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THE KING WHO FOUND HIS MATE IN CHAINS

The pain hit King Rowan Blackwood in the middle of his own coronation.

Not a sharp pain.

Not something human.

It was deeper.

A violent pull in his chest that nearly drove him to his knees in front of a thousand watching eyes.

The great hall shimmered with torchlight and gold, packed with nobles from every territory.

Wolves in human skin.

Predators dressed in silk and ceremony.

All of them watching their new king take his place.

And Rowan could barely breathe.

His hand crushed the armrest of the throne, knuckles whitening beneath heavy rings.

His wolf, usually calm and obedient, slammed against his mind like a caged beast.

Something is wrong.

His chief advisor leaned close, voice low, cautious.

The king looks unwell.

Perhaps we delay.

No.

Rowan forced himself upright.

He would not show weakness.

Not today.

Not in front of them.

But the pull came again.

Stronger this time.

Down.

The word did not come from his thoughts.

It came from something older.

Something instinctive.

Go down.

His vision blurred.

The noise of the crowd dulled into a distant hum.

I need air, he managed, though he already knew air would not fix this.

He rose too fast.

The crowd shifted.

Murmurs spread.

Confusion rippled through the room like a wave.

He ignored it.

His feet moved on their own.

Past the throne.

Past the guards.

Past the carved doors and into the cold stone corridors beyond.

Captain Marcus Hale followed immediately, hand resting near his blade.

Concern flickered in his sharp eyes.

Where are we going, sir

Rowan did not answer.

Because he did not know.

The pull dragged him deeper into the castle.

Down staircases he had walked since childhood.

Then lower.

Past the kitchens.

Past the servant halls.

Into places no king had reason to visit.

The air changed.

Warmer.

Thicker.

Older.

The stone walls grew rough beneath his fingertips.

The scent of dust and something darker filled his lungs.

This level has been sealed for years, Marcus said, tension tightening his voice.

No one comes down here

Rowan stopped.

Turned.

Something in his eyes made Marcus step back without thinking.

There is someone down here.

Marcus frowned.

That is not possible

A sound cut through the silence.

Faint.

Barely there.

Breathing.

Rowan froze.

Then his wolf snapped.

He ran.

No hesitation.

No control.

Just instinct.

The sound grew louder with every step.

Labored.

Weak.

On the edge of ending.

And beneath it

A heartbeat.

Slow.

Fading.

The corridor ended at a rusted iron door etched with ancient markings.

Magic burned across it.

Old.

Forbidden.

Rowan did not slow down.

His hand wrapped around the handle.

Pain exploded up his arm.

The metal burned his skin.

Wolfbane.

Whoever sealed this door did not want it opened.

He did not care.

His bones shifted.

Claws tore through skin.

With a roar, he ripped the door from its hinges.

Darkness spilled out like a living thing.

But Rowan could see perfectly.

And what he saw broke something inside him.

A girl lay chained to the far wall.

Not a prisoner.

Not even a person anymore.

A skeleton barely held together by skin.

Her ribs showed.

Her arms were too thin.

Her hair hung in tangled, filthy strands.

And her eyes

They glowed.

Violet.

Bright even in the dark.

She flinched when she saw him.

Terror flashing across her hollow face.

Please

Her voice cracked like broken glass.

Please do not hurt me again

Rowan dropped to his knees in front of her.

His chest tightened.

His hands shook.

His wolf howled so loudly it drowned out everything else.

Mate.

The word slammed into him.

No.

Impossible.

He had searched for years.

Traveled across territories.

Met every eligible wolf-blood woman in the kingdom.

His mate did not exist.

And yet

Here she was.

Dying.

In chains.

Beneath his own castle.

I am not going to hurt you, he said, voice rough, barely controlled.

I am getting you out of here

She tried to pull away.

Weak.

Failing.

No please I have been good I did not use it I swear

Use what

He felt it then.

Power.

Not wolf.

Something else.

Something brighter.

Something dangerous.

It rolled off her in waves even in her broken state.

His wolf surged again.

Mate.

Rowan’s jaw clenched.

He slashed through the chains with his claws, ignoring the burn of wolfbane biting into his skin.

The metal snapped.

She collapsed forward.

He caught her instantly.

Too light.

Far too light.

How long had she been here

Who did this to you

Her eyes fluttered.

Barely open now.

The council

Her breath rattled.

They said I was wrong blood

Her head lolled.

Dangerous

Rowan’s vision darkened.

Rage boiled under his skin.

They said my death would protect the kingdom

Her body went limp in his arms.

No.

Rowan pressed his ear to her chest.

The heartbeat was barely there.

A whisper.

Marcus, get the healers now

But the coronation

Forget the coronation

Rowan stood in one smooth motion, cradling her against his chest.

Someone chained my mate beneath this castle and left her to die

Marcus went pale.

Mate

She is not wolf

She is mine

Rowan’s voice dropped into something dangerous.

And she is dying

He ran.

Up the stairs.

Through the corridors.

Past stunned servants and guards.

Her breathing grew weaker with every step.

By the time he reached the throne room

It was almost gone.

The doors burst open.

Gasps filled the air.

Nobles recoiled.

Their king stood before them bloodied, burned, carrying a dying girl like she weighed nothing.

Healer.

Now

The royal healer rushed forward, hands glowing with power.

He pressed them to her chest

Then jerked back like he had been burned.

Your Majesty

His voice shook.

She has been cursed repeatedly for years

His face drained of color.

And she is not fully human

Rowan’s grip tightened.

I do not care what she is

Save her

The healer hesitated.

Fear flickering in his eyes.

If the council finds out

Rowan’s gaze turned cold.

The council will answer for this

The room fell silent.

Even the nobles stepped back.

Then the girl’s body jerked.

Violently.

Her eyes snapped open.

Violet meeting gold.

And something ancient stirred in the air between them.

The room temperature dropped.

Energy crackled.

The healer stumbled backward.

What is happening

Rowan did not answer.

Because for the first time since he found her

He felt something worse than fear.

Hope.

And hope

Was far more dangerous.

The girl’s body arched off the healer’s table like something unseen had seized her from the inside.

Light burst from beneath her skin.

Not fire.

Not magic Rowan had ever seen.

Silver.

Pure and blinding.

The entire throne room recoiled.

Some nobles stumbled backward.

Others reached for weapons without thinking.

Rowan did neither.

He stepped closer.

Her name.

He needed her name.

Something to hold onto as everything else unraveled.

Easy, he said, voice low, steady.

You are safe now

Her eyes snapped to him.

Violet burning through the silver glow.

Safe

The word sounded wrong in her mouth.

Like something she had forgotten how to believe.

Her hand shot up, fingers clawing weakly at his sleeve.

Do not send me back

The plea cut deeper than any blade.

No one is sending you anywhere

He covered her hand with his own.

The moment their skin touched, the light shifted.

It did not lash out.

It softened.

Curled around him instead of away.

The healer sucked in a sharp breath.

Your Majesty that should be burning you

Rowan barely heard him.

All he felt was warmth.

Not pain.

Not danger.

Recognition.

His wolf stilled.

Mate.

This time, he did not fight it.

What is your name

The girl blinked slowly.

Her lips trembled.

Sarah

The name barely made it out before her body convulsed again.

The light surged higher.

Then something darker answered it.

From the far end of the hall, a voice cut through the chaos.

Enough

High Chancellor Victor Hale stepped forward, his presence sharp as a blade.

The council will not tolerate this abomination any longer

Rowan’s head snapped toward him.

Abomination

The word echoed through the room.

Sarah flinched.

Her grip on Rowan tightened instinctively.

Victor’s gaze hardened.

You have brought a Lightborn into the heart of our kingdom

A ripple of fear moved through the nobles.

Lightborn.

A word from old wars.

From stories whispered to frighten children.

Impossible, someone breathed.

They were all wiped out

Clearly not, Victor said coldly.

And now one lies in our king’s arms

Rowan rose slowly, still holding Sarah against him.

She is not your concern

Everything in this kingdom is our concern

Victor’s eyes flicked to Sarah’s glowing skin.

Including threats

She is dying

Then let her

The room went silent.

Rowan’s control snapped.

A growl tore from his chest, deep and primal.

The kind that made even seasoned warriors step back.

You chained her beneath my castle

Victor did not flinch.

For the safety of our people

She was a child

She was a weapon

Rowan moved before anyone could react.

One second he stood across the room.

The next, his hand closed around Victor’s throat, lifting him off the ground.

She is my mate

The words hit harder than any blow.

Shock rippled through the court.

Victor’s eyes widened for the first time.

Impossible

Try me

Rowan’s grip tightened just enough to make the threat clear.

The bond is real

As if to prove it, Sarah’s light flared again.

But this time it did not spiral out of control.

It reached for Rowan.

Wrapped around him.

Gold flickered through the silver.

The two energies touched

And fused.

The air cracked like lightning splitting the sky.

Everyone in the room felt it.

A shift.

Ancient.

Powerful.

Unavoidable.

The healer dropped to his knees.

This cannot be happening

Victor choked out a strained laugh.

You do not understand what she is

Then explain it

Rowan’s voice turned deadly quiet.

Victor’s gaze flickered toward the nobles.

Toward the doors.

Calculating.

She is not just Lightborn

He coughed, forcing the words out.

She is the last of the royal bloodline

Rowan stilled.

What

Victor’s smile turned bitter.

The Lightborn were not just enemies

They were rulers once

Before the wolves overthrew them

Murmurs exploded through the hall.

History twisted into something far darker than Rowan had ever been taught.

Her kind could control life itself

Victor continued, voice strained but steady.

Heal.

Destroy.

Reshape the world if left unchecked

Sarah whimpered softly in Rowan’s arms.

No

Her voice cracked.

I never hurt anyone

Victor’s eyes flicked to her.

You would have

That is why we ended your bloodline

Rowan’s grip tightened again.

You mean you slaughtered them

For survival

For power

The words hung in the air, heavier than any truth spoken that day.

Rowan’s chest rose slowly.

Everything he had been raised to believe felt unstable now.

His kingdom.

His laws.

His father’s legacy.

All of it built on something rotten.

Sarah’s body suddenly went limp again.

Her light flickered.

Fading.

No

Rowan lowered Victor just enough to keep him conscious, then turned his focus back to her.

Stay with me

Her breathing was shallow.

Weak.

Too much

She whispered.

Too much light

Her hand slipped from his sleeve.

Rowan felt it instantly.

The bond strained.

Fraying.

Like something vital was slipping through his fingers.

Think

He had to think.

The healer’s voice trembled from somewhere behind him.

Your Majesty her body cannot sustain that power alone

Then she will not sustain it alone

Rowan made his decision in a heartbeat.

He turned back to Victor.

If she dies

He said quietly

You die first

Then the rest of you

No one doubted him.

Not after what they had just witnessed.

Rowan lowered Victor completely and stepped back.

But his attention never left Sarah.

Tell me how to save her

Victor hesitated.

Something like uncertainty flickered across his face.

Then he spoke.

There is one way

Rowan did not like the sound of that.

The bond must be completed

What does that mean

Victor’s gaze sharpened.

It means claiming her fully

Binding your life to hers

Sharing strength

Sharing fate

Rowan understood immediately.

No ritual.

No ceremony.

Something deeper.

Something irreversible.

If he did this, there was no going back.

He would tie himself to her completely.

If she died

So would he.

The throne room held its breath.

Sarah’s light flickered again.

Weaker this time.

Rowan looked down at her fragile form.

At the girl who had survived six years in darkness.

At the mate fate had hidden beneath his own feet.

Decision made.

He lowered his head to her neck.

His voice dropped to a whisper meant only for her.

Stay with me

Then he bit down.

Not violently.

Not cruelly.

A claim.

Ancient.

Binding.

Absolute.

The moment his teeth broke her skin, everything exploded.

Light surged.

Gold answered.

Power ripped through the throne room, forcing everyone back.

The walls trembled.

The chandeliers shattered.

Energy spiraled around them in a storm of silver and gold.

Rowan felt it flood his veins.

Her pain.

Her fear.

Her strength.

Everything she was poured into him.

And he gave it back.

His power.

His wolf.

His life.

Shared.

Balanced.

Whole.

Sarah gasped.

Her eyes flew open.

No longer fading.

Burning.

Alive.

The storm collapsed inward, leaving silence in its wake.

Rowan pulled back slowly.

Her breathing steadied beneath his hand.

Color returned to her face.

Strength flickered in her limbs.

She was not dying anymore.

She was changing.

The healer stared in awe.

You stabilized her

Victor’s voice came quieter now.

No

He said slowly.

You awakened her

Rowan met Sarah’s gaze.

Something new lived in her eyes now.

Not fear.

Not weakness.

Power.

And something else.

Something that made even the strongest wolves in the room step back without understanding why.

The truth settled over the court like a storm cloud.

This was not just a girl who survived.

This was something the world had not seen in generations.

And Rowan had just bound himself to it forever.

Outside, thunder rolled across a clear sky.

Inside, the future of the kingdom shifted on its axis.

And no one in that room could pretend otherwise anymore.