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Six

Author: Ayesha
last update publish date: 2026-07-15 23:11:09

Ronan was still pacing his chambers like a caged animal when the knock came. Hard. Urgent. He’d barely slept since sending Lira away the night before, the bond still buzzing under his skin like a live wire he couldn’t cut. Every time he closed his eyes he saw Elias’s face, felt that unwanted heat from the dream, and it pissed him off all over again.

“Enter,” he barked.

Captain Garrick stepped inside, armor still dusty from the border, face serious. “My king. Emergency summons from the elders. They’re waiting in the Grand Court. Said it couldn’t wait.”

Ronan rubbed a hand over his face, the stubble there rough under his palm. “What the hell do they want now? Another lecture about producing an heir?”

Garrick shrugged, but his eyes were careful. “They didn’t say. Just that every alpha on the council is already there. Looks important.”

“Fine.” Ronan grabbed his heavy cloak and threw it over his shoulders. The last thing he needed was more politics on top of everything else tearing at him. The bond hadn’t let up. He could still feel faint echoes of… something from Elias’s side. Anger. Maybe pain. It made his wolf restless, clawing to get out and run straight toward vampire territory. He hated it.

The walk to the Grand Court felt longer than usual. Servants bowed low as he passed, but he didn’t acknowledge any of them. His mind kept drifting back to the battlefield, the way Elias had looked pinned under him, the way their bodies had reacted before either of them could stop it. He growled under his breath and shoved the thought away.

The massive oak doors to the court swung open. The room was packed. Elders from every major pack sat around the long crescent table, their faces carved with age and old scars. Torches burned low along the stone walls, throwing long shadows. The air smelled of pine, smoke, and the faint musk of wolves who’d been arguing for hours.

All eyes turned to him as he entered.

“Alpha King,” Elder Thorne said, rising slowly. The old man’s voice was gravelly but strong. He’d been around longer than most, seen too many wars. “Thank you for coming on short notice.”

Ronan dropped into the central chair reserved for him, legs stretched out. “You pulled me out of my chambers. Make it quick. What’s the emergency?”

A few of the elders exchanged looks. Elder Mira, a sharp eyed woman with silver streaks in her dark braid, leaned forward. “The Grand Celestial Ball is in two weeks. We need to confirm your attendance.”

Ronan stared at her. “That’s it? You summoned the entire council for this?”

“It’s not just any ball,” Elder Thorne cut in. “Every leader from every species will be there. Witches, vampires, demons, dragons, werecats, werefoxes, hybrids… the whole damn lot of them. Neutral ground. The Celestial Spire in the Heartlands. You know the rules as well as we do, no violence, no settling old scores. Everyone keeps their hatreds locked away for one night. It’s been that way for centuries. Breaking it means consequences from the old gods themselves.”

Ronan leaned back, arms crossed over his chest. He remembered the last one he’d attended. Stiff smiles, careful dances, everyone pretending they weren’t one wrong word away from ripping each other’s throats out. It had been exhausting. But missing it wasn’t really an option. Leaders who skipped tended to look weak. And right now, with the bond messing with his head, the last thing he needed was anyone thinking he was distracted.

“I’ll attend,” he said flatly. “Send the usual preparations. Extra guards, but nothing obvious. I don’t want it looking like we’re expecting trouble.”

Some of the elders visibly relaxed. Elder Mira nodded. “Good. The packs need to see their king strong. Especially after the recent losses on the border. There’s already talk....”

“I know what they’re saying,” Ronan interrupted, voice low and dangerous. “Let them talk. I’ll handle it.”

The meeting dragged on for another half hour. Questions about security, what gifts to bring, which packs should represent them, whether to push for any quiet alliances while everyone was forced to play nice. Ronan answered mostly in grunts and short sentences, his mind elsewhere. The bond tugged again, sharper this time, like Elias was thinking about him too. He shifted in his seat, jaw tight.

By the time the elders finally dismissed, the sun was dipping low outside the tall windows. Ronan stood and headed for the doors without another word. Garrick fell into step beside him in the hallway.

“You alright, sire?” the captain asked quietly once they were far enough away.

“Fine,” Ronan lied. “Just tired of everyone breathing down my neck.”

He dismissed Garrick at the entrance to his private wing and kept walking alone. The palace felt too big tonight, too empty. He poured himself a drink from the decanter in his study, strong whiskey this time, not wine, and stared out the window at the darkening forest beyond the walls.

Two weeks until the Grand Celestial Ball.

He took a long swallow, the burn welcome. Every species would be there. Witches with their glowing runes, dragons in their human forms trying not to look bored, demons slinking around looking for deals. And vampires.

Elias would be there.

The thought hit him harder than he expected. Ronan’s grip tightened on the glass until it creaked. He could already picture it, Elias in some elegant black outfit, moving through the crowd with that cold grace, crimson eyes scanning the room. Would the bond react even stronger in the same space? Would they be able to stay away from each other with every leader watching?

Ronan drained the rest of the glass and set it down hard. Part of him wanted to skip the whole damn thing. Another part, the part that was still angry and aching from the dream and the failed night with Lira wanted to go just to see how Elias would react. To stand close enough to smell him again. To test how far this cursed bond could push before one of them snapped.

He ran a hand through his hair, muttering a curse. Even now, miles apart, he could feel the faint echo of Elias’s presence. Anger. Confusion. Something hotter underneath.

The ball was supposed to be neutral ground. A place where hate stayed buried for one night.

But Ronan already knew the truth in his bones. With Elias there, nothing about that night was going to be peaceful. Not for him.

He stared out into the growing dark, the moon just starting to rise above the trees, and wondered how the hell he was going to survive two weeks and then an entire night in the same room as the one person he wanted to kill and claim at the same time.

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  • Fated In Fang And Fur    Nine

    The ball dragged on longer than Ronan wanted. After that kiss with Lira, he’d thrown himself back into the crowd, talking with allies, nodding at old rivals, playing the part everyone expected. But Elias had disappeared somewhere in the sea of bodies. One minute Ronan could feel him like a brand against his senses, the next, nothing. The bond was still there, humming low and restless, but the vampire king had slipped away like smoke. It should have been a relief. Instead it left Ronan edgy, muscles tight under his formal jacket.The hall felt too hot. Too loud. Too many scents mixing together, blood and magic and fur and perfume. His wolf was pacing inside him, irritated. He grabbed another glass of strong spirits from a passing tray and told Lira he needed some air. She gave him a knowing look but didn’t argue. Smart woman.Ronan slipped out through one of the side doors into the sprawling gardens behind the Spire. The night air hit him cool and clean, carrying the smell of night blo

  • Fated In Fang And Fur    Eight

    The day of the Grand Celestial Ball finally arrived, and the Celestial Spire looked like something pulled straight out of old legends. Towering crystal pillars reached up toward the night sky, glowing soft and silver under the full moon. Magic hung thick in the air, old, neutral magic that made your skin prickle if you paid too much attention. No weapons allowed. No settling scores. Everyone played nice for one night, or the old gods supposedly cursed you for it. Ronan had never been sure how much of that was real, but nobody wanted to test it.He rode up with a small group of his strongest betas and Garrick at his side. Lira sat beside him in the carriage, dressed in a deep green gown that hugged her curves. She looked good. She always did. He’d brought her as his date mostly to keep up appearances and maybe, if he was honest with himself, to piss off a certain vampire if the opportunity came up. The bond had been restless all day, like it knew what was coming.Servants in neutral gr

  • Fated In Fang And Fur    Seven

    The day before the Grand Celestial Ball, Ronan sat alone in his private chambers with a half empty bottle of whiskey on the table. The fire crackled low in the hearth, throwing long shadows across the stone walls and the thick furs on the floor. He’d been staring into the flames for what felt like hours, glass in hand, mind turning in the same useless circles it had been stuck in for days. The bond wouldn’t leave him alone. It tugged and pulled, especially at night, feeding him flashes of Elias anger, confusion, that same sharp hunger he felt himself. Drinking helped dull it a little, but not enough.A soft knock sounded at the heavy door. Ronan didn’t bother looking up. “Come in, Garrick.”His captain stepped inside, closing the door quietly behind him. Garrick had been standing guard out there most of the afternoon, silent and steady like always. The man had been with Ronan since they were boys running through the forest chasing rabbits and getting into trouble. Guard, advisor, frie

  • Fated In Fang And Fur    Six

    Ronan was still pacing his chambers like a caged animal when the knock came. Hard. Urgent. He’d barely slept since sending Lira away the night before, the bond still buzzing under his skin like a live wire he couldn’t cut. Every time he closed his eyes he saw Elias’s face, felt that unwanted heat from the dream, and it pissed him off all over again.“Enter,” he barked.Captain Garrick stepped inside, armor still dusty from the border, face serious. “My king. Emergency summons from the elders. They’re waiting in the Grand Court. Said it couldn’t wait.”Ronan rubbed a hand over his face, the stubble there rough under his palm. “What the hell do they want now? Another lecture about producing an heir?”Garrick shrugged, but his eyes were careful. “They didn’t say. Just that every alpha on the council is already there. Looks important.”“Fine.” Ronan grabbed his heavy cloak and threw it over his shoulders. The last thing he needed was more politics on top of everything else tearing at him.

  • Fated In Fang And Fur    Five

    The witch arrived at the Obsidian Palace just as the last light bled from the sky. She was old, older than most vampires cared to remember, with milky white eyes that saw more than any sighted person ever could. Her name was rarely spoken aloud, most just called her the Seer. Two of Elias’s guards escorted her through the winding halls, but she moved like she already knew every twist and turn, gnarled staff tapping against the black marble floor. Elias waited on the throne, fingers drumming restlessly. He hadn’t told anyone why he summoned her. Not even Lucian. The bond still pulled at him, low and constant, like a bruise he couldn’t stop pressing. When the witch finally stepped into the throne room, she stopped a few feet from the dais and tilted her head, blind eyes fixed somewhere near his chest. “You called for answers about the fire in your blood,” she rasped before Elias could open his mouth. Her voice carried that dry, certain weight that made lesser men sweat. “The bond. The

  • Fated In Fang And Fur    Four

    Ronan tossed in the massive bed, sheets tangled around his hips like chains. Sleep had finally dragged him under after hours of pacing and snarling at shadows, but it brought no peace. In the dream he was back in the mud of the battlefield, only this time there was no war around them. Just the two of them.Elias was underneath him again, but the vampire’s eyes weren’t full of hate. They burned with the same raw hunger Ronan felt twisting in his own gut. Pale hands gripped Ronan’s shoulders, claws digging in just enough to sting. Ronan growled low and ground his hips down, cock sliding hard and hot against Elias’s thigh. The vampire arched up to meet him, mouth open in a silent snarl that turned into a moan when Ronan bit down on the side of his neck. Not enough to kill. Just enough to claim. Blood, hot and sweet, flooded his tongue while Elias’s hand fisted in his hair and pulled him closer.“Fuck you,” Elias hissed in the dream, but his legs spread wider, letting Ronan settle between

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