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She planned to destroy them all. He entered expecting nothing. Their dragons had other ideas. Princess Ravenna is spoiled, sharp-tongued, and armed with the smallest dragon in the kingdom. When her father forces her into a marriage competition, she schemes to sabotage every candidate. Make them leave, keep her freedom, stay in control. Then Theron walks in late-a scarred warrior who's survived numerous rejections that should have killed him. The bond between them ignites instantly. Her dragon purrs "home." His dragon whispers "ours." She plans his ruin. He shows her patience.
Chapter 1
Feb 23, 2026
POV: Ravenna
I had already decided to destroy them all before the one spoke his name.
The throne room of Cindravale — The Fire Kingdom — was built for dragons, not men. Black stone walls veined with deep crimson rose toward a ceiling that vanished into shadow, broken only by the great oculus that opened to the grey sky above.
Light fell through it like judgment — a pale column illuminating the obsidian throne where my father — the King Aldric sat, his face carved from the same cold stone as the walls around us.
The air smelled of smoke and ancient ash, of centuries pressed into rock. Every breath tasted of history. Of power. Of the weight that came with ruling a kingdom of fire and wings.
I stood at King's right hand, spine straight, chin lifted, every inch the princess they expected. My white hair was bound in an elaborate crown of braids, each one pulled tight enough to ache at my temples. The weight was familiar. Necessary. Loose hair was for private moments, for weakness, and I had no intention of showing any today.
The court lined the edges of the vast chamber like carrion birds waiting for scraps. Silk rustled. Jewels glittered. I felt their eyes — always on me, always watching. The princess with the white hair and burning blue eyes.
The princess about to be sold to the highest bidder.
I kept my face perfectly empty, a mask of pleasant indifference. Inside, I was sharpening knives.
"The first candidate," announced Lord Varen — Hand of the King and gruff man, scarred from decades of war, with zero patience for dramatics — his voice echoing off ancient stone, "Lord Lucien of House Ashford."
The great doors swung open, and golden light seemed to enter with him.
This one thought he'd already won.
Lucien was beautiful the way paintings were beautiful — technically perfect, designed for admiration. Golden hair caught the pale light like a halo. Blue eyes swept the room with practiced warmth, lingering on faces he deemed important.
Silver armor gleamed, more decorative than functional, polished to a mirror shine. He moved with liquid grace, bowed with measured precision, every gesture calculated to impress.
"Your Majesty. I am honored beyond measure to present myself as a candidate for the princess's hand."
Liar. You'd rehearsed every word.
His eyes found mine, and I saw it — that brief flicker behind the warmth. Calculation. Assessment. He wasn't seeing a woman. He was seeing a throne.
Lucien took his position, still smiling that perfect smile.
Threat. Wanted the crown, not the woman. Destroy second.
"Lord Edmund of House Selfman."
No flourish this time. No golden light. Just a man walking forward with the steady gait of someone who had stopped expecting joy and settled for endurance.
Edmund was handsome in a weathered way — the kind of face that had once been striking before grief carved hollows beneath his eyes. Brown hair streaked with premature grey at the temples. Hazel eyes soft with visible sorrow.
His armor was practical, leather and steel worn smooth with use, the armor of a man who had actually fought in it.
He bowed deeply, respectfully. "Your Majesty. I present myself at my family's request."
He didn't want to be here.
The realization should have pleased me — one less obstacle. Instead it sat uncomfortably in my chest. There was something broken in him. Something that made me want to look away, as if staring too long might reveal wounds I didn't want to acknowledge.
Edmund took his place beside Lucien.
Honorable. Grieving. Didn't deserve what I was going to do. Destroy last.
"Sir Brock of the Eastern March."
I knew what he was before he finished crossing the threshold.
Predator.
Massive — tall and broad, muscles straining against armor that seemed barely able to contain him. A thick neck, heavy jaw, small eyes set too close together. Eyes that found me immediately and lingered.
My skin crawled. A cold sensation slithered down my spine.
He didn't walk into the throne room. He swaggered, each step heavy, deliberate, a declaration of ownership. His bow was barely a nod, an afterthought, an insult dressed in the minimum of courtesy.
"Your Majesty." A pause. Then, lower: "Princess."
The way he said "princess" made it sound like something else entirely. Something that belonged to him.
His eyes slid down my body. Slow. Deliberate. He wanted me to know he was looking. Wanted me to feel it crawling over my skin like insects.
I held his gaze with the flat disinterest of a queen examining a particularly repulsive insect.
Dangerous. Stupid. Thought size made him untouchable. Destroy first. Enjoy it.
"Lord Roland of House Kerr."
The last candidate burst through the doors like an actor making a grand entrance — which was exactly how he saw himself.
Almost handsome. Blond hair styled with obvious care, not a strand out of place. New armor, gleaming, expensive, clearly never tested in battle. He stood too straight, smiled too wide, projected too much of everything.
"Your Majesty! It was the greatest honor of my life to stand before you!"
Poor fool.
His bow was elaborate, theatrical. His voice echoed too loudly, trying to fill space he couldn't occupy. I noticed the way his hands trembled slightly at his sides, the way his eyes darted around, checking if people were impressed.
Coward wearing a hero's costume. Would shatter at the first real test. Barely worth destroying.
My father rose from his throne, robes whispering against stone.
"Four candidates have presented themselves. In accordance with tradition—"
The doors groaned.
My father stopped. The court went silent. Every head turned toward the great entrance, where the ancient doors — doors that required four men to move — were slowly, impossibly opening.
No one had announced another candidate.
A figure stepped through.
For a moment, I couldn't process what I was seeing.
He was massive. Taller than Brock, broader in the shoulders, built like a siege weapon given human form. His armor was dark, worn, scarred — not for ceremony but for war. For survival.
He walked slowly. Each footstep echoed through frozen silence. He didn't hurry. Didn't perform.
He simply arrived.
Then I saw his face.
The scar ran from his left temple, through his eye, down to his jaw — a ragged ruin of flesh that looked like someone had tried to carve his face apart and nearly succeeded. Dark hair, too long, shadowing features that might have been handsome before violence unmade them.
His eyes—
Deep amber, almost gold. Wolf eyes. Predator eyes. They swept the room with flat assessment, dismissing threats, calculating distances.
Then they found me.
The world stopped.
Something ignited in my chest — heat blooming beneath my ribs like fire finding air. A sound began in my bones. Low. Thrumming. A hum that seemed to vibrate through my very soul, drowning out everything else.
What—
His gaze locked with mine. Those amber eyes widened — barely, just for a heartbeat. Recognition. Shock.
Wonder.
The hum grew louder. My heart pounded against my ribs. Solace — sleeping Solace, quiet Solace — suddenly stirred beneath my skin, rising toward consciousness with an urgency she'd never shown before.
Him, she seemed to say. Him.
He stopped at the proper distance from the throne. The silence was absolute. No one breathed.
"Theron," he said.
Just that. Just his name. No title or house. No flowery declarations. His voice was low and rough. Like stone dragged over iron.
"Warrior of Cindravale."
Whispers exploded — five times rejected and monster and what was he doing here — but they seemed distant, muffled, unimportant.
Because he was still looking at me. And I couldn't look away.
The hum was deafening now, drowning everything else. Heat flooded my skin. Solace was screaming inside me, clawing toward something I didn't understand.
My father was speaking but I couldn't hear the words.
All I could see was him. This scarred, ruined, terrifying man who had walked into my carefully planned destruction and set fire to everything.
His eyes held mine. Tired, so tired. The exhaustion of a man who had walked into rooms like this before, expecting to be turned away.
But underneath the tired — hope. Just a flicker. Just an ember he probably hated himself for feeling. Something that made my chest ache in ways I refused to examine.
No.
I wrenched my gaze away. Forced my spine straighter. Made my face into the mask I'd worn my entire life.
But my hands were trembling. And when I glanced back — just once, just for a heartbeat — he was still watching me; still hoping.
And Solace, the smallest dragon in Cindravale, was humming his name like a prayer.

The Dragon Princess and the Warrior
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