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Chapter four

Author: Mimi
last update publish date: 2026-05-10 00:49:29

Isabella POV

I knew about the ward before my mother told me.

I felt it at dawn, a pressure settling around the estate like a held breath, layers of old magic drawn tight and knotted at the boundary line. I had grown up inside Nyxara wards. 

I knew their texture the way I knew the sound of this house at night. This one was different. Newer at the surface, older underneath, built with the kind of intention that did not leave room for negotiation.

My mother came to my room at seven.

"We've warded the estate," she said. 

She stood in the doorway with her 

hands folded and her voice entirely level, the way she spoke when a decision had already been made and she was delivering it rather than discussing it.

 "For your protection."

"From what?"

"From any werewolf who might attempt to approach you before the council rules."

I sat up. "Mother. I am not a child who needs to be locked in her room."

"No." She crossed to the window and looked out at the grounds below.

 "You are a Nyxara witch with an unsanctioned bond to an Alpha werewolf. Which is considerably more dangerous."

"Unsanctioned," I repeated. "That's what we're calling it."

"That is what it is, Isabella. A bond formed outside the bloodline, outside coven law, outside everything our family has built for six generations." 

She turned. Her eyes were steady. Careful. The eyes of a woman who loved me and had already decided that love required this. 

"The council will dissolve it. It will be over. And you will be free of it."

"And if I don't want to be free of it?"

The words came out before I had decided to say them.

My mother went very still.

"You don't mean that," she said quietly.

"I don't know what I mean." I pushed back the covers and stood, moving to the window beside her. 

The grounds were quiet below us, dew still on the grass, the boundary trees standing dark at the edge of the property.

 "I know that I performed the rite last night. I know what the flame showed me. I know that what I felt in that room was not manufactured, regardless of what I told myself on the drive home."

"Feelings are not facts."

"No. But a silver flame in a Revelation Rite is."

She did not answer that. She looked out at the grounds instead, and I watched her profile,  the set of her jaw, the tension she carried in her shoulders that she believed nobody noticed and understood that she had no counter for the spell because there was none. 

The rite did not lie. She knew that as well as I did.

"What was written before you were born," she said finally, almost to herself, "can still be rewritten."

"Can it?"

"The council has dissolved bonds before."

"Chosen bonds," I said. "Not fated ones. There's a difference and you know it."

She turned to face me fully. For a moment she looked less like my mother and more like what she was beneath that a coven leader's daughter, a bloodline carrier, a woman who had spent her entire life understanding that some things mattered more than what you felt about them.

"Go downstairs," she said. "Eat breakfast. Rest. The council meets in three days and until then nothing needs to be decided."

Everything, I did not say, has already been decided.

I went downstairs.

*********

The estate felt different with the ward up. The grounds were the same as they had always been — wide enough to walk for an hour without reaching the boundary, old enough that the trees had names. But there was a quality to the air now, a slight resistance at the edges of things, the way a room feels when all the windows have been sealed. 

I had been inside Nyxara wards before. I had never been inside one cast against something I was not certain I wanted kept out.

I walked the grounds after breakfast because I needed to move and because the alternative was sitting in the library while my thoughts ran the same circuit they had been running since dawn.

The bond was quieter in the morning. It had been loudest at midnight, during the rite, flaring open with a certainty that had shaken me more than I intended to show. 

Now it sat low in my chest, a steady warmth, present the way a pulse was present — not demanding attention, simply there, simply constant, the kind of thing you only noticed when you stopped trying not to.

I noticed it constantly.

I reached the boundary trees and stopped.

The ward was visible here if you knew how to look, a faint shimmer in the air between the last tree and the road beyond, the light bending slightly where the magic held. 

I raised my hand and pressed my fingers to the edge of it. It yielded slightly, the way water yielded, and then pushed back.

My mother's work, I suspected, with my grandmother's foundation beneath it.

I was still standing there when the bond shifted. It simply changes the register, the way a sound changes when its source moves closer. 

A deepening. A pull that oriented itself outward rather than inward, away from my chest and toward the road, toward the treeline across the boundary, toward something on the other side of the ward that the bond recognized before I did.

I took a step back, I turned around and walked back to the house at exactly the pace I had left it, and I did not allow myself to think about what the bond had just told me, or what it meant that even through a Nyxara ward, through layers of old magic specifically designed to sever supernatural connections, I could still feel exactly where he was.

*********

The house went quiet after dinner. My father retired from his studies. The attendants moved through their closing routines, lights dimming in sequence the way they always did.

 I sat in the library with a book I had not read a single page of and waited for the kind of quiet that meant everyone had stopped moving.

Then I heard my mother's voice, coming from the sitting room at the end of the hall with the door pulled nearly closed, which meant she believed she was not being heard.

She had forgotten that I had been listening through nearly-closed doors since I was nine years old.

I set the book down. I moved into the hallway without making a sound, and I stood outside the sitting room door, and I listened.

"The council won't be a problem," my mother said. "Magistra Voss owes us a considerable debt. The vote will go our way."

A pause.

 A voice I didn't recognize, older, male, formal. Someone from the council, then, or a coven elder. Here in person, late in the evening, which meant this was not a routine conversation.

"And the bond itself?" the voice asked. 

"If it's fated —"

"Fated bonds have been dissolved before."

"With consent of both parties. The girl —"

"Isabella will understand. When she's thinking clearly and not under the influence of the bond's pull, she will understand what this would cost her. What it would cost this family."

"And if she doesn't consent?"

A silence. Long enough that I pressed closer to the door.

"There are older rites," my mother said. Her voice had not changed. Still level. Still certain. Still the voice of a woman who believed she was doing what love required. 

"Ones that do not require the subject's consent. They are not without cost. But they are thorough."

I stopped breathing.

"You would do that to your own daughter?"

"I would do that," my mother said quietly, "to protect my daughter. There is a difference."

I stepped back from the door until I was at the end of the hallway with my back against the wall and my hands flat against the plaster and the bond pulling steady and certain in my chest.

A forced dissolution. Without consent. I knew what that meant. I had read enough of the grimoire to know exactly what it meant, not just the severing of the bond but the severing of the part of a witch that had recognized it.

 The part that had opened. The rite did not distinguish between the bond and the witch who carried it. It simply cuts.

My mother was willing to cut that part of me away.

For the bloodline. For the legacy. For six generations of carefully maintained power that could not afford the complication of a fated mate who happened to be a wolf.

I stood in the dark hallway of my family's house and felt, for the first time since the signing, something that had nothing to do with suspicion or resistance or the careful architecture of self-protection.

I felt afraid.

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