
Chapter 1
"The decay has reached your central meridian, Your Highness. I am so sorry."
The words hung in the sterile, incense-heavy air of the royal clinic, heavy as an executioner's blade. Kaelia Vance did not flinch. She sat perfectly straight on the edge of the examination table, her posture rigid and dignified, as became the Crown Princess of the Obsidian Flight.
She looked down at her hands, resting gently over the slight swell of her stomach. Inside her, three tiny, flickering heartbeats pulsed in time with her own. Her royal triplets. The future of the Obsidian Court.
"How long do I have, Masterson?" Kaelia asked, her voice steady, betraying none of the cold terror gripping her chest.
The elderly royal healer wrung his hands, his gaze dropping to the marble floor. "Aether-burn is a cruel affliction, My Queen. The magical core decays from the inside out, turning your own life-force into ash. A normal dragon might survive a few years. But with the royal heirs drawing upon your magic to develop..." He swallowed hard. "Three months. Four, if the Goddess is merciful. You will not survive the birth, Kaelia. The babies are draining the very magic that keeps your heart beating."
"Three months," Kaelia repeated softly. She lifted her chin, her golden eyes locking onto the healer's terrified face. "Are the children safe? Is the Aether-burn affecting them?"
"No, Your Highness," Masterson said quickly, stepping forward. "The royal heirs are strong. They are taking everything they need from you. That is precisely the problem. They are parasitic in their demand for Aether. If we terminate the pregnancy now, we might be able to halt the burn. You could live."
"No." Kaelia’s response was immediate, sharp as cracked ice. "Do not ever suggest that again, Masterson. These children will live. That is my final word."
"But Kaelia—"
"Address me by my title, Healer," she commanded, her tone brooking no argument. She was resilient; she had survived the brutal politics of the Obsidian Court for two years, and she would survive this long enough to see her babies draw their first breath.
"Forgive me, Crown Princess," Masterson bowed his head. "But you must tell King Rhydian. His magic is the most powerful in the realm. If he shares his Aether with you, if he bonds with you completely during the nesting phase, it might slow the decay. He is your fated mate. His life-force is meant to sustain yours."
A bitter, humorless smile touched Kaelia's lips. *Her fated mate.* Rhydian Thorne, the Dragon King of the Obsidian Court. The man who was supposed to be her shield, her partner, her soul's other half.
"I will handle my husband," Kaelia said smoothly, sliding off the examination table and smoothing the dark silk of her skirts. "Write the diagnosis down. Put the royal seal on the scroll. I will give it to him myself."
Masterson hurried to his desk, his quill scratching frantically against heavy parchment. Kaelia stared out the narrow arched window, looking over the jagged, black-stone spires of the Obsidian Court. She had hidden her true heritage when she married Rhydian, masquerading as a lesser noble of a minor flight, keeping the secret of her Sun-Flight bloodline buried deep. She had believed their mate-bond would be enough. She had believed Rhydian would love her.
Instead, she had found herself in a crowded marriage, fighting a losing battle against a ghost who was very much alive.
"Here, Your Highness," Masterson said, handing her the wax-sealed scroll. His eyes were bright with unshed tears. "Please. Show him tonight. The King must know that his mate is dying."
"Thank you, Masterson. Speak of this to no one." Kaelia took the scroll, its weight feeling like an anchor in her hands.
She left the clinic, her soft slippers making no sound on the polished stone floors of the royal corridor. She intended to head straight to the King's study. She would lay the scroll on his desk. She would demand he finally step up, set aside his distractions, and act like the mate she desperately needed him to be.
But as she approached the antechamber that bridged the royal wing and the guest quarters, she heard a sound that made her freeze.
Weeping. Soft, delicate, perfectly pitched weeping.
"I can't bear it, Rhydian. I simply can't bear the way she looks at me."
Kaelia pressed her back against the cold stone wall, hidden in the shadows of the archway. Her grip on the medical scroll tightened, her knuckles turning white.
"Hush, Sera," came the deep, rumbling voice of Rhydian Thorne. The voice that still sent a traitorous shiver down Kaelia's spine, despite everything. "You are upsetting yourself. The healer said stress is bad for your fragile constitution."
"How can I not be stressed?" Seraphina Croft sobbed, the sound muffled, likely against Rhydian's broad chest. "She hates me. Kaelia hates me because I am here, in the palace. I see the jealousy in her eyes every time you check on me. Maybe I should just leave. Maybe I should go out into the wastes and die, since I have no magic left to protect myself!"
"Don't speak like that," Rhydian growled, his voice laced with a fierce, protective edge that Kaelia had never, not once, heard directed at her. "You lost your magic saving my life in the Blood Wars. You shielded me, Seraphina. You sacrificed your dragon-form, your core, your entire future for me. I swore I would protect you forever, and I do not break my oaths."
"But she is your Queen," Seraphina whispered, her voice dripping with manufactured despair. "She is carrying your heirs. She has everything I ever wanted, Rhydian. Everything we dreamed of when we were young. I am nothing but a broken, magicless burden."
Kaelia closed her eyes, a wave of nausea washing over her. This was Seraphina’s favorite game. The 'Fragile Savior' routine. Whenever Rhydian showed Kaelia even a sliver of attention, Seraphina would suffer a mysterious fainting spell, a sudden ache, a tearful breakdown about her lost magic. And Rhydian, blinded by his suffocating guilt, fell for it every single time.
"You are not a burden," Rhydian said softly. Kaelia heard the rustle of fabric, the sound of him shifting closer to his mistress. "You are the heart of this Court, Sera. You always have been."
"Then what is she?" Seraphina asked, her voice turning sharp with a sudden, greedy edge. "When the babies are born, Rhydian... will she banish me? Will she take those children and lock me out of your life?"
Silence stretched in the antechamber. Kaelia held her breath, her own decaying heart hammering against her ribs. *Defend me,* she begged silently. *For once in your miserable life, Rhydian, defend your mate.*
"Kaelia is fulfilling her duty to the crown," Rhydian finally said, his voice cold, detached, entirely devoid of the warmth he had just shown Seraphina. "The realm required heirs. She was a suitable, healthy match. That is all."
The words struck Kaelia like a physical blow. She gasped silently, pressing a hand over her mouth.
"Just a match?" Seraphina pushed, her tone lifting with victorious delight.
"She is a vessel, Sera," Rhydian stated firmly. "An incubator for the Obsidian bloodline. Her magic is stable enough to carry triplets, which is rare. But she is not you."
"But the children—"
"The children will be raised by the woman who holds my heart," Rhydian interrupted, his tone absolute. "I have already made the arrangements. Once the triplets are born, Kaelia will be moved to the outer estates to recover indefinitely. You will remain here in the Ancestral Spire. You will raise the royal heirs, Seraphina. I promised you a family, and you shall have one. My children will call you mother."
Kaelia felt the floor drop out from beneath her.
Her lungs seized. The air in the corridor turned to ash in her throat. He wasn't just neglecting her. He was actively plotting to steal her babies. He was going to use her body to birth his heirs, and then discard her to the outer wastelands while his manipulative first love played house with her children.
"Oh, Rhydian!" Seraphina gasped, kissing him. The wet, eager sound echoed off the stone walls. "You truly mean it? She won't interfere?"
"She will do exactly as her King commands," Rhydian said arrogantly. "Kaelia is meek. She knows her place. She won't put up a fight."
Kaelia’s vision blurred with red. *Meek.* He thought her patience was weakness. He thought her dignified silence was submission. He thought he could drain her life, steal her children, and cast her aside like trash.
She looked down at the medical scroll in her hand. The diagnosis of her impending death. If she gave this to him now, he wouldn't save her. He would merely calculate how much time he had left before he needed to plan her funeral. He would probably be relieved.
A dangerous, icy calm washed over Kaelia. The tears that had threatened to fall dried instantly, burned away by a sudden, terrifying fury.
She turned away from the archway and walked back down the corridor, her steps silent, swift, and purposeful. She bypassed the King's study entirely and headed for her own private chambers, locking the heavy oak doors behind her.
The room was grand, draped in the dark silvers and blacks of the Obsidian Court, but it felt like a cage. She walked over to the grand fireplace, picking up a silver ritual dagger from the mantle.
"You think I am merely a vessel, Rhydian?" she whispered to the empty room. "You think I am some lesser noble you can break and throw away?"
She was Kaelia Vance. But that was only half her name. She was Kaelia Vance of the Sun-Flight, the true heir to the golden throne of the east. She had hidden her blinding, radiant magic beneath cloaks of shadow to marry the man she thought was her destiny.
Destiny was a lie.
Kaelia sliced the silver blade across her own palm. She didn't flinch as the bright red blood welled up, dripping onto the hearthstones. She dropped to her knees, using her uninjured hand to trace an ancient, forbidden rune into the stone with her own blood.
"Hear me," she commanded, her voice dropping an octave, vibrating with a suppressed, golden magic she hadn't used in two years. "Blood of the Sun, hear your daughter."
The blood on the stone hissed, bubbling as it turned a brilliant, incandescent gold. The shadows in the room recoiled from the sudden burst of blinding light.
Within the golden flames, the severe, battle-scarred face of an older man appeared. His eyes, the same piercing gold as Kaelia's, widened in shock.
"Kaelia?" The man’s voice echoed directly into her mind, rough and frantic. "By the Goddess, child! You severed all ties with us when you bonded to that Obsidian brute. Why are you calling me now?"
"Uncle," Kaelia said, her voice eerily calm. "I was a fool. You warned me about the Obsidian Court, and I did not listen."
"Are you hurt? Has he harmed you?" General Vance demanded, his image flickering as his own rage flared. "Say the word, Kaelia, and I will march the Sun-Flight Vanguard to his gates."
"Not yet," Kaelia ordered, her eyes flashing. "I am pregnant, Uncle. Triplets. But I am dying. I have Aether-burn, and the King plans to strip my children from me the moment they are born to give to his mistress."
The silence from the flames was deafening, followed by a roar of pure, unfiltered draconic fury. "I will slaughter him!"
"You will help me extract myself," Kaelia corrected sharply. "I need an extraction team prepared at the border. But I cannot leave until I sever the mate-bond legally, or his magic will track me to the ends of the earth. I need time to trick him into signing a Severance Edict."
"Kaelia, Aether-burn is a death sentence. You do not have time for political games!"
"I have enough time to ensure Rhydian Thorne loses everything," Kaelia said, her voice dropping to a lethal whisper. She pressed her bleeding hand to her stomach, feeling the hum of her babies' magic. "Prepare the Vanguard, Uncle. When I signal, bring fire."
"It will be done, my Queen," her uncle vowed, bowing his head.
The flames died out, leaving Kaelia alone in the dark. She bound her hand with a silk ribbon, her face set in stone. The Dragon King didn't know it yet, but the meek, fragile wife he planned to discard had just signed the death warrant of his entire empire.
***