LOGINI wake up gasping.
My hand flies to my throat, then my chest, where my heart is pounding so hard it hurts. For one disorienting moment, my body doesn't feel like mine. It feels wrong, changed somehow. *Just what did he do*— The memories crash back. The prison. The vampires. *Him.* I shoot upright— Instead of the dank, freezing stones of the Guild's dungeons, I’m lying in a heavy four-poster bed draped in dark velvet. I blink once. Where am I? My eyes sweep the room, searching first for threats. No vampires. Instead, I find a room so lavish it feels unreal, a stark contrast to the utilitarian stone walls of the Guild. The room makes no sense. Am I in the Capital? I throw the blankets aside and swing my legs over the edge of the bed. The moment my feet touch the floor, a wave of dizziness hits me. I lean quickly against one of the thick bedposts, gripping the dark velvet drapes until the room steadies again. My fingers immediately search for the familiar weight of my dagger. Empty. My belt is gone. I run my hands over my torso, a sudden spike of panic wrapping my throat. Someone has stripped away my leather armor. In its place, I’m wearing a loose, simple linen tunic that feels far too light and too vulnerable. I force myself to breathe. If whoever had taken me wanted me dead, I would’ve woken up to chains… or not at all. Pushing off from the bedpost, I test my balance. My knees still tremble, but at least the room isn't spinning any more. I push past the heavy drapes and make my way toward the tall, arched windows on the far wall. I press my hands against the glass. The latch doesn't budge and the view yields almost nothing. Only a thick fog rolls across an endless expanse of dark treetops below, swallowing anything that might tell me where I am. Useless. I turn from the window and head to the door. Wrapping my fingers around the handle, I press my ear flat against the cold wood and pause. Nothing. Not even footsteps. I slowly press the handle down and it gives. *Unlocked?* The thought catches me off guard. If they meant to keep me prisoner, why leave the door unsecured? I ease it open only a fraction, just enough to peer through the gap. A long corridor stretches in both directions, lit by flickering wall torches that cast restless shadows across the crimson carpets. No guards. No voices. No movement. *A trap?* I glance back into the room, searching every piece of furniture for something I can use as a weapon. My gaze settles on a heavy brass candlestick resting on top of a polished dresser. It isn't balanced like a dagger, and recovering from a full swing would leave me wide open. Still, it is better than empty hands. I cross the room, wrap my fingers around the cool brass, and test its weight. Heavy. It will have to do. Returning to the doorway, I adjust my grip on the candlestick before slipping silently into the corridor. I keep my back close to the wall, my bare feet sinking into the thick carpet as I move. Every instinct tells me to sprint, but noise is death in a place like this. As I approach a grand, sweeping staircase at the end of the hall, low voices echo from below. “…are you sure she's the same one?” a voice says. I freeze, pressing myself into a recessed alcove behind a heavy velvet tapestry, my heart hammering against my ribs. A heavy silence follows. Then another voice answers, low and steady. “Yes.” I press the brass candlestick close to my chest. I would recognize the infuriating voice anywhere. I risk a glance through a gap in the tapestry. Two figures stand in what looks like a grand sitting room below. One of them has his back to me, but I'd know those broad shoulders beneath a dark coat anywhere. *The green-eyed vampire. Kaine.* The other man folds his arms. I know him as well. He’s the blond, glasses-wearing vampire who called him master and answered me in the prison cell. “But you could be wrong… she could just look like her.” Another silence. This one lasts longer than the other. I keep my weight balanced on the balls of my feet, scanning the perimeter of the upper landing for a back stairwell, a servant's door, or a balcony—anything that leads out. A heavy oak door past the stairway catches my eye. I shift my weight again. If I can reach it while they're distracted— “Their names were never Eira.” I freeze. *What?* “That still doesn't prove anything. It could be a coincidence.” “I don't believe in that. I know she's the one.” The one for what? A dozen questions pull at my mind, but my gaze returns to the oak door. Answers can wait. First I need to get back to the Guild. Whatever he wants from me, he can't have it if I'm gone. I shift my weight carefully onto my front foot and move. An exhale comes. “Assuming you're right, what was the need for giving her your mark?” I keep close to the wall, slipping from one pool of shadow into the next. One step. Two. I'm getting closer and neither vampire has looked up. “Her protection.” My foot falters. *Protection?* The word makes no sense. He kidnapped me and stole my armor and weapons. If that was his idea of protection, then the sooner I leave, the better. I reach the door and curl my fingers around the handle. *Please don't creak…* Relief floods through me when it doesn't. I slip inside, easing the door shut behind me. It opens into a small sitting room, elegant but unused. Another set of glass doors stands along one wall, veiled by dark curtains stirring in the breeze. A balcony. My pulse quickens. I cross the room in three silent strides and pull the doors open. Warm air rushes over my skin, carrying the scent of pine and damp earth. But hope lasts all of three seconds. The forest stretches endlessly in every direction. I grip the stone railing and look down. The ground is farther away than I'd hoped. My eyes desperately search for another way. A tree. A ledge. Anything. There. An old, massive tree leans toward the balcony, its highest branches still several feet beyond my reach. Too far. Maybe. I measure the distance again. The landing will hurt, and if I mistime it, I'll probably break a few bones. But better a broken leg than a vampire's cage. I ease the candlestick to the ground as quietly as I can. Then I climb onto the stone railing. Before I can lose my resolve, I push off. For one impossible breath, I am weightless. Wind tears through my hair as I reach for the branch. Then something ignites at the side of my neck. Pain. It rips through every nerve in my body, burning from my neck and spreading through me like wildfire. A scream tears from my throat as my fingers claw at the air. But it doesn't matter. The branch slips past my reach. I am falling. The forest rushes up to meet me. Firm fingers clamp around my wrist. Then the fall stops. My body jerks violently to a stop. I blink through the haze of pain. Green eyes. No. Kaine. He regards me with that same infuriating calm, as though catching someone in midair is a frequent occurrence. “You really have no sense of self-preservation.”Kaine doesn't speak after that, and even though my entire body is on fire and pain clouds every thought, his silence remains. I must be dreaming.No.This has to be a dream.She won't survive the night, Master.The words echo through the haze, refusing to make sense.No. They have the wrong person. Hunters don't die in a vampire bed. They die on their feet. They die with weapons in their hands.My fingers twitch against the velvet sheets, searching for a hilt, a blade, a piece of broken glass—anything. My hand finds only soft fabric. The taste of helplessness coats my tongue.Somewhere above me, fabric rustles. The weight of Kaine's hand still rests over the fabric covering my shoulder.“How long?” Kaine finally asks, his voice so low that I almost mistake it for part of the dream.“A few hours at most,” Celine answers. Her voice sounds distant, accompanied by the clatter of glass bottles. “Look at the silver lines. I've never seen a body reject a bond like this. Your mark is demand
Failure always tastes bitter. This time, I choke on it under what feels like a mocking stare.I don't have self-preservation? Rich words coming from a vamp.The moment my feet touch solid ground, I wrench my wrist free from his grip and shove him away with everything I have left. The bastard barely moves, but it matters little to me. The second I break contact, the pain returns with such blinding violence that the edges of my vision blur. I grit my teeth and straighten before he can notice the way my knees threaten to give.“I didn't ask you to catch me.” He studies me for a few seconds more than necessary before answering. “I'm aware.”I bite back a curse. I refuse to waste another second on him. I refuse to let him watch me struggle, either.Bracing my weight, I side-step his broad frame, slipping back through the glass doors leading off the balcony and into the sitting room I'd come through to find another way out of this gilded cage.I manage exactly two steps.Then it hits me a
I wake up gasping. My hand flies to my throat, then my chest, where my heart is pounding so hard it hurts. For one disorienting moment, my body doesn't feel like mine. It feels wrong, changed somehow. *Just what did he do*— The memories crash back. The prison. The vampires. *Him.* I shoot upright— Instead of the dank, freezing stones of the Guild's dungeons, I’m lying in a heavy four-poster bed draped in dark velvet. I blink once. Where am I? My eyes sweep the room, searching first for threats. No vampires. Instead, I find a room so lavish it feels unreal, a stark contrast to the utilitarian stone walls of the Guild. The room makes no sense. Am I in the Capital? I throw the blankets aside and swing my legs over the edge of the bed. The moment my feet touch the floor, a wave of dizziness hits me. I lean quickly against one of the thick bedposts, gripping the dark velvet drapes until the room steadies again. My fingers immediately search for the familiar weight of my d
KAINE’S POV It takes fifty seconds for my protection mark to appear. And it's only by thirty-nine, she finally stops resisting. *Great Hel. She’s too stubb—*The sudden, sharp pressure of her teeth sinking into my lip cuts my thoughts short. She actually drew blood.I lean back a little. Most prey would freeze when cornered. They would not bide their time, waiting for an opening to retaliate. They would not try to fight back. “How dare you? Let go of me, you beast!” she spits, her blue eyes blazing at me. I should do as she demands. I need her to be compliant if my plans are to succeed. Besides that, the process is complete. My gaze drops to her lips, and I lower my mouth to hers again, prolonging the contact. I make it softer this time. Why, I'm not entirely certain. To wear down her rigid posture, perhaps? The moment she starts to relax, I strike, nicking her lips in return.Her tiny gasp warms my skin as I draw her closer, catching the bead of blood. The taste is…unusual. I p
The flashes begin the same time pain consumes me and my scream is all my body knows. I hear nothing over the roaring until finally the pain begins to douse and sweet bliss starts to warm me everywhere. Flowers brush against my legs as I run. I'm laughing. No. Not me. Her ruby dress glitters under the sun, blowing because of the wind distracting me. She's laughing. I love it when she does. I'm gaining on her. Just a little further and—A knife thrusts into our stomach and I double over in agony, the pain is burning even hotter. When we look up, fire surrounds me instead and my senses drag between the two lives as smoke fills my lungs. I'm running after her again. Blood is everywhere. We have to get to her. Fear. She's singing. Darkness. She's screaming at me. Hunger. I'm a monster. She's dead.Grief. **Pain!****Pain!!****Pain!!!**“Aaaaaaaargh!!!”A scream jolts me back into the present. The dank, dark corridor comes back into my vision. I blink. What—“No! Don't go! Come back Lu
Not all vampires die in the execution square. At least not the ones chosen by the Order to bleed dry.We're told it's necessary. We're told that without their blood, hunters wouldn't exist. We need it to fight. We need it to grow strong, to survive the beasts outside the walls, which is why the Order always keeps the ones they wish to harvest in the prison cells.Obviously, they can't have a sound mind in case they get the funny idea to try and escape, so they’re always in a sedated state, between awareness and collapse. Disoriented or hallucinating. It is the exact state I expect to see now, the state I’ve watched most of them be in for the past three months. Except for now. Except for the one standing before me, like he has no problem doing so. “Why are you late?”And he speaks well as well. My grip tightens around my dagger as he starts to draw near.“Stay back!”He stops at once, studying me with the same unnerving focus from the execution square.Hel's gate. What is going on? W







