Sera didn't slow her pace as Viktor, a lower-tier vampire who worked security at The Scarlet Room, called out from his post. She'd learned early in this business that showing fear was like blood in the water. They could smell weakness, and in Nocturna, weakness got you killed. Or worse-turned.
"Just passing through, Viktor," she called back, keeping her voice light, casual. Human. "You know me. In and out."
His laugh followed her down the cobblestone street. "One day you'll stay for a drink. I'll make it worth your while."
Not in this lifetime or the next, Sera thought, but she just waved without turning back. Viktor was harmless enough, as vampires went. He liked to flirt with the human couriers, enjoyed the game of it, but he'd never actually touched one. The Blood Accord-the treaty that had governed vampire-human relations for the past century-was very clear about consent. Vampires could feed from willing humans at licensed establishments. Everything else was forbidden.
Not that the Accord stopped everyone.
Sera ducked into an alley, taking her usual shortcut toward her final delivery of the night. The Obsidian Tower-the fortress of the Northern Court-loomed in the distance, its black spire cutting into the star-scattered sky like a dagger. She never delivered there personally. No human courier with any sense got that close to the seat of vampire power. Her drop-off was at a subsidiary establishment three blocks away, a high-end blood bar called Crimson & Velvet.
She was five minutes from safety when she heard it.
The sound of a scuffle. Metal on metal. A grunt of pain that sounded distinctly not human.
Every instinct Sera had cultivated over twenty-three years of survival screamed at her to keep walking. Mind your business, stay invisible, don't get involved-these were the rules that had kept her alive and hidden. In Nocturna, curiosity didn't just kill cats. It massacred them.
But then she heard something else. A voice, low and commanding even in pain.
"You'll regret this betrayal, Celeste."
Sera's feet stopped moving before her brain caught up with the decision. She knew that voice. Everyone in Nocturna knew that voice.
Daemon Ashford. Lord of the Northern Court. The most powerful vampire in the city. And the man who had executed her mother ten years ago.
She should run. Every cell in her body knew it. Instead, she found herself creeping toward the mouth of the alley where the sounds originated, pressing herself against the damp brick wall.
Three figures moved in the darkness. Two were attacking one-the choreography of assassination playing out in fast, brutal movements. The lone figure was tall, moving with the lethal grace that marked him as vampire nobility, but even from here Sera could see he was losing. Blood-dark and gleaming in the lamplight-stained his white shirt. The blade in his hand was slowing.
Daemon Ashford was being murdered in an alley, and Sera was watching it happen.
Good, the vengeful part of her whispered. Let him die. Let him feel what your mother felt.
But the other part-the part that had kept her alive, that had made her good at reading people and situations-was already calculating the angles. If Daemon died, the Northern Court would collapse into chaos. The other courts would move in like sharks. The Blood Accord would shatter. And when vampires went to war, humans died by the thousands. History had proven that.
Sera's hand moved to her courier bag before she could second-guess herself. She wasn't armed-couriers couldn't carry weapons, as per the Accord-but she had something better. She had twelve vials of fresh blood, and vampires, for all their power, were slaves to their hunger.
She grabbed two vials, popped the seals, and hurled them into the alley.
Glass shattered against the cobblestones. The scent of blood-rich, intoxicating, overwhelming-filled the narrow space instantly.
The two assassins froze mid-strike. Their heads snapped toward the scent, eyes flashing red in the darkness. For vampires, fresh blood wasn't just food. It was a siren song, a compulsion written into their very nature.
"What the-" one of them started, but Sera was already moving.
She threw four more vials in quick succession, creating a trail of blood that led away from Daemon and deeper into the alley. The assassins followed it like puppets on strings, their assassination momentarily forgotten in the face of overwhelming hunger.
It would only buy seconds. Maybe a minute if she was lucky.
Sera sprinted into the alley toward Daemon, who had slumped against the wall, one hand pressed to his side where blood seeped between his fingers. His ice-blue eyes-the eyes that haunted her nightmares-tracked her approach with predatory focus.
"You," he said, and there was surprise in his voice. Surprise and something else she couldn't identify. "You're-"
"Stupid, I know," Sera cut him off, grabbing his arm and hauling him toward the other end of the alley. He was heavy, far heavier than any human, but adrenaline made her strong. Or maybe it was the other thing, the thing she never acknowledged, the thing in her blood that made her different. "Can you run?"
"I can kill you where you stand," Daemon said, but he was moving with her, his vampire speed returning as the immediate danger passed. "What are you?"
"Your exit strategy. You're welcome, by the way."
They burst out of the alley onto a main street. Sera could hear the assassins behind them, no longer distracted, coming fast. Daemon grabbed her suddenly, pulling her into a recessed doorway, his body pressed against hers, one hand over her mouth.
She should have been terrified. Should have been screaming. But all she could focus on was the cold solidity of him, the way his blood-old and powerful-called to something deep in her veins, and the ice-blue eyes that bored into hers from inches away.
"Don't. Move," he breathed against her ear.
The assassins rushed past, their footsteps fading into the distance.
Daemon held them there for another thirty seconds before releasing her, stepping back. Blood still stained his shirt, but the wound at his side was already closing. Vampire healing. Give him an hour and there'd be no trace of injury at all.
"That was foolish," he said, studying her with unsettling intensity. "Brave. But foolish."
"I panicked," Sera lied, avoiding his gaze. "Threw the first thing I had."
"You threw premium O negative. A month's salary for a human courier."
So he knew what she was. Most vampires didn't pay attention to the humans that served them, but Daemon Ashford wasn't most vampires.
"Send me a bill," Sera muttered, trying to step around him.
His hand shot out, catching her wrist. Not hard enough to hurt, but firm enough that she couldn't pull away. His skin was cold against hers. Dead skin. Monster skin.
"In vampire law," Daemon said slowly, "when someone saves a life, a debt is created. A blood debt."
Sera's stomach dropped. She knew about blood debts. Everyone did. They were magic, binding, unbreakable until repaid. And she'd just accidentally created one with the Lord of the Northern Court.
"I don't want-" she started.
"Neither do I," Daemon interrupted, and for the first time, she heard annoyance in his cultured voice. "But it's done. The magic has already bound us. I can feel it."
Sera felt it too. A thread of something connecting them, warm and uncomfortable and impossible to ignore.
"What does that mean?" she asked, even though she didn't want to know the answer.
Daemon released her wrist, but his eyes never left her face. In the lamplight, she could see details she'd never wanted to notice-the sharp angle of his jaw, the aristocratic features that made him look more like a fallen angel than a monster, the intelligence in those ice-blue eyes.
"It means," he said softly, "that you're mine until the debt is repaid. And I'm afraid, little courier, that saving the life of a vampire lord is not a small debt."
The implications crashed over her like a wave. She'd just bound herself to her mother's executioner. To the one vampire in all of Nocturna she should have let die.
"This is a mistake," Sera whispered.
Daemon's smile was sharp as a knife. "Perhaps. But it's done now." He pulled a card from his pocket-black, edged in silver-and pressed it into her hand. "Come to the Obsidian Tower tomorrow at sunset. We'll discuss the terms of your service."
"And if I don't?"
"Then the blood debt will compel you to come anyway, but you'll arrive in significantly more pain." He tilted his head, studying her with that unnerving focus. "There's something different about you. Something I can't quite place. What's your name?"
Sera's heart hammered against her ribs. She couldn't give him her real name. The Blackwood name was on a list, marked as traitor, as forbidden. If he connected her to her mother-
"Sera," she said, leaving off the surname. "Just Sera."
"Well, Just Sera," Daemon said, and there might have been amusement in his voice, "I look forward to understanding exactly what you are. Until tomorrow."
He was gone before she could respond, moving with the speed that made vampires apex predators. One moment he was there; the next, only shadows remained.
Sera stood in the doorway, clutching the black card, feeling the blood debt hum in her chest like a second heartbeat.
She'd survived twenty-three years by staying invisible, by being nobody, by hiding what she was. And in one stupid, impulsive moment, she'd bound herself to the one vampire who couldn't find out her secret.
Because if Daemon Ashford discovered she was a Dhampir-half vampire, half human-he wouldn't just kill her. He'd make it slow. He'd make it hurt. He'd make it an example.
"Congratulations, Sera," she muttered to herself, finally stumbling out of the doorway and toward home. "You've really outdone yourself this time."
Behind her, the Obsidian Tower loomed against the night sky, waiting.
To be continued.....