MAILAH FELL ASLEEP clutching Lailah’s bracelet, tears still wet on her cheeks, Grayson’s gifts scattered around her like promises made tangible.
When sleep finally claid her, it didn’t bring rest.
It brought visions.
She stood in a vast room filled with faces—hundreds of them, maybe thousands. All watching. All waiting. The air humd with power so dense it pressed against her skin like a physical weight.
She wore white. The dress from the fitting, but it shimred differently here—alive sohow, responding to her racing pulse.
"Mailah."
Grayson’s voice. She turned, searching for him in the crowd.
But the faces had no features. Just blank spaces where eyes and mouths should be, all turning toward her in perfect synchronization.
"Choose," they whispered in unison. "Choose what you’re willing to lose."
The room shifted. Now she stood on a precipice—behind her, the familiar world she’d known. Before her, sothing vast and unknowable. Grayson stood on the other side, hand extended, eyes silver fire.
"I can’t reach you," he said, and his voice carried centuries of longing. "Not unless you step forward. Not unless you’re willing to fall."
She looked down. The drop was infinite.
"What if I can’t make it across?" she asked.
"Then we both fall," he said simply.
The faceless crowd pressed closer. Their whispers grew louder, overlapping, becoming indistinguishable from wind, from music, from sothing that might have been screaming or might have been laughter.
"The bond will break you both," they chanted. "One will consu. One will be consud. This is the nature of things. This has always been the nature of things."
She stepped forward, felt the ground disappear beneath her feet—
And woke up.
Mailah gasped awake, heart hamring, sheets twisted around her legs. For a disorienting mont, she didn’t know where she was. The dream clung to her like cobwebs, refusing to dissipate.
The room was dim—that gray pre-dawn light that suggested sunrise wasn’t far off but hadn’t quite committed yet. Her phone said 5:47 AM.
Wedding day.
The thought hit her like cold water.
Today. They were doing this today.
If the Council allowed it. If Varrow didn’t succeed in sabotaging it. If the universe stopped throwing obstacles at them for five consecutive minutes.
A sound drew her attention—crunching, enthusiastic chewing coming from the corner of her room.
Shadow.
The cat was hunched over sothing, tail swishing with predatory satisfaction, making sounds that suggested whatever she’d brought was eting a grueso end.
"Please tell that’s not a bird," Mailah said to the ceiling.
Shadow paused mid-chew to look at her with those unblinking eyes. The expression clearly said: You don’t want to know.
"You’re right. I don’t want to know."
She threw off the covers, deliberately not looking at Shadow’s corner, and grabbed her robe. The gifts from Grayson caught her eye—still arranged on her dresser, each one a reminder that he’d seen her. Really seen her. Collected pieces of who she was before she’d ever said a word about them.
How long had he been planning this?
Mailah touched the hairpin and felt sothing settle in her chest. Whatever the dream ant, whatever warnings or prophecies it contained, she knew one thing with absolute certainty:
She was going to marry Grayson Ashford today.
Shadow owed—a sound of completion. Mailah glanced over despite herself and imdiately regretted it.
"Is that a—" She stopped. "You know what? Never mind. I’m going downstairs. You enjoy your... victory."
Shadow purred, pleased with herself, and began grooming her whiskers with the satisfaction of a successful huntress.
Mailah descended the stairs, expecting silence. The house should be sleeping still, everyone grabbing what rest they could before the chaos of preparations began.
Instead, she found Liora.
The wedding coordinator sat at the dining table with what looked like seventeen folders, three laptops, and enough coffee to caffeinate a small army. She looked up as Mailah entered, and her expression imdiately shifted from focused to horrified.
"Oh no," Liora said.
Mailah stopped mid-step. "What?"
"Your face. What did you do to your face?"
"I—what?" Mailah’s hand flew to her cheek. "What’s wrong with my face?"
"You look like you haven’t slept in three days." Liora stood, circling Mailah like a general assessing battlefield damage. "Dark circles. Puffiness. That’s the complexion of soone who’s been stress-crying into their pillow."
"I wasn’t stress-crying—"
"The evidence suggests otherwise."
Mailah wanted to argue but couldn’t. She’d definitely cried last night. Grayson’s gifts had destroyed her emotional defenses completely.
"It’s fine," Mailah said. "I’ll just—"
"Cucumber slices," Liora interrupted, already pulling out her phone. "Ice packs. Possibly a minor glamour spell. Do you consent to minor magical costic intervention?"
"Do I—what?"
"It’s your wedding day. You’re getting married in—" Liora checked her watch. "Approximately eleven hours. You need to look radiant, not like you’ve been possessed by a sleep-deprived ghost."
Despite everything, Mailah laughed. "You have a way with words."
"I have a way with miracles. Sit." Liora pointed at a chair like it was a royal decree.
Mailah sat.
Liora disappeared into the kitchen, returning monts later with what looked like a suspicious green smoothie and a bag of frozen peas.
"Drink this. Put these on your eyes."
"What’s in the smoothie?"
"Better you don’t know. It’s organic and vaguely magical and will make you glow from the inside out."
Mailah drank. It tasted like grass clippings and regret.
"Good girl," Liora said, placing the frozen peas gently over Mailah’s eyes. "Now breathe. You’re getting married today. To a man who clearly adores you, judging by the seventeen text ssages I’ve received from him this morning."
Mailah’s heart jumped. "He texted you?"
"To confirm arrangents. To verify seating charts. To ask if I could sohow make the ceremony happen faster because, and I quote, ’waiting is killing .’"
A smile tugged at Mailah’s lips. "He said that?"
"Three tis. In increasingly dramatic language. The last one said waiting was ’more torturous than three centuries of abstinence combined.’" Liora’s voice softened. "That man has it bad for you."
"I have it bad for him too."
"I know. Everyone knows."
"That’s romantic."
"In your case? Yes."
They sat in comfortable silence, Mailah with frozen vegetables on her face, Liora presumably coordinating the logistics of a supernatural wedding via her seventeen devices.
"Liora?" Mailah asked after a while.
"Mm?"
"What if sothing goes wrong?"
"Sothing will definitely go wrong. That’s the nature of weddings."
"But what if—what if Varrow succeeds? What if the Council shuts it down? What if—"
"Then you and Grayson will figure it out. Like you’ve figured out everything else." Liora’s voice turned firm. "Mailah, I’ve coordinated over two hundred supernatural weddings. I’ve seen bonds that shouldn’t work sohow thrive. I’ve seen ’perfect’ matches crumble before dessert is served. Do you know what the difference is?"
"What?"
"Choice. The couples who make it are the ones who keep choosing each other, even when it would be easier to walk away." Liora paused. "You and Grayson? You’re choosers. Both of you. That’s why you’ll survive whatever today throws at you."
Mailah felt tears prick behind the frozen peas. "Thank you."
"Don’t thank yet. Save it for after I’ve perford the costic miracle required to make you cara-ready."
"Harsh."
"Honest."
The kitchen door swung open, and Elin appeared, looking surprisingly put-together despite the past day’s trauma. She took in the scene—Mailah with vegetables on her face, Liora surrounded by technology—and didn’t even blink.
"Morning," Elin said. "Are we stress-managing already?"
"I’m not stressed," Mailah protested.
"You’re wearing frozen peas as eye masks."
Lucien arrived next, carrying what looked like more pastries and wearing an expression that suggested he’d gotten about as much sleep as Mailah.
"Stress baking continued through the night," he announced. "We now have enough bread to feed a small nation. Or one very hungry vampire delegation."
"The Corvinus family isn’t coming," Liora said without looking up.
Everyone froze.
"Sent regrets this morning. Apparently, they’ve been ’called away on urgent family business.’" Liora’s tone suggested she knew exactly what that ant. "My guess? The Council had a word with them about making threats at supernaturally significant events."
"Or they’re planning sothing worse," Elin said quietly.
"Always a possibility," Liora agreed cheerfully. "But that’s tomorrow’s problem. Today, we have a wedding to execute flawlessly."
Oliver stumbled in, looking like he’d been awake for seventy-two straight hours. "I’ve checked every ward. Twice. They’re holding. No breaches since Varrow’s visit."
"See?" Liora said. "Everything’s fine."
"Everything is not fine," Oliver said. "Everything is held together by duct tape and prayer."
"Welco to event planning."
Mailah stood, removing the peas entirely. "Where’s Grayson?"
"At the venue," Liora said. "Has been since 4 AM. Apparently, he decided to personally inspect every security asure."
"Of course he did."
"He also left sothing for you." Liora pulled out an envelope—cream-colored, sealed with wax that shimred like captured starlight.
Mailah took it with trembling hands. Her na was written on the front in his precise handwriting.
"Should I—" She looked around at everyone. "Should I open this alone?"
"Definitely," Lucien said.
"Absolutely," Elin agreed.
"We’ll give you privacy," Liora said, already ushering everyone toward the kitchen. "Five minutes. Then we begin wedding day preparations in earnest."
They filed out, leaving Mailah alone with the envelope.
She broke the seal carefully, pulled out a single piece of paper.
His handwriting. Just three lines.
Today, you beco mine and I beco yours.
Not because of tradition or ritual or supernatural law.
But because we choose it.
Always.
- G
Mailah pressed the note to her chest, eyes burning.
"Always," she whispered to the empty room.
From sowhere upstairs, Shadow yowled—a sound of triumph or warning or possibly just demanding breakfast.
And outside, through the villa windows, the sun finally broke over the horizon.
Wedding day.
For real this ti.
No more delays. No more waiting.
Just her and Grayson and a room full of supernatural beings who may or may not want them dead.
"Piece of cake," Mailah said to herself.
Shadow appeared in the doorway, gave her a look that clearly said you’re an idiot, and padded toward her food bowl.
"You’re right," Mailah told the cat. "But I’m an idiot in love. That’s got to count for sothing."
Shadow’s tail swished—grudging agreent.
And as Liora’s voice drifted from the kitchen, calling Mailah to begin preparations, as the villa started to wake around her, as the day she’d been simultaneously dreading and desperate for finally arrived, Mailah thought:
Here we go.
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