I didn’t expect the attack.
Not here. Not now. Not during a bond ritual.
The Sanctum was supposed to be impenetrable—carved from black diamond beneath the Citadel, warded with ancient fae magic, guarded by the High Priestess’s own sentinels. The ritual itself was sacred, a delicate weaving of Thorn and Bloom magic meant to deepen our bond, stabilize my blood, and align our powers for the trials ahead. No one dared disrupt it. Not the Blood Houses. Not the Unseelie King. Not even the Crimson Regent, who’d already tried and failed to kill me through assassins in the Council Chamber.
But someone had.
And they’d brought fire.
They came through the ceiling—three of them, cloaked in shadow, faces hidden behind silver masks etched with the sigil of the Crimson Regent. Vampires. Elite. Fast. Silent. Deadly. They dropped like falling stars, landing in a triangle around the dais, their daggers already in hand, their eyes glowing red with blood-frenzy. One lunged for the High Priestess. Another went for Vera. The third—taller, faster, more precise—came straight for me.
My blade was in my hand before the first scream tore through the chamber.
Steel met steel with a shriek that echoed off the vaulted ceiling. I parried, spun, kicked out—my boot connecting with the assassin’s chest, sending him skidding across the polished stone. But he was up fast, faster than any mortal, his movements liquid, his dagger flashing toward my throat.
I ducked.
The blade sliced air.
And then—
I felt her.
Not with my eyes. Not with my ears.
With my blood.
Vera.
She was on the dais—barefoot, in a white ritual robe, her storm-gray eyes sharp, her magic flaring like a storm about to break. She hadn’t fled. Hadn’t cowered. Hadn’t frozen.
She’d fought.
“Left!” I growled, not turning, not breaking focus. “Now!”
She didn’t argue.
She just moved.
One step. Two. And then she was at my back, her spine pressed to mine, her magic flaring like lightning beneath her skin. The bond hummed between us—not with hunger, not with desire, but with something sharper, something primal.
Survival.
The assassin lunged again.
I feinted left, then spun right, my blade slicing across his forearm. He snarled, blood black and thick, but didn’t falter. He came at me with both hands now—dagger in one, a second hidden blade in the other. I parried, blocked, twisted—my movements precise, calculated, every strike measured. But he was fast. Faster than he should’ve been. And then I saw it—the faint red glow in his eyes. Blood-frenzy. He’d been fed vampire venom. He wouldn’t stop. Wouldn’t feel pain. Wouldn’t die unless I tore his heart out.
“He’s poisoned,” I snapped, blocking a slash aimed at my neck. “Won’t go down easy.”
“Then we make it hard,” Vera said, her voice low, steady.
And then—
She struck.
Not with a blade.
Not with a spell.
With magic.
Her hand shot out, palm open, and dark vines erupted from her skin—thorned, writhing, alive—snaking across the floor, wrapping around the assassin’s ankles, yanking him off balance. He stumbled. I didn’t hesitate. I stepped in, blade flashing, and sliced deep across his thigh. He roared, but didn’t fall. He swung wildly, his dagger catching my shoulder, slicing through fabric and flesh. Pain flared—sharp, hot—but I didn’t flinch. I couldn’t. Not with Vera at my back. Not with the bond screaming in my veins.
“Behind you!” she shouted.
I spun.
Another assassin—this one from the side, silent as death, dagger aimed at Vera’s spine.
I moved without thinking.
My body twisted, my arm shooting out, yanking her back against me as the blade sliced air where her heart had been. She gasped, her hands flying to my arms, her magic flaring. I didn’t let go. I just held her there—pressed to my chest, her back to my front—my blade raised, my fangs bared.
“You okay?” I growled.
“I’m fine,” she said, breathless. “But he’s not.”
And then—
She reached back.
Not to push me away.
Not to break free.
But to grip my wrist—tight, possessive—and pull.
I didn’t question it.
I just followed.
We moved as one—her magic weaving through mine, our bond pulsing, alive, guiding us. I stepped left. She stepped right. I struck high. She struck low. My blade slashed across the assassin’s ribs. Her thorned vines wrapped around his neck, squeezing, cutting off his air. He thrashed. I didn’t stop. I drove my knee into his gut, then brought the hilt of my blade down on his skull.
He dropped.
Not dead. Not yet.
But down.
“One left,” Vera said, turning to face the third assassin—the one who’d gone for the High Priestess.
But he wasn’t after the Priestess anymore.
He was after us.
He moved like a shadow, silent, fast, his dagger gleaming in the silver light. I stepped forward, blade raised, ready to meet him.
But Vera was faster.
She darted in front of me—small, quick, fearless—and threw a spell. Not a severing blade. Not a binding vine. But a pulse of raw magic—dark, violent, hungry—that slammed into the assassin’s chest like a warhammer. He flew back, crashing into the dais, his mask cracking, his dagger skittering across the floor.
He didn’t get up.
But he wasn’t dead.
And neither were we.
The chamber was chaos—guards shouting, the High Priestess chanting, runes flaring as she sealed the breach, reinforcing the wards. The other assassins were down—one dead, one unconscious, one bleeding out. The Priestess was unharmed. Vera—
She was still at my side.
Her chest rose and fell with ragged breaths. Her hair was loose, falling over her shoulders. Her storm-gray eyes were sharp, alive, triumphant. And her magic—still flaring, still humming—wrapped around me like a second skin.
“You fought like my equal,” I said, my voice rough.
She turned to me, her gaze steady. “I am.”
And then—
She did something I didn’t expect.
She reached up.
Not to touch my face.
Not to check my wound.
But to trace the sigil on my collarbone—dark, glowing, alive—the mark that bound us, that linked our magic, our blood, our fates.
“It’s stronger,” she whispered. “The bond. It’s not just hunger anymore.”
“No,” I said, stepping closer. “It’s trust.”
Her breath caught.
And then—
She looked at me—really looked—and I saw it.
Not defiance.
Not anger.
Belief.
She believed in me.
And that was more terrifying than anything.
—
Later, in the infirmary, I watched her.
She sat on the edge of the stone table, her back to me, her fingers working the ties of her robe. The healers had already tended to my shoulder—sealed the wound with fae salve, bound it with enchanted linen. It would scar. It always did. But it would heal.
She hadn’t asked for help.
Hadn’t let anyone touch her.
But I could see it—the faint tremor in her hands, the way her breath hitched when she moved, the way her magic still flared beneath her skin, restless, unspent.
“You’re hurt,” I said, stepping closer.
“I’m fine,” she said, not turning.
“Liar.”
She exhaled, slow, rough. “It’s just a scratch. From the dagger. On my side.”
And then—
She pulled the robe aside.
Just enough.
Just to show me.
A thin, jagged cut ran along her hip—fresh, still oozing, the edges already darkening with bruising. Not deep. Not life-threatening. But painful. And it would scar.
My jaw tightened.
“Why didn’t you say something?”
“Because I didn’t want you to worry,” she said, her voice low.
“Too late for that,” I said, stepping behind her.
She didn’t pull away.
Didn’t flinch.
Just sat there, still, as I reached for the salve, as I smoothed it over the wound with careful fingers, as I wrapped the linen around her waist, binding it tight.
And then—
I didn’t let go.
My hand lingered—just above her hip, just below the edge of the bandage—my thumb brushing the warm skin beneath. She shivered. Not from pain. Not from cold.
From me.
“You don’t have to do this,” she said, her voice breaking.
“I know,” I said, stepping closer. “But I want to.”
She turned then, slow, deliberate. Her storm-gray eyes locked onto mine. “Why? Why do you keep doing this? Why do you keep protecting me? I came here to destroy you. To burn your world down. And yet—”
“And yet I can’t let you die,” I said, voice rough. “Not because of the bond. Not because of the Concord. But because you’re the only thing that’s ever made my blood still. Because you’re the only one who’s ever looked at me like I’m a monster—and made me want to be one.”
Her breath caught.
“You don’t know me,” she whispered.
“I know enough,” I said. “I know you’re brave. I know you’re strong. I know you’ve spent your life fighting for people no one else cares about. And I know you’re not a terrorist.”
“Then what am I?”
“You’re a revolution,” I said. “And I’m the man who’s supposed to stop you.”
“And will you?”
She didn’t answer.
She just looked at me—her eyes gold, her fangs bared, her breath hot—and for the first time, I saw it.
Doubt.
Not just in me.
In herself.
And then—
She reached up.
Not to push me away.
Not to strike.
But to touch my face—her fingers brushing my jaw, my cheek, the scar above my eyebrow where a rebel’s blade had once split my skin.
“You’re not what I thought you were,” she said, voice soft.
“Neither are you,” I said.
And then—
She kissed me.
Not violent. Not desperate.
Soft.
Slow. Deep. Reverent. Her mouth moved over mine like she was memorizing me, like she’d waited a lifetime for this. My hands slid to her waist, pulling her close, my breath hitching as her magic flared, merging with mine, our bond pulsing, alive.
She broke the kiss, but only to drag her mouth down my jaw, to my neck, fangs brushing my pulse. I gasped. My head fell back. My hands gripped her hair.
“Say it,” she growled against my skin. “Say you’re mine.”
“Never,” I breathed.
She bit down—just enough to sting. I cried out. My back arched. My magic exploded, thorned vines wrapping around her arms, her chest, claiming her.
She laughed—dark, dangerous. “You’re already mine.”
And then—
She pulled back.
Just enough to look at me.
Just enough to say, voice breaking—
“And you’re mine.”
I didn’t argue.
I didn’t pull away.
I just looked at her—really looked—and said, voice raw—
“Always.”
And then—
The door burst open.
Dain stood in the threshold, his dark eyes scanning the room—me with my hands in her hair, her fangs at my neck, our magics tangled, our breaths ragged.
“Kaelen,” he said, voice tight. “The Council summons you. Now.”
I didn’t move. Didn’t release her. My fangs still pressed into her skin. My breath still hot on her neck.
“Go,” she said, voice trembling. “Before I change my mind and kill you.”
He lifted his head, eyes blazing gold. “This isn’t over.”
“It never was,” I said.
He stepped back, but his hand lingered on my waist, thumb brushing the edge of the sigil. Then he turned and followed Dain, the door clicking shut behind him.
I stayed where I was, my breath ragged, my body trembling, my skin still burning where he’d touched me.
I hated him.
I wanted to kill him.
And I wanted him to come back.
Because for the first time in my life—
I wasn’t sure which one I wanted more.
And that terrified me more than anything.
—
Now, hours later, I stood in the war room, my shoulder bandaged, my armor back in place, my blade at my hip. The map of Aetheria’s realms was etched into the obsidian table, its borders glowing faintly under the silver light. The Council had been dismissed. The assassins were dead or captured. The Sanctum was sealed. But the threat wasn’t over.
I knew who had sent them.
The Crimson Regent.
He’d tried to kill me once. Now he’d tried again. And he’d used Vera as bait.
That changed everything.
“You’re brooding,” Dain said, stepping into the chamber. “That’s never a good sign.”
“He’s testing me,” I said, not turning. “The Regent. He wants to see how far I’ll go to protect her.”
“And how far will you go?”
I didn’t answer.
Because I already knew.
Farther than I’d ever gone for anyone. Farther than I’d ever thought possible. I’d kill the Regent. I’d burn his house to ash. I’d tear down the Blood Senate if I had to.
For her.
“She’s not just a pawn,” Dain said, stepping closer. “You know that, right?”
“I know.”
“You’re not just protecting the bond. You’re protecting her.”
“Yes.”
“And if the Council orders you to execute her—”
“They won’t,” I said, turning to face him. “Because if they do, I’ll walk out of this city with her. And if they try to stop us—” I bared my fangs. “I’ll tear this place down stone by stone.”
Dain exhaled, slow, rough. “You’ve changed.”
“She’s changed me,” I said, my voice low. “And I don’t want to go back.”
He didn’t answer.
He just looked at me—really looked—and for the first time, I saw it.
Not loyalty.
Not duty.
Hope.
And it terrified me.
Because if I was hoping—
Then so was she.
And if we were both hoping—
Then we were both falling.
And if we fell—
We’d fall together.
And that—
That was more dangerous than any war.
Because love—
Love was the one thing even the Concord couldn’t control.
And it was already too late.
We were already falling.
And when we hit—
The world would shake.