LOGINSoulbound: Chosen by Darkness In a city that devours the vulnerable, Tharien has learned one rule: distance is the only way to protect what he loves. Dangerous by nature and hunted by forces that fear the power of connection, he walks away from the one person who anchors him—Nori—believing his absence will keep her safe. But their bond is not something that can be outrun. A rare and forbidden soulbond ties them together, threading their hearts, their pain, and their survival into one. When Tharien disappears, the bond fractures, leaving Nori hollowed by longing and hunted by shadows that feed on separation. The farther he goes, the darker the world becomes—because something ancient has awakened in the space between them. As secret watchers circle and those who sever bonds hunt in the name of “mercy,” Tharien is forced to confront the lie he’s lived by. His distance is not protection. It is a wound. And the darkness that stalks their world grows stronger with every step he takes away from her. To save Nori, Tharien must return to the one place he swore he’d never stand again—at her side. Because in a world that calls separation mercy, choosing each other is rebellion. And loving her may be the only thing that keeps the darkness from devouring them both.
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This story contains dark romantic themes, emotional trauma, themes of abandonment and separation, coercion, ritualized harm, and intense psychological distress. Reader discretion is advised. --- Prologue The Thread Between Us The city outside the window breathed in neon and sirens, a restless animal that never slept. Inside the apartment, the lights were low, curtains drawn against the noise of it. The world had been reduced to the soft circle of lamplight on the floor and the quiet space between two bodies. Tharien sat on the edge of the bed with his forearms braced on his knees, the familiar tension coiled tight in his spine. The night pressed in on him from every direction—the weight of what he was, the things he carried, the violence he kept leashed behind his ribs. He could feel it humming under his skin, a low throb of readiness that never fully left him. Then Nori moved closer. She didn’t speak. She never did when she felt the storm building in him. She simply came to sit in front of him, close enough that her knees brushed his, close enough that the heat of her body softened the sharp edges of the room. Her palms lifted and settled against his chest, right over his heart. Breathe, she mouthed, though no sound came with the word. Tharien’s breath caught. The warmth of her hands seeped through fabric and skin, straight into the hollow behind his sternum. The ache there eased, just a little. Enough to remind him that the emptiness wasn’t permanent. Enough to remind him that he wasn’t alone in the dark. He let his forehead rest against hers. Their breaths fell into rhythm, slow and deliberate. In. Out. The bond between them—unseen, unspoken—tightened into something almost tangible. It wasn’t a thread he could see, not really, but he felt it the way he felt gravity. A steady pull. A quiet gravity that anchored him to the moment, to her presence, to the simple fact of being alive beside another human being. This is what steadies me, he thought. This is what keeps the worst of me from spilling over. The pressure behind his sternum eased into a warm, aching fullness. When he breathed, it was as if her breath answered him, met him halfway. He had never learned how to name the sensation properly. All he knew was that the world made more sense when she was this close. Nori shifted, her thumbs brushing small circles into his chest. Her eyes searched his face, reading the tension he hadn’t spoken aloud. She was always good at that—seeing the cracks before they split. “You’re somewhere else,” she said softly. He gave a faint, humorless smile. “I live somewhere else.” She huffed a quiet breath, the ghost of a laugh. “Come back,” she murmured, and pressed her palms more firmly against him, grounding him to the here and now. “Just for a minute.” For a minute, he did. The city’s noise dulled. The sharp edge of his thoughts softened. The violence inside him quieted, as if her nearness had lowered the volume on everything that wanted to break loose. He closed his eyes and let the moment hold him. But the world didn’t forget them. Somewhere beyond the walls, beyond the thin protection of brick and glass, the city whispered its old warnings. Tharien had heard the rumors in the alleys and back rooms—the Watchers who followed the glow of bonds, the Severers who called their work mercy. He’d never seen either with his own eyes. He’d only felt the weight of their presence in the way people spoke about them in half-voices, as if naming such things too loudly might draw their attention. Mercy, they called it. As if cutting something living could ever be gentle. His chest tightened again, not with the familiar storm, but with a quieter, more dangerous fear. He looked down at Nori, at the softness of her mouth, the trust in her eyes, the way she leaned into him without hesitation. If I stay, I will hurt her. The thought came unbidden, sharp and absolute. It carried the old logic he’d learned to live by—the belief that anything he touched too closely would eventually break. He’d kept himself apart from the world for a reason. Kept his distance. Kept his damage contained. Her presence steadied him. And that made her vulnerable. Nori must have felt the shift in him. Her hands stilled against his chest, her brow creasing. “What just happened?” she asked. “Nothing,” he said too quickly. It was a lie. A small one. The kind that didn’t yet know it would grow teeth. The air in the room seemed to change, subtle as a pressure drop before a storm. Tharien’s skin prickled. The warmth behind his sternum tightened into something thin and taut, like a cord pulled too far. He drew a slow breath, trying to shake the sensation, but it didn’t fade. Somewhere in the city, a bond was breaking. He didn’t know how he knew. The certainty settled into him without explanation, a distant echo of pain that wasn’t his and wasn’t hers, rippling faintly through whatever invisible web connected people like them. The room felt colder for it. The quiet pressed in, heavier than before. Nori’s hands curled into the fabric of his shirt. “Did you feel that?” Tharien swallowed. “Yeah,” he said. And in the stillness that followed, the first hairline crack formed in the lie he would soon tell himself—that distance could ever be anything but another kind of wound.35 — Odon Kuraim He did not have a body in the way bodies were usually understood. He had a presence. A weight. A quality of attention that settled into spaces the way cold settled into old buildings — not through the doors or the windows but through the gaps between things, the places where the structure had never quite been sealed. He moved through the city's fractures the way water moved through limestone, patient and accumulative, finding the weakness in every surface and working it quietly until the surface gave. He was very old. He had been hungry before. He had always found a way to feed. --- Tonight he moved differently. Not through the fractures — there were fractures everywhere, the city was full of them, the ordinary human abundance of people separating and withdrawing and deciding that the thing they felt was too dangerous to keep feeling. He could feed on those. He had been feeding on those for weeks, since the anchor event had denied him the reaffirmation energy h
34 — GiborThe knock was precise.Three raps, evenly spaced, the knock of a man who had learned that how you announced yourself communicated everything about what you expected to find on the other side. Tharien knew it before he reached the door. Had known the rhythm of it for fifteen years, through a dozen safehouses and twice as many cities and one long education in the doctrine that love was a liability and control was the only mercy worth offering.He opened the door.Gibor looked the same as he always looked.That was the first thing — the thing that landed before anything else. The world had shifted on its axis in the past seventy-two hours, the architecture of everything Tharien had believed about distance and protection dismantled and rebuilt into something that actually held weight, and Gibor looked exactly as he had looked the last time Tharien had seen him. Contained. Authoritative. The specific solidity of a man who had decided what was true a long time ago and had not fou
33 — FactionThe office had no windows.This was intentional. Windows implied orientation — a relationship to the outside world, to weather and light and the passage of time in ways that could be observed and therefore tracked. The people who worked in this office had decided long ago that orientation was a vulnerability. They existed in a sustained present tense, insulated from the city's rhythms, making decisions that shaped those rhythms without being subject to them.The lighting was consistent. The temperature was consistent. The hum of the ventilation system was consistent.Everything in this room was engineered to feel inevitable.---There were three of them.Not the administrative calm of the morning caller, not the institutional patience of the escalation desk. Those were middle architecture — useful, functional, the load-bearing walls of a structure that required people who believed in what they were doing in order to do it convincingly.The three in this room had stopped b
32 — LorakHe kept the vials in a case that had once held a musical instrument.Velvet-lined, latched with brass fittings that had gone green at the edges from handling. It had belonged to someone before him — he'd found it at an estate sale twenty years ago, before he'd known what he would become, before the order had found him and named the thing he could do and given it a framework and a purpose and a salary and a set of rituals that made the harm feel procedural.He didn't know what instrument had lived in the case originally.He kept it because the velvet held the vials steady.That was what he told himself.---Lorak's apartment was on the fourth floor of a building that smelled of other people's cooking and had radiators that knocked in the night like something trying to get in. He had lived here for six years and made it no more personal than a hotel room — functional furniture, empty walls, a kitchen that saw coffee and little else. The case sat on the table where other peopl






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