MasukThe 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. 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.
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 he moved. Economic. Controlled. Like a blade always prepared to cut.
Velis looked up from his papers. For a moment their eyes met across twenty feet of stone floor and fifteen years of bloodshed.
"Caelum Salutregui." The name emerged from Velis's lips like a diagnosis. "Crown Prince of the Ashan Federation. Heir to the throne that signs our tribute treaties." He set down his pen with deliberate care. "Do you know why you're here?"
Caelum straightened his spine despite the weight of iron and exhaustion. "Because your kind require fresh blood to survive, and mine are weak enough to provide it."
A smile ghosted across Velis's features—there and gone like a knife blade catching light. "Fresh blood, yes. But yours..." He stood and moved around the desk with predatory grace. "Yours is special."
"Special enough to warrant personal attention from the Butcher of Blackmere?"
The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees. Behind him, Caelum heard the guards shift nervously. But Velis's smile only widened, showing teeth that were very definitely not human.
"Oh, little prince." He stopped just beyond arm's reach. Close enough that Caelum could smell copper and ozone and something darker. "You have no idea how special you truly are."
Velis
The tribute manifest lay spread across Velis's desk like a dissection chart. Each name accompanied by blood type classifications, physical measurements, and behavioral assessments. Twenty-three offerings this cycle. Standard fare, mostly—farmers' children with rare O-negative, a few merchant spawn with adequate iron content, one bastard noble whose family had finally found a use for him.
Velis's finger traced down the list. House Marrick had sent another daughter. The third in five years. Either they bred prolifically or they were very good at adopting. House Dorne continued their tradition of offering twins—something about genetic purity that the court physicians found useful.
Standard. Predictable. Boring.
Then his finger reached the final entry.
Everything else became irrelevant.
Caelum Salutregui. Age 22. Blood classification: Unknown/Requires immediate testing. Special handling authorized by Queen Ysoria. Personal interview mandatory.
Velis read the entry three times.
In fifteen years of processing tribute manifests, he had never seen blood classification listed as unknown. The court had testing methods that could identify bloodlines going back eight generations. They could detect trace minerals absorbed from specific geographic regions. Dietary patterns. Even emotional predispositions based on chemical markers.
Unknown was not a classification. It was an impossibility.
He reached for the secondary intelligence file. A thick folder marked with the royal seal and bound in crimson silk. The contents made his blood run cold.
Subject exhibits anomalous readings in preliminary screenings. Standard classification methods produce contradictory results. Recommend immediate custody and extensive testing. Priority: Absolute. Handle with extreme caution.
Attached were surveillance reports going back months. Caelum training with weapons masters who'd taught half the Federation's officer corps. Caelum in closed-door meetings with intelligence officials. Caelum asking questions about vampire society that no tribute should know enough to ask.
And photographs. Dozens of them, taken with the long-range lenses that spy networks used when they wanted to remain invisible. Caelum in formal diplomatic attire, every inch the prince. Caelum in practice leathers, moving through sword forms with lethal precision. Caelum in casual clothes, walking through market squares where people stepped aside not from fear, but from respect.
This was no offering.
This was a weapon wrapped in velvet and tied with a bow.
A knock at his office door interrupted his analysis. Three short, two long—the code his aide used when the matter was urgent but not catastrophic.
"Enter."
Captain Seras stepped inside. Her armor bore fresh scratches from the morning patrol. "Commander. The tribute wagons have arrived."
"I can see them from my window."
"Sir." She hesitated—which was unusual for Seras. In ten years of service, she had faced down Federation cavalry charges and blood-drunk nobles with equal composure. "There's something you should know about the processing."
Velis looked up from the files. "Speak."
"The last wagon in the convoy. The guards are nervous. They keep mentioning special instructions and direct orders from the Queen Mother. And they've been asking about you specifically."
Interesting. Queen Isabella Salutregui rarely involved herself in tribute processing. She preferred to maintain the comfortable fiction that the offerings were diplomatic exchanges rather than cattle shipments. For her to issue direct orders about a specific tribute suggested either personal interest or political necessity.
Neither possibility boded well.
"Have the standard processing begun with the first wagons," he said. "I'll handle the special case personally."
"Sir, regulations require—"
"I wrote the regulations, Captain." Velis closed the files and locked them in the drawer marked with blood-binding runes. "When I want your opinion on procedure, I'll ask for it."
“It’s a pity,” he said. “That we were born on opposite sides. It forces my hand to cruelty I would rather avoid since you’re not an ordinary slave, Caelum. You’re a political prisoner—and perhaps… more than that. If only things had been different—if only we had been on the same side—”He didn’t finish.The words died somewhere between them, heavy and unfinished.Before Caelum could speak, Velis turned and left. The door closed with a muted click that sounded far too final—like the quiet sealing of something that could never be undone.The fuck is that?Caelum lay back against the thin pillow, staring at the ceiling. His body ached, his mind churned with questions he didn't want to consider, and somewhere deep in his chest, something twisted painfully.I didn't plan that.As if that made it better. As if that changed anything about what they'd done, what Caelum had let happen.He turned his face into the pillow, jaw clenched against the burning behind his eyes. But alone in the darknes
Velis's expression didn't change, but something flickered in his eyes—brief as lightning, gone before Caelum could identify it. "I never said anything about playing house.""Then what was it? The nice clothes, the private room, the servants bowing and scraping?" Caelum pushed himself up slightly despite the protest from his ribs. "What am I supposed to be to you?""Alive." The word came out sharp, cutting through the space between them. "That's all. Just... alive."Caelum stared at him, thrown by the response. The simplicity of it felt like a lie, but the way Velis said it—with that strange tension in his voice—made it sound almost like truth. "Why?""Because—" Velis stopped, his hand coming up to rub his temples in a gesture that seemed almost human in its frustration. For a moment, the mask of cold authority slipped, revealing something underneath that Caelum couldn't quite read. "Because the queen has taken an interest in you. Because there are things about you that don't make s
"Easy. You need to drink this. All of it."The voice was female, older, with the kind of authority that came from years of practice. A physician, maybe. Or whatever passed for one here.Caelum managed to crack his eyes open. The room was dim, lit by a single lamp. Stone walls, a narrow bed, the smell of antiseptic and herbs. An infirmary. Again.He lay still, eyes half-lidded, listening to the muted voices beyond the partition. Their words brushed against the edge of consciousness—hushed, yet sharp enough to pierce through the fog of pain.“The wounds barely stung, but his vital force felt drained, utterly spent—his body consuming itself to repair the constant damage." “But didn’t he refuse to serve the Commander?”“You know Commander Velis. He’s always… generous with his pets.”A pause. Then the same woman again, her tone laced with reluctant admiration.“He keeps them alive, even when their blood has turned bitter. Even when there’s nothing left worth consuming. He tends to them
The portraits on the wall offered no answers. They only stared, eternal and silent, keeping whatever secrets they'd held in life.Ysoria's mind raced through possibilities:Could there be a connection between the old Dixon line and the Salutregui family? But that was absurd—humans and vampires didn't interbreed. Couldn't interbreed. The biological incompatibilities were absolute.Wasn't that the foundation of their entire society? Vampires above, humans below, with a divide between them as impassable as death itself?Unless...Ysoria closed the book with a heavy thump that echoed in the confined space. She pressed her palms flat against its cover, willing her thoughts to order themselves.If there was a connection—if Caelum carried some genetic legacy from the Dixon bloodline—then he wasn't just a curiosity. He was a threat.Because if the noble houses discovered that a human bore markers of the deposed royal family, they would have questions. Dangerous questions. The kind that could
She stood abruptly, the silk of her gown whispering against the floor. Her chambers were vast, opulent—every surface a testament to her power. But there were places within these rooms that no one else knew existed.Secret places.Her fingers found the carved rose on the northern wall, pressing the center of its bloom. Stone ground against stone as a hidden panel slid aside, revealing a narrow passage beyond.The air that wafted out was stale, heavy with dust and old secrets.Ysoria took her lantern and stepped into the darkness.The passage was barely wide enough for her to walk comfortably, its walls pressing close like a throat trying to swallow her whole. Small alcoves had been carved at intervals, each one holding a candle that had long since burned to nothing.She knew this path by heart. Had walked it a hundred times in the dead of night when sleep eluded her and the past came calling.At the passage's end stood a door of dark iron, its surface carved with symbols older than h
Velis's expression didn't change, but something shifted in the air between them. The temperature seemed to drop ten degrees."You would prefer death?" His voice was soft as silk and twice as dangerous. "Very well. Let me arrange that for you."He moved faster than human eyes could track. One moment he was standing three feet away. The next, his hand was locked around Caelum's throat, just above the collar, lifting him onto his toes.Caelum's hands flew up instinctively, grabbing at Velis's wrist. Not that it mattered—the vampire's strength was absolute."Is this what you want?" Velis leaned in close, his breath cool against Caelum's ear. "You want me to treat you like the enemy? Like a prisoner? I can do that. I can put you back in that cell and visit you every night to take what I want while you scream yourself hoarse. Would that make you feel better? Would that let you keep your precious pride?"Caelum couldn't speak, couldn't breathe. Dark spots danced in his vision."Or perhaps yo
Chapter 26: The Sanctum of ViolenceCaelum woke in darkness.Not the ceremonial black that cloaked incense-thick temples. Not the dusky velvet gloom of the thro
Chapter 24: The CollapsePresentHis arms gave out with a sickening finality.Elbows slammed against cold ma
Velis stepped closer, his presence commanding absolute attention. When he spoke, his voice carried the weight of unquestionable authority."Hands behind your neck. Spine bowed. Knees apart."
“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 laug







