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BONDED CURSE Novel Cover

BONDED CURSE

When the Moon Summit names you Kaien Thorn’s fated mate, the whole world leans in. When Kaien rejects her under the Council’s eyes, Sariah Vale becomes a public wound — humiliated, hunted, and erased from every bonded ledger. She flees into the Rogue Wilds and finds something the Council never expected: a clan willing to crown the girl they called a mistake. Blood will buy power and blood will buy revenge. As Sariah claws herself into a queen the rogues didn’t know they needed, Kaien—Alpha of the iron-hearted Bloodfang—finds his bones aching for a phantom bond he swore to bury. Between them lie burned loyalties, whispered prophecies, and a secret bloodline that could remake the world or end it. They’ll try to destroy one another. They’ll try to use one another. But fate is tired of being the only author here. When the stone of oaths wakes under Sariah’s hand, the choice is brutal and simple: rise and rule a new world together, or burn what’s left to ashes. Call it war. Call it love. Call it what you’ll — just don’t call it fair.
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Chapter 1

The marble floor was so cold it felt like it was trying to bite straight through her skin, the kind of cold that makes your knees forget how to hinge, the kind of cold that makes memories ache. Sariah kept kneeling because that was what the ritual wanted, because everyone else stayed still and silence thickened like fog, and when the Moon Summit temple held its breath, you could hear your lungs loud as thunder.

The priest lifted his hand, and the motion was small and deliberate, palms like weathered pages. “Step forward, Alpha Kaien Thorn.”

Boots answered him, boots that sounded like the whole world landing right there. Kaien filled the circle before her like a shadow with edges, black armor swallowing the light, silver eyes level, unblinking. He didn’t give her the courtesy of looking soft or even curious. He looked like someone used to breaking things and walking away.

“I, Kaien Thorn, reject this bond.” His voice was flat, clean, a cut that didn’t tremble. It landed on her and kept going, like the rest of the room was some other place where the thing had never happened.

The priest mouthed the old words after him, and each syllable felt like a nail. The crowd breathed in unison, and for a beat she heard nothing but that sound, the way a building inhales before it collapses.

A laugh cracked the silence, sharp and small like a thrown stone. “Did you hear that? The Bloodfang Alpha’s fated mate, rejected like a stray.” Voices folded over each other, small cruel things making space between stone and skin.

Sariah lifted her head slowly, searching faces like someone scanning for an exit. Some looked away, some smirked, others tried for pity and failed. Her pulse hammered against her throat and her voice surprised her because it came out low and steady. “Say that to my face,” she told him.

Kaien just turned his head, his silver eyes grazing hers like cold metal. “I just did.”

She pushed up to her feet. Her knees screamed in protest, but she didn’t listen. “You think this makes you stronger?”

“It makes me free.”

Murmurs spread through the hall like spilled salt. Someone near the front hissed, “Her mark’s wrong; look at it,” and hands went to shoulders as if fingers could verify destiny.

Her hand moved of its own accord to the crescent on her skin, faint and pale, the moon carved into her shoulder like an accusation. “Free from what?” she asked, and the answer she wanted wasn’t in his face.

He didn’t answer. Instead he said, cool and small, “Remove her name from every bonded record.”

“Done, Alpha,” the priest said, like erasing ink.

Her voice tightened, angrier than she expected. “You’ll regret this.”

“No,” Kaien said without looking back, “you will.”

Commander Thale’s laugh came from the steps, a low sound like flint. Red cloak, scar that cut through her cheek and never closed, she leaned into the open doors like she owned the cold. “Not even a tear left to cry. Impressive.”

Sariah’s mouth turned sharp. “Keep talking, Thale. One day I’ll rip that smirk off.”

“If you’re still breathing by then,” Thale replied, indifferent as frost.

A gust from the open doors stirred the banners and made a mess of hair and thoughts. Sariah shoved through the ring of faces. Every pair of eyes tucked into her like barbs. Whispers followed along her spine.

“You hear about her mother?” someone muttered, dead with rumor. “Vanished before dawn. Took nothing.”

Her fingers closed on the cracked moon amulet at her throat, heat blooming against skin. She didn’t stop walking. The snow on the steps was already the lie of soft silence.

“Stop her,” Thale said when she reached the threshold.

Two Bloodfang soldiers snapped into place at the bottom of the stair, spears clicking like a locked jaw. “Alpha’s orders,” one said.

Sariah lifted her chin. “Move.”

“He already got what he wanted,” she said, loud enough for their cuirasses to hear. “There’s no fight left here for you.”

They didn’t move. The kind of obedience that came from living with someone who could unmake you sagged on their faces.

Another voice cut clear and steady, the kind that draws the room inward. “Let her go.”

A figure stepped out from the dark under the colonnade, a cloak swallowing the body, but it couldn’t hide the rune-fire pulsing in folded hands, small blue tongues licking her palms. Nyra lowered her hood and the blood streaks across her face were raw like a map. The amber eyes were sharp as weather.

“Mother,” Sariah breathed, and the word broke like a shard of something unfinished

Nyra’s face softened for a blink, then hardened back into steel. She looked at the soldiers slow, the kind of look that lists your sins out loud. “If you touch her, I’ll burn you down to bone.”

One soldier checked the other. The decision sat on their lips.

“Run,” Nyra told Sariah. “Don’t stop. Don’t look back.”

“I’m not leaving you,” Sariah said, voice like paper.

“You already are,” Nyra said. Her tone was knotted around that last word, but the command was clear. “They’ve taken everything else. They will not take you.”

“You’re hurt—”

“I said go.”

Rune-fire licked up through Nyra’s fingers, and the soldiers stepped back, unease written in armor. The fire smelled like old stories, like the parts of childhood that never die.

“Go, Sariah,” Nyra shouted and the voice cracked on the last syllable, but the flames were a wall and the snow at their feet hissed.

Sariah ran. She ran with the kind of animal speed born from someone who had just been unmade in a public place, hair and dress snagging on the pines as she slipped through the dark. Snow bit through thin fabric and seared the soles of her feet but she didn’t stop until the temple was a shadow, when even the priest’s murmurs were swallowed by wind.

When she opened her palm, the dagger lay there like a question. Nyra had given it to her in the chaos, a whisper at her wrist, a metal warmth. Runic lines pulsed under the moonlight, faint and hungry.

She pressed the blade to the crescent on her shoulder. Steel against bone started as a chill and then spread, a flare that settled into her chest like a second heartbeat. No blood came, only heat, like someone had lit a lantern under her ribs. She almost laughed, but the sound came out as a bark.

Thunder rolled far away, the sky ripping white. The world felt raw and too loud. In the thunder there was a voice that sounded like a thing you weren’t supposed to hear. Fate is flawed, it said, or maybe that was the wind, or maybe it was the Goddess, and the Goddess sounded tired.

“You think I’m broken?” Sariah said to the empty trees, fingers around the dagger. “Watch me prove you wrong.”

On the temple steps Kaien swung into a saddle, the warhorse under him a black bulk. Thale stood at his side, cloak whipping, watching storms gather over the valley like a promise.

“She’ll be dead before nightfall,” Thale said easy.

Kaien watched the pines where darkness had already swallowed her, like the world had already decided. “You’re certain?”

“She’s one girl. No pack. No allies,” Thale said like that settled it.

His hands tightened on the reins until knuckles went pale. “Sometimes that’s when they’re most dangerous.”

Thale raised an eyebrow. “You sound almost… concerned.”

“I’m not,” he said.

“Then why haven’t you ordered the hunt?” she asked, amusement under the knife of her words.

He looked out toward the tree line as if he could see the little figure flitting through it. “Because if she survives the night, she’ll come for me. And I’d rather face her when she’s strong enough to try.”

Thale laughed, low. “You’re playing with fire.”

“Maybe I am.” His voice dropped like something private and dangerous.

He rode into the storm and snow took his horse’s tracks like a painter covering mistakes.

Sariah kept moving through wind that wanted to knock her over. The dagger was a weight against her skin, the runes whispering like old bones. The moon slid behind cloud and the forest turned into a mouth.

She let the cold eat up the shock, let it harden her. She thought about the priest’s lips saying remove her name, about the way the crowd had chewed her and spat, about the way Kaien’s voice had been a scalpel and not a hand. She thought about Nyra and the way the healer had risked everything to pull her away, amber eyes stained with something like guilt.

If fate was flawed, then she had two choices: curl into the wreck and become the thing people pointed at, or stand up and terrify the world until the world learned her name the right way. She felt the muscle in her jaw set. She wasn’t a child to be pitied. She wasn’t a thing you corrected and shelved.

A fox yelped far off, then silence pressed down, and the only sound was her breath and the dagger’s pulse in her hand. She wrapped the cloak tighter, ignoring the sting of cold and the way snow had eaten through her hem, and kept walking until she couldn’t feel the temple or the priest or the easy cruel mouths anymore.

Behind her the temple lights were small pinpricks and then gone. The wind had taken the sound of Kaien’s horse long before he rounded the ridge. Two worlds turned their faces away from one another and for a beat the valley held its breath.

Then thunder broke, and the storm moved like it had something to finish, and Sariah walked straight into it.

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