⚠️ WARNING ⚠️ This book contains feral mate bonds, primal claiming, blood-soaked org*sms, and possessive men who do not share well but are about to learn they have too as the first Triad mate bond in millenniums though just to be a myth is about to tie them all together. If the words “bite,” “knot,” and “mine” make your toes curl, welcome home baby. Bloodbound: The Vampire Trials They told her the Trials were to prove her worth. They didn’t mention the blood-drenched battles… The savage power pulsing under her skin… Or the three dangerously obsessed men who’d be fated to crave her like a curse. Valkhara came to win and nothing else. But surviving means enduring brutal magical Trials, evading death at every turn, and resisting the feral hunger clawing through her bond. Sevrin: the cold, brutal vampire king with eyes like stormclouds and a voice that commands along with magic that can control blood Azric: the mind-reading menace who whispers her filthiest thoughts right back to her. Daxos: a war god wrapped in smoke and muscle, made to mark, knot, and conquer. Each one touches a different part of her soul. Each one claims her in ways she never saw coming. And the deeper they sink in, the more power she unlocks. But this isn’t just about lust or love, it’s about vengeance, destiny, and ripping the truth from the council’s cold, dead hands. Because Valkhara isn’t just bonded. She’s becoming unstoppable. Other Info
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The doors to the arena didn’t open , they cracked.
Stone shrieked against metal as ancient enchantments groaned awake, resisting the command like even the magic knew I didn’t belong here.
Or maybe it knew I did.
The crowd above went silent as the gateway peeled open, unveiling me in its center like the last secret they tried to bury.
No chains. No escort. No trembling hands.
Just me.
Barefoot, bloodstained, and walking into their sacred vampire arena like it was my execution… or my coronation. I hadn’t decided yet.
Each step I took echoed. The ground beneath me was black stone, old and scorched, said to be carved from the remains of the first fallen vampire god. I could feel the magic humming in the floor thrumming against the soles of my feet, licking up my spine like a warning.
It didn’t scare me.
Nothing scared me anymore.
Not after they burned my home.
Not after they tried to erase my name.
Not after I watched the last of the Emberborn scream as the fire took them and lived.
I walked to the center of the arena in silence, my crimson cloak dragging behind me like a trail of dried blood. It was torn at the hem, the edges burned to ash, revealing tight leather beneath. No armor. Just scars and fire-forged muscle. My hair, bright as flame, whipped around my shoulders as the cold wind swept across the killing floor.
Above me, the nobles gathered in their balconies—vampires draped in silk, bone jewelry glinting in the torchlight, faces painted like death. I felt their eyes slither across my skin.
Some looked bored.
Some looked curious.
Some looked hungry.
I hoped they were.
Because I wasn’t here to entertain them.
I was here to remind them why their ancestors tried to kill mine.
I reached the center of the arena and stopped. My heart didn’t race. My hands didn’t shake. All I felt was the steady throb of something ancient in my blood, the low burn of wrath that had never gone out. I could taste the air metallic, thick with magic, tainted by the stench of old blood and fresh expectation.
Let them expect something soft.
Let them pray for weakness.
I would bury them in the aftermath of their disappointment.
A booming voice shattered the silence from the upper altar.
“Kneel.”
I didn’t. This whole place could fucking burn before I kneeled for these blood sucking fuckers.
My head turned slowly toward the source an officiant robed in crimson, face painted white with a vertical slash of black through one eye. Blood Priest. One of the Eternal Court’s lapdogs. He stood above the arena with a brand in his hand, glowing orange at the tip. The mark of entry. The test of obedience. Every competitor received it. It burned into skin and soul alike.
I said nothing.
“Kneel,” he repeated, louder this time. “Face the flame. Submit, and be recognized by the Court.”
I tilted my head, eyes narrowing slightly.
“You want me to kneel?”
A flicker of discomfort passed through his expression. Just a flicker. He hadn’t expected a voice like mine. Sharp. Calm. Like a dagger laid gently on silk.
“I said kneel,” he snapped.
I walked forward instead.
Each step was slow. Measured. And when I reached the circle of ancient runes carved into the sand—meant to amplify the mark, to bind me with blood—I stepped right over them.
I didn’t stop until I stood beneath the Blood Priest’s altar.
Then I looked up at him.
“You want to put fire on my skin,” I said softly. “What happens when it burns back?”
He faltered. Just a breath. But I saw it.
The brand in his hand flared. Reacting to me. To my blood. To the fact that I wasn’t human. I wasn’t vampire. I was other.
I was Emberborn.
Gasps stirred the balconies above.
“Impossible—”
“She should be dead—”
“The Burned Vale—wasn’t it—”
Their whispers curled around me like smoke.
I smiled.
The Blood Priest raised the brand. I didn’t flinch.
“Valkhara,” I said before he could speak. “Of the Burned Vale. Last of the Emberborn.”
The magic in the arena pulsed.
A visible ripple cracked through the ground beneath my feet, fine lines of glowing red bleeding across the runes like veins lighting up.
“I don’t kneel,” I said. “I burn.”
The brand exploded in his hand.
Shards of molten metal shot outward, some embedding in the stone wall beside him. He screamed, stumbling back, hand blackened with fire. The crowd above erupted in chaos—some standing, some laughing, some stunned into silence.
I didn’t move.
The heat rising off my skin curled the edges of my cloak.
Across the arena, a gate groaned open. Iron scraping rock. From the shadows behind it, something snarled.
The first Trial had begun.
And they still thought I was the one being tested.
The creature that emerged was massive—eight feet of clawed flesh and bone-plated armor. Its eyes glowed red. Not enchanted. Feral. Its teeth jutted sideways out of a maw designed to rip, not bite. It sniffed the air, its gaze snapping to me, nostrils flaring.
It smelled power. It smelled blood.
It wanted mine.
I didn’t even blink.
My hands moved to the twin blades at my sides—obsidian-forged, curved, deadly. I’d carved the hilts with my own blood the night before I came here. I didn’t name them. They weren’t sacred. They were efficient.
The beast let out a roar that shook the arena. Dust spilled from the balconies. I heard nobles flinch. Someone screamed.
I ran straight toward it.
No hesitation. No waiting for orders.
Let the vampires see this clearly.
Let the court watch.
Let the blood flow early.
Because I wasn’t here for their favor.
I wasn’t here for mercy.
I came for blood.
And I never left survivors.
ValkharaI was lying on the floor.Not gracefully. Not dramatically. Just… flat.Wrapped in a thick blanket, hair still crusted with blood from the Mirror Chamber, one eye cracked open as I stared at the ceiling like it might offer divine answers.It did not.Sevrin sat in the corner sharpening a blade...again.Azric paced near the balcony, pausing only to glance at me every few seconds like he wasn’t sure if I’d combust or throw up.I didn’t blame him. I wasn’t sure either.The burn from the Trial still lingered under my skin. Not physical, but magical. Emotional.Worse.The bond with Sevrin and Azric pulsed low in my chest, steady but heavy. And beneath all of that?Something else.A faint pulse.Distant. Unsteady.Not from either of them.Not mine.But still... connected.It came and went in short, aching bursts. Like someone screaming underwater.Like a chain rattling behind a locked door in the back of my head.I sat up too fast and groaned. Azric appeared beside me instantly.“Y
ValkharaThe Mirror Chamber was silent when I entered.Not peaceful. Not calm.The kind of silence that screamed.No footsteps echoed. No wind stirred.Only magic pulsed in the walls alive and waiting.The door sealed behind me with a deep, final thud.I didn’t flinch.I wouldn’t give them that.Glass surrounded me ceiling to floor. Every wall reflected the room, the door, the pedestal in the center.But not me.I had no reflection.And that was the first warning.The enchanted hourglass waited atop the pedestal. Tall, slender, its sand deep red like powdered blood. The moment I crossed the threshold fully, it flipped itself.The Trial had begun.Let your mind speak.I took a breath.The air was too still. Too thick.I didn’t trust it.Then it started.The mirrors rippled not like water, but like skin and shifted.Images flashed, then vanished.A battlefield. Fire. Screams.Me, drenched in blood, sword in hand.Me, kneeling. Collared. Bound.Me, begging someone I didn’t recognize not
ValkharaI didn’t return to the suite right away.Not because I couldn’t.But because I didn’t know what I’d do if I saw them.Sevrin. Azric. The bond.Everything inside me still vibrated with magic. With violence. With blood.Caelun’s blood still stained my arms, dried beneath my fingernails. My leathers were torn, soaked in the iron stink of a kill I didn’t regret.Because I didn’t just win.I dominated.I didn’t just survive.I made them watch.The Council. The nobles. The enemies. The allies. All of them watched as I tore a man apart with my bare hands and declared myself fire-born and unbent. And the worst part?I liked it.Power had never fit me so perfectly.By the time I made it back to the suite, the sky outside had gone a dusky crimson. Twilight bleeding into darkness.I opened the door quietly, expecting silence.What I found?Was them.Sevrin sat in front of the hearth shirtless, legs spread, one elbow on his knee, his blade in his lap sharpening metal that didn’t need to
ValkharaWhen I woke, the room smelled like sex, blood, and danger.Sevrin was on one side of me, arm slung over my waist, his breathing slow but still tense like his body hadn’t stopped guarding me even in sleep. Azric lay on the other, one leg draped over mine, fingers lazily tracing the bite he’d left on my breast like he was drawing runes in my skin.I didn’t move. Not yet.Because beneath the haze of soreness and bond-induced satisfaction, something darker coiled in my gut.I didn’t come here to be claimed.I didn’t enter the Trials for a mate—let alone two.I came to win. To survive. To earn power strong enough to protect the ones who couldn’t protect themselves. My people. My bloodline.And here I was naked in a bed I hadn’t chosen, marked by two men I barely knew, while the Council waited to see if I was a weapon or a weakness.No.I would not be their pawn.And I sure as hell wouldn’t be anyone’s pet.I peeled Sevrin’s arm off me gently, sliding from the bed and wrapping myse
Valkharawhen the towel hit the floor so did my last shred of self-control.I should’ve run. Should’ve slammed the door and locked it behind me. But the look in their eyes? That unhinged, starved heat? It rooted me to the floor like my legs forgot what fleeing meant.Azric’s pupils were blown wide, his lips parted like he was tasting my thoughts. Because he was.And Sevrin? He didn’t even pretend to be calm. His chest heaved with every breath, muscles tight, jaw locked like he was holding back a war.“You don’t want this,” I whispered to myself, lying to all three of us.Azric’s smile was wicked. “That’s funny. Because your mind is screaming otherwise.”I lunged to slap him.He caught my wrist mid-air and spun me so fast my back hit his chest. “Still pretending, Valkhara?”“Fuck you.”Sevrin was already moving.He crossed the room in two steps, hand at my throat, fingers gentle but firm—just like before.“You want this,” he said low. “Say it.”“I—”“Say it.”Azric brushed his lips aga
ValkharaThe walk back to the castle was slower than it needed to be.Not because of the distance, but because of the tension. The kind that wrapped around your ankles and dragged every step into something… heavier. Wilder. Unspoken.Azric walked on my left, Sevrin on my right like I needed a full escort just to make it through the forest. Their silence wasn’t comfortable. It was loaded.Sevrin’s gaze kept flicking to me like he was waiting for me to bolt again. Azric’s hands stayed in his pockets, but his thoughts?Oh, I could feel them pressing at the edge of my mind like they were waiting to be let in again.I ignored them both.Mostly.“You know,” I said after a long stretch of silence, “you two could’ve just sent a raven. Or a guard. Or literally anyone not obsessed with marking me.”Sevrin snorted. “You think we’d trust anyone else with you now?”“That’s not flattering. That’s prison.”“It’s protection.”“It’s control.”Azric spoke up finally. “It’s the bond. And you know it.”I
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