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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 2

The announcement echoed through the Ashbourne estate's grand hall like a stone dropped into still water, ripples of shock spreading through the assembled pack members. I sat perfectly straight in my chair, hands folded in my lap, watching faces transform from polite interest to stunned disbelief.

"My daughter Claire has chosen to honor our pack through a strategic alliance," Arthur's voice carried the weight of authority as he stood before the gathered wolves. "She will be engaged to Samuel Blackwood of the Northern Ridge Pack."

A collective intake of breath filled the room. I could feel their stares burning into me—some admiring, others confused, a few openly skeptical. The Alpha's daughter choosing duty over destiny? It was practically unheard of.

"Such wisdom for one so young," murmured Elder Morrison, his weathered face creasing with approval. "The old ways are not forgotten."

But I caught the whispers too, threading through the formal congratulations like poison through honey.

"She must not have found her fated mate yet."

"Poor girl, settling for an arrangement."

"The Blackwood boy is handsome enough, I suppose."

If only they knew. If only they understood that I wasn't settling—I was surviving.

The anxiety gnawed at my stomach like a living thing as the crowd dispersed, pack members filing out with their heads bent together in hushed conversation. Would this actually work? Could a simple engagement ceremony really protect me from whatever cosmic force had brought both Lucius and me back to this moment?

I pressed my palms against my thighs to stop them from trembling. It had to work. It was the only plan I had.

A week later, the morning of the engagement party dawned crisp and clear, sunlight streaming through the tall windows of the main hall where I sat like a statue among the chaos. Servants bustled around me, their arms full of white roses and golden ribbon, transforming the space into something that belonged in a fairy tale.

The irony wasn't lost on me. Once upon a time, I'd dreamed of a day like this—a celebration of love and commitment, surrounded by family and friends. Now it felt more like watching them build my own gilded cage, each flower and candle another bar between me and the freedom I'd never really had.

"Miss Claire, should we move the centerpieces closer together?" Maria, our head housekeeper, paused beside my chair with an armful of ivory peonies.

I blinked, realizing I'd been staring at nothing for God knows how long. "Whatever you think is best, Maria."

She studied my face with the keen eye of someone who'd helped raise me. "You're nervous, dear. That's perfectly natural."

Nervous. Such a simple word for the storm raging inside my chest. I nodded anyway, forcing a smile that felt like it might crack my face in half.

The preparations continued around me in a blur of activity. Ice sculptures shaped like wolves, tables draped in silk, enough food to feed half the territory. All of it beautiful, all of it perfect, all of it wrong.

Because this wasn't about love or joy or new beginnings. This was about survival. This was about building walls high enough to keep the monsters out.

Even if the biggest monster was destiny itself.

Samuel arrived in the early afternoon, his car crunching up the gravel drive just as the last of the decorations were being put in place. I watched from the window as he stepped out, tall and lean in a perfectly tailored navy suit, his dark hair catching the sunlight. He moved with quiet confidence, nothing like Lucius's predatory swagger, and something in my chest loosened just a fraction.

He was safe. He was kind. He was everything Lucius wasn't.

He was also walking toward a trap I'd set, and the guilt threatened to choke me.

"Claire." His voice was warm as he approached, that genuine smile lighting up his angular features. "You look beautiful."

I smoothed down the pale blue dress I'd chosen—modest, appropriate, nothing that screamed 'look at me.' "Thank you. The decorations turned out lovely, don't you think?"

He glanced around the transformed hall, taking in the elaborate floral arrangements and twinkling lights. "It's like something out of a dream. Your family certainly knows how to throw a party."

A dream. More like a carefully constructed illusion, but I nodded anyway. "They wanted to make sure everything was perfect for... for us."

The word tasted strange on my tongue. Us. As if we were actually a unit, a team, something real instead of a desperate alliance born from my terror.

Samuel moved closer, and I caught the scent of cedar and clean soap—nothing overwhelming, nothing that made my wolf sit up and take notice. Safe. Comfortable. Everything a mate bond wasn't supposed to be.

"I hope we can build something good together," he said quietly, his gray eyes earnest. "I know this isn't... conventional. But I believe partnerships built on mutual respect can be just as strong as any other kind."

Mutual respect. God, when was the last time someone had offered me that? I tried to meet his gaze but found myself looking past his shoulder instead, focusing on the way the afternoon light caught the crystal chandelier.

"I think so too," I managed, though the words felt hollow.

Silence stretched between us, not uncomfortable exactly, but weighted with all the things we weren't saying. He was trying so hard to put me at ease, to make this easier for both of us, and all I could think about was how I was lying to him with every breath.

"Are you nervous?" The question was gentle, without judgment. "About tonight, I mean. It's a big step."

Nervous didn't begin to cover it. I was terrified. Terrified that this wouldn't work, that Lucius would find a way around my defenses, that I was dragging Samuel into something that would destroy us both. But how could I explain that without sounding completely insane?

"A little," I admitted, which was probably the most honest thing I'd said all week.

Samuel's expression softened. "That's completely understandable. I want you to know—I don't have any expectations beyond what we've discussed. Friendship, partnership, mutual support. We can take everything else as it comes, at whatever pace feels right for you."

The kindness in his voice was like a knife twisting in my gut. He was offering me everything I'd never had—choice, patience, respect—and I was accepting it under false pretenses. He deserved so much better than a bride who was using him as a human shield against fate itself.

"Thank you," I whispered, finally forcing myself to look at him directly. "That means more than you know."

And it did. Even if this was all wrong, even if I was being selfish and cruel, his gentleness was like balm on wounds that had never properly healed. For just a moment, I let myself imagine what it might be like to actually deserve this—to be the kind of woman who could love him the way he deserved to be loved.

But that woman had died twenty-three years ago in another life, and what was left of her was too broken to offer anyone anything real.

Samuel seemed to sense my internal struggle because he stepped back slightly, giving me space to breathe. "Should we go over the ceremony details? I want to make sure everything goes smoothly tonight."

I nodded gratefully, seizing on the distraction. As we walked through the timeline for the evening—the formal announcement, the exchange of family rings, the traditional blessing—I tried to focus on the practicalities instead of the growing dread in my stomach.

Because somewhere out there, Lucius was still breathing. Still remembering. Still believing that I belonged to him.

And no amount of white roses and golden ribbons was going to change that.

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