Chapter 1: The Bond She Cut
“The prince chose Lady Seraphine again,” the page whispered.
My six-year-old son stood beneath the moon glass, wings trembling, still staring at the empty chair beside mine.
Rowan had polished that chair himself before the ceremony. He had asked the servants to place it where Father could see him when his wings opened.
Now it sat empty.
“Mother,” he said. “Father promised.”
The Moonhall went quiet in that careful court way, where everyone heard and no one admitted it.
I knelt and fixed the moonstone clasp at his throat.
“He was called away.”
“Is Lady Seraphine sick?”
A lady in the front row looked down at her fan.
I tied the clasp. My fingers slipped once.
“Stand tall for me.”
Rowan nodded too fast. He was small enough to sleep with a stuffed cloud-hare. Old enough to know when adults lied.
The High Seer lifted her white staff.
“Let the child of royal blood step forward.”
Not prince.
Not heir.
Child of royal blood.
Kael had never let the court call him more than that.
Rowan walked onto the dais alone. Moonlight poured from the glass ceiling and wrapped his shoulders. His wings twitched under his ceremonial tunic.
“Breathe,” I called.
“I am,” he said, but his voice shook.
The light deepened. His wings opened.
The hall stopped breathing.
Not gold, like Kael’s house.
Not gray, like mine.
Black and silver spread behind my son, bright as a blade under water.
The High Seer’s lips parted.
“Old queen’s blood.”
Then the western doors flew open.
Prince Kael Veyr strode in with Seraphine beside him. His cloak hung around her shoulders. His hand held her wrist like the whole kingdom would crack if he let go.
Rowan’s wings faltered.
Kael did not look at him first.
He looked at her.
“Seraphine had a vision attack,” he said. “End the ceremony. She needs the moonwell.”
The High Seer turned. “Your Highness, the child has entered the binding.”
“Release him.”
“It may scar his wings.”
“I gave an order.”
Rowan made a small sound.
I stood.
Seraphine leaned into Kael’s arm. Pale. Pretty. Damp-eyed. She had perfected the look of a woman who never meant to take anything, only somehow always walked away holding it.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I didn’t mean to ruin his day.”
His day.
My son’s first Moonflight. His one chance to be named by magic before the court that had ignored him since birth.
“My lord,” I said, “Rowan has waited six months.”
Kael’s eyes finally moved to me.
Annoyance first. Always annoyance.
“Elara, don’t make this harder.”
“Harder for whom?”
A fan snapped shut.
Kael’s mouth tightened. “Not here.”
“Yes,” I said. “Here.”
The moonlight around Rowan pulsed. He pressed both hands to his chest.
The High Seer stepped between Kael and the well. “If we stop now, the magic may turn inward.”
Seraphine gripped Kael’s sleeve. “It hurts.”
That was all it took.
Kael looked back at the High Seer. “End it.”
Seven years ended inside me with that word.
I walked to the altar and took the crescent blade.
Kael went still. “Elara.”
The court stirred.
I held out my left hand. The moon-bond mark glowed in my palm, blue-white and alive. It had burned there since the night Kael married me behind closed doors and called it duty.
“Put it down,” he said.
Rowan stumbled off the dais and ran to me. “Mother, don’t.”
I touched his hair. “Close your eyes.”
“Will it hurt?”
“Yes,” I said. “But only me.”
Kael took a step. “You will not threaten the royal bond because you are jealous.”
Jealous.
After every empty chair. Every missed birthday bell. Every night Rowan waited at the nursery window until sleep folded him over the sill.
“No,” I said. “I am done begging for scraps.”
Seraphine lifted her chin. “Elara, you’re frightening him.”
I looked at her cloak. His cloak.
“You are wearing my husband’s colors while my son bleeds moonlight. Don’t speak to me about frightening children.”
The hall gasped.
Kael’s face went cold. “Apologize.”
“No.”
The word felt clean.
I pressed the blade to the mark.
“Elara,” Kael said, lower now. “If you cut that, you leave this court with nothing.”
“I came here with nothing.”
“You leave without my protection.”
“I have lived without it for years.”
His eyes flicked to Rowan. “You will not take him.”
Rowan clutched my skirt.
I looked down at my son. Silver blood had started to bead along one feather.
Then I looked at the man who had never chosen us.
“Watch me.”
I cut through the bond.
Pain shot up my arm. I bit my lip and tasted blood. The bond flared between us, a cord of blue-white light only the court could see.
Kael looked startled.
Not sorry. Not afraid.
Startled, as if a chair had spoken.
Then the cord snapped.
Every torch in the Moonhall went black.
The palace wards screamed.
