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Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees
Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees
Author: Halley Valentine

Blood in the Water

last update Last Updated: 2025-09-04 11:28:08

“Run.”

The word wasn’t shouted. It wasn’t even spoken aloud.

It slid into Rio’s skull—cold, certain—and his body obeyed before his mind caught up.

Branches whipped his face, slapping and scratching as he tore through the swamp.

Mud sucked at his bare feet, thick and greedy, trying to pull him under with every desperate step. The air was hot, heavy, buzzing with insects that bit at the edges of his skin, their tiny stings almost lost beneath the pounding in his chest.

His breath tore in ragged gasps, tasting copper and rot. Every muscle screamed, but his legs kept moving — faster, harder, like they had a will of their own.

What was he running from? What was he running toward? He didn’t know. He only knew he had to keep moving.

His foot snapped on something hard and jagged — a hidden root or broken branch — and he stumbled.

His shoulder slammed into the rough bark of a cypress tree. Pain flared where bark scraped raw skin.

Dark spots flickered in his vision’s edges.

Then the voice came again—silk wrapped in venom curling inside his head:

“Run, or burn.”

A sudden shaft of sunlight stabbed through the mist, striking his bare arm like a whip.

The pain exploded.

His skin hissed and blistered, curling back from bone-white beneath.

A scream tore from his throat as hot fire seared every nerve.

He dropped to the cold mud, clutching his arm as if to hold himself together.

But the horror was just beginning.

Within seconds, the charred flesh knit back together — smooth, flawless, unscarred.

He stared, breath catching, heart hammering.

Not human.

His mouth was dry and cracked. His gums throbbed deep, raw in the bone.

He lifted trembling fingers and pressed them to his lips.

They were sharp. Longer than they should be. Curved like a predator’s.

Something stirred behind him.

He spun around.

A young deer stood trembling between two twisted cypress roots.

Its wide eyes locked with his, dark pools full of fear and life.

And then Rio heard it.

Not a sound in his ears, but a pulse in his bones.

The thunder of its heartbeat.

The rush of hot blood under fur.

The raw, aching pulse of life.

His muscles tensed, coiling tight like springs.

His stomach twisted — not with hunger, but with need.

Feed.

The deer backed away, hooves scraping damp roots.

Rio dropped low, balanced on the balls of his feet.

The sweet, iron scent of blood hit him in waves, sharp and intoxicating.

The deer bolted.

Without thinking, without choice, Rio lunged.

Branches tore at his skin and soaked him in mud.

His breath came out ragged and wild.

Three powerful strides later, he crashed into the deer’s flank, sending them both tumbling into the muck.

The animal kicked and thrashed, hooves slashing his side.

Pain burned, but he barely noticed.

He locked his iron grip around the deer’s neck.

The heartbeat thundered in his ears — faster, louder, desperate.

He bit down hard.

Warm, coppery blood flooded his mouth and slid down his throat, thick and scalding.

A wild fire lit inside him, sharpening his senses.

Every sound grew sharper, clearer — the drip of water, the rustle of leaves, the frantic pounding of a dying heart.

The deer flailed once, twice, weakening under his strength.

His teeth tore deeper, ripping flesh in ragged, desperate chunks.

Steam rose from the wound in the cool morning air, swirling around his face like mist.

A gurgling, strangled sound slipped from the animal’s throat.

Its eyes rolled back, showing the whites.

And still he drank.

He ignored the slowing heartbeat.

Ignored the faltering pulse.

Ignored the limpness that spread beneath him.

Only when the world fell eerily, hauntingly silent did he pull back.

The deer lay still.

Its neck was a mess of shredded meat and fur.

Blood dripped from Rio’s chin, smeared across his hands and chest.

Horror should have hit him next.

He should have vomited.

Instead —

He felt full.

Strong.

Alive.

Something inside purred like a waking beast.

By nightfall, the brutal truth had sunk in:

Nothing else stayed down.

No crackers.

No trail mix.

Not even water.

His body rejected it all — spitting it out like poison.

Only blood satisfied.

Days blurred.

Nights sharpened.

On the fourth night, he stumbled upon an old bait shack —

Moldy boards.

Rusting hooks.

The stench of dead fish thick in the air.

Behind a rotting shelf, a shard of broken glass caught his eye.

His reflection stared back — pale, bone-white beneath grime.

Cheekbones sharp as blades.

Eyes glowing golden — embers flickering in ash.

A mouth ringed with dried blood.

Teeth longer, older, more ancient than before.

He smashed the glass, leaving the shards scattered in the dirt.

That night, he walked the streets again, hood pulled low.

Watching the living — without being one of them.

And then he saw them.

Three figures slipped from an alley off Bourbon Street.

Too graceful.

Too perfect.

They moved like predators wearing human skin.

He followed them —

Past the neon glow.

Past the music’s pulse.

Into the swamp’s thick fog where silence swallowed sound.

They vanished into a shack at the water’s edge.

A crooked neon sign buzzed above the door:

LE SANG VERT

The Green Blood.

His fists clenched.

His heartbeat slowed — deep, deliberate, hungry.

The wind shifted.

Cypress branches groaned overhead.

And the voice curled through his mind again, silk wrapped in poison:

“You’ve taken your first taste, Rio… but you’re nowhere near ready for what comes

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  • Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees   Echo of Dominion

    The floodwaters slammed against the plantation walls, roaring like a beast, carrying debris and splintered wood through mud-choked fields. The High Hunter advanced relentlessly, massive, calculating, red eyes locked on every flicker of movement.Lucien’s hands flared with gold energy, but this time, it wasn’t just raw force. He drew upon something deeper—something no one had ever seen before. His body began to glow, veins of golden light spreading across his skin, and a hum resonated through the air. The storm itself seemed to recognize it, lightning cracking closer, thunder vibrating in response.This was the Echo of Dominion, a power Lucien had never fully mastered, a surge that allowed him to manipulate not just energy but the very flow of chaos around him. He could bend the currents of the flood, twist debris midair, and momentarily freeze the High Hunter in a stasis of perception, making time slow around the monster while his body moved at normal speed.Odessa, deflecting a falli

  • Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees   Fight in the Flood

    The floodwaters hadn’t fully receded, and the plantation lay battered beneath a bruised sky. Mud-choked fields were strewn with debris—broken trees, splintered wood, fragments of smaller rebel houses floating across the swamp like drowned ghosts. Every step was a struggle through thick, cold water that pulled at boots, pants, and robes alike.Inside the main house, the witches worked frantically, hands weaving threads of energy that shimmered in the murky flood. Sparks danced across the water, twisting debris aside, bending it away from the weakest points in the structures. Each incantation was a desperate plea, a fragile line of defense holding the remnants of the plantation together.Lucien stood on the porch, scanning the chaos. “Thomas! Claude! Keep the rebels organized along the outer lines. Jules, make sure everyone—children, witches, anyone—reaches the safe house!”Thomas barked orders like a drill sergeant, grabbing a shivering young witch and shoving her behind a floating

  • Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees   Chaos at the Plantation

    The hurricane had passed Driskill Mountain hours ago, but the plantation below was still a chaos of floodwater and debris. Torrential rains had shredded the smaller rebel houses, and leaving two completely submerged, their walls collapsed and roofs floating away in pieces. Mud, wood, and twisted metal swept through the swampy fields, carrying with it the scent of destruction and fear.Lucien stood on the main house’s porch, cloak whipping around him as he surveyed the damage. His eyes were steady, scanning the remaining structures and the struggling rebels. Even soaked to the bone, he radiated calm authority.“We’ve lost two houses completely,” he said, voice tight but controlled. “Jules, get the survivors to the safe house. Claude, Thomas—reinforce the remaining structures and barricade what you can.”Jules, knee-deep in water near one of the surviving rebel houses, guided the shivering, soaked survivors toward higher ground. His dark cloak clung to him, but he didn’t falter. “Keep

  • Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees   Night of the Flooded Houses

    Night had fallen over the plantation, heavy and suffocating, the hurricane’s roar magnified against the wide expanse of cypress and moss-draped oaks.The main house, fortified and warded, stood resilient against the lashing rain and screaming wind, but beyond its protective walls, chaos reigned.Two of the smaller rebel houses, hastily constructed, had already succumbed to the floodwaters. The swollen swamp had surged unexpectedly, tearing foundations apart. Wood splintered, walls collapsed, and the screams of the trapped and panicked echoed over the roaring water.Lucien stood at the edge of the main veranda, cloak soaked, boots sinking into mud, staring at the devastation. His jaw tightened. “Two houses gone. How many did they have in there?”Claude and Thomas were shouting over the wind, coordinating what survivors they could. “Check the eastern ridge! Everyone head that way!” Thomas’s voice cracked as a wall of water swept through what remained of the first house, carrying furnitu

  • Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees   Lost Soul

    Rain still hammered the cabin, relentless, as if the storm itself refused to sleep. Winds bent the trees outside at impossible angles, snapping branches and shaking the old timber structure.Inside, the cabin smelled of damp wood and magic—wards humming faintly, protective energy layered thickly across every window, every door.Junie sat near the fireplace, Jade on her lap, Willa beside her murmuring soothing nursery rhymes. Even the flicker of the fire felt small against the raging hurricane outside.Simone and Sophie huddled together on a blanket, exhausted eyes reflecting the storm’s rhythm. Outside, the world was chaos. Inside, the cabin tried to hold that chaos at bay.But the shapeshifter had not left.In the dark, high on the ridge beyond the trees, it watched. No longer humanoid, no longer falcon, no longer anything fully alive in the way Junie or Rio knew. Its limbs flowed like black water, skeletal and trembling. The storm mirrored its confusion—flashes of lightning glinting

  • Blood Beneath the Cypress Knees   Escape to Driskill Mountain

    The shapeshifter shifted again, towering and humanoid yet inhuman. Its black, waterlike limbs flowed unnaturally around a skeletal frame.Its voice carried across the storm, cold and deliberate. “You think your little games have ended me? You’ve killed my handler. One of many. The High Hunters are patient. They will not stop until every vampire is destroyed.”Junie’s green eyes narrowed. “It’s not… it’s not just hunting us. It’s warning us. But is it a threat… or something else?”Rio gritted his teeth, gripping the steering wheel. “Doesn’t matter. We can’t wait here. Move now!”Both vehicles lurched forward in sync. The shapeshifter seemed to anticipate each turn, gliding along the flooded road with unnatural ease.Junie’s magic flared faintly, stabilizing the Chevy as water rushed around the tires. Her powers were no match for the storm—controlling the elements was near impossible.Willa’s fae warmth cocooned Jade, protecting her from the cold. Simone whispered for Sophie to stay cal

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