THE CORONATION đđ„
The Northern Crownlands, ruled from Montana, have long been a seat of law and reform. Beyond them lies the Far Northâa borderland where threats appear first and mercy comes last.Seren Merrowâs family is infamousâfor joining a rebellion that nearly toppled the royals, they were exiled, shunned, and whispered about for fifteen years. Inherited guilt is all she knew. Her father and uncle accepted their past with regret, but with dignity. Everything changed when her sister bonded with Prince Lysander of the Northern Crownlands. Together, they stopped a new rebellion from rising and inspired reforms that rebuilt their familyâs honor.Now, five years later, her sister is Queen. Seren is a confident healer, skilled hunter, and woman who has survived exile, threats, and sudden fame. But nothing could prepare her for Cassius Blackwell, the Arctic Crownland Northern heir whose icy reputation was forged by betrayal and loss.Thrown together by fate, Seren and Cassius must navigate danger, desire, and the bitter irony of their bond: she is the daughter of traitors, he is a king shaped by the traitorous acts of his own peopleâand neither of them is willing to back down.The Exiled Mate of a Ruthless King is a slow-burn fantasy romance full of fire, wit, and the kind of love that refuses to be tamed.
Chapter One â Seren
My family was never supposed to return.
Exile has a way of rewriting you of hollowing out your name until it becomes a warning instead of a lineage. For years, ours was spoken only in accusation. Traitors. Sympathizers. Bloodline guilt, passed down without trial or mercy.
I grew up knowing exactly how easily a reputation could swallow a truth.
We were punished for sins we didnât commit, cast out while the guilty ruled comfortably behind stone walls and titles. The North remembers blood. The South remembers fear. And the central packs those who claimed neutrality remembered nothing at all.
Until my sister.
Elora didnât just come back. She challenged everything.
Her bond to Lysander shattered the old order not gently, not cleanly. Hatred didnât dissolve overnight. It sharpened. We endured kidnappings, threats disguised as justice, whispers that called her a traitor queen before she ever wore a crown. Respect wasnât handed to her because she loved a prince. It was dragged, bleeding, into the light by her choices.
And by ours.
Sebastianâs rebellion had forced the truth into the open. Lies unraveled. Loyalties cracked. My father, my mother, my uncle and his mate stood where others fled. When the dust settled, it wasnât mercy that earned them council seats.
It was action.
Five years later, the realm looks different. Not healed. Not whole. But altered.
And so am I.
While Elora learned to rule, I learned to mend. Bones. Flesh. Nerves. Trauma that never quite leaves the body even after the wound closes. I trained as a healer not because it was expected but because it was necessary. And when the borders remained dangerous long after peace was declared, I learned to hunt.
Quietly. Efficiently. Without spectacle.
Years ago, no one would have noticed. Now, they have no choice.
Today, my sister becomes queen in truth, not just in name and know my family is proud..so am I.
And I stand among the healers not because I belong to the crown, but because I belong to the people who will need help long after the night ends.
Part two: The Coronation
The Great Hall trembles with sound.
Howls ripple through the stone as the crowns are liftedâancient silver etched with oaths older than memory. Lysander stands tall, unflinching, Eloraâs hand locked in his as though the world itself might try to pull them apart.
It doesnât.
When the crowns are placed, the realm erupts.
Cheers crash against the walls. Wolves shift and howl in unison, a sound that feels like history finally exhaling. Elora doesnât bow beneath the weight she lifts her chin. Not as a symbol. As a queen who has already paid the cost. She looks in the crowd and smiles at her and their family. Seren smiles back.
I let myself breathe.
The festivities spill outward music, firelight, wine flowing too freely. Delegations from every region crowd the halls, including the North. I feel them before I see them. The air tightens. The kind of presence that commands space without asking permission.
It happens quickly.
A servant stumbles. A goblet shatters. The scent hits sharp and wrong bitterroot laced with nightbane. Poison. Sloppy. Desperate.
They donât get far.
Guards move instantly. Someone screams. Iâm already kneeling beside the intended victim, fingers steady as I force a tincture between trembling lips. The man lives. Barely.
When I rise, I feel it.
Eyes on me.
I move through the chaos with purpose, directing healers, barking quiet instructions. Then I see him.
Tall. Northern build. Broad shoulders wrapped in dark ceremonial armor that hasnât seen peace in decades. His presence is oppressive in the way storms areâinevitable, consuming.
He watches me as I pass.
Not like prey. Like a problem.
My sisterâs resemblance must be obvious same dark hair, same bone structure but where Elora radiates warmth, I donât soften my stride. I donât slow. I donât bow.
His beta leans in, murmuring something.
âSheâs one of the healers and sister to Queen Elora Merrow Valen,â I hear him say.
The man..Cassius Blackwell nods once.
Future King of the North. Vicious. Insufferable. Ruthless. A reputation carved in blood and fear.
He steps into my path.
âAs acting authority over Northern security,â he says coolly, âIâll need assurance that the packs responsible for medical oversight are competent enough to prevent another attempt.â
There it is. Control disguised as concern.
I meet his gaze without flinching.
âWe are,â I reply evenly. âAnd the threat has already been contained.â
His jaw tightens. Heâs not used to being dismissed.
âYouâll provide a report,â he says.
I smile small, polite, dangerous.
âWe can handle it.â
The air snaps.
His eyes darken, something sharp and interested flickering beneath the irritation. âYou speak boldly for someone standing in a royal hall.â
I tilt my head. âAnd you assume authority in a kingdom that isnât yours.â
Silence spreads like spilled wine.
For a moment, I genuinely forget who he is. Then someone says his name low, reverent, fearful and the pieces click into place.
Prince Cassius Blackwell of the Arctic Crownland pack ..the very far north.
Of course.
I hate that heâs beautiful. Hate the pull curling low in my chest. Hate that fate would dare draw me toward a man like him.
Across from me, I see it on his face too.
He hates it.
Hates that heâs drawn to a woman who doesnât care for his presence. Hates that she meets his dominance with defiance. Hates that she looks at him like a man not a king.
For now, neither of us yields.
And the realm, still celebrating, has no idea what it just set in motion.