"e;We should speak with a mage,"e; Brennan said. His voice was steady. He was proud of that.He had forty minutes to get through this war council session. He had been managing rooms for eleven years — hostile nobles, territorial disputes, grievances old enough to have grandchildren. He knew exactly what he was doing.He did not know what to do with this.The mating bond had manifested across a table, in front of witnesses, between Brennan Ashveil and the man who had humiliated him in public five years ago. Luc Varentis: precise, brilliant, and carrying a debt he had been waiting — for five years — for Brennan to collect.Brennan never collected.That was, Luc thought, the worst part. He had prepared for every form the retaliation might take. He had prepared counters and contingencies and the particular readiness of someone who knows the blow is coming and intends to absorb it cleanly. Five years, two postings, a dozen shared court functions. Nothing. As if what had happened was a thing that had occurred and then simply stopped mattering.It had not stopped mattering. It had calcified. And now, somehow, impossibly, they were bonded.Bite the Hand That Forgives is a slow-burn fantasy romance about two men who have been misreading each other for years — and the mating bond that forces them into the same room long enough to stop. Brennan is a wolf-blood sentinel who has spent his career making every room work, absorbing every cost, and performing steadiness so thoroughly that he has almost forgotten there is a self beneath the function. Luc is a dragon-blood noble who built an entire interior architecture of careful compartmentalization after a betrayal at seventeen taught him that openness was a liability. He keeps his feelings in an inventory. He builds shelves.The bond doesn't care about shelves.What follows is not a simple love story. It is a story about what it costs to be seen — genuinely, completely, without the professional distance that makes surviving a court possible — by someone who has no interest in making that easier for you. It is a story about anger kept as proof, about the difference between forgiving and disappearing, about learning to want things out loud after years of deciding that wanting was a structural weakness.There is one grudge. It is kept on purpose. It is never weaponized. That distinction is everything.Set in a richly imagined world of bloodline-based magic, territorial politics, and a court that runs on managed language, this novel offers the slow accumulation of honest weight between two deeply guarded people — joint sessions with a bone-dry court mage, a garrison road walked in the dark, a small antechamber, a stone floor, a door opened wider. Two characters with incompatible defenses who find, against every prepared contingency, that the other person is more interesting than the wound.Can a man who has spent his life performing forgiveness learn the difference between grace and self-erasure? Can someone who has never let himself want anything choose — deliberately, not fated — to want this?