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The Dept of Thorns

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friends to lovers
dominant
badboy
powerful
prince
stepfather
royalty/noble
heir/heiress
bisexual
mythology
small town
multiple personality
musclebear
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Blurb

The Debt of Thorns is a fantasy romance set in a Fae court, following Lyra — a mortal thief who got caught stealing a magical relic and was given a choice: death or three years of service to the Twilight Court's prince.She chose service. She's been regretting and not regretting it ever since.Caelindor is the fae prince she serves — powerful, cold, and maddeningly unreadable. He's spent three years hiding behind arrogance and formality while quietly, almost imperceptibly, choosing her safety over everything else.The story picks up with four days left on her contract — and both of them suddenly unable to pretend that the end of it means nothing.The tension is built on:Unspoken feelings dressed up as practicality — a sword left on her pillow, a seat moved closer at dinnerPower imbalance slowly dissolving as her freedom approachesTwo proud, guarded people circling something neither will name firstIt's slow burn at its core — less about grand declarations, more about the charged silence between two people who have run out of time to keep pretending.

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The Dept Of Thorns
The Debt of Thorns The fae prince was insufferable. Lyra had known this since the moment she'd crossed into the Twilight Court three years ago — a mortal thief with a stolen relic and nowhere left to run. She'd known it when Caelindor had circled her in his throne room, silver eyes catching the candlelight like blades, and offered her a deal instead of death. Serve me for three years. Then your debt is cleared. She should have chosen death. "You're late," he said now, not looking up from the map spread across the war table. His dark hair fell across his jaw, and the twin points of his ears caught the amber glow of the firelight. He was, infuriatingly, beautiful in the way that predators were beautiful — designed to lure you close before they destroyed you. "I was followed," Lyra said, dropping her satchel on the table. "Three of the Shadow Court's hunters. I lost them in the Ashenwood." "Alone?" "Did I stutter?" Now he looked up. Those silver eyes found her with an attention that felt like a hand around the throat — not threatening, exactly. Just... inescapable. "You're bleeding," he said. She glanced down. A long cut along her forearm, already crusting over. She'd forgotten about it. "I noticed." Caelindor straightened from the table and crossed the room with the unhurried grace of someone who had never needed to rush — who had always been the most dangerous thing in any room he'd ever entered. He stopped in front of her, close enough that she could smell the winter-cold scent of him, pine and smoke and something older. "Give me your arm." "It's fine." "Lyra." Her name in his mouth had always been a problem. He said it like it meant something. Like it cost him something. "Give me your arm." She did — because arguing with him was exhausting, and because after three years she had learned, against every instinct she possessed, that he did not actually want her dead. He wrapped his hand around her wrist with a careful precision that felt nothing like the coldness he wore everywhere else. He murmured something in Old Faeric. The cut sealed, slow and warm, like sunlight on skin. She watched the side of his face while he worked. The sharp line of his jaw. The faint crease between his brows. The way his thumb rested, perhaps unnecessarily, against her pulse point. "You could have sent someone else tonight," she said quietly. "I could have." "Why didn't you?" He released her arm. Met her eyes. For a moment — one terrible, suspended moment — the mask he wore slipped, and she saw something underneath it that made her chest ache. "Because the Shadow Court wants you dead specifically," he said, voice carefully even. "And I find I'm not willing to allow that." "I'm your servant." "Yes." A muscle in his jaw tightened. "That's what you are." The lie sat between them, thin as paper. Lyra had spent three years telling herself she despised him. It had been easy at first — he was arrogant, exacting, and took visible pleasure in reminding her of her place. But somewhere in the second year, despising him had started to feel like work. Like pressing a hand against a wound not to heal it, but just to feel something familiar. "My contract ends at the new moon," she said. "Four days." "I'm aware." "And after that, I leave." She needed to say it. Needed to hear it aloud, in this room, with him standing close enough to touch. Caelindor looked at her for a long moment. In the firelight, he looked almost human. Almost uncertain. "You could stay," he said. Low. Almost quiet enough to pretend she hadn't heard it. Her heart did something she would never forgive it for. "As what?" she asked. "Your servant again?" "No." He turned back to the war table, jaw set, the mask sliding perfectly back into place. "As nothing. Forget I said it." But she didn't forget. She stood in his war room with her healed arm and her traitorous pulse and thought about four days, and what it meant that the word stay in his voice felt more dangerous than anything the Shadow Court had ever sent after her.

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