LOGIN"Some princes are born to rule. Others are born to kneel." Crown Prince Caelum Salutregui was raised to be humanity's perfect weapon—diplomatic, deadly, and utterly devoted to destroying the vampire empire. What he wasn't raised to know? He's vampire royalty himself. When the Ashan Federation offers him as a "peace tribute" to the very monsters he's sworn to hate, Caelum expects torture, death, maybe both. He doesn't expect General Velis Drayke—a sadist in uniform who sees right through his royal mask to the defiant soul beneath. But in the Crimson Dominion, submission is statecraft and pleasure is politics.
View MoreThe scent arrived before memory could defend against it—jasmine and bitter almonds twisted into something obscene, a perfume that belonged in mausoleums rather than maternal chambers.
It was the same cloying sweetness that had once meant sanctuary, those distant afternoons when he'd pressed his face against silk skirts while his mother read him tales of noble princes and necessary sacrifices. Now it settled in his throat like a funeral shroud.
Prince Caelum paused at the threshold of the Queen Mother's solar, his hand moving unconsciously to the ceremonial blade at his hip—a gesture born of court paranoia rather than genuine threat.
Surely not here. Not with her.
The chamber basked in honey-colored light, filtered through stained glass windows that painted the space in shades of amber and blood.
Curtains embroidered with phoenixes consuming themselves in eternal flame hung between them, and dust motes danced like captured souls in the afternoon air.
For a moment he felt seven years old again, believing his mother could shield him from any darkness.
"Come, darling." Queen Isabella's voice carried across the room like warm honey over cold steel. "You've kept me waiting, and the tea grows bitter when left too long."
The reproach was gentle, practiced—the same tone she'd used when he was a boy hiding beneath his bed. A ruler must witness what he commands, Caelum. Even when it breaks his heart.
She sat in perfect composure at a lacquered table, its mirror-bright surface reflecting her movements like a scrying pool.
Queen Isabella moved with her usual grace—silk skirts whispering against marble floors, silver hair pinned in the elaborate braids that marked her station. But something in her posture felt wrong, like a violin string wound too tight.
Her hands—those pale instruments of statecraft that had signed both treaties and death warrants—arranged the porcelain tea service with ritual precision. They'd inherited it from his grandmother, each delicate piece finding its proper place among the scattered treaty documents.
Each gesture was deliberate: the delicate lift of her wrist, the careful positioning of bone china painted with blue roses, the theatrical pause before pouring.
"You look haunted," she observed, not meeting his eyes as he settled into the chair across from her. He noted absently how it faced away from the windows, away from escape, away from witnesses. "The weight of the crown presses heavy on young shoulders, doesn't it?"
"The eastern lords grow restless," Caelum admitted, though his mind was still on the border agreements he'd been reviewing before her arrival. "They question whether I have the stomach for what's coming."
"And do you?" Her gaze finally found his, and he was startled by what lurked there—not maternal concern, but something colder. Something that looked almost like satisfaction. The calculating stare of a chess master studying her final gambit.
"You've been working too hard, my dear." She lifted the delicate cup, steam rising from the amber liquid within. "Jasmine tea. Your favorite."
He lifted the offered cup, breathing in the complex bouquet. The scent was familiar—flowers and honey that had comforted him through countless childhood illnesses. But something else lingered beneath the surface, sweet where it should be bitter, enticing where it should warn.
His training screamed caution: Always test for foreign compounds. Trust nothing, not even love.
Yet this was his mother. The woman who had sung him lullabies about brave kings who saved their kingdoms through noble sacrifice.
"I've never disappointed you before," he said, and took a deliberate sip.
The tea was exquisite—layers of flavor unfolding like a symphony across his palate. Floral notes gave way to something richer, more complex. Almost medicinal, but in a way that promised healing rather than harm. She had always possessed impeccable taste in all things.
It wasn't until the second sip that he tasted the bitter undertone.
"No," she agreed, watching him drink with the intensity of a hunter tracking wounded prey. "You've been everything I could have hoped for in a son. Dutiful. Compassionate. Noble to a fault."
Something in her tone transformed those virtues into accusations. His eyes found hers across the desk, confusion replacing casual obedience as the porcelain cup suddenly weighed a thousand pounds in his hands.
"Mother?" The word felt thick on his tongue.
"I have waited so long for this day." She settled deeper into her chair, her own teacup untouched. "Twenty-two years of watching. Of pretending. Of playing the devoted mother while you grew into everything I knew you would become."
The warmth began in his chest—not unpleasant, like sinking into heated bathwater after a brutal winter hunt. His shoulders unknotted, tension melting away like snow in spring sunlight. But the relief felt artificial. Too complete. Too sudden.
The room began to tilt. Not physically—the floor remained steady beneath his feet—but reality itself seemed to shift sideways. The phoenix tapestries writhed, their golden threads becoming actual flames that licked at the edges of his vision.
"I don't... understand."
Chapter 7Their gazes met across the vast hall, and Caelum felt the world narrow to that single point of connection. The vampire's lips curved in the barest suggestion of a smile, cold and predatory and promising. Caelum stared back with all the hatred he could summon, letting it burn in his green eyes like emerald fire."Well, well," the vampire said, his cultured voice carrying easily across the distance. "What fire burns in this one."The vampire's tongue darted out, just the tip, to wet his lower lip. The gesture was brief and unconscious, but Caelum saw it. Saw the way those silver eyes darkened, pupils dilating slightly as they traced the line of his throat, the curve of his jaw."Commander Drayke," Queen Ysoria's voice cut through the tension like a blade. "How good of you to join us."Monster. The word rang through Caelum's mind, but it carried less conviction than it should have.…Several months earlier...General Velis Drayke stood cloaked in the shadows of Ashan's Great Ca
“Go to hell.”The assembled guards froze, not daring to breathe. Everyone knew Velis's reputation—his preference for slowly dismembering enemies, for making them watch as he tore out their throats with his bare hands.But instead of rage, Velis stared at the blood coating his palm and began to laugh. Low and rich and utterly delighted."Magnificent," he said, his voice slightly nasal from the broken nose but no less dangerous. His silver eyes fixed on Caelum with something between admiration and promise. "Absolutely magnificent."He straightened slowly, making no attempt to heal the damage or wipe away the blood. If anything, he seemed to relish it."You'll come to me willingly, Prince Caelum Salutregui," he said, each word precise despite his injuries. "You'll kneel at my feet and beg me to accept your submission. And when that day comes—and it will come—I'll remind you of this moment."His smile was sharp enough to cut glass. "Guards. Return our guest to his quarters. He needs time
Chapter 5Seras saluted with mechanical precision. "Yes, sir. Shall I prepare the interrogation chamber?""The reception hall."Another hesitation. "Sir?""You heard me."After she left, Velis moved to the window and studied the courtyard below. The first three wagons had already disgorged their human cargo—young men and women stumbling in the sunlight, iron shackles glinting against pale skin. They moved with the mechanical shuffle of people who had accepted their fate. Broken. Compliant. Useful.The fourth wagon remained sealed.He could see Federation guards clustered around it, speaking in hushed tones with his gate sentries. One of them—a man whose face looked like raw meat—kept gesturing toward the wagon and shaking his head. Whatever was inside had them spooked.Fifteen minutes later, they brought Caelum Salutregui into his office.Velis had executed men for breathing too loudly in his presence. He'd flayed the skin from Federation spies who'd tried to infiltrate his command st
The voice from within was cultured, controlled, and absolutely without warmth. A voice that had given orders for executions and inquired about the weather with the same dispassionate tone.The doors swung open, and Caelum found himself thrust into a circular chamber dominated by a single window that offered a view of the execution yards below. Maps covered every wall, marked with colored pins and trajectory lines and what looked like supply calculations. This was a war room disguised as an office, or perhaps the reverse.And behind the desk, reviewing what appeared to be tribute manifests with the same attention other men might give to wine lists, sat Commander Velis Drayke.Caelum had memorized that face from intelligence briefings, studied it until he could have drawn it from memory. High cheekbones sharp enough to cut glass. Dark hair pulled back with military precision. Eyes the color of winter storms, cold and grey and utterly pitiless. But the reports hadn't captured the way
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