Chapter 95 : Offering to the King
*Oliver*
I watched from Gideon’s front porch as two figures approached, walking hand and hand up the
driveway. Adrian looked like he was healing from several blows to the face based on the purplish hue
of his eye sockets and jawline, but Abigail looked chipper and exceedingly relieved as they neared the
house. I smirked, rising from the chair I’d been sitting in aimlessly for what felt like several hours.
“I take it my family knows what happened?” I said loudly, watching the scowl form on Adrian’s mouth.
He’d definitely taken one for the team.
“This,” he said sharply, waving his hand around his face as he stopped short of the porch steps, “was
for stealing the Persephone. That Beta of your father nearly killed me, and he said you're next.”
“He almost went after your dad, too,” Abigail teased, resting her hand on Adrian’s shoulder. “Your mom
had to separate them.”
“So the whole family is in Breles, then?” I asked, guilt rippling through my stomach as they walked up
the steps. I held the door open, and Adrian tossed a heavy duffle bag into my chest as he passed.
“Queen Hannah is in Winter Forest with someone named Mara, and White Queen Rosalie. Your mom
is… heading this way, apparently.”
“Great,” I murmured as I shut the front door behind me and tucked my hands in the pockets of my
jeans.
It had been over a month since Lena and Xander had disappeared. Adrian, Gideon, and I had spent
over a week in the hills looking for any trace of them, eventually coming up with the rotting bodies of a
man Gideon knew as Maxwell Radcliff and an unfamiliar guard. We’d also found a large, blackened
area outside of what was once a temple, which was littered with bones. At first, I thought something
had exploded there, but after a thorough investigation of the area, we realized that was where Lena
had opened the portal, and she had blasted away the winged creature that had carried Xander off into
the night.
It seemed far-fetched even now, but there had been no trace of them, or of the hybrid beasts that had
been causing chaos in the west, for weeks now.
The only explanation was that Lena had opened the portal and closed it behind her.
I’d stayed behind in Crimson Creek when Adrian went back to Breles a little over a week ago to find
Abigail, while also being the one to try to come up with an explanation as to what happened to my
cousin and his Alpha. I’d expected him to show up with an army, and my parents, and Lena’s parents.
But it was just him and Abigail.
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtHe sunk down into one of the couches, groaning loudly. Abigail swatted him as she turned around the
room, looking around.
“Adrian said vampires lived here,” she mused.
“They went into town,” I said, then explained the whole damn thing about the blood root to her. They
could use it to stay in the sun for a while if need be. It kept them alive while not needing to suck the
blood out of helpless victims. But from the stories Alma had told me about their kind at night while we
sat by the fireplace and waited for news from Adrian, I found out just how closely related our kinds
were, especially since the vampires who lived in this realm had been removed from their realm for a
long, long time.
They were more like us now than what they used to be. Our realm had morphed them, shaped them to
fit into our environment. Gideon, while always the graceful, welcoming host, had made it clear to me
that the second there was conflict with the King of the Vampires, he and his family were out. They
would leave because they didn’t stand a chance.
“Why did Hannah go to Winter Forest? Why is no one here? I expected my family to be here–”
“They’re building armies in Breles. I’ve never seen anything like it,” Adrian said with a sigh, rubbing his
eyes and wincing as he grazed the bruises. “Maeve wanted to come. She’s waiting for word from
Hannah, from what I understand. They’re trying to find Lena themselves.”
“Oliver,” Abigail cut in, “your mom told me to tell you to… to remember what you can do, and who you
are. I didn’t understand at the time–”
“I could probably open a portal,” I shrugged.
Abigail eyed me suspiciously, but Adrian looked livid.
“Why haven’t you mentioned this before?”
“I’ve had a lot of time to think and mess around out here,” I said sharply, shrugging. “I can do a lot of
the stuff Lena can, I think. At least, I used to when we were younger, before I turned twenty-one and
came into my powers as a wolf. I tried once while you were away, and I felt it for a moment, but nothing
happened. Not yet, at least. But when I was trying… I can’t explain it–” I gripped the couch, leaning
over it to look down at Adrian. “Someone is there, calling out to me. Trying to lure me in.”
“The Vampire King?” Adrian asked, but I shook my head, glancing at Abigail.
“Not Lena?” she asked, and I shook my head at her too. “Then who?”
“It’s a mate bond. I should only have healing powers, but this light–” I looked down at my hands, turning
my palms out toward Abigail. “Lena couldn’t do much besides make plants grow through the carpets
and dream dance before she was marked by Xander. Something about that bond, well, I think it’s
important. I first felt it with you, Abi, not going to lie, but it wasn’t strong like it should be. Just a flicker.”
Adrian was growing red in the face, but I continued.
“A spark, that's it. But when we found those bodies, Adrian. When we were in that place… I felt a
f*****g lightening bolt. Like my mate had been there, like she was still there–”
“Is this really what you’re worried about? Your parents are livid, Oliver. There’s a war coming. People
are dying–”
“I can’t f*****g help it,” I breathed. “It’s just there, like this energy is all around me, begging me to use it
like Lena can, or so I thought. Whatever it is… it wants me to go there, to that realm. My mate is over
there, Adrian. I feel like I’m supposed to find her, and she’s supposed to, I don’t know, help me like
Lena and Xander helped each other–”
“They got blasted into another realm, and now the royal family wants to f*****g kill me for it,” Adrian
argued, but Abigail laid her hand over his shoulder again, squeezing. He relaxed.
“This is all a little… out there. Don’t you think? Hell, you say you felt a spark with me, huh? Maybe my
long lost twin sister is in the other realm.”
Adrian smirked, shaking his head. I also considered this a joke, but the expression on Abigail’s face
told me otherwise.
“Wait, you have a twin?” I asked.
Adrian’s eyes shot up to his mate, studying her closely.
“Yeah, I do. I, uh, I did. She just… wasn’t there one day. I woke up and looked over and her bed was
empty, the window cracked open like she had left in the night or been taken. My parents don’t talk
about it. I was young, four or five. The only memory of her I have is her name.”
“Abigail, that’s awful. I’m sorry–” Adrian said, but I raised my hand, cutting him off.
“What was her name?” I asked, my tone steady and voice deathly serious.
“Elaine,” she said, tilting her head as she looked at me. “Her name was Elaine.”
***
*Lena*
The Vampire King’s castle was death. That’s the only way to describe it. Black vines snaked up its half
dozen or so towers made of obsidian, and there weren't any windows to be seen. The interior was just
as bleak.
It was frigid in the castle. So cold, ice glistened on the walls of the circular bedroom I’d been stuck in for
an unknown amount of time, likely days. A glass of water that had been sitting on the side table beside
the bed was nearly frozen over, and the bed itself was bare. I’d taken the sheets and duvet off the
mattress and wrapped myself in them as I slumped against the stone wall, trying in vain to stay warm.
I’d slept, but fitfully. I’d been so stupid… so, so stupid. What the hell had I been thinking? I hadn’t even
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmthought of Xander throwing his power over me like a net, stopping me from being able to force him
through the portal. That single second of realization had been enough for me to fail. The last thing I
heard was his scream telling me to shut the portal, but it was too late. I was airborne, stuck in the
clutches of a hybrid beast and much too far away.
He wasn’t dead; I knew that much, but I was too weak to use our bond to communicate with him.
I hadn’t met the king, not yet. But there was a reason for the cold, barren room and lack of food. He
was keeping me cold and hungry to stifle my powers, and it was working. The lights above my head
flickered in an uneven rhythm and gave me a painful, throbbing headache.
I wrapped the blankets tighter around my body, doing what I could to keep save the precious life inside
of me that was no doubt suffering just as much as I was.
Would he know I was pregnant? Would he be able to sense it?
I let a single tear fall down my chilled cheeks then wiped it away.
They’d taken my armor. They’d taken the knives. But the little pouch with the sunstone in it had been
hanging from my neck, hidden by my clothing. I still had it.
I didn’t know what it was, or how to use it. Starla had been adamant that I keep it safe. There had to be
a reason.
The door to the room swung open, and I flinched, turning my eyes away from whoever was taking up
the doorway. Warm air rushed in and crept through the blankets, thank Goddess.
“Up,” said a voice so shrill it sent a chill up my spine.
I rose to my feet, trembling as I held the blankets against my body.
“The king will see you now. Leave the blankets–”
“I’m freezing,” I said through chattering teeth.
The figure in the doorway entered the room, his face and body now in my full view–ugly, so, so ugly.
His skin was gray and sunken around his bones, and his eyes burned a deep red. He wore a silver
cloak that was nearly the same color as his skin.
He was bald, but past his sunken cheeks, I could see youth flaming behind his eyes. He may have
been handsome, once, before he became what he was.
He took several steps toward me and ripped the blankets away, tossing them on the bed. “Go, now!”
I swallowed against the fear rushing through my body. I was barefoot, and the frost-covered floor bit
into my feet as I walked out of the room, followed by the man.
The hallway was warm, almost hot. I sighed deeply, shaking terribly from the abrupt change in
temperature.
“Your behavior will determine your privileges,” the man, obviously a guard of the king sent to fetch me,
said with a shrill, gravelly hiss. “If you want warmth, you will be warm to the king. If you want food, you
will offer him the same.”