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Many elves were like her: shackled to someone they couldn’t have, existing in a state of constant fear that they would lose their minds due to devastating hormone imbalance.

And then there were the consequences they were only now coming to understand. The moratorium on Other consorts had been in place for a thousand years. That spanned two generations of elves, many of whom went on to procreate with partners who were not bound to them in the way they were supposed to be. It had not only narrowed their gene pool significantly, but had a cascade effect on the children produced by those unions.

The healers who had diagnosed Camille’s mother didn’t have an explanation other than the circumstantial evidence that children born to two generations of unbound elves were dying fast. Marian’s parents andtheirparents had all been unbound, their offspring created through loveless unions. Camille had lost sleep wondering if that genetic legacy had played a role in her mother’s lifelong misery, only to culminate in her pitiful death.

Swallowing around a jagged lump in her throat, Camille asked, “And what have you found so far?”

Margot leaned back in her seat, her fingers half curled around the delicate handle of her teacup. Her angular features took on a look of frustration when she answered, “A lot and also nothing.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean that in the effort to keep all of this a secret for so long, the actual pool of research is painfully shallow.” She heaved out a large sigh. “It doesn’t matter how much money you pour into something if you don’t have the right people looking into it. If the issue had been put on the medical radar across the world a hundred years ago, we might actually have an idea of how to help people by now. Or at least we could have warned you that elves were steadily poisoning their own population with unions.”

Camille held very still. She could feel her heart beating faster in her chest, the frenzied pulse echoing down to her fingertips. Guilt and anxiety twisted her stomach into knots.

Was she making the same mistake as her ancestors by pursuing a union with an elf who was unbound? Would her children suffer the same fate as her mother?

It didn’t matter that all available information pointed toward Camille herself being safe.Herparents were consorts, which seemed to wipe the genetic slate clean. But what about her own children?

“If we eliminated the need for pheromone binding in the first place, none of this would be an issue,” she breathed, thinking of her own torture, of the uncertainty of her future. Bitterness laced every word.

“I’m not sure that’s true.” Margot’s voice was prim, lacking any false sympathy or pity. When Camille glanced at her expression, she found it thoughtful. “And what I do know is that the better part of all that money and researchhasgone into trying to find a ‘cure’for the pull — to absolutely zero success. The body needs hormones to function, Cammie, and you can’t turn off one without causing a ripple effect across the entire, complex system.”

Camille dug her capped claws into the edge of the table, the tips sinking through the white tablecloth all the way into the wood below. “How do you know for sure?”

Margot’s expression darkened into a grim mask. “Because I have access to highly confidential records, Cammie, and I can tell you that more than one teamtriedit.”

She sat back suddenly, cold astonishment stealing her breath. Camille wasn’t even aware of the kernel of hope that had existed, buried in her breast, until the life was snuffed out of it. “I…” She closed her mouth, only to open it again a second later. “What happened?”

“They died.”

ChapterTwelve

Margot looked away,her lips pressed into a firm, bloodless line. There was a lengthy pause as they both digested the grim truth.

When she spoke again, a thread of anger wove itself into her soft voice, “The results didn’t stop them the first, or second, or third, or even thefifthtime. Six trials, all with desperate volunteers, ended with the death of the subjects due to rapid tumor growth, irregular hormone regulation, or heart attacks induced by shock.”

It was stupid, Camille thought, that she felt like crying over something that had never been a possibility to begin with. But she did.

Camille blinked hard several times and turned her face away, ostensibly to examine the beautiful restaurant but really to hide the devastation she knew was written across her face.

Her voice cracked when she said, “So there really is no hope.”

For her. For others like her.

The choice would always be impossible. Either you found a way to be with your consort or you suffered. If you dared to try and find some happiness on your own, you might very well doom those you loved to a miserable end at some indeterminate point in the future.

For her, there was no winning.

“I’m sorry, Cammie,” Margot murmured, soft and full of feeling. “I wish I could give you a better answer. I really, really do.”

Sheknewit hadn’t always been like this. Not everyone found their consorts even before the moratorium, after all. Was it simply that they had tipped the scales too far in their pursuit of isolation? Perhaps the poison couldn’t get a foothold when the majority of babies were born to bound couples, but when that number flipped…

We’ve cursed ourselves,she thought, assailed by grief and useless rage.Gods, there is no saving people like me.

A soft hand touched her arm, just above where her royal blue gloves ended. When Camille’s eyes darted up in surprise, she found Margot reaching across the table, her expression creased with concern. “Cammie, if you ever want to talk about—”

“Madam Solbourne.” One of her guards appeared by Margot’s elbow, his large, black-clad form bent slightly at the waist to speak near her ear.