The first time I truly understood that blood wasn’t just life—but memory—was when I stopped fearing the past and let it speak to me.
Not in whispers.
Not in shadows.
But in a scream that tore through my bones.
The fortress was quiet now. Too quiet. The echoes of war had faded into the stone, the moors stilled, the sky clearing to a pale, bruised blue. The scent of ash still clung to the air, mingling with the iron tang of blood and the faint, lingering ozone of my voice. My hands still trembled—not from magic, not from power, but from the quiet, terrifying truth that had settled into my bones.
I had won.
Malrik was gone. The hybrids were free. The truth was exposed.
And yet—
I didn’t feel like a victor.
I felt… hollow.
Like the girl who had once hidden in the shadows, throat raw from silence, heart broken by fire, had finally stepped into the light—and realized the light didn’t burn. It healed.
And I wasn’t sure I wanted to be healed.
I stood at the edge of the battlements, my fingers gripping the cold iron railing, my breath fogging in the morning air. The moors stretched before me, silver and shadow, the heather trembling with the memory of war. The ruins of the Iron Grove were barely visible in the distance, charred skeletons of trees standing like sentinels to the past. And I—
I stood at the edge of everything.
Not as a weapon.
Not as a rebel.
Not as the woman who came here to burn it all down.
But as a woman who had finally stopped fighting.
And for the first time—
I didn’t know what came next.
Because the war wasn’t over.
The threat wasn’t gone.
And the bond—
The bond still pulsed between me and Kaelen, low and constant, a warning thrum beneath my skin. It flared when he was near, when he looked at me, when his voice cut through the silence like a blade. It didn’t just tie us together.
It changed us.
And I was tired of pretending it didn’t.
“You’re not sleeping,” his voice said from behind me.
I didn’t turn. Didn’t flinch. Just kept my gaze on the horizon, where the first hints of dawn bled through the storm. “Neither are you.”
He stepped beside me, boots heavy on stone, his presence a wall of heat and power. The scent of leather and wolf and something uniquely him filled the air, wrapping around me like a promise. He didn’t touch me. Just stood there, his golden eyes scanning the moors, his jaw tight, his fangs barely visible behind clenched teeth.
“They’re still out there,” he said, voice low. “Not just Malrik. Not just the hybrids. The ones who fed him secrets. The ones who marked you as a target. They’re watching. Waiting.”
My breath caught.
“Mael told you,” I said, not a question.
“He told me enough,” Kaelen said, turning to me. “That the conspiracy reaches deeper than one vampire noble. That they’re coming for you. For us.”
“And you believe him?” I asked, lifting my chin. My voice was steady. Cold. A blade wrapped in silk.
“I believe you,” he said, stepping closer. “I believe the way your sigil burns when you walk into a room full of liars. I believe the way your voice shatters magic when you sing. I believe the way you look at me—like you’re afraid to want me.”
My breath hitched.
Because he was right.
And that was the most dangerous thing of all.
“And if I am?” I asked, turning to face him. “If I’m afraid? If I don’t know how to stop fighting? If I don’t know how to let someone in?”
He didn’t answer.
Just reached up, his hand cupping my face, his thumb brushing my cheek. The bond flared—hot, electric—feeding on the tension between us. His touch was rough, calloused, but gentle. Reverent.
“Then I’ll wait,” he said, voice rough. “I’ll fight beside you. I’ll stand with you. I’ll bleed for you. And when you’re ready—when you stop seeing me as the enemy, as the warden, as the man who once chained you—I’ll be here.”
My breath trembled.
Because no one had ever waited for me.
Not my mother, who died for me.
Not Mael, who trained me to fight.
Not the Council, who saw me as a weapon.
Just him.
The man who had once called me a terrorist.
The Alpha who had once tried to break me.
And now—
Now he was offering me a choice.
Not a command.
Not a demand.
A choice.
“Why?” I whispered, my voice breaking. “Why do you keep doing this? Why do you keep fighting for me when I’ve done nothing but burn it all down?”
He didn’t answer.
Just pulled me into his arms, his mouth crashing into mine—hot, hungry, desperate. Not gentle. Not soft. A collision of lips and teeth and tongues. I didn’t fight him. Just kissed him back—fierce, aching, my hands clawing at his shoulders, my body pressing into his.
The bond roared.
A wildfire in my veins.
When he finally pulled away, his breath was ragged, his eyes dark with something I couldn’t name.
“Because you’re not just fire,” he said, his forehead pressed to mine. “You’re not just vengeance. You’re not just the woman who came here to burn it all down. You’re the storm. And I’m the man who fights with you.”
Tears burned my eyes.
And then—
I pushed him away.
Not hard. Not angry.
Just enough to break the spell.
“Stop,” I said, stepping back. My voice was steady. Cold. A blade wrapped in silk. “Stop calling me that. Stop fighting for me. Stop loving me like it’s some grand sacrifice.”
He didn’t move. Just stood there, his chest heaving, his eyes blazing. “And if I can’t?”
“Then you’re not fighting with me,” I said, lifting my chin. “You’re fighting for me. And I don’t need a protector. I don’t need a savior. I don’t need a man who thinks he has to die for me to prove he loves me.”
“And what do you need?” he asked, stepping closer. “What do you want from me, Symphony?”
I didn’t answer.
Because I didn’t know.
Not anymore.
“I want you to fight beside me,” I said, my voice breaking. “Not in front. Not behind. With me. As my equal. As my partner. As the man who chooses me—not because of the bond, not because of duty, but because he wants to.”
He didn’t answer.
Just stepped closer, his body caging mine against the railing, his hand sliding to the back of my neck. The bond flared—hot, electric—feeding on the tension between us.
“Then have me,” he said, voice low. “All of me. No more lies. No more games. Just this. Just us.”
My breath caught.
Because he wasn’t asking for permission.
He was offering himself.
And that was the most terrifying thing of all.
“I can’t,” I whispered, my voice breaking. “Not like this. Not with the Council waiting. Not with the threat hanging over us. Not when they’re coming to kill me and frame you for it.”
“Then when?” he asked, his mouth at my ear. “When will it be enough? When will I be enough?”
“When you stop trying to save me,” I said, turning to face him. “When you stop seeing me as something to protect. When you see me as your equal.”
He didn’t flinch. Just stepped back, his hands falling to his sides, his presence a wall of heat and power. “And if I do?”
“Then I’ll choose you,” I said, lifting my chin. “Not because of the bond. Not because of the curse. Not because I have to. But because I want to.”
He didn’t answer.
Just looked at me—really looked—and something flickered in his eyes.
Hope.
And then—
He nodded.
—
The Council chamber was colder than ever.
Torches flickered low, casting long, jagged shadows across the stone floor. The air hummed with old magic, thick and slow, like honey laced with lightning. The scent of ash still clung to the walls, mingling with the iron tang of blood and the faint, lingering ozone of the ritual. And I—
I stood at the center of it all, my silver-streaked hair loose down my back, my gown swirling around me like a storm. Not as a prisoner. Not as a suspect. Not as the half-breed they’d spent centuries hunting.
But as a truth-teller.
And for the first time—
I wasn’t afraid.
“You requested this hearing,” Torin said, stepping forward. His voice was low, rough, laced with tension. He stood at the head of the chamber, his sword at his side, his expression unreadable. “You said you had proof. That you could expose the conspiracy. That you could name the traitors.”
“I do,” I said, lifting my chin. My voice was steady. Cold. A blade wrapped in silk. “But not with words. Not with scrolls. Not with blood-stained parchment.”
“Then how?” Mareth asked, gliding forward from the shadows. His ruby eyes flicked between me and Kaelen, who stood just behind me, a wall of heat and power. “You expect us to believe you on faith?”
“No,” I said. “I expect you to believe me on truth.”
And then—
I reached for the clasp at my throat.
The room stilled.
My fingers trembled—just slightly—as I unfastened the silver chain, letting the heavy fabric of my gown slip from one shoulder. Then the other. The silk pooled at my feet, leaving me standing in nothing but the thin, silver-lined underdress that hugged my body like a second skin.
And then—
I turned.
Slowly.
So they could see.
So they could know.
On my back, etched into the skin just below my shoulder blades, was the sigil.
Not just any sigil.
The Siren-Witch mark. The one only awakened by blood, breath, and truth. A swirling spiral of ancient runes, pulsing faintly with silver light, the edges still raw, still healing from the night I’d chosen Kaelen. The night I’d claimed him.
And beneath it—
The bond mark.
Kaelen’s bite. Deep. Precise. Unmistakable.
Not forced.
Not stolen.
Given.
“This,” I said, my voice low, rough, “is not a curse. It’s not a lie. It’s not a weapon they forged to control me.”
I turned back to face them, my breath steady, my spine straight.
“This is proof.”
“Proof of what?” one of the vampire elders asked, his voice sharp. “That you’ve bound yourself to the Alpha? That you’ve compromised the balance of power?”
“No,” I said, stepping forward. “Proof that I am not alone. That I am not afraid. That I am not the half-breed you’ve spent centuries hunting. I am Symphony. Daughter of Elara. Niece of Mael Sorrow. Voice of the Unbroken. And I stand before you not as a traitor—but as a truth-teller.”
“And what truth do you bring?” Torin asked, his gaze locked on the sigil.
“That Lyra is not acting alone,” I said. “That the conspiracy reaches deeper than one vampire noble. That there are others—on this Council—who have fed secrets to Malrik. Who have marked me as a target. Who have plotted to kill me and frame Kaelen for it.”
“And how do you know this?” Mareth asked.
“Because I felt it,” I said, pressing a hand to the sigil on my back. It flared, hot and bright, sending a jolt of energy through my spine. “The Siren-Witch sigil doesn’t just respond to magic. It responds to lies. To betrayal. To the weight of hidden oaths. And when I walked into this chamber, it burned.”
The room stilled.
And then—
“You expect us to believe that a mark can tell truth from lies?” one of the werewolf elders sneered.
“No,” I said, stepping closer. “I expect you to believe me. And if you can’t—then let’s test it.”
“How?” Torin asked.
“The Ritual of Skin,” I said. “An ancient Unseelie trial. A truth-binding rite that requires physical contact between the accused and the accuser. The sigil reacts to deception. To hidden oaths. To blood-tainted lies. If I’m lying, it will burn me. If I’m telling the truth—” I looked at Kaelen. “—it will burn them.”
“You’re asking for a blood rite,” Mareth said, his voice low. “One that hasn’t been performed in centuries.”
“Then it’s time it returned,” I said. “Because I’m done with silence. Done with fear. Done with pretending I’m not a threat.”
I turned to the Council. “I accuse Lyra Vex of treason. Of conspiring with Lord Malrik. Of feeding secrets to the enemy. And I accuse anyone in this room who has aided her.”
“And if we refuse?” one of the elders asked.
“Then you admit your guilt,” I said. “And I’ll burn your lies to ash with my voice.”
“You wouldn’t dare,” another snapped.
“Try me,” I said, lifting my chin. “Because I’m not the girl who sang in silence anymore. I’m the woman who chooses her truth. And I will not be silenced again.”
The room stilled.
And then—
Kaelen stepped forward.
Not to me.
To the Council.
“I second the motion,” he said, his voice a growl. “The Ritual of Skin will be performed. Tonight. In the Trial Chamber. And if any of you are guilty—” His golden eyes blazed. “—you will burn.”
—
The Trial Chamber was deeper beneath the fortress than I’d ever been. The air was colder here, the torches dimmer, the walls lined with black stone etched with ancient runes. The floor was a perfect circle, carved with the sigil of the Unseelie Court—twisted vines, broken crowns, and the spiral of truth at its center. And in the middle—
A basin of black water.
Still. Silent. Reflecting nothing.
I stood at the edge, barefoot, dressed only in the silver-lined underdress. My hair was loose, my breath steady. The sigil on my back pulsed faintly, a low, constant thrum beneath my skin. And I—
I was ready.
Kaelen stood beside me, his coat unbuttoned, his presence a wall of heat and power. He didn’t speak. Didn’t look at me. Just kept his eyes on the chamber, on the shadows that moved in the corners, on the elders who had gathered in silence.
And then—
She walked in.
Lyra.
Her crimson eyes burned in the dim light, her lips curled in a cold smile. She wore a gown of black silk, her neck bare—no mark, no bite, no sign of Kaelen’s claim. But I saw it in her eyes. The lie. The betrayal. The hunger.
“You’re really going through with this?” she purred, stepping into the circle. “A ritual so old, so dangerous, even the Unseelie abandoned it.”
“Then it’s time it returned,” I said, stepping forward. “Because you don’t get to hide behind glamour anymore. You don’t get to whisper in shadows. You don’t get to play the victim while you plot my death.”
“And if I did?” she asked, lifting her chin. “If I fed them secrets? If I wanted you gone? You’re a threat, Symphony. A weapon wrapped in flesh. You don’t belong here.”
“And you do?” I asked, stepping closer. “A vampire noble who slinks through the halls, whispering in ears, feeding lies? You’re not a queen. You’re not a leader. You’re a spy.”
“And you’re a half-breed,” she spat. “A mongrel. A traitor. You don’t have the right to judge me.”
“I don’t need the right,” I said. “I have the truth.”
And then—
I stepped into the circle.
So did she.
The elders formed a ring around us, their eyes locked on the basin. Kaelen stood just outside, his fangs bared, his wolf howling in his skull.
“Place your hands in the water,” one of the elders said, his voice echoing through the chamber.
I didn’t hesitate.
I stepped forward, knelt, and plunged my hands into the black water.
It was cold. So cold it burned. My breath hitched, my muscles tensed. The sigil on my back flared—hot, electric—sending a jolt of energy through my spine.
Lyra knelt beside me, her hands sliding into the water.
And then—
The chamber screamed.
Not with sound.
With magic.
The basin erupted in silver light, the water boiling, the runes on the floor blazing. The sigil on my back pulsed—once, twice—then exploded with light.
And I felt it.
The lie.
Not just from Lyra.
From others.
From the elders. From the shadows. From the ones who had marked me as a target.
“You conspired with Malrik,” I said, my voice low, rough. “You fed him secrets. You told him about the bond. You told him about the curse. You told him how to break us.”
“Lies!” she spat, her hands still in the water. “You’re twisting the truth!”
And then—
The sigil burned.
Not me.
Her.
A scream tore from her throat as the silver light lanced up her arms, searing her skin, blackening her veins. Her gown caught fire. Her hair singed. The scent of burning flesh filled the air.
“You marked me as a target,” I said, my voice rising. “You told them to kill me. To frame Kaelen. To make him a monster.”
“I did it for the Accord!” she screamed. “For balance! For order!”
“And who gave you that right?” I asked, my voice a whip. “Who let you play judge, jury, and executioner?”
The sigil flared again.
And then—
She collapsed.
Her hands pulled from the water, her body convulsing, her breath ragged. The mark on her arms—blackened, cracked—would never heal.
“Guilty,” the elder said, his voice echoing. “Lyra Vex, you are banished from the Supernatural Accord. You are stripped of rank. You are no longer welcome in any sovereign territory.”
She didn’t speak.
Just glared at me, her eyes burning with hatred.
And then—
Kaelen stepped forward.
He didn’t look at her.
Just at me.
“You did it,” he said, his voice low. “You faced her. You faced them. You won.”
“I didn’t win,” I said, standing. My hands were shaking, my breath unsteady. “I just proved the truth.”
“And that’s enough,” he said, stepping closer. His hand cupped my face, his thumb brushing my cheek. “For now.”
The bond flared—hot, electric—feeding on the tension between us.
And then—
I kissed him.
Not gently. Not sweetly.
Hard. Angry. A collision of lips and teeth and pent-up fury. I wanted to hurt him. To punish him. To make him feel the chaos I carried inside.
But he didn’t pull away.
He kissed me back.
One hand tangled in my hair, the other gripping my hip, pulling me onto my back, his body pressing into mine. His mouth was hot, demanding, his fangs grazing my lip. The bond roared—a wildfire in my veins. My hands clawed at his shoulders. My legs tangled with his. The heat was unbearable. The need—
Then the door burst open.
We broke apart, gasping, hearts racing. Torin stood in the doorway, his expression unreadable.
“Alpha,” he said. “The Council summons you. Now.”
Kaelen didn’t move. Didn’t speak. Just stared at me, his breath heavy, his eyes dark with something I couldn’t name.
“I’ll be there,” he said, voice rough.
Torin nodded and left, closing the door behind him.
Silence.
Then Kaelen sat up, running a hand through his hair. “We need to talk.”
“No,” I said, sitting up too. “We don’t.”
“Symphony—”
“That didn’t mean anything,” I said, standing. “It was the bond. The sickness. It—”
“Liar,” he said, standing too. “You wanted it. You kissed me.”
“Because I was angry!”
“And I wasn’t?” he shot back. “You think I don’t feel it? The pull? The fire? The way my wolf howls every time you’re near?”
I didn’t answer. Because I could feel it too. The way my body ached for him. The way my voice trembled when he looked at me. The way the bond pulsed, hungry, insistent.
“This changes nothing,” I said.
“It changes everything,” he said. “And you know it.”
I turned away. “I came here to burn it all down.”
“And I’m here to stop you,” he said. “But not because I want to. Because I have to.”
“Then do it,” I said. “Chain me. Silence me. Whatever it takes.”
He stepped closer. “And if I don’t want to?”
I didn’t answer.
Because I was afraid.
Not of the curse.
Not of the Council.
But of what would happen if he chose me over duty.
If he followed me into the fire.
And I realized—
That was the most dangerous thing of all.
“Get dressed,” he said. “We have a Council to face.”
I didn’t look at him. “And then what?”
“Then,” he said, voice low, “we see if we can survive each other.”
I closed my eyes.
Because I wasn’t sure I wanted to.
Not anymore.