LOGINThe 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. My stomach was tied in knots of pure acid. I hadn’t said much either. Just stared at him, letting my hate build until it felt like a living, breathing thing inside my chest.
When he finally got up to deal with his “court”, which were a bunch of pale, whispering shadows that gave me the creeps. I didn’t head back to whatever fancy guest suite they’d stuck me in. I waited until those heavy iron doors boomed shut behind him, then slipped into the shadows of the west wing like I belonged there.
This place was a labyrinth, it was clearly built to mess with your head and trap you. I crept through endless hallways lined with tapestries showing battles from some history I’d never heard of, full of armored figures that looked way too real. Every corner felt like a trap waiting to spring. Every little sound , a shifting floorboard, a distant gust of wind made my heart jump into my throat. But I kept going, driven by this desperate, clawing need to find something. Anything that could give me leverage or a way out.
I found the door at the end of a narrow, dimly lit corridor. It wasn’t locked, which should’ve been my first red flag, but at that point I didn’t care about risks. I pushed it open on silent hinges and stepped into a room that was less library and more creepy mausoleum. The air was dead and heavy, smelling like ancient paper mixed with something metallic, almost like old coins.
Shelves stretched up the walls, packed with leather-bound journals and thick, dusty tomes that looked like they hadn’t been touched in centuries. In the center sat a massive desk made of what looked like petrified wood, and right on top of it was a single glowing ledger, lying open like it was inviting me in.
My hands were shaking so bad I almost knocked over a nearby candle as I approached. The ink on the pages pulsed with this faint crimson light that seemed to sync up with my heartbeat. I leaned in closer, and my breath caught hard. There was my name, Andrea Alfonso, written in elegant but jagged script that looked like it had been carved with a knife.
Below it were dates, locations, and weird cryptic notes. Some in plain English, others in a language that made my head throb just looking at it. I flipped through the pages, my skin crawling more with every entry.
This wasn’t random. It was a full decade of surveillance on me. The day I got my first bike. The day Mom walked out. That awful crash when I was eleven. He hadn’t just been waiting around, he’d been curating my entire life like some twisted hobby. Watching me, shaping things from the shadows.
My fingers brushed against a loose scrap of parchment tucked into the back cover. I snatched it up, heart pounding. It was a copy of the original pact, signed by my grandfather in shaky ink. As I read the fine print, the cold reality of my situation hit even harder. It wasn’t just some simple soul-for-a-life deal. There was this archaic clause about the “Consort of the Blood-Stained Throne.” If the blood debt got satisfied a certain way, the whole contract could supposedly be challenged.
“You’re a curious little thing, aren’t you?”
The voice echoed through the vault, cold and way too amused. I spun around fast, clutching the parchment to my chest like a shield.
Caius was standing in the doorway, his silhouette blocking most of the light from the hall. He looked even bigger in the low glow, his arms crossed over that fitted black shirt, his expression a mix of irritation and dark fascination. He didn’t move at first, he just watched me trying to hide the paper behind my back.
“I figured you’d try to run,” he said, his voice smooth and dangerous as he stepped inside. “Didn’t expect you to start digging through the fine print like a little lawyer.”
He crossed the room in a blur, faster than any human should move. One second he was by the door, the next his hand had my wrist in an iron grip. He didn’t snatch the paper away, he just held me there, those crimson eyes burning into mine, searching for the defiance he knew was still there.
“You’re playing a game you don’t understand, Andrea,” he whispered, his face inches from mine. His breath was cool against my skin. “That contract isn’t your ticket to freedom. It’s the blueprint of your cage, you think that scrap of paper is a weapon? It’s just proof that your grandfather sold you to save his own skin.”
“Then I’ll burn the whole damn cage down,” I hissed, my voice steadier than I felt. I didn’t care if he was a king, a monster, or whatever the hell he was, he wasn’t owning me.
He paused, and a slow, predatory smile spread across his face. For the first time, he looked like he was facing a real opponent instead of just a prize. “Is that so?” He asked , his voice dropped into this low, intimate rumble that sent shivers down my spine. He plucked the parchment from my fingers and tossed it onto the desk.
“Well then, let’s see if you’ve got the backbone to back up that threat.”
He stepped even closer, his body heat, or lack of it, was swallowing me whole. The candles around us flickered wildly like something was messing with the air. That’s when I noticed it. Up close like this, his lips parted just enough to show the sharp points of fangs where normal teeth should be. Not subtle little ones either, real vampire fangs, glinting in the low light. My stomach dropped.
“Wait… you’re…” The words stuck in my throat for a second. “You’re a vampire, a real one. That’s what this whole blood pact thing is about, isn’t it?”
His smile widened, flashing those fangs again like he was done hiding it. “Took you long enough to say it out loud. Yes, Andrea. I am. Have been for longer than your bloodline has existed. Your grandfather didn’t just make a deal with some shady businessman. He bargained with the King of the Blood-Stained Throne and now his debt has come due in the form of you.”
He gripped my waist and pulled me flush against him, his movements forceful and claiming. My heart was racing a mile a minute, caught between wanting to bolt and the terrifying realization that I was trapped in his personal vault with an actual vampire.
He was impossibly strong, and as he held me there I understood I wasn’t just in his house, I was in his world.
“You think this is a game, Andrea?” he growled, one hand sliding up to the back of my neck, his fingers tangling in my hair. “It’s not. This is an inheritance, a bond written in blood. You belong to the bloodline now… and you belong to me. You can try to burn the cage, but you’ll find the fire only burns the one holding the match.”
I tilted my head back, staring straight into those glowing red eyes even as fear buzzed in my ears. “If I’m gonna get consumed by your fire, Caius, I’m making sure I leave nothing but ash behind.”
He stared at me, searching for any crack in my resolve. He wouldn’t find one tonight. His grip tightened, his thumb tracing my jaw in this possessive, electric way that felt like both a threat and a promise. The candles finally died out completely, plunging parts of the room into deeper shadow, but his eyes kept burning bright.
We were locked in this stalemate, two predators surrounded by ghosts and old secrets. As the darkness pressed in, I knew one thing for sure: the fight for my life and whatever was left of my soul was only getting started. And now that I knew exactly what he was, I was more determined than ever to survive it.
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
"It’s because of you," he corrected. "The Pact feeds on human life force to maintain its stability. It always has. But for thousands of years, I was only ever fed on the dregs, the weak energy of those who feared me. It was sustenance, but it was sterile. It didn't wake me up. Then I found you."He traced the line of my jaw, his touch light, almost reverent. "The moment you drew blood from me, something broke. You aren't just a human, Andrea. You have a chaotic, wild spark in your soul that isn't bound by the rules of this world. When you touched me, you didn't just drain energy, you infused me with your own. You gave me back the capacity to feel anger, to feel regret, and yes… to feel the crushing weight of missing you."I felt a shiver run down my spine. "So I’m not a battery. You weren't siphoning me to stabilize your reign. You were trying to wake up.""I was trying to survive without losing the last scrap of myself," he admitted, his jaw tightening. "The Traditionalists hate you
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
The 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
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







