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The smell of lilies was always the first thing to return. It was the scent of my own funeral, a cloying sweetness that made me want to gag.
I opened my eyes and didn't move. I didn't breathe. I just counted the cracks in the gold-leaf ceiling of the ducal bedchamber. One, two, three... I knew them all. I had memorized them while gasping my last breath in Life Four. I had stared at them while my vision went black in Life Seven.
I was back. Life Ten. My final chance.
I sat up, my silk nightgown sliding against my skin. It felt like a shroud. I looked at my hands—they were steady, but my soul was screaming. Every inch of my body remembered the sensation of Julian’s fingers tightening around my throat, the desperate, confused look in his eyes just before the "Darkness" took him over.
He didn't know. That was the cruelest part of the curse. He killed me in the throes of passion, and then the world reset for me—but for him, it was always the first time. He was a monster who woke up every morning thinking he was a saint.
The heavy oak doors creaked open.
I froze. My heart hammered against my ribs so hard it hurt.
Julian Valerius stepped into the room. He was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen, and the most terrifying thing I had ever loved. His silver hair was tossed, his white shirt unbuttoned to reveal the hard, muscular planes of a chest I had died against nine times.
"Elowen," he murmured. His voice was like dark honey. "You’re awake early."
He walked toward the bed with the grace of a predator who thought he was a protector. When he sat on the edge of the mattress, the bed tilted. I instinctively scrambled backward, my back hitting the headboard.
Julian’s hand froze in mid-air. He was reaching for my cheek. His brow furrowed, a flash of genuine hurt crossing his handsome face. "You flinched. Why did you flinch from me, my love?"
Because I can still feel your thumb crushing my windpipe, I wanted to scream.
"I... I had a nightmare," I whispered. My voice was raspy.
Julian’s expression softened instantly. He leaned in, his scent—sandalwood and cold rain—filling my lungs. "It was just a dream, Elowen. You’re safe here. I have you."
He wrapped his arms around me, pulling me into his chest. It was the "Safe Place" that always became my grave. I felt the heat of his skin, the strength in his arms. I loved him. God help me, despite the nine deaths, I still loved him. And that was the true curse.
"Julian," I said, my face pressed against his heart. Thump-thump. Thump-thump. It sounded so normal. So human. "Do you love me?"
He pulled back just enough to look into my eyes. His gaze was intense, obsessive. "More than my own soul. I would burn this kingdom to the ground to keep you."
"Then don't touch me," I said.
The silence that followed was deafening. Julian’s eyes darkened, the silver in them turning to a stormy charcoal. "What?"
"Not today. No kissing. No... intimacy." I struggled to keep my voice from shaking. "If you love me, give me twenty-four hours of distance. Please."
Julian stood up, the warmth leaving the bed instantly. He looked down at me, his jaw tight. "Is this a game, Elowen? We were married only a week ago. My blood burns for you, and you ask me to stay away?"
"I am asking for my life!" I snapped, the words slipping out before I could stop them.
Julian went still. The shadows in the corner of the room seemed to stretch, reacting to his sudden shift in mood. "Your life? Do you think I am a threat to you?"
"I think..." I paused, looking at the door. I had to get to the library. I had to find the ritual. "I think we are both in danger, Julian. Just give me today."
He stared at me for a long, agonizing minute. The air in the room grew heavy, the temperature dropping until I could see my own breath. This was the "Darkness" starting to stir, even without the sex. The curse was getting stronger with every rebirth.
"Fine," he rasped, his voice sounding like grinding stones. "One day. But know this, Elowen—I cannot stay away from you forever. It is not in my nature."
He turned on his heel and strode out, slamming the door so hard a vase of lilies shattered on the floor.
I didn't waste a second. I scrambled out of bed, ignoring the glass, and ran to the floorboards near the window. In Life Seven, I had spent my final hours scratching a message into the wood under the rug, hoping my next self would find it.
I ripped back the heavy velvet rug. My fingernails tore as I pried up the loose board.
There, hidden in the dark dust, was a small, leather-bound diary and a dried rose stained with old, brown blood. I opened the first page. The handwriting was mine, but it was frantic, jagged.
"If you are reading this, I am dead again. He doesn't know he's doing it. Look at the mirror in the North Tower. The reflection isn't him. It's—"
The sentence ended in a bloody smear.
Suddenly, a cold hand clapped over my mouth from behind.
I tried to scream, but the sound was muffled. I was pulled back against a chest that was ice-cold. A voice whispered into my ear—a voice that sounded like Julian’s, but it was twisted, hollow, and ancient.
"You weren't supposed to find that yet, little bird."
I looked at the mirror across the room. I saw myself, trapped in the grip of a shadow. But standing behind me wasn't Julian.
It was a skeleton wearing his wedding ring.
Chapter 52: The Shadow in the CrowdThe apartment was small, cramped, and smelled of lemon polish and old wood. It was the most beautiful place I had ever seen.I stood by the window, watching the rain streak against the glass. Below, the city was a blur of yellow taxis and umbrellas. To anyone else, it was just a Tuesday. To me, it was a miracle."The tea is getting cold," Julian said.I turned around. He was sitting at a small circular table, the steam from two mugs rising between us. He looked different in the soft light of the kitchen. The tension in his shoulders had eased, but his eyes still darted to the door every time the floorboards creaked."I can't stop looking at them," I said, walking over and sitting across from him. "The people. They have no idea what’s walking among them.""That's the point of the contract, Elowen," Julian replied, his voice low. "We keep it that way."I looked down at my wrist. The circle-and-line tattoo was dark today, almost black. It had be
The white light didn't fade so much as it dissolved, leaving us standing in the middle of a city that felt like a graveyard made of glass and iron.This wasn't the manor. It wasn't the laboratory. It was a massive, sprawling metropolis that sat at the edge of a grey, motionless sea. The buildings were tall and jagged, their windows reflecting a sky that stayed a permanent, bruised purple. There were no cars, no people, and no sound except for the rhythmic pulse of the waves."This is the Source," Julian whispered, his voice echoing off the cold stone walls of the alleyway where we had landed. "The city Silas built from the remains of the First Life."I sat up, my head spinning. I looked at my wrist. The skin was smooth and pale. No violet eye. No black thorn. I felt lighter, but there was a hollow ache in my chest where the Scythe used to burn."Is it gone?" I asked, my voice trembling. "The power... is it finally dead?"Julian knelt beside me. He looked human—exhausted, bruised,
Chapter 50 The Two DoctorsThe air inside the manor was stagnant, smelling of old paper and the sharp, metallic tang of blood. The room looked exactly like my childhood bedroom—the yellowed wallpaper, the cracked ceiling, even the small wooden horse on the nightstand.But it was a lie. This room was a memory trap.I looked at the young man sitting on the edge of the bed. He looked barely twenty. His face was soft, his eyes a warm, chocolate brown without a trace of the charcoal fire that lived in the man standing behind me. He looked kind. He looked like the version of Julian I might have loved if our world hadn't ended a thousand years ago."Who are you?" I asked, my voice trembling."I’m the Julian you remember," the boy said, holding out the glass of water. "The one who promised he would never hurt you. The one who told you the Scythe wasn't a curse, but a gift."I looked back at the current Julian. He looked haggard. His jaw was tight, and he was staring at his younger self
Chapter 49: The Two DoctorsThe air inside the manor was stagnant, smelling of old paper and the sharp, metallic tang of blood. The room looked exactly like my childhood bedroom—the yellowed wallpaper, the cracked ceiling, even the small wooden horse on the nightstand.But it was a lie. This room was a memory trap.I looked at the young man sitting on the edge of the bed. He looked barely twenty. His face was soft, his eyes a warm, chocolate brown without a trace of the charcoal fire that lived in the man standing behind me. He looked kind. He looked like the version of Julian I might have loved if our world hadn't ended a thousand years ago."Who are you?" I asked, my voice trembling."I’m the Julian you remember," the boy said, holding out the glass of water. "The one who promised he would never hurt you. The one who told you the Scythe wasn't a curse, but a gift."I looked back at the current Julian. He looked haggard. His jaw was tight, and he was staring at his younger self
Chapter 48: The Whispering FogThe island didn't just change—it bled.As the emerald portal closed, the bright beach of Life Zero vanished. We weren't standing on white sand anymore. We were standing in the middle of a dense, suffocating fog that smelled of wet earth and ancient incense. The ocean was gone, replaced by the sound of invisible water dripping somewhere in the dark."Julian?" I whispered. My voice didn't travel; it felt like the fog was swallowing the sound."I’m here."His hand found mine in the grey gloom. His skin was cold, and for the first time, the silver marks on his arm weren't glowing. They were dark, like charcoal lines etched into his flesh. Without the sun, his "Shield" was dormant."Where are we?" I asked, squinting through the mist."This is the true Life Zero," Julian rasped. "The beach was just the lobby. This is the Source—the place where the first soul was split. It’s a pocket of time that never moves."A shape began to form in the fog. It wasn't
Chapter 47: The Void’s TitheThe beach of Life Zero was silent, but the silence was a lie.Julian stood at the edge of the surf, his boots sinking into the white coral sand. In his right hand, he gripped the white-hot Scythe—Elowen’s anchor. The weapon was still warm, vibrating with the frantic rhythm of her heartbeat, but the woman who owned it was gone.The emerald portal had vanished, leaving nothing but a faint, scorched scent of ozone and lilies in the air."Elowen!" Julian’s roar tore through the jungle, but only the mechanical hum of the island answered him.He slammed the Scythe into the sand. He didn't have his Shield anymore—the silver marks on his skin were dull, grey embers. He was just a man, a doctor, a soldier with no one left to save."She’s not coming back, Valerius."Julian spun around. Silas stood ten feet away, leaning against a twisted palm tree. He looked ancient again, his skin like yellowed parchment, his eyes clouded with cataracts. He wasn't a god here







