LOGINA light rain fell over the city like a gray veil as I got off the bus in the old part of town. I held Agnes’s diary against my chest like a shield while searching for the address I had found on the final pages of the book.
The shop hid itself in a dark alley, its facade painted black, with only a discreet symbol of an eye inside a triangle painted on the door. The sign above simply read: “The Den of Shadows.” The bell above the door tinkled softly as I entered. The interior was as dark as I had expected, smelling of incense, dried herbs, and something metallic — blood, perhaps? — which sent a shiver down my spine. Crowded shelves displayed jars with ingredients named things like “Moon Powder” and “Siren Tears.” A black cat watched me intently from atop the counter, its yellow eyes following my every move. “Looking for something specific, child?” A hoarse voice, sweet like poisoned honey, echoed from the depths of the shop. The witch emerged from the shadows, as old as time itself, with silver hair that fell to her feet and eyes that seemed to know every secret in the universe. She wore a black dress that whispered against the wooden floor as she approached. “Yes,” I answered, trying to sound more confident than I felt. “I need a voodoo doll.” Her eyes narrowed, examining me as if she were reading my soul. “For what purpose?” “For…” I swallowed hard, my hands sweating. “For a binding spell.” She let out a low, scornful laugh. “Twenty years old and you think you’re ready to handle ancestral forces? The university doesn’t teach you about consequences, girl.” “I know what I’m doing,” I lied, gripping the diary tighter. The witch moved gracefully to a high shelf and picked up a small black cloth figure sewn with red threads. “This is not an academic experiment. Once blood is spilled, the bond is eternal.” “I understand the implications,” I said, reaching for my wallet. “I doubt it,” she retorted, holding the doll out of my reach. “Blood spells are not one-way. They create a cycle. What you send out will return to you three times stronger. The obsession you invoke will consume the target… and then it will consume you.” “I’m aware of the risks,” I declared, my heart pounding. “I still need it.” She sighed, as if she had already had this conversation with many arrogant young people before. “Very well. But remember the three laws: first, the doll must contain something from the target. Second, every needle you drive into it will also pierce your own soul. Third…” Her eyes darkened. “Once the spell is initiated, it can only be broken by death or madness.” I paid with more than half of my allowance. When her bony hands delivered the doll, a strange energy ran through my fingers. “It is yours now,” the witch whispered, her fingers wrapping around my wrists with surprising strength. “But reflect: do you really want to be loved by someone who has no free will?” I left the shop with the doll hidden under my coat, the witch’s question echoing in my mind. The rain had stopped, but the sky remained gray. When I got home, my parents didn’t even notice my arrival. I ran upstairs to my room, locked the door, and placed the doll on my bed. It looked harmless, just a cloth doll, but I could feel the power pulsing within it. I opened Agnes’s diary to the right page. The instructions were clear: I would need a personal object from Dorian, a strand of his hair… and my own blood. The next day in the literature department, I couldn’t pay attention to anything but him. When he leaned over my desk to discuss my assignment, my heart raced. His hair smelled of mint shampoo and old books. “Professor…” I said, my voice coming out softer than I intended. “You have a strand of hair… here.” He touched his own hair, distracted, while I reached out and, with quick movements, took a silver strand that glistened at his temple. “Thank you, Lara,” he said, unsuspecting, as I closed my fingers around my treasure. That night, with the full moon shining through my window, I prepared the ritual. I placed the strand of hair inside the doll, sewing it with red thread exactly as the diary instructed. I took my ritual knife — a sixteenth birthday gift from Grandma Agnes — and made a shallow cut in my palm. The blood flowed hot and alive, and I let it drip onto the cloth heart of the doll. “May he want me…” I whispered, and drove the first needle into the doll’s chest. “As I want him.” A sharp pain pierced my own chest, but I smiled through the tears. The witch had been right — the spell was already affecting me. But I didn’t care. For the first time in my life, I felt like I had control over something. And in that moment, control was worth any price.My cell phone vibrated on the dressing room counter while I finished adjusting my lipstick.“Eve!” I answered, putting it on speaker. “Finally! I thought you had been abducted for good by the hot guy in the overcoat.”Evelyn’s laugh sounded on the other end of the line, and I smiled. It had been a few days since we had talked properly. She had been busy being protected from who-knows-what, and I had been busy trying to process the fact that the supernatural existed.“I wasn’t abducted.” She replied. “I’ve just been busy. Training. Surviving. Going to dinners with billionaires.”“Dinners with billionaires? That’s new.”“It was a disaster. I’ll tell you later.” A pause. “But first: the costume.”“THE COSTUME!” I dropped the blush brush and threw myself into the chair. “Tell me everything. All the sordid details. Did he lose it?”“He lost control.”“What?”“Like, eyes glowing, skin changing color. He tried to take the costume off, but I decided I wanted him restrained.”“RESTRAINED? YOU
The café Celeste had chosen was a charming confectionery on the Upper East Side, with small iron tables on the sidewalk and an interior decorated with floral wallpaper and crystal lamps. We arrived at three o’clock sharp, Nox in his cat form nestled in my arms.Celeste was already there, seated at a table near the window. She wore a light blue suit, her silver hair pinned in an elegant bun. When she saw us, she smiled and waved.“Darlings!” She stood up and hugged me. “Evelyn, you look radiant. And Christopher, you look handsome, dear.”“Thank you, Mom.” Mortyss murmured, but there was a reluctant smile on his lips.“And this is the cat!” Celeste stroked Nox, who accepted the affection with a loud purr. “How cute! What’s his name?”“Nox.” I replied.“Nox. What a mysterious name. It suits you both.”We sat down. The waiter appeared immediately, and Celeste ordered the full afternoon tea: sandwiches, scones, apple pie, and a selection of teas that included Darjeeling, Earl Grey and cham
The pocket dimension was quiet at that time of the afternoon.The fake windows showed a twilight sky that had never existed, and the golden light from the lamps bathed the main room.Mortyss had moved the furniture aside with a distracted gesture, creating a wide space in the center. He had installed a pole, yes, a professional pole, because the dimension was versatile and he was obsessed with every detail of my comfort.I was training.My hands on the cold metal, my hips drawing circles, my legs wrapping and unwrapping around the pole. The music — something slow and pulsating, with deep bass — played softly on the dimension’s sound system.It was a different dance from the ones I did for clients. More intimate. More personal. Something I was creating not to seduce, but to feel.And, on the black leather sofa, Mortyss watched.He was sunk into the cushions, legs crossed, violet eyes fixed on me. Nox was curled in his lap, purring. Mortyss’s tail snaked lazily, caressing the iridescent
“It was… it was Pieter.”Pieter Van Der Werff. The younger brother. The same one who had made the unfortunate comment at the business dinner. The same one I had corrected with words, believing it would be enough.Clearly, it had not been enough.“What exactly did Pieter say to you?”“He… he commented that you were in love with a nightclub dancer. He said she was… exotic. That she was probably a luxury companion you had decided to take on.” The senator swallowed hard. “He laughed while telling me. He said you were ‘domesticated.’ That it was fun to see the untamable Christopher Rockefeller being tamed by a…”“By a what?”“By a… prostitute. That was the word he used.”I felt my eyes burn. The violet illuminated the room, and the senator shrank back, terrified.“I… I only repeated what I heard.” He stammered. “I didn’t mean to offend. It was a joke. A joke in bad taste. I…”“It was not a joke.” My voice was ice. “It was a calculated insult. Pieter planted the seed, and you watered it. He
Evelyn fell asleep with her head resting on my chest, her dark hair spread across the pillow.Her breathing was slow and regular, but I knew the sleep was not peaceful. Through the bond, I felt the remnants of what she had experienced during the dinner. The anger, the humiliation, the pain.Not the superficial anger of someone who is insulted. It was something deeper. Something ancient.I closed my eyes and focused on the bond. Her memories came like waves, fragments of the past that she rarely let show. The rain. The empty street. The gate slamming. The man in the dark overcoat who looked at her as if she were merchandise. The words he said: “Want some company?”Company. Companion. They were variations of the same poison.I felt the cold she had felt that night. The hunger. The fear. The loneliness of a fifteen-year-old girl who had nowhere to go. The pain of feeling insignificant.And then, today, that senator. “That’s what entertainment companions are for, isn’t it? To entertain.”
The door closed behind Christopher and Evelyn, and the room fell silent.Not the comfortable silence that follows a successful dinner, but the heavy silence after a catastrophe.The guests began to disperse shortly afterward, Mariana with her bored husband, Helena with a fake smile on her lips, Sophie dragging the wine-stained senator. Beatrice Astor gave me a kiss on the cheek and whispered “courage, dear” before leaving.And then it was just us. The family.William was in his armchair, whiskey in hand, his blue eyes fixed on the fireplace. Victoria had set her tablet aside on the sofa and was massaging her temples. Eleanor was sitting on the floor, petting Astor, who was whimpering softly. Even he could feel the tension.“Well…” Victoria said, breaking the silence. “I think we can agree that it was a memorable dinner.”“Victoria.” I warned, but there was no strength in my voice.“What? It’s true. I will never forget the senator’s face with red wine running down his collar.” She sket
Chapter 41 — Where Silence Remained (Sarah)The doorbell rang the next day, very early, tearing me from a restless sleep. Two uniformed men stood at the door, with a white van parked in front of the house. They wore blue coveralls with the moving company’s logo embroidered on the chest.“Mrs. Caine?
The house was silent when I entered.Not the peaceful silence of a cozy home, the kind that wraps around you like a blanket at the end of the day. It was the empty silence of a cemetery, the kind that weighs on your shoulders and makes every step echo as if the floor were hollow. Every room seemed
She was mounted on me, her hips moving in a rhythm that alternated between devotion and madness, and the sensation of déjà vu didn’t escape me. It was as if my body remembered every wave of pleasure she had ever given me, even when my mind had been submerged in forgetfulness.Her black hair fell ov
The apartment was dark, only the yellowish light from the kitchen on and the bluish glow of the muted TV, casting shadows across the walls. Aggy slept in the bedroom, her sleep deep and heavy sealed by the tiredness of the day—so much play, so much laughter, so much newness. I had covered her less







