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Our Toxic Fated Bond Novel Cover

Our Toxic Fated Bond

The graduation cap hanging on my closet door caught my eye, and reality hit me like a physical blow. June 15th. The day before my coming-of-age ceremony. The day before everything went wrong. I was eighteen again. My fingers flew to my neck, searching for the raised scar tissue where his mark had branded me as his property. Nothing. Just smooth, unmarked skin that had never known his teeth. But I could still feel it—phantom pain that made me want to claw at my throat until I drew blood. "This isn't happening," I whispered to the empty room, but my voice cracked on the words. "This can't be happening." But it was. Somehow, impossibly, I'd been given a second chance. The Moon Goddess's idea of mercy, perhaps—or maybe just another cruel joke. Either way, I wasn't going to waste it.
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Chapter 1

The silk sheets beneath me felt like a shroud as I jolted awake, my heart hammering against my ribs with the violence of a caged bird.

For a moment, I couldn't breathe—couldn't think—as the familiar weight of my childhood bedroom pressed down on me like a tomb.

But it wasn't the room that made my skin crawl. It was the memories.

They crashed over me in waves, each one more devastating than the last. Lucius's hands on my throat as he marked me. The suffocating pull of the mate bond that had turned my own body into a prison. The endless nights feeling his pleasure with other women through our connection, each sensation a knife twisting in my chest. The miscarriage—God, the miscarriage—bleeding out alone on the bathroom floor while I screamed his name into the void, knowing he wouldn't come, knowing he was probably buried between someone else's thighs.

I pressed my palms against my eyes until stars burst behind my lids, but the memories wouldn't stop. They never stopped.

Twenty-three years of hell condensed into crystal-clear recollections that felt more real than the silk pajamas clinging to my sweat-dampened skin.

The graduation cap hanging on my closet door caught my eye, and reality hit me like a physical blow. June 15th.

The day before my coming-of-age ceremony. The day before everything went wrong.

I was eighteen again.

My fingers flew to my neck, searching for the raised scar tissue where his mark had branded me as his property. Nothing. Just smooth, unmarked skin that had never known his teeth. But I could still feel it—phantom pain that made me want to claw at my throat until I drew blood.

"This isn't happening," I whispered to the empty room, but my voice cracked on the words. "This can't be happening."

But it was. Somehow, impossibly, I'd been given a second chance.

The Moon Goddess's idea of mercy, perhaps—or maybe just another cruel joke.

Either way, I wasn't going to waste it.

I stumbled to my feet, legs shaking like a newborn colt's, and caught my reflection in the vanity mirror. Eighteen-year-old Claire stared back at me—round-faced and bright-eyed, still soft with the naivety that Lucius would systematically destroy. She looked so young. So hopeful.

So fucking stupid.

"Never again," I told my reflection, and this time my voice was steady as steel. "I will never be your victim again."

The next morning found me standing outside my father's study, my hand trembling on the brass doorknob. Arthur Ashbourne sat behind his mahogany desk, silver hair gleaming in the morning light as he reviewed pack documents. He looked up when I entered, his weathered face creasing into a smile that would have warmed me once. Now it just reminded me of how easily he'd handed me over to Lucius like a prize heifer.

"Claire, sweetheart. You're up early. Nervous about tomorrow's ceremony?"

If only he knew. "Actually, Father, I wanted to discuss something with you. Something important."

He set down his papers, giving me his full attention. "Of course. What's on your mind?"

I took a breath, steeling myself for what I was about to do. "I've been thinking about my future. About what's best for our family and our pack."

His eyebrows rose slightly. "Go on."

"I want to enter an arranged marriage."

The words hung in the air like a bomb waiting to explode. Arthur's coffee mug froze halfway to his lips, his eyes widening in shock.

"I'm sorry, what did you just say?"

"You heard me correctly." I clasped my hands behind my back to hide their shaking. "I've realized that waiting for a fated mate is... naive. Childish, even. Our pack needs strong alliances, and I want to do my part to secure them."

Arthur set down his mug with deliberate care, studying my face like he was seeing me for the first time. "Claire, this is... unexpected. Just last week you were telling me about how romantic it would be to find your true mate at the ceremony. You said you wanted to marry for love."

The irony was so bitter I could taste it. "I was being foolish. Love is a luxury we can't afford, not when there are political advantages to be gained. I'm ready to put the pack's needs before my own desires."

He leaned back in his chair, fingers steepled as he processed my words. "This is quite a change of heart. Are you certain about this?"

"Completely." The lie came easily now. "I've given it a lot of thought, and I believe this is the right path. For everyone."

A slow smile spread across Arthur's face—the same expression he'd worn when negotiating lucrative pack treaties. "Well, I must say, I'm impressed by your maturity. This kind of sacrifice... it shows real leadership potential."

Sacrifice. If only he knew what I was really sacrificing—and what I was trying to save.

"So you'll help me arrange something?"

"Of course." He was already reaching for his contact list, the wheels of political maneuvering spinning in his mind. "There are several families who would be excellent matches. The Blackwoods have a son about your age—Samuel, I believe. Good bloodline, strong pack connections. The Greystone family has twin sons, both promising young men..."

I let him talk, nodding at appropriate intervals while my mind raced. Over the next few days, I threw myself into the process with calculated determination, reviewing files and attending meetings like I was planning a military campaign rather than my own life.

Samuel Blackwood emerged as the clear choice—not because I felt anything for him, but because he represented everything Lucius wasn't. Where Lucius was an Alpha heir drunk on power, Samuel was a Beta's son raised with humility. Where Lucius took what he wanted by force, Samuel asked permission. Where Lucius saw women as possessions, Samuel had been raised to see them as equals.

Most importantly, Samuel was kind. I could see it in the way he spoke about his younger sister, the way he listened when others talked, the way he never interrupted or dismissed ideas simply because they came from someone he considered beneath him.

He would never hurt me the way Lucius had. He might not love me—not yet, maybe not ever—but he would never break me.

The guilt ate at me like acid. Samuel deserved better than a bride who was using him as a human shield against her own destiny. He deserved someone who could love him with her whole heart, not someone whose heart had been shattered so completely that the pieces could never be put back together.

But I was drowning, and he was the only life raft in sight. I had to grab hold, even if it meant pulling him down with me.

As I signed the preliminary engagement documents, my hand steady despite the storm raging in my chest, I made myself a promise: I would be a good wife to Samuel. I would be faithful, supportive, everything Lucius had never allowed me to be. It might not be love, but it would be honest partnership.

And when Lucius inevitably came for me—because I knew he would, knew that whatever force had brought us both back wouldn't let us escape each other so easily—I would be ready.

This time, I wouldn't be his victim.

This time, I would fight.

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