
Rejected by the Fae Lord, Claimed by the Shadow King
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
For a long, suffocating moment, the three of us stood frozen in the shattered wreckage of the vines.
Darius’s hand remained suspended in the air, the lethal glow of his magic flickering as he processed the sight of me in my wedding gown. Behind him, Seraphina’s eyes widened in momentary panic, but as she took in my rigid posture and the lack of any magical defense, her fear quickly melted into a cruel, mocking sneer.
"Well, well," Seraphina drawled, stepping out from behind Darius and adjusting the bodice of her dress. "It seems the little mouse learned how to sneak out of her cage."
I ignored her. My gaze remained locked on Darius. The man I had trusted. The man who had sat by my father’s sickbed and held my hand, promising that our family’s legacy would be safe with him. Every warm smile, every gentle touch had been a calculated lie.
"How long?" I asked, my voice terrifyingly calm. I refused to let my voice shake. I refused to give them the satisfaction of my tears.
Darius let his hand drop, the magic extinguishing. His initial shock vanished, replaced by a chilling, arrogant composure. He casually adjusted his cuffs, his face an impenetrable mask of superiority.
"Does it matter, Aria?" Darius asked, his tone devoid of a single ounce of remorse. "You always were too observant for your own good. I suppose it was only a matter of time before you stumbled across something you shouldn't have."
"You are poisoning my father," I stated, the words tasting like ash on my tongue. "You are murdering the Lord of the Sunflare Court."
"Correction," Seraphina chirped, stepping closer to loop her arm through Darius’s. "I am poisoning your father. Darius is merely providing the alibi. And honestly, Aria, you should be thanking me. The old man is in constant pain. I’m doing him a favor."
A violent tremor wracked my body, but I forced my fists to unclench. "The Bonding Ceremony is off," I said coldly, taking a step backward. "There will be no wedding. And you will never touch the deed to the Sunflare Mines."
I turned to leave, my mind racing with plans. I needed to get to the grand hall. I would declare their treason in front of the High Council. The King himself was in attendance. Even a Null’s word would spark an investigation if I demanded a truth-seeker be brought to my father’s chambers.
Before I could take a second step, a wall of invisible, concussive force slammed into my chest.
I gasped as the magic threw me backward. I hit the marble pillar hard, the breath knocked from my lungs. I slid to the ground, my heavy gown tangling around my legs.
Darius stalked toward me, his eyes dark with greed and absolute control.
"You aren't going anywhere, Aria," he said, his voice dropping to a dangerous, silken whisper. "And you most certainly are not canceling this ceremony."
I glared up at him, fighting to pull oxygen back into my chest. "You cannot force me to bond with you. The altar requires a willing vow. If I stand before the High Fae and speak of your betrayal, you will be ruined."
Darius laughed. It was a cold, hollow sound that echoed off the glass dome. "Speak of my betrayal? To whom? The Council? Do you honestly think a single Lord sitting in that hall will take the word of a magicless Null over a High Fae Lord?"
"Treason is treason," I spat, pushing myself up to my knees. "When they find the poison in his blood—"
"They won't find poison," Darius interrupted smoothly. He reached into the inner pocket of his ceremonial jacket and withdrew a folded piece of heavy parchment, stamped with the red wax seal of the High Council.
He flicked his wrist, and the parchment floated down, landing squarely in my lap.
"Open it," he commanded.
My hands trembled slightly as I broke the seal and unfolded the thick paper. My eyes scanned the elegant, looping script of the Fae courts.
It was a warrant for execution.
*Lord Elian Solis, by decree of the High Council, is hereby found guilty of sedition and conspiring to traffic forbidden dark magic to the exiled Shadow factions. Penalty: Immediate execution and the seizure of all assets.*
I stared at the paper, my mind going blank. "This... this is a forgery. My father would never traffic dark magic. He despises the shadow factions."
"Of course he wouldn't," Darius agreed, crouching down so he was eye-level with me. The scent of Seraphina’s cloying jasmine perfume radiated off his clothes, making me nauseous. "But I spent a great deal of gold planting the evidence in his private study this morning. Ledgers, correspondence, forbidden shadow-glass. It’s all there, waiting to be found."
Seraphina stepped up behind him, a vicious smile playing on her lips. "The High Council is already looking for an excuse to seize the mines, Aria. They will jump at the chance to execute your father and take the estate for the crown."
Darius reached out, his fingers roughly gripping my chin, forcing my gaze up to meet his. "I am the only thing standing between your father and the executioner’s block. I intercepted this warrant. I have the power to make the evidence disappear."
"You monster," I whispered, the stoic armor I had worn my entire life beginning to fracture under the weight of his utter depravity.
"I am a survivor, Aria," Darius corrected coldly. "And I am ambitious. You were born broken. You have no magic, no power, and no right to hold the wealth of the Sunflare Mines. It is a waste of resources."
He released my chin and stood, towering over me like a dark god of judgment. He pulled a second piece of parchment from his coat—the official deed of transfer for the Sunflare Mines—along with a blood-quill.
"Here is what is going to happen," Darius dictated, his voice echoing with the unnatural resonance of a magical command. "You are going to sign this deed right now, transferring full ownership of the Sunflare estate to my house. Then, you are going to stand up, fix your dress, and walk out those doors to the grand altar."
"And if I refuse?" I challenged, my voice raw.
Darius’s eyes darkened, all traces of humanity vanishing. "If you refuse, I will hand this warrant to the King’s guards. They will drag your father from his sickbed, throw him in the dungeons, and execute him before the sun sets. And then, I will let Seraphina have you."
I looked at my cousin. She was practically vibrating with cruel anticipation, a sphere of crackling blue fire dancing in the palm of her hand.
I looked back down at the deed in my lap. My family’s legacy. Centuries of Solis history, of hard work, of pride. To sign it away to this arrogant, deceitful monster felt like tearing out my own heart. But my father... my father who had loved me fiercely, who had never once looked at me with disappointment despite my lack of magic. I couldn't let him die in a dark, damp cell, branded a traitor.
"You will give him the antidote," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "If I do this, you stop poisoning him."
"You have my word," Darius lied effortlessly.
I knew he was lying. I knew the moment he had what he wanted, we were both dead. But I needed time. If I signed the paper and went through with the ceremony, my father lived another day. It gave me time to find a way to save him.
With a shaking hand, I took the blood-quill. The enchanted needle at the tip pierced my index finger. I hissed in pain as my own blood flowed down the glass barrel, forming the ink.
I signed my name at the bottom of the deed. *Aria Solis.*
The moment the final letter was drawn, the parchment glowed with a sickly green light, sealing the magical contract. The deed was done. The Sunflare Mines belonged to Darius Vane.
Seraphina snatched the paper from my lap, a triumphant cackle escaping her lips. "Finally. The Solis legacy is exactly where it belongs. With the powerful."
"Excellent," Darius said, smoothing his jacket. "Now, get up. The procession music is about to begin."
I didn't move fast enough for his liking.
Darius grabbed my arm, his grip bruising and vicious. He yanked me to my feet with such force that I stumbled into the shattered remains of the crystal trellis. The razor-sharp thorns of the vines tore through the delicate silk of my sleeve, slicing deep into my forearm.
I cried out, clutching my arm as bright red blood began to well up from the cuts, dripping down my pale skin and staining the pristine white fabric of my dress.
"Pathetic," Seraphina muttered, looking at my bleeding arm with disgust. "Try not to bleed on the aisle runner. It’s imported silk."
Darius didn't let go of my arm. His fingers dug directly into the fresh wounds, ensuring maximum pain as he dragged me forward. "Wipe your face, Aria. If you look anything less than overjoyed when those doors open, I will send the guards to your father's room immediately. Do you understand me?"
I nodded once, my jaw clenched so tight my teeth ached.
Stripped of my dignity, my inheritance stolen, and my blood dripping steadily onto the marble floor, I was forced out of the conservatory and toward the towering golden doors of the grand hall.
The heavy, rhythmic beating of the ceremonial drums began to echo through the corridors, signaling the start of the Bonding Ceremony. The sound felt like a death march.
But as Darius dragged me closer to the altar doors, a strange sensation washed over me. It started at the site of the lacerations on my arm, where my blood freely flowed. It wasn't the cold, numbing pain of the crystal thorns.
It was heat.
A deep, unnatural, burning heat.
It pulsed beneath my skin, sinking into my veins and racing toward my heart. For my entire life, my blood had been quiet, empty, utterly devoid of the magical hum that defined my race. But right now, with absolute humiliation and furious desperation tearing my soul apart, the emptiness inside me cracked.
Something ancient, dark, and terrifyingly hot stirred in the deepest, forgotten corners of my being.
Darius pushed me forward as the massive golden doors began to slowly swing open, revealing the blinding light of the grand hall and the sea of expectant High Fae faces.
*Walk,* Darius’s magical command echoed in my mind.
I stepped forward, the burning shadow beneath my skin pulsing in time with the ceremonial drums, waiting to be unleashed.
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