Chapter 60 The Third Choice
ARIA'S POV
"Sebastian, run!" I screamed as Nyx's shadow tendrils reached for him.
He didn't move. Just stood there, his hand frozen inches from my chains, his face twisted with impossible grief.
Through our bond, I felt his despair. Either I let you die, or I doom everything.
"There has to be another way!" I yanked against the chains, my wrists burning. Around us, the throne room descended into chaos. Vampires fled. Warriors attacked Nyx uselessly. And Morgana—what was left of Morgana—screamed as the ancient entity devoured her.
"There isn't." Sebastian's voice broke. "Aria, I'm so sorry. I'm so—"
"Stop apologizing and think!" I shouted. "You survived eight hundred years by being smarter than everyone. So be smarter now!"
Nyx laughed, the sound scraping against reality itself. "How touching. The human still has hope. Let me crush that for you."
She gestured, and suddenly I could see—really see—what she was. Not just a creature from the void, but something worse. She was the absence of everything. Every failed timeline, every destroyed world, every hope that died before it could live. She was entropy given form.
And she wanted our bond because it was the opposite—creation, life, connection.
"If you merge," Nyx purred, "I'll use that connection as a bridge between life and death. I'll become the axis point of all existence. Every living thing will be mine to control."
"Then we don't merge," Sebastian said, his voice hollow. He looked at me, and tears tracked down his face. "Aria, I have to let you go. It's the only way to—"
"No, you don't."
The voice came from behind us.
Kieran limped forward, blood streaming from a dozen wounds. In his hands, he carried something that glowed with golden light.
"There's a third option," he said, breathing hard. "One you're both too close to see."
He held up what looked like a crystal vial filled with liquid sunlight. "This is Sanguine essence. The pure, concentrated power of the First Bloodline. I found it in the archives while researching Aria's heritage."
"What does it do?" I demanded.
"It severs bonds." Kieran's eyes met mine with terrible sympathy. "Completely. Permanently. If you drink this, your connection to Sebastian will be destroyed. You'll both survive, and Nyx gets nothing."
My heart stopped. "No. There has to be—"
"There isn't," Kieran said gently. "I'm sorry, Aria. It's your bond or everyone's existence."
Through our connection, I felt Sebastian's anguish mirror my own. We'd only just found each other. Only just started to hope for something beyond duty and death.
And now we had to choose to destroy it.
"Do it," Sebastian said hoarsely. "Give her the vial."
"Sebastian—"
"Please." His voice cracked. "Let me save you this one time. Let me do the right thing before it's too late."
Kieran broke my chains and pressed the vial into my hands. It was warm, pulsing with power that made my Sanguine gift sing in recognition.
"Drink it," he urged. "Before Nyx realizes what we're doing."
I looked at Sebastian. At this ancient, broken vampire who'd spent eight centuries punishing himself for his sister's death. Who'd finally learned to hope again because of me.
"I love you," I whispered through the bond.
"I love you too." His smile was devastated. "That's why you have to do this."
I raised the vial to my lips.
Nyx shrieked, realizing the trap she'd set was collapsing. "NO! You can't—"
I drank.
Power exploded through me—pure, ancient, absolute. It felt like swallowing the sun. I screamed as the Sanguine essence tore through my blood, seeking the bond with Sebastian.
Found it.
Began to sever it.
Through our connection's final moments, I felt everything—Sebastian's love, his grief, his desperate hope that I'd survive this. Felt the curse that had bound him for eight hundred years finally, fully break.
Felt our souls, which had just started to intertwine, being ripped apart.
The pain was unbearable.
Then the bond went silent.
I collapsed, the empty vial shattering on the floor. The golden light faded. And where our connection had been—that warmth, that constant presence—there was nothing.
Just horrible, empty silence.
"Aria!" Sebastian caught me, but I couldn't feel him through the bond anymore. Couldn't sense his emotions or share his thoughts. He was just a stranger with ice-blue eyes filled with tears.
"It's done," Kieran said quietly. "The bond is broken."
Nyx howled in rage. "You think that saves you? I'll just kill you both and take what I need from your corpses!"
She lunged.
But something strange happened.
The dimensional void—the tear in reality she'd crawled through—began to close.
"What?" Nyx spun, confusion replacing her fury. "No. That's impossible. The ritual should keep it open!"
"The ritual was powered by Morgana's obsession," Dante called out, stepping forward from the fleeing crowd. He looked battered but determined. "And you just absorbed her. Which means you're bound by the same rules she was."
Understanding crashed over Nyx's inhuman features. "The blood oath. She swore to protect this realm—"
"And now you're bound by that oath too," Dante finished with grim satisfaction. "You can't destroy what you're sworn to protect. And you can't stay in this dimension without a willing host."
The void closed further, pulling at Nyx like a riptide.
She screamed, clawing at reality, but it was dragging her back. "This isn't over! I'll return! I'll—"
The void snapped shut.
Nyx vanished.
Silence fell over the throne room.
For a long moment, nobody moved. Then someone started crying. Then cheering. Then chaos of a different kind—relief, joy, disbelief.
We'd survived.
I looked up at Sebastian, and he looked down at me, and the absence of our bond felt like a wound that would never heal.
"You're alive," he said softly.
"So are you."
We'd saved everyone.
But the cost—
"My lord." A guard approached hesitantly. "What do we do about the Winter Feast? The ritual was never completed. The brides—"
"Are free," Sebastian said, his voice carrying through the throne room with ancient authority. "The curse is broken. The ritual is ended. The Winter Feast is abolished."
Gasps rippled through the survivors.
"By what right?" an elderly noble demanded. "You can't just—"
"By the right of the one who's ruled this realm for eight hundred years," Sebastian said coldly. "Anyone who disagrees can challenge me. Now."
Nobody moved.
"Good." He turned to me. "Aria, you and the other brides will be returned to the human world with compensation for—"
"No," I interrupted.
Everyone stared at me.
"I'm not going home," I said firmly, getting to my feet despite my shaking legs. "The bond is broken, but there are still injured people. Still damage from Nyx's attack. I'm a healer. Let me help."
Sebastian's expression was unreadable. "You want to stay?"
"I want to finish what we started." I met his gaze, even though it hurt to look at him without feeling his emotions beneath. "Changing this realm. Making it better. That's worth staying for."
For a heartbeat, hope flickered in his eyes.
Then Kieran's hand landed on my shoulder.
"Aria," he said gently. "You should know something. The Sanguine essence—it didn't just sever your bond with Sebastian."
Dread pooled in my stomach. "What did it do?"
"It severed your connection to the Sanguine bloodline entirely." His face was filled with sympathy. "Your healing power. Your ability to sense life force. All of it." He paused. "It's gone."
The world tilted.
"What?" I breathed.
"I'm sorry," Kieran said. "It was the only way to break a bond that deep. The essence had to cut you off from the source of your power completely."
I looked at my hands. Tried to call up the golden light, the healing warmth I'd had my entire life.
Nothing.
I was just human now. Ordinary. Powerless.
And the man I loved was a stranger I could never touch again without risking everything we'd just fought to save.
"Aria—" Sebastian started.
The throne room doors burst open.
A messenger stumbled in, wild-eyed and terrified.
"My lords!" he gasped. "The human world—something's wrong. The portal Nyx opened—it didn't close all the way. Things are crossing over. Creatures. Shadows. And—" he looked at me with horror, "—they're hunting for the Sanguine healer who broke their master's plan. They're hunting for Aria Thornwell."