Lyra Vale was meant to save her kingdom with a marriage. Instead, she becomes the property of a monster. On the day of her wedding, the infamous Dragon King storms the cathedral and claims her before the entire royal court. Draven Arkael, ruler of the obsidian fortress of Vaelthorn, feared across kingdoms as the last great dragon lord, invokes an ancient blood debt her family can never repay. Now trapped inside a palace carved from black stone and dragon bone, Lyra discovers the truth hidden beneath centuries of legend: the dragons are dying, enemies move in the shadows, and her blood may hold the key to saving an entire race. But Draven is no savior. Cold, ruthless, and haunted by a betrayal that destroyed his family, he binds Lyra to him not out of love, but vengeance. Yet as assassins close in, ancient magic awakens, and a dangerous bond begins to burn between them, Lyra realizes the Dragon King is hiding far more than hatred behind his dark crown. And the closer she gets to the truth... the more impossible it becomes to resist him. In a world of fire, betrayal, and ancient power, one stolen bride may become the beginning of a war that will either destroy the kingdoms, or remake them entirely. BRIDE OF THE DRAGON KING is a dark fantasy romance filled with enemies-to-lovers tension, dragon lore, forced proximity, deadly secrets, forbidden magic, and a slow-burning bond powerful enough to change the fate of the world.
The cathedral smelled of dying roses and old money.
Lyra Vale stood at the altar and counted the candles because she had run out of prayers. Four hundred and twelve flames burning in iron chandeliers above the heads of every noble family in Aethon, all of them dressed in their finest, all of them watching her like she was a lamb being walked to the block with a ribbon around its neck. Which, she supposed, was close enough to the truth.
Lord Caevan Dross stood waiting at the end of the aisle. He was sixty one years old, wide in the belly, narrow in the eyes, and he had already buried two wives under circumstances that polite society had collectively agreed never to discuss again. He watched Lyra approach with the specific satisfaction of a man acquiring property he had negotiated hard for. Not a husband watching his bride. An investor watching the deed transfer.
She kept walking.
The kingdom of Valedris was three months from collapse. The grain stores were empty. The eastern trade routes had been taxed into uselessness by neighbouring lords who smelled weakness the way wolves smell blood through ice. Her father, King Aldric Vale, stood in the front pew in ceremonial robes that had not been cleaned properly and smiled at her with the desperate brightness of a man who had sold his daughter and needed her to make peace with it quickly.
Lyra had made peace with nothing. She had simply stopped fighting the thing she could not change and started planning for the life on the other side of it. Survive Caevan. Learn his household. Find his weaknesses. Turn them, slowly, into leverage. It was not a romantic strategy. It was the only one she had.
She reached the altar.
The officiator, a thin man in grey ceremonial robes, opened his mouth to begin.
The cathedral doors came off their hinges.
Not broken. Not kicked open. They simply departed from the wall as though the stone itself decided to release them, both massive panels of iron banded oak swinging outward and crashing into the courtyard with a sound like the world clearing its throat. Cold air rushed in from the mountain dark outside, and every candle in the building guttered sideways in the same direction, four hundred and twelve flames all bowing toward the doorway at once.
The man who walked through it was not particularly tall.
That was the first thing Lyra noticed, because she had expected something monstrous and outsized, something that matched the stories. The Dragon King of legend was described in every text she had ever read as enormous, terrible, a creature barely wearing human skin. Draven Arkael walked into the cathedral at the measured pace of a man who had nowhere urgent to be and filled the space with something that had no name. Not size. Not noise. Just absolute, suffocating weight, the way a storm front changes the air before the rain begins.
He was dressed simply. Black coat, no armour, no visible weapons. His skin held the faint gold undertone of old firelight, his hair dark and loose past his shoulders. His face was the kind of face that artists got wrong because they always added cruelty where there was only precision. Every feature deliberate. Eyes the colour of cooling embers, that deep amber burning toward red at the centre, and they moved through the crowd without urgency, taking inventory.
They found Lyra.
He stopped walking.
Nobody in the cathedral breathed. Four hundred and twelve candles had straightened back to attention but the cold had not left the room and Lyra realised it was not cold from the open doors. It was coming from the people around her. Every single noble guest had gone rigid where they sat. Several had moved their hands to their mouths. Lord Caevan Dross, who had survived two decades of court politics through sheer aggressive confidence, had gone the colour of uncooked pastry.
Draven Arkael walked up the aisle.
He did not look at Caevan. He did not acknowledge the officiator or the altar or the four hundred witnesses arranged in perfect witnessing formation. He walked to Lyra the way a man walks to a thing that already belongs to him, and he stopped close enough that she could see the exact temperature of his gaze and determine that it was not rage, not hunger, and not triumph.
It was exhaustion.
Three hundred years of it, compressed into two amber eyes, looking at her like she was the last item on a very long list.
"Lyra Vale," he said. His voice was low and even, built for rooms that echoed. "Daughter of Aldric, heir of the bloodline that bears the debt."
She did not step back. She was proud of that later.
"I don't know you," she said.
"You know the debt."
She did. Every Vale child learned it before they learned anything else, the old story of the treaty and the betrayal and the blood that had never been repaid, told as history, as cautionary tale, as the reason the family name carried that particular shadow even after three centuries of clean living. She had grown up believing it was legend. Old guilt dressed in narrative. The kind of ancestral shame that had no living consequence.
"That debt was never formally contracted," she said. "There is no legal instrument. There is no binding."
"There is a binding older than your legal instruments." He reached into his coat and produced a coin, black metal, stamped with a dragon devouring its own tail, worn smooth with handling. He held it out. "Your ancestor gave this to mine as surety. The debt was his flesh and blood, surrendered willingly, to be claimed at the holder's discretion." He paused. "I have held this coin for two hundred and sixty three years."
"That is not a legal document. That is a coin."
"I did not say it was a document."
King Aldric Vale was making small sounds from the front pew, the sounds of a man trying to form words and failing to select which ones. Lord Caevan Dross had put one hand on the arm of his nearest aide and appeared to be conducting a quiet structural assessment of whether this aide could support his weight if his legs gave out.
Lyra looked at the coin. She looked at the man holding it.
She thought about the grain stores. The empty trade routes. Her father's desperate ceremonial smile. The two dead wives in Caevan's past that polite society had agreed not to discuss.
She thought about what surviving looked like on the other side of this, and whether her strategy of finding weaknesses and turning them into leverage had any application whatsoever to the immortal Dragon King standing in the ruins of her wedding.
"What does the debt require of me?" she asked.
Something moved in his face. Too fast to name.
"You will come to Vaelthorn as my bride. You will remain there until I determine the debt is settled." He lowered the coin. "I will not harm you. I will not force you to act against your own nature. I require only your presence and your compliance with the terms as I explain them."
"And my kingdom? My father?"
"Valedris keeps its autonomy. The debt is with the bloodline, not the crown."
She heard Caevan move behind her, the wet sound of a man working up to speech.
"This is outrageous," Caevan announced, and his voice only shook a little. "She is contracted to me. There are papers. The king himself authorised the match and the terms are legally witnessed and the debt you are describing has no standing in any court on this continent."
Draven turned his head.
Just that. He turned his head and looked at Caevan Dross for perhaps three seconds, and Caevan Dross sat down.
Draven looked back at Lyra.
She realised he had not come here to negotiate with anyone in this room except her. The rest of them were furniture. Witnesses, maybe, in the formal sense. But this conversation had only two participants and he had known that before he walked through the doors.
"Will you come willingly?" he asked.
Four hundred and twelve candles burned in the silence.
Lyra thought of her father. Of Valedris. Of the grain stores and the trade routes and the two dead women no one was allowed to mention. She thought of the shape of a life built on leverage and survival and the cold art of turning other people's weaknesses into exits.
She thought of the way Draven Arkael had looked at her when he stopped walking.
Like a man at the end of a very long list.
Like a man who was tired of carrying something.
She reached out and took the coin from his hand.
It was warm. Far warmer than it should have been from being tucked in a coat pocket, warm like something alive, and when her fingers closed around it she felt it, brief and unmistakable, a pulse. Not her own heartbeat. Something older and larger, pressing once against her palm like a recognition she had no language for.
She closed her fingers around it and looked up at him.
"Take me to Vaelthorn," she said.
He did not smile. He did not look relieved or satisfied or victorious. He looked at her for a moment with that same unreadable exhaustion, and then he turned and walked back down the aisle toward the open doors and the mountain dark beyond.
Lyra followed.
She did not look at her father. She did not look at Caevan, who was making the sounds again. She walked past four hundred and twelve witnesses and out of the cathedral into the cold air, and behind her the candles blew out, all of them, simultaneously, as though the building itself had decided the ceremony was over.
Above the cathedral, something vast moved against the stars.
The coin in her hand pulsed again.
And Lyra Vale understood, with the particular clarity of a woman who had survived a corrupt court by learning to read rooms correctly, that she had not just agreed to repay an old debt.
She had just stepped into a story that started long before she was born, and she had no idea yet how many of the people in it were already dead.
Bride of the Dragon King
Arthur De Peart
Fantasy
Chapter 1 The Wrong Groom
14/05/2026
Chapter 2 The Obsidian Palace
14/05/2026
Chapter 3 The Terms of the Debt
14/05/2026
Chapter 4 What Lives in the Walls
14/05/2026
Chapter 5 The First Fracture
14/05/2026
Chapter 6 Blood Remembers
14/05/2026
Chapter 7 The Bond Stirs
14/05/2026
Chapter 8 Enemies With Faces
14/05/2026
Chapter 9 The Cost of the Bond
14/05/2026
Chapter 10 What He Never Said
14/05/2026
Chapter 11 Fire and Choosing
14/05/2026
Chapter 12 The World After Fire
14/05/2026
Chapter 13 What the Blood Remembers
03/06/2026
Chapter 14 What Sleeps in the Mountain
03/06/2026
Chapter 15 The Preparation
03/06/2026
Chapter 16 The Eastern Coast
Today at 14:43
Chapter 17 The Second Door
Today at 14:45
Chapter 18 The Southern Door
Today at 14:45
Chapter 19 The Triangle
Today at 15:41
Chapter 20 Thirty Hours
Today at 15:42