Chapter 21 Tyr
TWENTY-ONE
TYR
The kiss is not gentle.
There’s nothing left in me but desperation—the absolute refusal to let her slip away. My hands frame her face, holding her to me while power surges between us. The power that’s always been mine alone reaches toward her, finds the pattern of her existence, and grips.
She gasps against my mouth. I swallow the sound. Keep kissing her while my magic tears into the divine ice’s assault on her lifespan, refusing to let it continue. Refusing to let forced mortality remain decided.
The mating bond begins to form.
I’ve heard it described before—by other dragons who made this choice, by texts that tried to capture the experience in inadequate words. None of them prepared me for the reality: my power reaching into the structure of her existence and writing itself there, permanent and indelible.
Her lifespan—what’s left of it after the divine ice’s assault—stops collapsing. Stabilizes. Then begins to expand, centuries unfolding where moments remained before. My years becoming her years. My time becoming her time.
She makes a sound against my mouth. Not pain—a different kind of reaction. Relief, maybe. Or wonder. Or the sensation of mortality releasing its grip.
I don’t let her pull back to identify it. Can’t stop. The claiming isn’t complete, and every instinct I possess demands that I finish what I’ve started.
The divine ice blade in her gut begins to crack. My power is spreading through her, carrying with it my absolute rejection of what the Arbiter tried to do. The blade was designed to accelerate mortality—but she’s not mortal anymore. Not entirely. She’s bound to me, and I refuse to let her die.
The blade shatters.
Crystalline fragments scatter across the stone, inert and harmless. The wound remains—she’s still bleeding, still hurt—but the divine assault on her existence has ended. Her lifespan is no longer collapsing.
She’s going to survive.
The dragon roars triumph inside me. I echo it externally—a sound that shakes the ruined chamber, rattles the remaining ice formations, announces to the gods themselves that she is claimed.
But the mating isn’t finished.
The kiss has initiated the bond. Stabilized her existence. Saved her life.
Now comes the claiming.
I pull back enough to look at her. Her eyes have brightened—silver-gray sharpening from the dimness of near-death, gaining an edge they didn’t have before. My power is already changing her, and the transformation has barely begun.
“Tyr—” Her voice is stronger. Still weak, still trembling, but no longer fading.
“Not done.” The words come out layered—man and dragon unified, the distinction between us blurring in ways I’ve never allowed. “The bond needs to be sealed.”
She knows what that means. Her Auric Veil sight lets her read the patterns of magic, and the pattern forming between us is explicit in its requirements. The bond was initiated through the kiss. It must be consummated through claiming.
Blood. Power. Bodies.
“Then seal it.” She reaches for me—her movement stronger now, the borrowed time I’ve given her allowing her body to function. Her hand fists in my shirt, pulling me toward her. “I’m not dying on these fucking stones while we discuss protocol.”
A sound escapes me. Might be a laugh. Might be relief. Might be the dragon expressing satisfaction at her spirit.
“Shelter first.” I gather her in my arms, lifting her from the blood-soaked stone. The wound in her stomach protests—she hisses through her teeth—but she doesn’t fight me. “There’s a threshold zone beyond the gate. Enforcement weakens there.”
“How do you know?”
“I feel it.” My power has expanded with the partial bond, my awareness extending farther than it ever has.
Beyond the ruined gate, past the collapsed temple architecture, there’s a space where divine authority falters.
A cave formation, old and forgotten, where mating magic can take hold without divine interference.
I carry her toward it.
Every step jars her wound. Every movement costs her pain. But her hand stays fisted in my shirt, holding on, refusing to let go even when the going gets difficult.
Good. She’ll need that determination for what comes next.
The shelter reveals itself through a gap in the ruined architecture—a natural cave enlarged by ancient magic, ice-veined but passable. Inside, the divine pressure that’s been constant since we entered the gate ruins fades to a whisper.
I set her down on the smoothest section of stone I can find. She’s still bleeding—the wound in her stomach reopening with movement, crimson spreading across her ruined clothes. But her eyes are bright, her breath steady, her body functioning in ways it couldn’t moments ago.
The partial bond is keeping her alive. The completed bond will make that permanent.
“This is going to hurt.” I strip off what remains of my shirt—shredded by combat, stained with blood and divine ichor. “The claiming mark isn’t gentle.”
She looks up at me. Steady. Certain. “Neither am I.”
My hands find the hem of her shirt. Pause.
“Zephyra.”
“If you ask me if I’m sure, I will stab you myself.”
The laugh that escapes me is rough, surprised out of me. Even now—dying minutes ago, bleeding on cave stone, about to be claimed by a dragon—she meets me with sharp edges instead of softness.
It’s why the obsession became devotion. She doesn’t let me protect her without fighting beside me.
I pull her shirt over her head.