Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina
Chapter 311: Vows and Consequences
Dean had expected the aisle to feel longer.
He had expected every step to become a negotiation between his dignity and the very real possibility that he would trip over ceremonial fabric in front of three continents, four royal houses, and at least five people who would never let him forget it.
Instead, the aisle felt strangely peaceful.
Arion’s hand was warm beneath his.
Possessive enough that Dean could feel the restraint in the hold and careful enough that he hated him a little for being perfect when Dean was trying very hard not to embarrass both of them by looking at him too much.
Dean looked ahead because he still possessed survival instincts in theory.
"You are staring," he murmured.
Arion’s mouth barely moved. "Yes."
Dean almost missed a step.
Arion’s hand tightened at once.
Dean’s pulse betrayed him so loudly he hoped the orchestra had the decency to cover it.
"You could deny it," Dean whispered.
"I could."
"You didn’t."
"I am not lying before the vows."
Dean’s breath caught somewhere between a laugh and something softer, and Arion looked so pleased with himself that Dean decided, immediately and sincerely, that marriage was going to make him worse.
They reached the dais together.
Otto stood waiting in full imperial regalia, severe, golden, and almost painfully composed. Beside him, Minerva looked like the kind of empress poets wrote about right before being executed for doing it badly. Her gaze moved over Dean with warmth so controlled it almost passed as ceremony.
Dean saw her eyes soften.
That nearly ruined him.
He turned slightly and caught the row where Trevor and Lucas stood.
Trevor looked carved out of restraint.
Lucas was smiling.
Dean saw the exact second his father decided not to cry in front of every hostile diplomatic delegation in the hall and chose pride instead.
That nearly ruined him, too.
Arion noticed.
The bond warmed, not with pressure, but with presence.
’I am here.’
Dean did not look at him.
He did not need to.
The officiant stepped forward, robed in white and imperial gold. The old words began.
Alamina’s wedding rite was not soft.
Dean had learned that during the rehearsals.
There were no pretty promises about endless spring, gentle devotion, or harmonious households. Alamina did not trust peace enough to put it in vows without terms and witnesses.
The rite spoke of alliance. Of shelter. Of sovereignty shared and defended.
Of one life not swallowed by the other, but bound beside it.
Dean had mocked it the first time he read it.
Then he had gone quiet.
Because there, buried beneath ceremony and imperial arrogance, was the one thing he had not expected.
Choice.
Again and again.
Do you stand here by will?
Do you bind by will?
Do you accept the weight by will?
Do you remain, not as captive, not as ornament, not as conquered blood, but as chosen equal beneath crown, law, and witness?
Dean had looked at Arion during rehearsal and said, "Your empire is surprisingly romantic for a military state with emotional constipation."
Arion had replied, "I will inform my ancestors."
Now the words were real.
The hall listened.
The continents watched.
And Dean, who had once thought ceremonies existed to make people beautiful and trapped, stood beside the man who had never once asked him to be smaller to fit the position.
"Dean Fitzgeralt of Palatine," the officiant said, voice carrying through the hall. "Do you stand before the throne, the houses, the people, and the crown by your own will?"
Dean lifted his chin.
"I do."
The answer rang more cleanly than he expected.
Across the hall, Sebastian’s expression did something complicated and proud.
Zion inclined his head.
Sylvia pressed her lips together like she was trying not to make a sound.
Arion’s fingers brushed once against Dean’s palm.
The officiant turned.
"Arion Caelis Varn Alamina, Crown Prince of the Alaminian Empire, Commander of the First Eastern Legion, Heir-Presumptive to the Council of Thirteen, and representative of the Rite of Binding in inter-empire alliances. Do you stand before the throne, the houses, the people, and the crown by your own will?"
"I do."
The simplicity of it made Dean’s chest tighten.
The vows continued.
Arion spoke first.
Because of course Alamina had decided the crown should offer itself before the consort accepted the burden. Dean had once asked if that was tradition or political theater.
Otto had said, "Both."
Arion turned to him fully.
The hall blurred at the edges.
Dean hated that.
He liked it more.
"I take your hand before my family, my empire, and every witness gathered here," Arion said, his voice low but perfectly clear. "Not to possess your will, not to dim your name, and not to place you behind me."
Dean stopped breathing.
Arion’s dark gold eyes held his.
"I take you beside me. In public and in private. In peace, in danger, in all burdens that come with the crown, and in all choices that come before it. I offer you my protection, my loyalty, my house, my body, my name, and the authority that will one day rest on my shoulders."
A faint ripple moved through the hall.
Dean did not care; he was trying very hard not to cry.
Arion’s expression did not change, but the bond burned warm, fierce, almost reverent.
"And I swear," Arion said, softer now, but somehow more devastating, "that no crown I wear will ever come before the mate I chose."
Dean’s eyes shone with unspilled tears, raised in amusement, and fortunately for the dignity of the empire, he did not say something that would be broadcast everywhere and recorded for history.
He only looked at Arion as if he had personally offended him by being impossible to mock.
Then Dean breathed in.
"I take your hand before crown, law, family, and witness," he said, voice steadier than he felt. "Not because you are the Crown Prince, or because empires have determined that I am best suited to serve alongside you."
A faint ripple moved through the hall.
Dean ignored it.
"I take your hand because I chose you. Because you saw me clearly and still wanted me beside you. Because you never asked me to become smaller to survive your world."
Arion’s fingers tightened around his.
Dean smiled, softer now.
"I swear to stand with you. To argue with you when necessary, which will be often. To protect what we build, even from ourselves. And no crown you wear will ever make me forget that before you were my prince, you were my mate."
They kissed, and the hall erupted.
By the time Arion drew back, Dean was breathless, the empire was applauding, Lucas was crying, Dax was laughing, and Dean decided the gala had absolutely no chance of surviving them.