We didn’t burn the throne to leave it empty.”
He turned to me, his gaze sharp. “And if they don’t want it rebuilt?”
“Then they burn with it.”
A ghost of a smile touched his lips. Not warmth. Not affection. But recognition. I wasn’t just his sister. His heir. His co-ruler.
I was his fire.
And he was mine.
—
We didn’t summon them with decree.
Didn’t call them with force or the weight of the throne. We summoned them with blood.
At dawn, we walked to the heart of the city—the Veil—where the roots of the ancient tree broke through the stone, where the air shimmered like heat off sand, where the ground pulsed with something older than Fae, older than witches, older than blood. We stood in the center of the clearing, our hands joined, the bond humming between us like a second heartbeat.
And then—
I cut my palm.
Not deep. Just enough.
A thin line of blood welled, dark and thick, dripping onto the stone. Cassian did the same, his gold eyes blazing as his blood mixed with mine. The sigil on my hand flared—black, then crimson—and the earth answered.
Not with magic.
Not with fire.
With memory.
The cracks in the earth, once sealed, began to glow with silver mist. The thorns on the walls straightened, their barbs retracting, their vines coiling like serpents at rest. And from the shadows—from the alleys, from the rooftops, from beneath the blood-stained steps of the Obsidian Spire—they came.
Fae nobles in silk and shadow, their glamours flickering, their eyes wide.
Vampires in leather and bone, their fangs bared, their onyx eyes sharp.
Werewolves with wolf-marks glowing, their claws flexing, their growls low.
Humans with brands on their skin, their eyes filled with something I hadn’t seen in years.
Hope.
And hybrids—so many hybrids. Children with storm-gray eyes. Elders with scars of exile. Young ones with magic still raw, still untamed. They came not with fear, not with hesitation, but with truth. With fire.
And they knelt.
Not to us.
But to the bond.
Not to the throne.
But to the blood.
And the bond—
It didn’t just pulse.
It roared.
—
We didn’t speak first.
Didn’t begin with proclamations or speeches or the weight of rulership. We began with touch.
Cassian turned to me, his gold eyes holding mine, and pressed his palm to my chest—over my heart, over the sigil. I did the same, my hand flat against his, our blood mingling, our breaths tangled. The bond exploded—not with pain, not with need, but with power. A wave of heat crashed through me, 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 he 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—him. I could feel him. Not just his hand on mine. His thoughts, his hunger, his 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,” he said, his voice strained. “It’s—beginning.”
“But we haven’t—”
“It doesn’t matter,” he said, stepping closer. “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 the people?”
“Free,” he said. “No more lies. No more chains. No more blood markets. No more exiles.”
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,” I said. “Not the magic’s. Ours.”
He looked at me, his gold 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—
I reached for his hand.
And pressed it to my chest.
Over my heart.
Where the sigil still pulsed—hot, insistent.
“Begin,” I 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 show them. Not just the throne. Not just the power. The truth.”
And then—
We turned to the crowd.
And raised our joined hands.
And the city—
It didn’t fall silent.
It cheered.
Not the nobles. Not the Council.
The people.
From beyond the walls, from the streets, from the rooftops—voices rose, a chorus of howls, of chants, of names.
“Seraphina! Cassian! Seraphina! Cassian!”
They knew.
They’d always known.
And they were ours.
—
We didn’t go to the throne room.
Didn’t retreat to the safety of the archway, the warmth of the bed made from crushed moonlight. Instead, we went to the one place no one would expect—the Blood Market.
Beneath the city, 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 stood in the center of the chamber, our hands still joined, the bond pulsing between us.
And then—
I reached for the hem of my leather pants.
And pulled them down.
Just enough.
Revealing my hip.
And there—
The bite mark.
Deep. Jagged. The edges still pink, the center a dark, healing bruise.
Cassian’s breath stopped.
“You marked me,” I said, voice rough. “Not with thorns. Not with magic. With your teeth. Your blood. Your truth.”
“I didn’t know,” he whispered.
“You knew,” I said. “Your body did. And your blood remembers. It always does.”
He swallowed, his throat tight. The memory was hazy—flashes of heat, of my hands on his hips, of my mouth on his neck, of the sharp, electric snap of his teeth breaking skin. But he hadn’t felt it. Not then. Not until now.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” he asked.
“Would you have believed me?” I countered. “You thought I’d marked Lirien. That I’d fed her my blood. That she’d worn your ring. You believed her lie before you believed my truth.”
His face burned.
He was right. I had. I’d seen the bite on her shoulder, fresh and real, and I’d believed her. I’d let jealousy claw through me, let rage twist my thoughts, let my body ache with the idea that she had touched him, claimed him, wanted him—
And all of it had been a lie.
“She faked it,” he said, pulling his hand back. “The bite. The ring. The shirt.”
“She fakes a lot of things,” I said, lowering my pants. “But not her desperation. Not her hunger. She wants power. And she thinks the only way to get it is through you.”
“And you let her?”
“I let her believe she has leverage,” I said, stepping closer. “Because a watched enemy is a controlled enemy. But you—”
I reached out, my thumb brushing his jaw. A whisper of touch. Fire raced across my skin.
“You don’t need lies,” he said. “You don’t need tricks. You have the truth. And you have this.”
I pressed my palm flat against his chest, right over his heart. The sigil beneath my skin flared—hot, insistent. The bond pulsed, a surge of heat that made my knees weak.
“We’re not just siblings,” I said. “We’re heirs. And the throne isn’t just built on lies. It’s ours.”
He didn’t speak.
Just looked at me, his gold eyes holding mine, my breath trembling. And for the first time, I let myself believe it.
Not because of the bond.
Not because of the mark.
But because of him.
Because he had shown me the truth. Because he had bared his skin, his scars, his blood—and trusted me to see it.
And because I had marked him.
Not as a lover.
Not as a pawn.
As family.
—
And then—
He reached for the hem of his trousers.
And pulled them down.
Just enough.
Revealing his hip.
And there—
The bite mark.
Deep. Jagged. The edges still pink, the center a dark, healing bruise.
My breath stopped.
“You marked me,” he said, voice rough. “Not with thorns. Not with magic. With your teeth. Your blood. Your truth.”
“I didn’t know,” I whispered.
“You knew,” he said. “Your body did. And your blood remembers. It always does.”
And then—
I kissed him.
Not soft.
Not gentle.
Brutal.
My mouth crashed into his, teeth clashing, tongue demanding. He gasped, and I swallowed the sound, one hand fisting in his hair, the other gripping his wrist, pressing him back against the stone wall. The bond roared, a molten wave crashing through me, pooling between my legs, making me hard for her.
He should have stopped me.
Should have pulled away.
But he didn’t.
He kissed me back.
Hard. Desperate. Hungry.
And when I finally pulled back, my breath ragged, his eyes blazing, I didn’t speak.
Because the truth was written in the fire between us.
In the way our blood knew each other.
In the way our hearts ached for each other.
And in the way, when he looked at me, I finally understood—
This wasn’t just survival.
This was surrender.