Page 52
Story: A Bargain So Bloody
I had avoided the alcove ever since Titus found me there.
I missed the music, but a na?ve part of me hoped that if I simply didn’t encounter the spymaster again, he’d ignore me.
He’d rightfully pointed out that if I told Raphael or anybody who he was, that would open more questions about how I knew, and those weren’t questions I could afford to answer.
And now that I’d decided not to tell Raphael about the grimoire passage I’d translated, I was keeping even more secrets.
So, yes, I was na?ve to think Titus would simply leave me be. And perhaps a little bit stupid.
Amalthea had offered—more like insisted—we go out to the second level and visit some of her favorite shops. She had offered to meet me at my rooms, but I offered to meet her closer to the tunnel that led to the lower level so she wouldn’t need to trek all the way from court to my chambers.
“Waiting for someone?”
I swung around, expecting to see Titus. Instead, the only thing I saw was an empty hallway.
“You’re a hard woman to get to these days, Samara Koisemi.”
Titus’s voice came from my left this time. Still, nothing. Disguise magic, then. The most potent disguise magic would allow the caster to become entirely invisible. As the king’s spymaster, Titus would have access to all the best cards.
Titus was a witch. Likely a powerful one— could have risen to power in the Storm-blooded King’s court.
But what kind of magic he had, I couldn’t be sure.
Likely not disguise magic, since otherwise he would have used it more liberally.
Not knowing a witch’s magic was dangerous, especially when that witch was threatening you.
“Amalthea will be here any minute,” I said. “You should go. I have nothing to say to you, except I’m not a threat to your mission.” Whatever it was.
“Oh, Samara. And here I thought you’d be interested in hearing the king’s offer to pardon you.”
I was unable to stop myself from flinching at his words. “What?”
“Oh, did that get your attention?” Titus said coyly. “Home, Samara. Pardoned, with enough money to start your own household in Ulryne. You could go home .”
He was suddenly very, very close. I couldn’t see him, but I could smell his breath. I wrinkled my nose.
“Why would the king do that?” He’d been the one who sentenced me as a child.
“Yes, what could make up for treason on two counts? What service could you give the Crown that would let His Majesty overlook the fact you helped a vampire break out of Greymere?”
I could give Titus the Black Grimoire . I’d have to escape after, but giving Titus that tool could be enough to earn a pardon.
It would be a betrayal, however. And as much as Titus might technically serve the Crown, I didn’t trust him. Not with that.
The pardon though? There was a very strong possibility it was a real offer. A tempting one.
“Righting that wrong would be a start,” Titus finally said when it became clear I wouldn’t answer.
“Destroying the scourge of our kingdom. You’d be hailed as a hero , Koisemi.
Your family name would be known for centuries for your bravery.
You wouldn’t just be pardoned, you’d be welcomed in court. ”
I wavered. For the briefest second, I considered what it would mean to be allowed to return home.
Not surrounded by dangerous creatures who could kill me in a heartbeat.
Ones who would maim children to get what they wanted.
Instead, I could be among my own kind, living out of exile.
Not a shameful life, but one I could live proudly in court, like my mother had always wanted.
It cost me something to give that up and say, “I’m not interested. I’ve made a new life here.” I had no intention of telling Titus my true plans were to go west of the kingdom.
“Look how keen you are to defend that life, even when it could be what kills you,” Titus purred.
My spine stiffened. “Are you threatening me?”
“Me?” The spymaster made a sound of indignation. “How quick you are to forget that any of them would kill you in a heartbeat. Isn’t that what nearly happened in the library just a few weeks ago?”
How did he know? Then again, he was a spy for a reason.
“The vampire was crazy.” That’s what Raphael had said—sometimes the old ones went insane.
“Do you really believe that?” Titus’s laugh was cruel. “Or is that what you want to believe, because otherwise you betrayed your country for no reason? You’re kept as a pet, a blood bag for their bastard king. You love being kept on a leash in a dark room.”
Vampires couldn’t lie. If Raphael said it, it must be true. Yet had he said the librarian had gone crazy? Or just that it happened sometimes? I tried to recall the exact wording .
“Open your eyes to the world you’re living in, not the one you’d like to believe you are,” Titus said. He was in front of me now. “I’ll ask your answer again in one week, Samara. Even if you’re as stupid as you appear, I expect your response may change.”
I wish I could say Titus’s offer hadn’t haunted my visit with Amalthea, but it had. At my request, she’d shown me more of Damerel. But both she and Demos had refused to show me the parts I was most desperate to see: the blood donors.
Maybe desperate wasn’t the right word. I didn’t want to be reminded of the act.
The memory of how it had felt with Raphael hadn’t faded—his fangs buried in my neck, sensation ricocheting through my body.
The shame of it, of being used to sustain another creature, the shame of how I would have let him take every last drop.
But I had to know. The three of them might have become my friends, but they were keeping some things secret.
Titus’s comments still lingered in my mind, seeds of doubt he’d masterfully planted.
What if I really had blinded myself, let myself believe everything could be okay when I was sheltered from the truth?
That was why I doubled back after parting ways with Amalthea .
Vampires and witches hadn’t become mortal enemies simply because they were two tame, well-mannered species with slightly differing needs.
They had warred over the years because vampires saw themselves at the top of the food chain and had taken and taken.
Centuries ago, a great battle had broken out, and the Witch Kingdom emerged, having driven the vampires out of society.
There had been a cost. We were surrounded on all sides, and lost access to the rest of the continent, as well as the ability to trade overseas.
But it was for the best. That way, we were safe.
So, no, regardless of how much I’d come to trust Raphael, I couldn’t believe voids had really given up everything and happily let vampires feed on them as needed.
Being in the second level felt different without the security of an escort. I pulled my cloak low over my head and clutched the bronze dagger in my hand.
I’d killed a vampire with that dagger. Gods, it was terrifying to be out alone, but I had to do this. I tried to remember what Raphael had said. No bravery without fear.
Well, I was afraid. But I had to know the truth, and that mattered more.
I knew exactly where to go: the district Amalthea was always careful to avoid. As I understood it, there had to be several different places for vampires to go drink, but much like restaurants cropped up in clusters in cities, so too did the vampire equivalent.
My stomach turned at the comparison, but I kept moving. The rule was the same in all cities—move with purpose, move fast.
Damerel held thousands of denizens, and the streets were moderately crowded at any time. I walked quickly, my heels digging into the dirt as I navigated the city.
An old wooden sign swung down from outside a building.
Signs like that were used throughout witch cities—a dress from a seamstress, a necklace for a jeweler, a bed for an inn.
This sign with a red droplet painted on it, there was no such sign in the Witch Kingdom.
But I understood the meaning implicitly.
It was late, even for vampires. A pair of male vampires walked towards the building, arms braced around each other’s shoulders.
“By blood, I’m starving,” one said loudly to the other.
I flinched at the bold exclamation, praying the shadows held me tightly.
“Me too. I hope Sue’s available tonight,” the other replied.
The first vampire chuckled, craggy laugh carrying over to where I stood at the edge of an alleyway. “Sue’s always available for you.”
The two went in.
I didn’t have a plan. I wanted to talk to some of the humans who worked there and find out what the truth was. See if they were really okay .
The building didn’t have any windows, otherwise, I would have looked in them to get a sense of what I was walking into.
There was no choice. After a few more minutes of deliberation, I went inside.
The inside of the blood den was nothing I’d been prepared for.
The building was grand, with columns at the entrance.
Several vampires lingered around. A host stood at the front but paid me little mind.
With my raven-black hair, I was obviously human, and therefore not a customer.
I walked back. The entryway turned into a long hall with dozens of branching rooms. Women and men were posted at most, bodies curved invitingly against the doorway.
More than just their necks were exposed.
Breasts were bare at minimum. I tried not to stare lest I get caught, but my cheeks were hot at the sight.
Until I passed an occupied room, the velvet curtain not fully loose.
The man sprawled out was entirely bare, appendages I’d only been vaguely aware of on display, and a vampire sat between his thighs…
biting. I walked faster, my blood cold. I rounded a corner and pulled the curtain back slightly on a room to the left.
No one was posted at the edge of it, but no sounds came from inside.
A girl was splayed backwards onto a low mattress.
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