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Bound to the Throne: When Love Becomes a Risk. Draven Covenant Trilogy, #2
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233052477
- EAN9798233052477
- Date de parution16/01/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
Bound to the Throne is a political romance about what survives when love is placed inside a system designed to consume it. In a palace built on order, language is never neutral. Every word is weighed, every silence recorded, every gesture translated into leverage. Power does not announce itself with cruelty; it arrives politely, wrapped in procedure, asking only for cooperation. What it takes, it takes slowly-until the loss feels inevitable rather than chosen.
Kion Draven rules within that structure. Trained to value stability above impulse, he has learned to treat restraint as virtue and silence as strategy. His authority is real, his intentions often sincere, yet the throne he serves demands a specific kind of loyalty-one that measures love not by devotion, but by risk. Lumir lives on the other side of that equation. Observed, managed, and increasingly defined by what others fear he represents, he learns how easily a person can be reduced to a file, a route, a liability.
He does not rage against the system. He listens, endures, and discovers that survival is not the same as dignity. As suspicion tightens and political necessity begins to speak in the language of protection, both men are forced into choices that cannot be undone by later explanations. Truth arrives, but not always in time. Understanding is offered, but it does not heal. What remains is the weight of what was not said when it mattered most.
This is not a story of dramatic rebellion or easy forgiveness. It is a story of proximity made dangerous, of love treated as evidence, of silence that becomes a decision. Intimacy here is not safe; it is a vulnerability the system knows how to exploit. Touch restrains more than it comforts. Distance becomes both wound and boundary. Bound to the Throne traces the slow fracture between two people who care deeply, yet are shaped by forces that reward control over trust.
It asks what it means to choose duty when duty demands sacrifice-not in spectacle, but in quiet rooms where no one raises their voice and everything is decided anyway. For readers drawn to slow-burn emotional tension, court intrigue, and romances where power is never abstract and love is never simple, this novel offers a restrained, intimate descent into the cost of choosing the throne-and the permanence of what that choice leaves behind.
Kion Draven rules within that structure. Trained to value stability above impulse, he has learned to treat restraint as virtue and silence as strategy. His authority is real, his intentions often sincere, yet the throne he serves demands a specific kind of loyalty-one that measures love not by devotion, but by risk. Lumir lives on the other side of that equation. Observed, managed, and increasingly defined by what others fear he represents, he learns how easily a person can be reduced to a file, a route, a liability.
He does not rage against the system. He listens, endures, and discovers that survival is not the same as dignity. As suspicion tightens and political necessity begins to speak in the language of protection, both men are forced into choices that cannot be undone by later explanations. Truth arrives, but not always in time. Understanding is offered, but it does not heal. What remains is the weight of what was not said when it mattered most.
This is not a story of dramatic rebellion or easy forgiveness. It is a story of proximity made dangerous, of love treated as evidence, of silence that becomes a decision. Intimacy here is not safe; it is a vulnerability the system knows how to exploit. Touch restrains more than it comforts. Distance becomes both wound and boundary. Bound to the Throne traces the slow fracture between two people who care deeply, yet are shaped by forces that reward control over trust.
It asks what it means to choose duty when duty demands sacrifice-not in spectacle, but in quiet rooms where no one raises their voice and everything is decided anyway. For readers drawn to slow-burn emotional tension, court intrigue, and romances where power is never abstract and love is never simple, this novel offers a restrained, intimate descent into the cost of choosing the throne-and the permanence of what that choice leaves behind.






















