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Bride of the Forgotten Throne

PerryEllis17
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a kingdom ruled by vampires, peace between rival blood clans is fragile—held together by an ancient pact requiring the vampire High Lord, Dorian Veyr, to take seven brides, one from each clan, every hundred years. This time, however, Dorian has a secret. He doesn't care for politics, nor for the war-thirsty nobles that circle like vultures. He only wants her—Kaelira, the sixth bride. But Kaelira isn't who she seems. A commoner posing as a noble, she's been trained since childhood to infiltrate the palace and assassinate the High Lord. Her people have lived in the shadows, suffering under vampire rule, and she’s their last hope. She’s meant to kill him on their wedding night and disappear into legend. What Kaelira never expected was to find herself drawn to Dorian- his kindness, his loneliness, his terrifying beauty… and the way he looks at her as if he’s known her forever. Because he has. Centuries ago, Kaelira lived another life as the mortal woman who betrayed Dorian and sparked a civil war that nearly destroyed the vampire race. Reborn with no memory of who she once was, she now finds herself caught in a deadly tangle of past and present, love and vengeance. But the seventh bride is arriving and she’s not a pawn. She’s a weapon. As betrayal brews and ancient prophecies awaken, Kaelira must make an impossible choice: fulfill her mission and kill the only man who’s ever truly loved her, or protect him, and watch the world burn.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Price of A Name

The carriage wheels thundered over the stone bridge as Kaelira sat still, her hands gloved, her spine straight, her heartbeat betraying everything her face did not.

Outside, the towering gates of Veyrhold Castle loomed ahead, carved with iron roses and spiked thorns, glistening like obsidian under the dusk sky. Shadows clung to the spires like jealous ghosts. The castle didn't welcome. It warned.

"Almost there," murmured the handler beside her. His name was Marek, a loyal hound of the rebellion. "Do not forget what you are."

"I never do," Kaelira whispered, her voice like frost.

She touched the locket around her neck—not for comfort, but out of habit. Inside, a sliver of parchment bore the last words of her mother before she vanished into the dungeons of the vampire king. Blood answers blood. Strike where the heart once beat.

Kaelira had trained her whole life for this moment.

She was no noble, no bride. She was a blade in silk.

The sixth chosen. The assassin.

---

The great hall of Veyrhold was colder than she'd imagined.

Dozens of noble eyes tracked her as she stepped down from the carriage—vampires in embroidered coats, jeweled fangs, and mocking smiles. The scent of blood hung faintly in the air, like perfume. Kaelira had been warned not to stare back too boldly. Predators didn't like being challenged.

Then he appeared.

High Lord Dorian Veyr.

He descended the staircase without a sound. Tall, clothed in shadow-black with a deep crimson sash, his eyes were not the crimson of hunger—but the gray of mourning stone. Ancient. Quiet. Watching her.

Kaelira dipped into a perfect curtsy. "My Lord."

"You are... the sixth." His voice was smooth, low, and vaguely amused.

"And still not last," she said carefully, risking a glance up. "There's room for one more mistake."

A hush spread through the crowd. Dorian tilted his head, and for a moment—just a moment—Kaelira thought she saw a flicker of something behind his calm expression.

Recognition.

But that was impossible. He'd never seen her before.

Right?

---

That night, in her private chamber, Kaelira sat before the gilded mirror, unpinning her hair, her fingers trembling. Why had he looked at her like that? Like she was a secret half-remembered.

A knock interrupted her thoughts.

She opened the door to find a servant holding a velvet box. "A gift from the High Lord," they said, bowing low. Inside was a single black rose. Dried. Preserved. With it, a note written in a hand that felt too steady to be warm:

"For the sixth bride.

May this one last longer than the others."

Her blood ran cold. She wasn't the only one playing a game.