The Council chamber still hummed with the weight of what had just passed—the echo of voices, the pulse of magic, the quiet surrender of power. I stood at the center of the dais, my hand in Kael’s, the cracked vial warm against my chest, the bond pulsing gold and bright beneath my skin. I was Councilor now. Not by blood. Not by title. By truth.
And yet—
I didn’t feel like a leader.
I felt like a woman who had just chosen mercy over vengeance. A daughter who had forgiven her father. A lover who had finally stopped running.
And it terrified me.
Because I didn’t know how to be this person.
Kael squeezed my hand, his thumb brushing the inside of my wrist. “You did it,” he murmured, his voice low, rough. “You gave them balance.”
“I gave them a choice,” I said. “Same as Cassian gave me.”
He didn’t answer. Just pressed his forehead to mine, his breath warm on my skin. The bond flared—soft, deep, alive—feeding on our proximity, our heat, our need. Around us, the Councilors rose, their voices low, their eyes sharp. Some with respect. Some with suspicion. But none with open hostility.
Not yet.
We left the chamber like fire—Kael and I, Nyx, Riven, the rebels at our back. The corridors were alive with whispers—witches in their robes, werewolves in their leathers, vampires in their silks—all watching, all judging, all knowing. A Fae woman in a silver gown smirked as we passed, her voice carrying just loud enough: “Looks like the hybrid finally got what she came for.”
Another, a werewolf with amber eyes and a scarred face, muttered, “Kael’s never shared a bed. Not in three centuries. What’s so special about her?”
“She’s Dusk-blood,” a vampire whispered. “Cursed. Dangerous. And he’s marked her. Claimed her. Used her.”
I clenched my jaw, my fingers brushing the Dusk-mark beneath my collarbone. It flared—warm, alive—feeding on the truth, on the love, on the war we’d just survived. But I didn’t react. Just kept walking, my hand in Kael’s, our bond pulsing like a live wire.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to leave.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I could.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to.
We reached the eastern wing—the same chambers where he’d broken his oath, where I’d healed him, where we’d claimed each other. The door clicked shut behind us, sealing us in silence. The room was dim, the curtains drawn, the air thick with the scent of ozone and old magic. The cot was still there, the sheets tangled, the sigil on the floor faint but visible.
And for the first time since I’d walked into the Iron Spire, I felt… safe.
Not because the danger was gone.
Because I wasn’t facing it alone.
Kael moved to the low table, his boots silent on stone, his hand pressing to the journal I’d left behind—the one where I’d written every suspicion, every clue, every memory of my mother. He didn’t open it. Just stood there, his back to me, his shoulders tense.
“You don’t have to carry it all,” I said, stepping closer.
He didn’t turn. “I do. I’ve carried it for centuries. Silence. Duty. Loss. And now? Now I’ve broken every law for you. And I’d do it again. But I don’t know if I can bear the weight of what comes next.”
My breath caught.
Because he wasn’t just talking about the war.
He was talking about us.
“You don’t have to,” I said. “We’re in this together.”
He turned—slow, deliberate—his silver eyes dark with something raw. Not pain. Not fear.
Need.
“I know,” he said. “But I’ve spent my life protecting others. Keeping secrets. Holding back. And now? Now I don’t know how to stop. I don’t know how to just… be.”
I didn’t answer. Just stepped forward, my hands framing his face, my thumbs brushing his cheeks. His breath hitched. His eyes closed. And for the first time, I saw it—the man beneath the title, the warrior beneath the armor, the lover beneath the silence.
And I kissed him.
Not soft. Not slow.
Deep.My mouth claimed his, my tongue delving in, feeding the bond, feeding the fire, feeding the truth I’d been running from. He gasped, but I swallowed the sound, my hands sliding up his back, tangling in his hair, holding him like I’d never let go. The bond erupted—not a pulse, not a surge, but an explosion of heat and need and truth.
When I finally pulled back, breathless, trembling, my forehead resting against his, I whispered the only truth I had left.
“I don’t know if I can do this.”
“You don’t have to,” he said. “Just stay.”
And I did.
Not because I had to.
Not because of the bond.
Because I wanted to.
The room was dim—the curtains drawn, the air thick with the scent of ozone and old magic—but I could feel the shift. Not just in him. Not just in me.
In us.
He didn’t speak. Just pulled me into his arms, his body a furnace against mine, his breath hot on my neck. The bond surged—a wave of heat crashing through me so intense I gasped. My breath hitched. My skin burned. My body ached for his touch, for his mouth, for the claim I’d been running from since the moment I’d walked into the Iron Spire.
“You don’t have to fight it,” he murmured, his lips brushing my ear. “You don’t have to pretend. You can stop.”
“I can’t—”
“Yes, you can.” He turned me, pressing me against the wall, his body a furnace against mine. One hand slid to my hip, over the sigil, the other tangling in my hair, tilting my head back. His silver eyes held mine—dark, intense, needing. “You came to me. You let me hold you. You let me in. That was the first step.”
“It wasn’t—”
“It was.” His lips traced my jawline, slow, deliberate. “And now? Now you’re ready for the next one.”
“I’m not—”
“You are.” He kissed me—soft, slow, full of promise. “You’re ready to be mine.”
The bond erupted.
Not a pulse. Not a surge.
An explosion.
Fire. Real. Molten. Unstoppable. A wave of heat ripped through me, starting where our mouths met and exploding outward—up my spine, across my chest, down my limbs. I gasped, but he swallowed the sound, his tongue delving deeper, his hands tightening in my hair.
His hand slid under my tunic, his fingers tracing the curve of my waist, the dip of my spine, the swell of my hip. The sigil flared beneath his touch, heat pooling low in my belly, spreading through my limbs. I arched into him, my hands fisting in his coat, dragging him closer.
“Kael—”
“Shh.” His mouth left mine, trailing down my neck, his teeth scraping my pulse point, his tongue soothing the sting. “Let me in.”
“I can’t—”
“You already did.” His hand slipped under the waistband of my pants, his fingers brushing the sensitive skin just above my hip. The sigil flared, a wave of heat crashing through me so intense I cried out. “You’re mine.”
“I’m not—”
“You are.” He kissed me again, deep, desperate, feeding the bond, feeding the fire, feeding the truth I’d been running from. “Say it.”
“I can’t—”
“Say it.” His fingers slipped under the waistband—just an inch, just enough to make me gasp, to make my back arch, to make my thighs clench. “Say you’re mine.”
My breath came faster. My skin burned. The bond screamed, a raw, primal thing that clawed at my insides, demanding him.
And then—
I said it.
Not because I had to.
Not because of magic.
Not because of duty.
Because I wanted to.
“I’m yours,” I whispered, my voice breaking. “Always.”
He didn’t smile. Just pulled me closer, his mouth claiming mine, his body pressing me against the wall, the bond flaring gold and bright around us like a vow.
And for the first time, I didn’t fight it.
I leaned into it.
Into him.
Into the truth.
That I wasn’t here to destroy the man who let my mother die.
I was here to find the man who’d loved her.
And the man who loved me.
When I finally pulled away, breathless, trembling, my forehead resting against his, I whispered the only truth I had left.
“I don’t know if I can do this.”
“You don’t have to,” he said. “Just stay.”
And I did.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to leave.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I could.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to.
He exhaled, slow and shaky, and pressed his forehead to mine. “We need to move,” he said. “The High Queen won’t wait. Cassian’s still uncommitted. And we still don’t know who else is loyal.”
“Riven,” I said. “Nyx. The rebels.”
“Are they enough?”
“They will be.” I sat up, pulling my tunic over my head, my fingers brushing the Dusk-mark beneath my collarbone. It flared—warm, alive—feeding on the truth, on the love, on the war we’d just survived. “We just need one more.”
“Who?”
“Cassian.”
Kael looked at me. “He’s dangerous. Unpredictable. And he’s your father.”
“And he’s the only one who knows how the curse works,” I said. “Not just the casting. The breaking. The sealing. If we’re going to end this, we need him. Not as an enemy. Not as a prisoner. As an ally.”
He didn’t answer. Just watched as I moved, his silver eyes dark with something I couldn’t name.
“He needs to choose,” I said. “Not the High Queen. Not the Council. Not duty. Us. And he needs to choose it freely. Without chains. Without oaths. Without fear.”
Kael exhaled, slow and shaky. “And if he doesn’t?”
“Then we fight without him.”
He didn’t flinch. Just nodded. “Then let’s go.”
We left the chambers in silence—his hand in mine, his thumb stroking the inside of my wrist, the bond pulsing low and steady between us. No fever. No visions. Just us. Real. Present. Alive. The corridors were quiet—no whispers, no footsteps, no magic humming in the walls. Just silence. Heavy. Thick. Charged. But I could feel them—watching. Waiting. The enforcers. The spies. The ones loyal to the High Queen.
They knew.
They knew we’d broken the gate. They knew we’d killed her enforcers. They knew Kael had shattered his oath.
And they wouldn’t let us live.
We reached the eastern gate—now a ruin of blackened stone and shattered sigils—where Riven stood with his wolves. Dozens of them. All armed. All ready. All loyal.
But Riven didn’t look at us.
Just at the horizon, where the sun burned through the clouds like a warning.
“You’re late,” he said, his voice low.
“We had things to finish,” Kael said.
Riven turned—slow, deliberate—his amber eyes sharp, his claws extended, his fangs bared. He didn’t look at Kael. Just at me. “You healed him.”
“I did.”
“And the bond?”
“It’s stronger than ever.”
He didn’t flinch. Just studied me, his gaze lingering on the sigil on my hip, the Dusk-mark beneath my collarbone. “And you’re not afraid?”
“Of what?”
“Of being used. Of being controlled. Of being claimed.”
“I’m not claimed,” I said. “I’m chosen. Just like he’s chosen by me.”
Riven didn’t answer. Just turned to Kael. “You broke your oath.”
“I did.”
“And the decay?”
“It’s gone.”
“Because of her?”
“Because of us.”
He exhaled, slow and shaky, and stepped closer. “Then I have something to say.”
Kael tensed. “Riven—”
“No.” He raised a hand. “Let me speak.”
And then—
He dropped to one knee.
Not in submission.
In choice.
His amber eyes held mine—sharp, intense, needing. “Thunder,” he said, his voice rough. “I’ve followed Kael for centuries. Not because of duty. Not because of oath. But because he was the only one who saw me. Who saw past the hybrid blood. Who didn’t fear what I was.”
My breath caught.
“But now?” he said. “Now I see you. Not just the Dusk-blood. Not just the prophecy. Not just the woman he loves. But the woman who fought for him. Who healed him. Who claimed him back. And I choose you.”
“Riven—”
“No.” He stood, his presence a quiet storm in the room. “I’m not pledging to him. I’m pledging to us. To the truth. To the future. To the woman who will break the curse and build a new world.”
Kael didn’t move. Just watched—his silver eyes dark, his breath hot on my neck.
“And if the High Queen comes?” I asked.
“Then I’ll fight,” Riven said. “Not for him. Not for the Council. For you.”
“And if Cassian chooses her?”
“Then I’ll fight him too.”
“And if we lose?”
“Then I’ll die with you.”
The bond pulsed—low, insistent, a second heartbeat—but it wasn’t just magic. It was trust. The kind that had taken fire, blood, and betrayal to build.
And then—
I stepped forward.
Not to speak. Not to whisper. Not to plead.
To claim.
My hand found his—rough, calloused, strong—and I pulled him into a hug. Not gentle. Not careful.
Hard.Like the truth. Like the war. Like the future.
He didn’t flinch. Just pressed closer, his body a furnace against mine, his breath hot on my neck. The bond surged—gold and bright—wrapping around us like a vow.
When I finally pulled away, breathless, trembling, my forehead resting against his, I whispered the only truth I had left.
“You’re not just his Beta.”
“No,” he said. “I’m yours too.”
And I believed him.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to leave.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I could.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to.
Kael stepped forward, his hand finding mine, his thumb brushing the inside of my wrist. “Then it’s time,” he said. “The High Queen won’t wait. Cassian’s still uncommitted. And we still don’t know who else is loyal.”
“Then we make them choose,” I said.
“How?”
“By showing them the truth.” I turned to Riven. “Gather the rebels. All of them. Witches. Vampires. Werewolves. Fae who’ve had enough. Bring them to the central hall. We’re not hiding. We’re not running. We’re claiming.”
Riven didn’t hesitate. Just nodded. “It’ll be done.”
He vanished into the shadows, his wolves following like smoke.
Kael looked at me. “You’re not afraid?”
“Of what?”
“Of being seen. Of being known. Of being exposed.”
“I’m not hiding anymore,” I said. “I’m not running. I’m not fighting to destroy. I’m fighting to claim.”
He didn’t smile. Just pulled me into his arms, his mouth finding mine, his hands tangling in my hair, holding me like he’d never let go. The bond erupted—not a pulse, not a surge, but an explosion of heat and need and truth.
And then—
We moved.
Through the Spire. Past the ruins of the gate. To the central hall.
The door was sealed—blackened steel, etched with runes for silence and binding—but I didn’t hesitate. Just pressed my palm to the sigil, my magic flaring, the Dusk-mark beneath my collarbone glowing gold and bright.
The door groaned, then split open, the wards screaming as they were torn apart.
Inside—
Chaos.
Rebels. Dozens of them. Hundreds. Witches in their robes. Vampires in their silks. Werewolves in their leathers. Fae in their silver sigil-coats. All armed. All ready. All angry.
And in the center—
Nyx.
She stood like a queen, her crimson eyes glowing, her fangs bared, her dress a cascade of shadows. “Took you long enough,” she said, her voice like silk over steel.
“We had a claim to make,” I said.
She smiled—slow, dangerous. “Good. Because they’re waiting.”
“Who?”
“The undecided. The fearful. The ones who still believe the High Queen’s lies.”
“Then let them hear the truth.” I stepped forward, my hand in Kael’s, my storm-gray eyes holding the room. “I am Thunder. Daughter of Elira. Last of the Dusk-blood. And I am not a weapon. Not a curse. Not vengeance.”
The room fell silent.
“I am love,” I said. “I am fire. I am storm. And I am here to break the curse. Not with hate. Not with blood. But with truth.”
No one moved. No one spoke.
Just silence.
Heavy. Thick. Charged.
And then—
A single voice.
From the back.
“I believe you.”
A witch. Young. Silver-haired. Her eyes wide with something raw. Not fear. Not doubt.
Hope.
And then another.
“So do I.”
A vampire. Old. Crimson-eyed. Her fangs bared, her dress a cascade of shadows.
And another.
“And I.”
A werewolf. Broad-shouldered. Amber-eyed. His claws extended, his fangs bared.
And another.
And another.
And another.
Until the hall roared—witches, vampires, werewolves, Fae—all shouting, all believing.
And the bond—
The bond surged, gold and bright, wrapping around us like a vow.
And I realized—
I wasn’t here to destroy the man who let my mother die.
I was here to find the man who’d loved her.
And the man who loved me.
And the woman who would claim them both.
And when I finally pulled away, breathless, trembling, my forehead resting against Kael’s, I whispered the only truth I have left.
“I don’t know if I can do this.”
“You don’t have to,” he said. “Just stay.”
And I did.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to leave.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I could.
Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure I wanted to.