"You're late," Ivy said, uncurling from the threadbare couch. "Four hours late. I was about to start calling hospitals."
"Don't," Sera said automatically, shrugging off her courier bag. The remaining vials clinked together-she'd lost six to her moment of stupidity. Six vials meant sixty credits lost. That was groceries for two weeks. "You know they don't admit humans without payment upfront."
"Which is exactly why I was worried." Ivy crossed the room in three strides, her hands hovering near Sera's shoulders like she wanted to check for injuries but knew better than to touch without permission. They'd been roommates for five years, best friends for longer. Ivy knew Sera's boundaries. "What happened?"
Sera opened her mouth to lie-she was good at lying, had built her entire life on a foundation of careful untruths-but the words stuck in her throat. The blood debt hummed under her skin, a constant reminder of how spectacularly she'd ruined everything.
"I did something stupid," she said finally, sinking into the armchair that Ivy had rescued from a dumpster three years ago. "Really, catastrophically stupid."
Ivy's eyes widened. "Stupid like 'I got caught speeding in the vampire district' stupid, or stupid like 'I accidentally insulted a vampire lord' stupid?"
"Stupid like 'I saved a vampire lord's life and now I'm bound to him by blood debt' stupid."
The silence that followed was absolute. Even the dying pipes seemed to hold their breath.
"Tell me you're joking," Ivy whispered. "Please tell me this is your weird sense of humor finally emerging."
Sera pulled the black card from her pocket and held it up. Silver lettering gleamed in the dim light: **Daemon Ashford, Lord of the Northern Court**. And below that, in smaller script: **The Obsidian Tower, North Quarter, Nocturna**.
Ivy sat down hard on the couch. "Oh, fuck."
"Yeah."
"Daemon Ashford. The Daemon Ashford. The Ice Lord. The-" Ivy's voice dropped to barely a whisper. "The one who executed your mother."
Sera's hand clenched around the card, the edges cutting into her palm. "I know who he is, Ivy."
"Then why-" Ivy stopped, shook her head. "No, stupid question. You wouldn't have done it unless you had a reason. What happened?"
So Sera told her. About the alley, the assassination attempt, the vials of blood thrown in panic, and Daemon's ice-blue eyes watching her with that unsettling intensity. She left out one detail: the way her blood had sung when he'd pressed her into the doorway, the way something in her had recognized something in him. That was too dangerous to say aloud, even to Ivy.
When she finished, Ivy was quiet for a long moment.
"You did the right thing," she said finally.
"I bound myself to my mother's killer."
"You prevented a war." Ivy leaned forward, her expression fierce. "Sera, if Daemon Ashford died in an assassination, do you know what would happen? The Northern Court would tear itself apart fighting for succession. The other courts would move in. The Blood Accord would collapse. And when vampires go to war, humans are just collateral damage."
Sera knew this. Had known it even in the moment. But hearing Ivy say it made her feel marginally less insane.
"He wants me at the Obsidian Tower tonight," Sera said. "To 'discuss the terms of my service.'" She couldn't keep the bitterness from her voice. "I'm going to be a vampire's servant. Me."
The irony wasn't lost on either of them. Sera, who'd spent her entire life hiding from vampires, was now bound to the most powerful one in the city.
"How long?" Ivy asked.
"He didn't say. Blood debts last until the debt is repaid, and apparently saving a vampire lord's life is not a small debt."
"Could be worse," Ivy offered weakly. "Could be a blood bond."
A blood bond was permanent, formed when a vampire and human exchanged blood willingly and repeatedly. It created a psychic link, an obsession, a connection that lasted until one of them died. It was also highly addictive and generally considered a fate worse than death by both species.
"Not helping, Ivy."
"Sorry." Ivy grabbed her tea, realized it was cold, and set it down with a grimace. "Okay. Practical concerns. Do you think he recognized you?"
This was the question that had kept Sera's heart racing the entire walk home. Her mother had been Elena Blackwood, executed for the crime of loving a vampire and bearing his child. Sera had been thirteen, hidden away when the Northern Court guards came. She'd watched from a hiding spot as Daemon Ashford himself had passed judgment.
But that was ten years ago. Sera had been a child then, and she'd changed. She was taller now, her features sharper, her dark hair kept short instead of long. She'd also been careful never to use her surname, never to draw attention, never to give anyone a reason to look too closely.
"I don't think so," Sera said slowly. "He seemed curious, but not suspicious. And I only gave him my first name."
"What about-" Ivy gestured vaguely at Sera. "You know. The other thing."
The other thing. Her dhampir nature. The fact that she was half vampire, an abomination by both human and vampire law.
"I was careful," Sera said. "Didn't use any strength. Didn't let him get a good look at my eyes." Her eyes were brown in normal light, but in darkness or under stress, they reflected light like a vampire's. "He noticed something was different about me, but he couldn't place it."
"Yet," Ivy said grimly. "He couldn't place it yet. Sera, you can't go to the Obsidian Tower. You can't spend time around him. He's going to figure it out eventually."
"I don't have a choice." Sera held up her left wrist. In the right light, you could see it-a faint silver mark, like a thread wrapped around her wrist. The physical manifestation of the blood debt. "The magic will compel me if I don't go willingly. And if I show up writhing in magical pain, that's definitely going to raise questions."
Ivy looked like she wanted to argue, but she knew Sera was right. They'd both studied the laws, the magic, the rules that governed vampire-human interactions. It was necessary knowledge for survival in Nocturna.
"Then we need a plan," Ivy said, shifting into problem-solving mode. This was what she did, why they worked so well together. Sera was the risk-taker, the one who acted on instinct. Ivy was the planner, the one who thought three steps ahead. "First, you need a cover story. Why did you save him?"
"Panic," Sera said immediately. "Human courier, panicked, threw the blood without thinking."
"Good. Simple. Believable." Ivy started pacing, a habit she'd picked up during her brief stint at university before the tuition became unaffordable. "Second, you need to be forgettable. Don't stand out. Don't be interesting. Just be a human servant doing her job."
"That's going to be hard if I'm around him constantly."
"Then you need to make yourself useful in a boring way. Bookkeeping. Scheduling. Something that keeps you in the background."
Sera nodded, but doubt gnawed at her. Daemon Ashford hadn't looked at her like she was forgettable. He'd looked at her like she was a puzzle he intended to solve.
A sharp knock at the door made them both jump.
Sera and Ivy exchanged glances. Nobody knocked on their door at three in the morning. Nobody friendly, anyway.
"Expecting someone?" Ivy whispered.
Sera shook her head, already moving toward the door. She pressed her eye to the peephole and felt her stomach drop.
Two figures stood in the hallway, both wearing the black and silver uniforms of the Northern Court guard. Vampires. In her building. At her door.
"Fuck," she breathed.
"What?" Ivy hissed. "What is it?"
"Northern Court guards."
"Already? But you just-the sun isn't even up yet!"
Another knock, harder this time. "Sera," a male voice called through the door. "We know you're in there. Lord Ashford requests your presence."
Requests. What a lovely euphemism for demands.
Sera looked down at herself. She was still wearing her courier clothes-black pants, grey shirt, both practical and nondescript. Her hair was a mess and she probably smelled like the streets, but there wasn't time to change.
"Coming," she called, then turned to Ivy. "If I'm not back by sunrise-"
"Don't," Ivy cut her off. "Don't do the dramatic goodbye thing. You're coming back."
Sera wished she had Ivy's certainty.
She opened the door to find two vampires who looked like they could break her in half without trying. The one who'd spoken was tall, dark-skinned, with the kind of handsome features that probably made humans stupid. His partner was a woman, blonde and petite, which made her no less dangerous. Vampires didn't need size to be deadly.
"That was fast," Sera said, aiming for casual and landing somewhere near terrified. "The summons said sunset."
"Lord Ashford changed his mind," the male guard said. His eyes were the deep red of a well-fed vampire. "He wants to see you now."
"It's the middle of the night."
"It's always night for us." The vampire smiled, showing just a hint of fang. "I'm Marcus, by the way. This is Elena."
Sera's heart stuttered at the name. Elena. Her mother's name.
The female guard noticed her reaction and her smile sharpened. "Problem?"
"No," Sera said quickly. "Just tired. Long shift."
"Then let's make this quick." Marcus gestured toward the stairs. "After you."
Sera glanced back at Ivy, who stood in the doorway of their apartment looking small and frightened. Sera tried to give her a reassuring smile but wasn't sure she succeeded.
The walk down four flights of stairs and out into the street was silent except for the sound of their footsteps. A black car waited at the curb-expensive, sleek, the kind of vehicle that screamed vampire money.
Marcus opened the back door. "Get in."
Sera got in.
The interior was all black leather and tinted windows. Marcus slid in beside her while Elena took the driver's seat. The car started with a purr and pulled smoothly into the empty street.
"So," Marcus said conversationally, "you're the courier who saved our lord's life."
"Lucky timing," Sera muttered.
"Lucky for Lord Ashford, certainly." Marcus studied her with unsettling focus. "He's very interested in you."
"I can't imagine why. I'm nobody."
"Nobody who threw away sixty credits worth of premium blood without hesitation." Marcus tilted his head. "That's either very brave or very stupid."
"Can't it be both?"
He laughed, and the sound was surprisingly genuine. "I think I like you, Sera. It's rare to find humans with a sense of humor about these things."
"These things being my indentured servitude?"
"Blood debts aren't slavery," Elena called from the front seat. "You'll be compensated. Lord Ashford is generous with his servants."
The word "generous" sounded wrong coming from her. Vampires weren't generous. They were territorial, possessive, and viewed humans as either food or tools. Sometimes both.
The Grey District gave way to the North Quarter, and the architecture changed dramatically. Human buildings were practical, cramped, built on top of each other like they were trying to save space. Vampire buildings were sprawling, elegant, designed to showcase power and wealth. It was a physical manifestation of the social hierarchy: vampires on top, humans below, and everyone knew their place.
The Obsidian Tower rose before them, blacker than the night sky, its windows glowing with cold white light. It was the tallest structure in Nocturna, visible from everywhere in the city. A reminder that vampire rule was absolute.
Sera had never been this close to it before. She'd made a point of avoiding it, avoiding anything connected to Daemon Ashford. And now she was being delivered to his doorstep like a package.
The car pulled into an underground garage where more guards waited. They were being cautious, Sera realized. After an assassination attempt, security would be tightened. Every unfamiliar face would be scrutinized.
Including hers.
"This way," Marcus said, leading her to a private elevator. The doors were polished silver, reflecting Sera's pale face and wide eyes back at her.
She looked terrified. She needed to fix that.
By the time the elevator opened on the top floor, Sera had schooled her features into something approaching calm. She'd survived worse than this. She'd survived losing her mother, survived thirteen years of hiding, survived discovery attempts and close calls and nights when she'd been sure she wouldn't see morning.
She could survive Daemon Ashford.
The elevator opened into a cavernous space that was more art gallery than office. High ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city, and furniture that probably cost more than Sera's entire building. Everything was black and silver and sharp angles. It felt cold despite the massive fireplace crackling at one end.
And standing by the windows, looking out over his city, was Daemon Ashford.
He'd changed clothes since the alley. Now he wore black slacks and a crisp white shirt, the sleeves rolled to his elbows. His dark hair was pushed back from his face, and in the firelight, his ice-blue eyes seemed to glow.
He didn't turn when they entered.
"Leave us," he said quietly.
Marcus and Elena bowed and retreated to the elevator. Sera heard it descend, taking her escape route with it.
"Come here," Daemon said, still looking out the window.
Sera's feet moved before she could think about refusing. The blood debt pulled at her, a gentle insistence that would become painful if she resisted too long.
She stopped a few feet behind him, close enough to obey but far enough to feel safe. Or as safe as anyone could feel alone with a vampire lord.
"Do you know what I see when I look at this city?" Daemon asked.
Sera wasn't sure if he expected an answer. "Your kingdom?"
"A powder keg." He finally turned to face her, and the intensity in his gaze made her want to step back. "The Blood Accord is a fragile thing, Sera. It requires constant maintenance, constant vigilance. One spark and everything burns."
"Why are you telling me this?"
"Because you saved my life tonight, and you need to understand what that means." He moved closer, and Sera forced herself to hold her ground. "There are factions within the vampire courts that want war. They see humans as cattle, as food, as lesser beings fit only for service and sustenance. The Accord restricts them, frustrates them."
"And you?" Sera asked. "What do you see us as?"
"Necessary," Daemon said simply. "Humans are necessary. Your blood sustains us, yes, but your ingenuity, your short lifespans that make you desperate to create and build and leave something behind-that drives progress. Without humans, vampire society would stagnate."
It was the most pragmatic, cold assessment of human value Sera had ever heard. And somehow, it was more honest than the pretty lies about peace and coexistence that the Blood Accord claimed.
"The vampires who tried to kill you tonight," Sera said slowly. "They're part of this faction that wants war?"
"You're perceptive." Daemon's expression didn't change, but something flickered in his eyes. Approval, maybe. "Yes. And their attempt failed, thanks to you. Which means they'll try again. Which means I need to know everyone around me is loyal."
"I'm not around you."
"You are now." He held up his own wrist, where a silver thread identical to Sera's marked his pale skin. "The blood debt binds us. Where I go, you go. What threatens me, threatens you. We are connected until the debt is satisfied."
"How do I satisfy it?"
"You can't. Not quickly." Daemon lowered his wrist. "Saving a life, especially a vampire's life, creates a debt measured in years, not months. You'll serve me, live here in the Tower, act as my personal attendant."
Sera's stomach dropped. "Live here? I have a life. A job. A roommate-"
"Your job now is serving me. Your residence is the Tower. As for your roommate-" Daemon pulled out his phone, typed something, and showed her the screen. It was a bank transfer. Ten thousand credits. To Ivy Chen. "Consider this compensation for the inconvenience. It should cover your rent for the year and her portion as well."
Sera stared at the number. Ten thousand credits. That was more money than she'd seen in her entire life. More than enough to keep Ivy safe and fed for a year. Maybe longer if she was careful.
It also felt like a collar snapping shut around her neck.
"I don't have a choice," Sera said quietly. It wasn't a question.
"No," Daemon agreed. "You don't. The debt is binding. You can serve me willingly and make this easier on both of us, or you can resist and make it painful. But the outcome is the same."
He was right. Sera knew he was right. But that didn't make it easier to accept.
"What exactly will I be doing?" she asked. "As your personal attendant."
"Whatever I need. Scheduling, correspondence, research. You'll accompany me to meetings, events, court gatherings. You'll be my eyes and ears in places where I cannot go." Daemon's gaze swept over her, assessing. "You'll also need new clothes. Humans in my service dress appropriately."
Sera looked down at her courier uniform and felt a spike of defensiveness. "What's wrong with my clothes?"
"Nothing, for a courier. But you're not a courier anymore. You represent me now, and appearances matter in vampire society." He gestured to a door Sera hadn't noticed. "Marcus will show you to your quarters. Get some rest. We have a long night ahead of us tomorrow."
"It's already tomorrow," Sera pointed out.
The corner of Daemon's mouth twitched. It might have been a smile. "Fair point. Get some rest regardless. Dismissed."
Sera turned toward the elevator, but Daemon's voice stopped her.
"One more thing, Sera."
She looked back.
His ice-blue eyes pinned her in place. "Don't lie to me. I'll find out if you do, and I don't tolerate deception from those in my service. Whatever secrets you're hiding-and you are hiding something-I will discover them eventually. Better to tell me now."
Sera's heart hammered against her ribs. He knew. Or suspected. But he didn't know what, not yet.
"Everyone has secrets, Lord Ashford," she said carefully. "Even you, I'd bet."
"Especially me." He turned back to the window. "Now go. Before I change my mind about letting you sleep."
Sera didn't need to be told twice.
Marcus was waiting by the elevator and led her down a corridor lined with doors. He stopped at one near the end, pushed it open, and gestured inside.
"Your quarters," he said. "Bathroom through there, closet on the left. Someone will bring clothes in your size before sunset. If you need anything, there's a phone on the nightstand. Dial zero for the kitchen, one for housekeeping, two for security."
"And if I want to leave?" Sera asked.
Marcus's expression was sympathetic but firm. "You can't. Not without Lord Ashford's permission. The blood debt won't let you get more than a mile from him before it starts causing pain. Think of it as a magical leash."
"Wonderful," Sera muttered.
"It could be worse," Marcus offered. "Lord Ashford is demanding but fair. Serve him well and you'll be treated well. Try to run or betray him..." He didn't finish the sentence. He didn't need to.
"Thanks for the pep talk," Sera said dryly.
Marcus smiled. "I like you, Sera. Try not to get yourself killed, yeah?"
He left before she could respond.
Sera entered her new quarters and closed the door, leaning against it. The room was bigger than her entire apartment. King-sized bed, elegant furniture, a window overlooking the city. It was beautiful. It was a cage. It was both.
She crossed to the window and looked out at Nocturna spread below her. Somewhere out there, Ivy was probably pacing their apartment, worried. Somewhere out there, humans were sleeping in their beds, unaware that their world was a powder keg waiting to explode.
And here, in the Obsidian Tower, Sera was bound to the vampire who'd killed her mother, hiding a secret that could get her executed, with no idea how she was going to survive this.
The silver thread around her wrist pulsed gently, reminding her of the connection. She could feel Daemon somewhere in the tower, a cold presence at the edge of her awareness.
"You wanted to survive," she whispered to herself. "So survive."
She just had to figure out how to do that without losing herself in the process.
To be continued....