LOGINThe transition wasn’t some smooth journey it was a straight-up violation. One second I was shaking on the side of the road, with my heart slamming against my ribs, and the next the air turned thick and stale, like I’d been dropped to the bottom of the ocean.
My lungs burned as I tried to suck in a breath. It tasted like old dust, cold stone, and that nasty sweet smell of funeral flowers left rotting in a closed room.
When the spinning in my head finally stopped and my eyes focused again, I wasn’t on the rainy road anymore. I was standing smack in the middle of a massive foyer that looked like someone had carved it straight out of a mountain.
Everything was black marble and brushed steel. Sleek, super modern, and completely soulless. It didn’t feel like a house, it felt like a fancy tomb that somebody had scrubbed clean because they hated anything warm or alive.
I stumbled, legs were heavy as lead, and I caught myself on a sharp-edged console table. The steel bit into my palms like ice. I glanced down at myself and almost threw up. I was still in my soaked waitress uniform, covered in mud and road grime from the crash. I looked pathetic next to all this cold perfection.
He was standing a few feet away with his back to me. He’d ditched the coat, and the tailored black shirt underneath hugged his shoulders like it was painted on.
He didn’t even look at me. Just moved with that smooth, dangerous grace toward a huge wall of glass overlooking a city I didn’t recognize at all. The skyline was all jagged edges, glowing with neon lights that pulsed like veins. The sky above it was this weird bruised purple. It looked completely alien, but it was beautiful in a messed-up way and it made me want to scream.
“Where the hell am I? And who the hell are you?” I demanded. My voice cracked, sounding tiny and way too human in that giant empty space. I wrapped my arms around myself, trying to stop the shaking, but it wasn’t just the cold. It was the heavy weight of his presence pressing down on me, it felt like I was standing next to a live power line.
He turned around and looked at me. He didn’t rush or snap, but he moved slow and deliberate, like a predator who already knew his prey was trapped. His boots echoed on the marble with every step, like a countdown.
“I am Caius Kane, Andrea,” he said, stopping just inches away. He was so close I could feel that unnatural chill rolling off him, totally opposite to the burning heat in his eyes. “And you’re in my sanctuary. A place where the rules of your world are just suggestions.”
“I have a life,” I spat back, letting my anger cover up the terror clawing at my throat. “I’ve got a job and rent to pay. People are gonna notice I’m gone. You can’t just grab me off the street like some damn trophy.”
He let out a low, dark laugh that crawled across my skin. He reached out, his hand hovering just above my shoulder without actually touching me, but the pressure alone made me stumble back.
“Your ‘life’ was barely hanging on by a thread you didn’t even know about,” he murmured, his eyes locking onto mine so hard it felt like a physical grab.
“You really think I’d leave loose ends? That accident was meant to be final. To everyone back in your world, you’re just another name on a coroner’s report. You’re a ghost now.” he said and the floor felt like it was ripped out from under me.
All the air rushed out of my lungs. He hadn’t just kidnapped me, he had erased me. I wasn’t a person anymore, I was a blank page he’d already decided how to fill.
“You’re a monster,” I whispered. The words tasted like blood in my mouth.
“I am a King,” he corrected, his voice dropping into this silky, dangerous purr. He finally touched me,his fingers brushing my throat. It wasn’t gentle, it was firm, a reminder that he owned me. His thumb traced my racing pulse at my neck, his skin was so cold it left a mark. “And you are the prize I’ve waited ten years to collect.”
He leaned in even closer, his face right there, and I could see that subtle, hungry shift in his eyes. “You spent your whole life thinking you were just some ordinary girl, Andrea. You were wrong, you were being cultivated. Every choice, every crappy job, that shitty apartment, the way you saw the world, it was all leading you right here. To this floor. Into my arms.”
He pulled his hand back and the sudden lack of his touch left me feeling weirdly exposed, shivering in the cold sterile air. He waved a hand at the huge empty room like it was nothing.
“You’re going to want to run,” he said, his voice flat like he didn’t care either way. “You’ll try to find a way out, try to get back the life you think you lost and I encourage it. That is what makes the chase more fun.”
He turned away, his presence pulling back like a tide, leaving me standing alone in the middle of a room that felt way more like a cage than a home.
“My guards are waiting at every exit,” he added over his shoulder, voice echoing through the huge space. “If you try to leave, they won’t be as patient as I am. You belong to me now, Andrea Alfonso. You’re the heartbeat of this kingdom, so I suggest you figure out your place really quick.”
He disappeared down the shadowy hallway.
I stood there trembling in the silence. I wasn’t just scared anymore I was pissed. He thought I was some pet he could stick on a shelf. But when I caught my reflection in the dark polished wall, I saw something else in my eyes: that stubborn spark that refused to die.
He’d taken my world, but he hadn’t taken my fight. If he wanted a war, fine. I was going to turn this cage into his worst nightmare.
The throne room was like an icebox, and not just because of the architecture. The atmosphere in there was so toxic you could practically taste it, like licking a battery that had been sitting in a puddle of bile. Caius was standing on the dais, with his arms crossed over his chest, looking like he was five seconds away from deciding which one of these snooty Elders he wanted to decapitate first.I was standing beside him, with my hands in my pockets. I was wearing a simple coat, something that didn’t scream I’m the secret weapon. I kept my face blank, my eyes dull, acting exactly like the human pet they wanted me to be. It was hilarious, honestly. They were sweating bullets, terrified of what I might be, and I was just standing there thinking about how much I wanted a damn coffee.Then came Elder Vane, the guy with the eyes like frozen pond water. He was the biggest prick in the room, the one who’d been the loudest about me being a stain on the lineage. He stepped forward, his robes
Lysandra scrambled backward, her hands shaking, her royal robes torn and stained with the grime of the shop floor. She didn't say a word. She couldn't. She just turned and bolted, vanishing into the night like a frightened rat.I watched her scrambled out, my heart still thumping with that weird, electric rhythm. "She’s going to tell them everything," I said, turning to Caius. "She’s going to tell them what I did. What I am." i whispered.Caius walked over, his presence washing over me, cool and firm. He took my face in his hands, his thumbs tracing my cheekbones. He didn't look worried, instead he looked satisfied."I know," he said. "And that is exactly what I need them to do.""What?" I asked, confused."They’ve been stagnating for centuries, Andrea. They’ve grown fat on tradition and comfortable in their arrogance. They think they know the limits of the world because they’ve never been challenged." He leaned down, his forehead against mine, his eyes burning with a dark, terrifying
The air in the shop didn't just turn cold; it curdled. I was in the back room, trying to force a stubborn, rusted padlock to melt just by staring at it, when the front door didn't just open, it exploded off its hinges.I didn't need to look to know, I felt the intrusion like a splinter in my brain. There were four of them. Cold, arrogant, and smelling of stale incense and centuries of decayed ambition and Lysandra was at the front, flanked by three of her lapdogs, they looked like soulless enforcers."Julian," I hissed, but he was already moving. He didn't stand a chance, not against four of them at once. He lunged, trying to buy me time to get to the back, but they were too fast. One of them caught him by the throat, slamming him against the wall with enough force to shatter the plaster, another one drove a jagged, silver-tipped blade through his shoulder, pinning him there like a butterfly in a display case."So little pet" Lysandra said, her voice was a silky, poisonous whisper
Caius didn't look, he looked at me with a kind of predatory pride. "There’s something we’re missing. The Pact doesn't do this, I need to know exactly what you are, and I know exactly where the answers are buried.""You mean the archives?" I asked and he nodded, his expression hard and completely unfazed. "The deepest vaults. It has scrolls that hasn't been touched in centuries. If there’s a legend of someone like you, it’ll be there." he said."You know Lysandra already tipped them off right," I said. "They’ll be waiting for you."He let out a short, cold laugh. "Let them wait. They’re subjects, Andrea, and they’re forgetting their place. I don't need to sneak into my own palace to handle a few disgruntled nobles. I’ll walk through the front door, turn the Court upside down, and be back before you finish your next lesson." he said.He wasn't bragging; it was just a statement of fact. He ran the world, and the idea of being afraid of his own court was beneath him. He just needed to cle
Julian’s smirk widened. "Exactly. She’s not just a weapon. She’s a conduit. You two have no idea what you're actually capable of, do you?"Caius looked at the flower, then at me, his gaze shifting from dangerous to something much more complicated. "We’re just getting started."The shop was quiet, except for the soft thump of my heart and the way my skin felt like it was humming. Julian and Caius were watching me like I was a science experiment, and honestly, I kinda felt like one."Alright," Julian said, pacing the room while Caius leaned against the counter, his arms crossed, that intense look never leaving his eyes. "We know you can jump-start dead matter. You brought that rose back. Now, let’s see the range. Close your eyes."I did as I was told. The moment I shut them, the world didn't go dark, it went wide. It was like I’d been viewing the world through a keyhole and suddenly someone kicked the door down. I could feel the house, the street outside, the damp earth beneath the flo
It was intense, overwhelming, and somehow, perfectly right. I felt his memories, his strength, and that terrifying, cold resolve he’d carried for ten thousand years, all pouring into me. I grew… heavier, stronger. My senses expanded until I could hear the heartbeat of a mouse in the alley and the vibration of the cars miles away.When I finally pulled back, gasping, I felt like I could bench-press the house. My eyes were glowing so bright I could see the reflection of the shop lights in his dark pupils."Good," he breathed, his voice ragged. He didn't look drained; he looked proud. "Now, we see if you can use it."He didn't give me a break. He shoved a heavy iron pruning stool across the floor. "Forget the flowers, put your hands up." he said.The next few hours were a brutal, beautiful mess. He didn't treat me like a delicate human anymore. He came at me with speed that would’ve killed a mortal, his movements fluid and unpredictable. I had to rely on that new, heightened perception t
Andrea's POVThe rain was lashing against the windshield like it was trying to shatter the glass, and I could barely see two feet in front of the car. My twenty-first birthday was ending in a pathetic way. The tires made a sickening, screeching metal-on-asphalt, a sound that I knew was the last thi
The peace we bought with all that blood at the gala lasted exactly two days. By the third morning, the whole estate felt off the air was ice, and the shadows stretched out like they were trying to grab me. I was in the library, trying to make sense of the cryptic scrolls Caius left for me, when the
The dinner had been straight-up ridiculous, silver platters, crystal glasses filled with some shimmering red liquid that looked way too much like blood, and Caius sitting across from me the whole time, watching every tiny movement like I was a bug under a microscope. I hadn’t eaten a single bite.
The air in that massive penthouse wasn’t just cold, it was thin as hell, like the whole place was sitting at some impossible altitude that was actively trying to suck the oxygen out of my lungs. I hadn’t moved an inch from where Caius had left me. My feet were killing me, and my damp waitress unifo







