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3.15.2026

Lies that Bleed (The Ember War #1)


My stars, Aisling, you’re my best friend
and you don’t even know it yet.



Lies that Bleed
Leia Stone
The Ember War, book one
ebook, 412 pages
Published June 23, 2024
ASIN B0CYCW6KH8
ISBN 9781951578367



For tonight, we either lived or died in The Wilds. Nothing else mattered.

As the daughter of the emperor, Aisling Everhart was born into privilege. She has trained her entire life to go into The Wilds and have a chance at bonding with a creature that can give her unknown power. Half of the candidates will die the first night, and only a few will make it out. Those who survive the bonding are quickly conscripted into the Imperial Fleet to join the war.

What Aisling never could have prepared for, was Kohen Badshah, former prince of Imbria, her father’s sworn enemy. When Kohen proposes an unlikely alliance, she accepts. They enter The Wilds together, and Aisling realizes that she was woefully unprepared, especially when nothing goes to plan.

After barely surviving, she’s thrust into the Imperial Fleet to learn how to control her new gifts, but as her power grows, so do the dangers—including multiple attempts on her life. When you don’t know who is friend or enemy, it’s hard to trust, but Kohen Badshah appears to be protecting her.

It’s that or he’s playing one excellent long game. Which one, only time will tell.

As future empress, Aisling has long prepared for the day she would enter the Wilds and risk her life to bond with a magical creature that would bestow upon her, and all other worthy candidates, a magical power that could be used not just in the war against Luska but also grant the lesser privileged a higher standing within society.

As her father's heir, her chance is a given. For others, the opportunity is left to a lottery. And to the rigging by the powers that be. Aisling is well aware of her father's schemes. First, to have her betrothed enter the Wilds with her, ensuring their mutual success would also provide a stronger rule. And secondly, to have the son of the late infamous traitor be put to death without any political backlash.

What Aisling is unprepared for, however, is meeting Kohen Badshah, her best friend's name being pulled in the lottery, and her betrothed's infidelity. The latter of which blamed entirely on a man's need to "scratch an itch". And for the love of all things worthy must we be so cliché?!

Kohen enters the Wilds alongside a number of his fellow Imbrians with a reputation steeped in violence.

And it's a rep that Aisling is practically questioning from the onset. His every act, his every word, has her second guessing the long held prejudice spawned from stories circulated by his enemies and pounded into her by her father.

Three days. Survive three days in the Wilds, claim a beast worthy of an empress (but not a challenge to the reigning emperor) and keep her bestie safe. That's it. That's the goal.

Kohen's motivations are similar. Survive. Survive not only his rival candidates and the beasts of the Wilds but also the many assassins the emperor has sent after him. Protect his kin, those he claims as his family. And bond with a creature that can give him the power he so desperately needs.

While Aisling intends to steer clear of the legendary Talanagi beasts, Kohen is focused on bonding nothing less.

By a third of the book, Aisling has sparked a tentative friendship with Anika (Kohen's steadfast friend and passionate supporter), ensured her best friend has survived and bonded to wolf, commits treason by killing off two of her father's men when they nearly take out Kohen, witnesses that same Kohen fight and bond to a dragon, and she herself bonds to a firebird. Which results in her burning up in a ball of fire, dying, and rising from the dead inside of a bodybag after Kohen carries her corpse from the forest.

Oh, Kohen. That boy had my heart throughout.

From his bonded dragon, Onyx, Kohen inherits a power of fire but also the much feared power of foresight. He can see a future of battles and death but with them, visions of he and Aisling together as lovers. He struggles to reconcile his feelings of possessiveness and the urge to protect her with the very unfortunate present wherein they are strangers to one another and, by extension of her father, practically enemies.

As he contends with the weight of this power, Kohen desperately seeks the connection that has not yet come to fruition. His future lover and best friend wants only to keep him at a distance.

Aisling, meanwhile, has her own powers to conceal. While becoming a living fireball may be a praiseworthy skill, her ability to control one's mind would see her terminated by her very own people for being too strong a threat.

Add on that Aisling's firebird raised Kohen's dragon as if he was her own hatchling and these two main characters have more red strings tying their fates than your average YA leads.

And it all ends on a cliffhanger.

4 out of 5 stars. Immediately diving into book two and a small part of me is very much hoping that Kohen is indeed playing the long game. Metal Slinger has ruined me for life.

Available in ebook | hardcover | paperback | audiobook

Next in the series:


2026/09