I didn't feel the bond take root.
There was no sudden jolt of connection, no mystical warmth curling between our souls. Just silence. Cold, unfeeling, sterile. I was expecting something—anything—to confirm that the world had just changed. But the only thing I felt was the slow trickle of blood down my thumb and the numb ache in my knees.
The parchment had turned a shade darker where our marks bled together. The magic of the old law flared once—brief and colorless—and then vanished.
That was it.
My life was gone, and no one in the room looked surprised.
Kael stepped closer.
He didn't reach for my hand. He didn't offer a nod of acknowledgment. Instead, he reached up and tilted my chin with two fingers, slow and cold.
I stiffened.
He studied my face like a man inspecting a statue, as if weighing my value on a scale only he understood. My skin burned beneath his touch—not from desire, but from humiliation. The room was full of witnesses: guards, advisors, servants. Even my father, who now looked everywhere but at me.
"You look smaller than I expected," Kael murmured, fingers still on my chin.
I didn't respond.
"You'll need discipline."
His grip tightened, just for a second. My jaw clenched. Kael's mouth curled into something that wasn't quite a smile.
"No vow," he said, loud enough for the room to hear. "No kiss. No Luna ceremony. This union is not one of affection. It is a contract of surrender."
The words echoed like a death bell.
One of the advisors from the Vale pack shifted uncomfortably. Another cast a glance at my father, who remained frozen on the dais, face pale as ash. He didn't move. Didn't object. Didn't defend.
He never had.
Kael finally released my chin.
"Bring her," he said to his men.
Two of the Blackthorn guards stepped forward. I instinctively stepped back.
Kael's hand shot out and caught my wrist.
His grip was not violent—but firm. Final. Like steel wrapped in silk.
He leaned in close, his breath brushing the shell of my ear as he spoke, low enough that only I could hear.
"Tonight, little bride, I'll make sure you know what hell tastes like."
My pulse stopped.
Kael pulled me forward, past the stunned faces of the Vale Court, without looking back.
I had no choice but to follow.
Behind me, the blood-soaked scroll was rolled and sealed.
Ahead of me, the carriage door to Blackthorn territory opened like the mouth of a beast.
And I—bound, silent, and shivering—stepped willingly into the jaws of the wolf.
I didn't breathe until I was outside.
Even then, the air didn't help. It was too cold, too thin, too full of him. Every step down the stone steps echoed in my skull. My legs didn't want to move, but he didn't let me stop. His grip on my wrist was constant — not crushing, but absolute. Final.
Like a chain disguised as a hand.
Behind us, the heavy doors of the Vale Court slammed shut.
That was the last time I would ever see it — the cracked stone floors, the half-dead torches, the father who couldn't look at me even as I was handed off like a lamb to slaughter.
I didn't even cry.
Not because I wasn't afraid.
But because there was no room for tears in a body already filled with cold.
Kael didn't speak as we crossed the outer yard. His soldiers flanked us like shadows, and I could feel their eyes crawling across my back. I didn't know if they pitied me or envied him. Probably neither. Monsters rarely earned pity. And brides rarely earned envy—especially when they looked like me. Dressed like a doll. Carved like an offering.
The carriage waiting at the gate was nothing like the wooden carts from home. It was made of blackened iron, etched with sharp runes and trimmed in silver, drawn by two towering, snorting beasts that might have once been horses—if horses had eyes like coals and breath like smoke.
Kael opened the door himself.
He didn't gesture for me to enter.
He shoved me in first.
The inside was velvet and shadow. The moment I stumbled onto the seat, he followed, closing the door behind us with a soft click that sounded far too gentle for the violence he carried in his voice.
I dared a glance at him.
Kael sat across from me, legs spread slightly, arms resting on his thighs. Relaxed. Controlled. Dangerous.
The silence stretched.
I couldn't take it anymore.
"Why didn't you just kill me?" I whispered.
He tilted his head, like I'd asked something amusing.
Then leaned forward until I could smell the faint trace of blood on his breath.
"I could've," he murmured. "But this is better."
My throat tightened.
"You want peace?"
"I want justice."
He shifted again—then reached across the carriage, fast, and gripped my jaw.
His thumb pressed into my cheek. Not hard enough to bruise. But hard enough that I couldn't turn away. Couldn't hide. Couldn't pretend I wasn't shaking.
"I want your father to live knowing what I'm doing to his daughter. I want your pack to watch you kneel and scream and break—and know they paid me to do it."
I froze. Every muscle in my body turned to ice.
Kael leaned in closer, his mouth barely an inch from mine.
I didn't look away.
I couldn't.
If I blinked, I might break.
If I breathed, I might scream.
So I stared into the eyes of the monster I now called husband, and prayed that I'd survive the night.
The rest of the ride passed in silence.
Not the kind that settles.
The kind that waits.
Kael didn't touch me again. He didn't speak. He didn't blink. Just sat there, staring out the carriage window like I wasn't even there.
And somehow that was worse.
His words kept echoing in my mind—burning through every inch of fabric, every inch of skin, like they'd already come true.
"I'll make sure you know what hell tastes like."
Was it rage that drove him? Or pleasure?
Was there a difference to him?
The Blackthorn territory was colder than mine. I felt the shift the moment the carriage crossed the border. The trees thinned. The mist thickened. And then—nothing. No moon. No stars. Just dark woods and stone walls wrapped in silence.
When the carriage finally stopped, Kael stepped out first.
He didn't look back to see if I would follow.
Still gripping the ache in my own wrist, I stepped out onto foreign ground.
The Blackthorn stronghold towered before me like a mausoleum — carved into the mountainside, its blackened spires pierced the fog, jagged and cold. Iron torches lined the stone steps, flickering with pale blue fire that gave off no warmth. Two massive wolf statues flanked the entrance, their mouths open in permanent snarls.
This wasn't a home.
It was a warning.
Kael didn't wait. He walked like a man who owned everything — the earth beneath him, the sky above, and now the girl behind.
I stumbled to keep up, my thin shoes slipping on the frost-glazed stone.
He didn't slow.
As we neared the doors, they opened on their own. Blackthorn guards lined the walls inside, standing in silence as we passed. No one bowed. No one smiled.
They didn't look at me.
They didn't have to.
They'd already judged me. A Vale girl. The blood of traitors. The enemy's offering.
The last daughter, wrapped in white silk and silence.
Kael stopped at the top of the stairs, just before the threshold of the inner keep.
He turned his head slightly—just enough that I saw the edge of his profile beneath the torchlight. His voice came quiet, but there was no mistaking the weight in it.
"After tonight, Aria," he said, "you'll stop wondering which parts of the stories were true."
Then he walked inside.
And I followed him into the wolf's den.
Into hell.
Into him.