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Chapter 3

Author: Key Kirita
last update Last Updated: 2025-11-11 21:21:33

The doors opened without a sound.

Heat spilled out from the Sanctum like breath from a waiting mouth—dry, searing, scented with smoke and molten stone. Sera stepped forward before she could stop herself, her bare feet brushing over cooled obsidian etched with glowing runes. The doors closed behind her with a low thud, sealing her inside.

The chamber was circular, vast, and pulsing with heat. Flames burned in suspended braziers overhead, casting shadows that writhed across walls inscribed with ancient sigils. At the center of the room, a raised dais shimmered with embedded gold and claw-marked stone. And standing upon it, wrapped in nothing but shadow and command—was him.

The Warlord.

He had shed his armor.

Now, he wore nothing at all. No armor. No robe. Just skin—scarred and scaled, carved with muscle and laced with heat. Dragons did not dress for modesty. They did not conceal what they were. His body was a declaration of dominance, unapologetically primal.

Sera froze.

The sight of him—fully bare—struck her like a blow. She’d seen men naked before. Statues. Soldiers bathing. Lovers in stolen glances. But none of them had looked like this.

None of them had radiated such effortless possession.

She expected someone—anyone—to react. To avert their eyes, to bow, to acknowledge the raw, overwhelming display of power. But no one else in the chamber even blinked. As if his nakedness meant nothing at all.

Because to them, it didn’t.

To them, this was normal. Natural.

Only she seemed human enough to feel the shame—or the heat. His skin shimmered with the faint gleam of embedded scale, as if the fire inside him still searched for a way out. There was nothing human in the way he stood. He was built for ruin. For conquest. For claiming.

His face was sharp and regal, all high cheekbones and a jaw made to grind kingdoms into dust. Horns curled back from his temples, obsidian-dark and laced with red. Not large, but undeniable—primal. And his eyes, still burning embers, locked onto her as if her breath had called him.

He was not beautiful.

He was terrible. And it was worse than beauty.

His eyes, still burning embers, found her immediately. Held her.

He said nothing at first. Just looked.

The air shifted. Heat licked at her collarbones, her thighs, the inside of her wrists like breath too close. His eyes followed her like a brand already pressed to flesh—slow, deliberate, and unblinking. There was no hunger in his stare. No lust. Just certainty. As if he already saw her marked, already heard her whimper, already knew how her body would look trembling beneath his.

And in that silence, she felt it again—the raw, terrible weight of being wanted not for politics, not for legacy, but for possession.

"Come," he said, and the word unfurled through her like a command.

She walked.

The runes beneath her feet pulsed with each step, reacting to her presence. Magic clung to the air like humidity, thick and humming, teasing her skin. With every breath, the chamber seemed to close in around her—warm and watchful, alive. The symbols beneath her toes sparked faintly, glowing brighter with her fear, as if the Sanctum itself recognized her. Welcomed her. Approved of the offering. When she reached the base of the dais, she stopped, trying not to look too long at his bare chest or the sharp glint of his claws.

"Kneel."

She didn’t move.

He came down the steps slowly, eyes never leaving hers. The floor trembled beneath him. When he reached her, he didn’t force her down. He simply waited.

After a long silence, she dropped to her knees—not from obedience, but because her legs betrayed her.

The motion scorched her pride. Kneeling before a dragon—every story warned against it. Kneeling meant surrender. Kneeling meant you would never rise again, not as who you were. Her hands curled into fists against her thighs as if she could squeeze the shame out through her knuckles.

He exhaled, a slow breath that ghosted across her skin.

"You resist with every breath," he said, voice low, dangerous. "And yet you burn for what’s coming."

Her lips parted to deny it, but the heat in her cheeks, in her chest, said otherwise.

He raised a hand. Magic coiled at his fingertips—red and gold, curling like smoke. The light illuminated the underside of his jaw, his collarbones, the sharp cut of his body. He drew a symbol in the air—long strokes, looping arcs—and the magic shimmered.

"Do you know what this is?"

She shook her head.

"It is the mark of my house. My line. My blood."

He pressed his hand against her chest, just above her heart.

The magic flared.

Agony.

It wasn’t fire. It was heat with purpose, carving itself into her skin, deeper than flesh. She gasped, eyes wide, spine arching as the sigil burned into her.

A vision struck her—blinding, wordless. Fire sweeping across a battlefield. A throne, blackened and broken. Clawed feet crushing a crown into dust. A roar that shook the bones of mountains. She didn’t know if it was memory or magic, didn’t know if the images came from him or the mark itself—but they rooted deep. When her eyes snapped open, the world was different. He was different. And so was she.

The pain from the brand was unbearable—and then something else swelled beneath it. Pleasure. Shameful, foreign, treacherous.

She hated it. Hated how her body arched into his hand. Hated the heat curling inside her like a seedling of surrender. She wanted to scream that it wasn’t hers—but the bond didn’t care.

She whimpered, trembling as the brand sealed itself. The pain had crested—only to leave something dizzying in its wake. The scent of iron and spice filled her senses, heavy as incense. She could taste it on the back of her tongue. The air shimmered around them, reacting to her body’s surrender.

He didn’t remove his hand.

His thumb stroked the edge of the brand, slow and deliberate, as if reassuring himself it had taken. His gaze flicked to her lips, then lower—to the way her chest rose and fell, ragged and unsteady. A muscle in his jaw flexed, and something passed behind his eyes: restraint. Barely held.

She could feel him reining it in, the monstrous desire that lived beneath his calm—wanting to devour, to complete the ritual with more than magic. And yet he did not move. He only watched her, possessive and patient, as if he enjoyed this—her trembling, her defiance, her confusion.

As if this moment belonged to him, too.

"Now," he said, "no one else will touch you. Not without bleeding."

The magic quieted. Her chest glowed faintly beneath the sheer fabric, the sigil a living part of her now.

It pulsed—slow and deep, like a second heartbeat trying to sync with her own. The shape was seared into her skin in molten gold, the lines still flickering like heat over a forge. She could feel it… moving, not physically, but through her blood. As if it was listening.

And beneath it all, a thread of something foreign stirred at the base of her spine—possessiveness, hunger, satisfaction. Not hers.

His.

She fell forward, catching herself with shaking arms.

Her skin felt too tight, every nerve frayed and thrumming. The fabric of her gown clung to her chest, damp with sweat and something deeper—some magic heat that hadn’t faded. Her limbs didn’t quite feel like her own. The ground spun under her palms, and even the air felt heavier, as though it had learned her shape and now pressed against her like a lover.

A faint sound echoed in her ears, not from the chamber, but from inside her—his voice, not spoken but remembered. Or sensed. A presence that lingered inside her mind like smoke curling under a door.

He knelt beside her, cupped her face.

She wanted to slap his hand away. She wanted to lean into it. Her breath caught somewhere between resistance and ruin, and she hated that she didn’t know which side she stood on anymore. Her body ached, not just from the pain—but from the claim. The brand still pulsed, syncing slowly to something deeper, ancient and territorial. She wasn’t sure if it beat with his heart—or hers.

But she knew one thing with sudden, startling clarity: he had chosen her.

He could have refused. Could have razed her father’s palace to its foundations, turned her city to bone and smoke. He didn’t need her surrender to claim victory. Yet he had paused the ruin—for her. Accepted her. Marked her. Not as a symbol of peace, but as something he wanted.

He hadn’t spared her.

He’d taken her, instead.

"You belong to me. Not because you were given. But because I chose."

And the worst part was—some part of her wanted to believe it.

His voice was absolute, but there was something beneath it—a tension in his jaw, a flicker behind his eyes. As if even he feared how much he meant the words.

He didn’t speak again. Just stood and looked down at her, his shadow stretched long across her body. The hunger in his eyes had not faded—but now it was matched by something else. Something older. A vow. A promise she wasn’t sure she wanted kept.

She hadn’t been spared. She’d been claimed.

And the worst part was… the brand would never let her forget it.
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