LOGIN"You will." She reached across the table and plucked the cup from his nerveless fingers before it could shatter on the floor. "The treaty requires tribute, Caelum. Young. Beautiful. Noble. You satisfy all requirements admirably."
"You poisoned me." The words fell from his lips like stones into a still pond.
"I liberated you," she corrected. She rose with fluid grace that seemed to mock his growing paralysis. From her sleeve she produced a small vial—empty now, but bearing traces of white powder around the rim. "From the weakness that would destroy everything we've built."
His body was betraying him. First his hands, growing numb and unresponsive. Then his legs, muscles turning to water beneath him. But his mind remained crystal clear. Cataloguing every detail with the precision his tutors had drilled into him.
The way his mother's hands remained steady as she cleaned up the tea service.
The fact that she wouldn't meet his eyes as consciousness began to slip away.
The cruel calculation behind her maternal mask.
"I am not weak," he managed, though the words emerged slurred and pathetic. His heartbeat thundered against his ribs. Then stuttered in an arrhythmic symphony that sent panic coursing through his veins. "I've done everything you asked. The grain riots, the rebels in Thornwick, the—"
"You hesitated." She was behind him now. Her hands settled on his shoulders with deceptive tenderness. "Every time, you hesitated. You felt for them—those who would see our kingdom burn rather than kneel. That compassion will be the death of everything sacred."
Memory crashed over him like a poisoned tide. Standing in the courtyard of Ravenshollow. Watching smoke rise from cottages where families had barricaded themselves rather than surrender their sons to conscription. His mother beside him, beautiful and immutable as winter itself. Mercy is a luxury kings cannot afford.
He had given the order to fire the buildings.
But he had wept for them afterward. In the darkness of his chambers, where no one could witness a prince's weakness.
"You knew," he whispered. Understanding flooded through him even as his vision tunneled toward darkness. "You've always known."
"A mother knows her child's heart better than he knows it himself." Her fingers combed through his hair with aching familiarity. The gesture was so reminiscent of childhood comfort that for a moment he was small again—fevered and frightened, while she sang lullabies about heroes who saved the world through noble sacrifice. "And yours has always been too gentle. Too human."
"What did you use?" Professional curiosity warred with terror in his fading awareness. "I should have detected it. I can identify forty-three known toxins by scent alone."
"Not a toxin, my darling. Medicine." She moved to face him again, studying his dilated pupils with clinical fascination. "From the mountain shamans of Keth'morah. They use it to reshape consciousness. To burn away troublesome emotions. You'll wake tomorrow with your conscience clean as fresh snow."
Horror cut through the pharmaceutical fog like a blade through silk. The chamber breathed around him. Walls expanded and contracted like the ribs of some vast, dying beast. The drug—whatever hellish compound she'd chosen—rewrote his nervous system with each passing second. His body became a foreign country. His muscles responded with the sluggish obedience of a broken marionette.
"I'm going to perfect you." Her hand cupped his face with terrible gentleness. "The kingdom needs a ruler who can order massacres at breakfast and sleep peacefully that night. Who can watch children starve and feel nothing but necessity. I'm giving you that chance."
"Why?" The word escaped as barely more than a whisper.
Queen Isabella finally looked at him then. Her smile held no warmth whatsoever. "Because some sacrifices are necessary for the greater good. I became what the crown demanded, and it carved out pieces of my soul that will never grow back."
She leaned down and pressed her lips to his forehead. A benediction that felt like a funeral rite.
"When you wake, you'll be everything a king should be. Serve for your people, body and soul."
The cruel irony wasn't lost on him. Even through the chemical haze rewriting his consciousness, he could appreciate the vicious poetry. Trust was a luxury princes could afford with their mothers, even if they could afford it with no one else.
She had raised him on stories of just rulers and righteous causes. Filled his head with ideals of honor and mercy. Then condemned him for becoming exactly what she'd taught him to be.
"Mother—" His voice was barely a whisper now.
"Yes." The admission emerged soft as silk. Sharp as winter steel. "I'm sorry, my beautiful boy. I've been waiting for this day for years."
Consciousness fled like smoke through his fingers.
His last coherent thought was a fragment of an old lullaby she'd sung to him countless nights:
Sleep now, sweet prince, let dreams take thee, Tomorrow you'll wake and...
But he understood now that it had never been a lullaby at all.
As awareness slipped away entirely, he heard her voice one final time. Distant. Formal. Speaking to someone who had entered the chamber.
"It is finished. Send the Prince to them."
The last thing he saw before darkness claimed him was his mother's reflection in the polished table surface. Beautiful. Terrible. Absolutely without remorse.
The world went black to the scent of jasmine and bitter almonds, while her lullabies echoed in his ears like funeral dirges.
*
Chapter 43When the vampire's mouth descended to close around one aching nipple, tongue swirling with skill, Caelum's last coherent thought was that he was lost—utterly, completely lost—and that perhaps, in this drugged state, he didn't entirely mind being found.The sensation was unlike anything in his previous experience—not the rough urgency of stolen moments with palace guards or the clumsy fumbling of his few romantic encounters during diplomatic visits.This was something else entirely: methodical, deliberate, as though Velis were mapping every nerve ending with the patience of a scholar studying ancient texts."Look at me," Velis commanded softly, lifting his head just enough to meet Caelum's gaze. "I want to see those
Chapter 42"Why?" The question hung in the air between them, deceptively simple. "Your human constitution should not allow such rapid recovery. What are you not telling me, little prince?"Caelum's response was a barely coherent mumble, his tongue still thick from the drugs. "Fuck... off..."A hand reached toward him—pale, long-fingered, decorated with rings that had probably adorned the fingers of kings before their owners met unfortunate ends. The gesture was gentle, almost hesitant, as though approaching a wounded animal that might bolt at any sudden movement."Let me help you back to bed. These floors are too cold for someone in your condition.""Don't—" Caelum tried to jerk away, but
Chapter 41The endearment, the tone of false comfort—it was worse than violence. Violence, at least, was honest.This mockery of care, this pretense of gentleness from the monster who had destroyed everything Caelum had ever loved, made bile rise in his throat.But the sedative was already coursing through his veins, turning his limbs to lead and his thoughts to honey.His body went limp against Velis's chest, strength fleeing like water through cupped hands.Yet still the vampire lord held him, one arm supporting his shoulders while the other continued its careful work.Through the gathering haze of drug-induced stupor, questions bur
Chapter 40The surviving soldiers would remember those words for whatever remained of their miserable lives.They would whisper them in the darkness of their cells, would wake screaming from dreams where that soft voice promised them torments beyond imagination.They had witnessed something being born in that chamber—not love, for creatures like Velis were incapable of such pure emotion.But obsession, certainly.Possession that transcended the merely physical. The kind of fixation that had toppled kingdoms and driven men to acts of madness that echoed through history.And at the center of it all hung a broken prince who had som
Chapter 39Bronze rang against stone like a bell tolling doom. Caelum's blood painted the walls in crimson arcs, splashed across the faces of the torturers who had been so absorbed in their work that they hadn't noticed death entering their sanctuary.The metallic scent exploded through the confined space, thick enough to taste, rich enough to make even the strongest stomach clench."Who," Velis asked, and each word fell into the sudden silence like a blade finding flesh, "gave the order for this?"The three men who had been so confident in their work moments before now looked like rabbits caught in an open field by circling hawks.Two of them—mere soldiers whose names Velis had neve
Chapter 38Velis stepped carefully between the bodies, his boots squelching in puddles that reflected torchlight like dark mirrors.The silence felt wrong—not the comfortable quiet of a tomb, but the breathless hush that follows catastrophe.A single prisoner had done this. A mortal boy, barely past twenty summers, who had been dragged into these dungeons more dead than alive just days ago.Caelum, the fallen prince whose kingdom Velis had ground to dust, whose family had died screaming his name.That same boy had carved a path of destruction through Velis's most seasoned killers armed with nothing but chains and desperation.For the







