Chapter 36 Beginning Again
ARIA'S POV - Six Months Later
"You're terrible at this," I said, laughing as Sebastian tried to make human coffee.
"I haven't had to make coffee in eight hundred years," he protested. "Cut me some slack."
This was our new normal. Coffee dates. Movie nights. Walking through town without dimensional rifts or ancient evils interrupting. Just two people getting to know each other.
"Tell me something," I said as we sat in our favorite café. "Something I don't know yet."
He thought for a moment. "I'm afraid of birds."
"What? The ancient vampire lord is afraid of birds?"
"They're unpredictable!" he said defensively. "They fly at your face without warning!"
I burst out laughing. Without our bond, I couldn't feel his emotions, but I could see them—the way his eyes crinkled when he smiled, the slight blush when he was embarrassed.
It was different from before. Slower. More deliberate. But in some ways, better.
"Your turn," he said. "Tell me something."
"I've been having dreams," I admitted. "About things I can't quite remember. A garden of roses. A curse. Fighting something made of shadows."
His face went serious. "The bond echo. Roslyn said it might happen."
"Are they real memories?"
"Yes," he said quietly. "From our life before."
"Do you want to tell me about it?"
He was quiet for a long moment. "I'm afraid if I do, it'll ruin this. What we're building now."
"Or maybe it'll help me understand you better," I countered.
So he told me. Not everything—that would take hours—but the important parts. The Winter Feast. How we'd met. How I'd changed him. How we'd fought impossible battles and won.
How I'd chosen to break our bond to save the world.
"I was so angry at you," he admitted. "For weeks, I hated you for making that choice. For choosing everyone else over us."
"But not anymore?"
"Now I understand," he said. "You were being the person I fell in love with—someone brave enough to sacrifice everything for what's right. I was the selfish one, wanting to keep you even if it doomed millions."
I reached across the table and took his hand. No golden light this time, no magical bond. Just skin on skin. Human connection.
"I think I would have made the same choice," I said. "Even now, not remembering—I think I'd still choose to save everyone."
"I know," he said. "That's why I'm falling in love with you all over again."
My heart skipped. "Really?"
"Really. It's different this time—slower, less desperate—but just as real. Maybe more real, because we're choosing this. Not destiny or magic or necessity. Just choice."
I smiled. "I'm falling for you too. The you that's afraid of birds and makes terrible coffee but still shows up every day trying."
We sat in comfortable silence, just being together.
Then my phone rang. Elena.
"Aria, you need to come to the healing house. Now. Something's wrong."
We rushed over to find Elena, Kieran, and Roslyn gathered around a portal—one that shouldn't exist anymore. All the dimensional rifts had been closed six months ago.
"What is this?" Sebastian demanded.
"A message," Roslyn said grimly. "From Morgana."
The portal shimmered, and Morgana's voice echoed through: "Hello, heroes. Did you really think your sacrifice solved everything? That breaking one bond would fix reality itself?"
"What are you talking about?" I asked.
"The dimensional merge wasn't an accident," Morgana said. "It was the universe trying to evolve. Trying to unite all realities into one cohesive whole. And you stopped it."
"We saved everyone!" Elena protested.
"You delayed the inevitable," Morgana corrected. "In five years, maybe ten, the dimensions will try to merge again. And again. And again. Each time more violently, until either the merge succeeds or all realities tear apart trying."
My stomach dropped. "You knew. You knew breaking our bond wouldn't really fix things."
"I knew," she admitted. "But I needed the dimensional energy to stabilize long enough for me to do what's necessary."
"Which is?" Sebastian asked coldly.
"Become the permanent bridge," Morgana said. "I've spent six months absorbing power from all seventeen dimensions. In twenty-four hours, I'll complete my transformation. I'll become the living anchor point that allows all realities to coexist without chaos. I'll be the bond you refused to be."
"That'll kill you," Roslyn breathed. "Containing that much power—you'll burn out in months."
"I know," Morgana said softly. "But six months of being important, of finally having purpose beyond guilt and suffering—that's enough for me. I told you sacrifice was necessary. You taught me that."
The portal started to close.
"Wait!" I shouted. "There has to be another way!"
"There is," Morgana said. "You and Sebastian could rebond. Could take my place. Your connection was strong enough to anchor reality before. It could do so again, permanently this time. You'd live, and I'd be free."
Sebastian grabbed my hand. Through no bond at all, just touch, I felt his fear.
"But that would mean giving up everything you've rebuilt," Morgana continued. "The slow, normal relationship. The choice. The freedom. You'd be bound again—not by love this time, but by necessity. Trapped together forever whether you wanted it or not."
"How long do we have to decide?" Sebastian asked.
"Twenty-four hours," Morgana said. "Same as before. Choose wisely, heroes. Your bond or my life. Love freely chosen or duty forcibly bound."
The portal snapped closed.
We stood in silence, the weight of another impossible choice crushing us.
"Not again," Elena whispered. "This can't be happening again."
But it was.
And this time, I had something to lose that I didn't before—the chance to love Sebastian without destiny forcing us together.
He looked at me, and I saw the same conflict in his eyes.
"What do we do?" I asked.
He squeezed my hand. "I don't know. But we have twenty-four hours to figure it out."
"Together?"
"Always."
And somewhere in another dimension, Morgana waited for our answer—knowing whatever we chose would break someone's heart.