Chapter 15
We moved as one entity toward the exit, the princes’ bodies creating a living barrier between me and the watching court.
Every step felt significant, weighted with purpose beyond mere physical movement.
The vial at my throat pulsed hotter with each passing moment, its once steady rhythm now erratic, a warning I couldn’t yet interpret.
Something was building, not just tension in the room but pressure inside me, currents of power gathering beneath my skin like storm clouds before lightning strikes.
The distance to the door stretched impossibly long. Twenty steps. Fifteen. Each one bringing me into closer proximity with all three princes simultaneously.
Ten steps to the door.
The crack in the vial widened as we moved, the hairline fracture expanding across the glass surface like ice breaking on a spring pond.
I felt it with a clarity that shouldn’t have been possible—the molecular separation, the weakening bonds, the imminent failure of whatever magic had contained what lived inside me for so long.
"Hurry," I whispered, my voice barely audible even to myself.
Kael glanced down, his eyes widening fractionally as he registered the vial’s deteriorating state. "Almost there," he murmured, his pace increasing without becoming urgent enough to draw more attention.
But attention had already found us. The court had rearranged itself around our movement, bodies shifting to maintain visual contact, protests and condemnations flying at us.
I felt their focus as a physical weight, pressing against my skin from every direction, amplifying whatever was happening inside me.
The heat built beneath my skin with each heartbeat, blood running hotter in my veins as if something ancient was waking up, stretching after centuries of forced dormancy.
The vial wasn’t just cracking now; it was barely containing what lived inside it…
what lived inside me. My fingers trembled at my sides.
My vision sharpened until I could count individual eyelashes on faces across the room, until colors separated into their component hues, overwhelming in their intensity.
Seven steps.
Rhex moved closer, his massive frame almost touching mine, radiating heat and concern in equal measure. "Your scent," he murmured, voice dropping to a register so low no one else could possibly hear. "It’s changing."
I knew it was. I could feel it… the final fragments of chemical suppression burning away, the last barriers between what I had been forced to be and what I truly was dissolving like sugar in hot water.
My body temperature spiked, sweat beading at my hairline, at the hollow of my throat, between my shoulder blades.
I fought it. Instinct took over, years of conditioning demanding I contain whatever was happening, that I make myself smaller, less noticeable, less problematic.
Three counts in. Hold for four. Release for five.
The breathing technique that had kept me centered through so many crises.
I pulled the energy inward, trying to compress it into a manageable core, trying to suppress the heat rising like a tide inside me.
For one heartbeat, it seemed to work. The pressure eased fractionally, the vial’s cracking slowed, and I thought perhaps we might make it to the doors before whatever was building reached its breaking point.
Then Silas’s fingers brushed against my lower back, a gesture so subtle it could have been accidental, except nothing about Silas was ever accidental.
The contact lasted less than a second, but it was enough.
Where his skin touched mine flared with heat that had nothing to do with ordinary temperature and everything to do with connection.
The sensation cascaded outward, meeting similar points of warmth where Kael’s shoulder nearly touched mine, where Rhex’s arm moved in protective proximity.
Four points. A perfect square. The geometric foundation for something that had no name in any language I knew.
Three steps from the door.
The vial gave way.
It didn’t shatter with dramatic flair. It simply reached the threshold of what it could contain and surrendered to inevitability.
The crack widened all at once, and I felt something release—not a liquid or a gas, nothing so mundane as physical matter.
This was an essence. This was the concentrated truth of what I was, what I had always been beneath the chemical suppression, ash, the years of careful erasure.
I gasped, the sound harsh in the sudden silence that had fallen around us.
My control, maintained through such monumental effort, snapped along with the vial.
Heat flooded through me, not pain but transcendence, like breaking the surface after too long underwater, like the first real breath after years of shallow ones.
It radiated outward from my core, down my limbs, across my skin, into the air around me.
And it hit all three princes at once.
Kael straightened first, his spine lengthening as if some invisible weight had been lifted from his shoulders.
His eyes, already commanding, sharpened to a focus that cut through pretense like a blade through silk.
The air around him changed texture, thickened, charged with authority that wasn’t just power but rightness.
A leadership in its purest form, undiluted by doubt or compromise.
He didn’t grow physically larger, yet he seemed to expand, to fill more space than his body occupied.
Rhex transformed next, the perpetual tension in his massive frame not disappearing but transmuting.
Where before his power had felt barely contained, volatile, now it found perfect channeling.
A strength with direction, force with purpose.
His eyes shifted fully to alpha-red, but not with the blind aggression that color usually signified.
This was a focus so complete it had physical presence, predatory attention without the savage edge that had always haunted his expressions before.
And Silas… Silas underwent the most subtle yet profound change.
His analytical precision, which had always carried the cool distance of pure intellect, warmed with something I could only describe as connection.
His perception didn’t just observe; it understood.
The distance between information and meaning collapsed, leaving him not just brilliant but wise, not just calculating but comprehending.
His silver-blue eyes took in everything, missing nothing, but now that awareness carried compassion alongside clarity.
Each had become more perfectly himself. Kael’s authority, Rhex’s power, Silas’s perception… yet something new emerged in the spaces between them. A configuration of energies that enhanced rather than competed, that completed rather than cancelled.
And I stood at the center, the conduit through which this transformation flowed, the fourth point that made their triangle into something new. Not their possession but their equal. Not a tool for their use, but an essential component of what they were becoming.
The room reacted before conscious thought could intervene.
The nearest Alphas, powerful nobles who had never yielded to anyone below the royal family, took unconscious steps backward, their bodies recognizing a shift in the dominance hierarchy that their minds hadn’t yet processed.
Some lowered their eyes instinctively, throats exposed in the subtle angle of their chins.
Others froze entirely, caught in the sudden reorganization of everything they thought they understood about power and place.
Omegas throughout the room went utterly still, their attention fixed on me with expressions ranging from confusion to awe to pure fear. I wasn’t just an omega anymore. I was something they had no category for, something that disrupted every assumption about what an omega could be.
"This is it," Silas murmured behind me, his voice carrying wonder beneath its analytical precision. "The Bond of Four, fully manifested. Not just amplification but transformation."
"Perfect balance," Kael agreed, his voice carrying that new quality of absolute certainty without domination. "The ancient texts were right."
Rhex said nothing, but he didn’t need to. His body had aligned with his brothers and me in a configuration that felt older than words, more fundamental than language. Protection without possession. Strength without subjugation. Power in service rather than power that demanded service.
"We need to leave," Kael said quietly, his gaze sweeping the room with new understanding. "This changes everything… not just for us, but for the kingdom. There are those who will move quickly to prevent what’s happening here."
"Lady Morvane," I said, the pieces clicking into perfect alignment. "She’s never been working alone. Someone else has been directing her, someone who understood what I was and what would happen if I ever came in contact with you three."
Silas nodded, his enhanced perception connecting information that would have remained scattered before.
"The purge of amplifier omegas wasn’t just about preventing individual Alphas from gaining too much power.
It was about preventing this specific configuration from ever reforming.
The Bond of Four represents something far more dangerous to those who benefit from instability. "
"Balance threatens those who profit from imbalance," Rhex growled, his newly focused intensity cutting straight to the heart of the matter.
I looked at each of them in turn… these three men who had been strangers days ago and now felt more essential than breath. The connection between us hummed at a frequency I felt in my marrow, steady and unwavering despite the chaos our presence was creating in the ballroom.
The doors were just steps away now. Beyond them lay uncertainty, danger, the beginning of something none of us fully understood yet.
But that uncertainty no longer felt threatening.
For the first time in my life, I wasn’t facing the unknown alone.
I was facing it with three others who completed me as I completed them.
A perfect square of balanced power that transformed weakness into strength, isolation into connection, fragmentation into wholeness.
I reached for the door handle, my fingers steady despite everything that had just happened. As the cool metal met my palm, I felt the three princes shift in perfect synchronicity behind me, their movements aligning without conscious coordination. The four of us moved as a single entity.
The door opened, and we stepped through. Shouting increased and fights broke out as protesting Alphas fought to reach us. One on one, none of the Alphas could take the princes. But as a mob? We wouldn't survive.
I wouldn't survive.