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Home > Fantasy > Kneel For Me: The Immortal Queen's Shadow
Kneel For Me: The Immortal Queen's Shadow

Kneel For Me: The Immortal Queen's Shadow

Author: : Alma
Genre: Fantasy
I was an arrogant, canceled reality TV star, trying to salvage my ruined reputation on a live broadcast. But after I lost my temper and assaulted a cameraman, my furious grandfather chased me into our family's forbidden gallery, where I accidentally crashed into an ancient, sealed portrait. The canvas shattered, and a terrifying woman with glowing golden eyes stepped out of the wall. She was Cecil, the First Matriarch of the Marshall family. She caught a lightning bolt with her bare hands and crushed me to my knees with an invisible, suffocating pressure. My grandfather, instead of saving me, groveled on the floor and abandoned me to her mercy. "You are the disgrace that will end this family." She hijacked my entire life, forcing me to act as her submissive baggage handler on my own survival reality show, broadcasting my humiliation to millions. I didn't understand why this ancient monster was tormenting me. Why did she strip away my pride, treat me like a broken tool, and force me to endure the mockery of the very ex-girlfriend who had ruined my life? But when those same cast members tried to corner me in the dark woods, Cecil stepped in front of me, her eyes locking onto the silver ring of the man mocking me. "To catch the wolf, one must sometimes walk with the sheep." That was when I realized she wasn't here to destroy me-she was here to hunt the parasites who had been secretly siphoning away my life force.

Chapter 1

"You people are just jealous of my life."

Aedan Marshall lounged on the velvet sofa, his voice dripping with contempt. He stared directly into the lens of the studio camera, a slow, mocking smile spreading across his face. He didn't care that millions were watching. In fact, he loved it.

In the corner of the room, standing just out of the camera's frame, Julian Fletcher wiped a bead of sweat from his forehead. The publicist's hands were shaking. He waved his arms frantically, slicing his hand across his throat in the universal sign to cut the feed.

Aedan saw him. He deliberately ignored the warning. He leaned closer to the lens, his eyes narrowing into slits. "You sit behind your screens, typing your little comments, while I live in a mansion you could never afford."

The live chat on the monitor beside him exploded. The text scrolled so fast it was a blur of vitriol. Scum. Cancel Aedan. Privileged trash. The hate was a living, breathing thing, filling the studio with a suffocating tension.

Julian couldn't take it anymore. He lunged forward, his hand reaching for the power switch on the camera rig. "Aedan, stop!" he hissed, his voice cracking.

Aedan's hand shot out, smacking Julian's hand away with a brutal backhand. The sound echoed in the quiet room. "Don't touch my equipment," Aedan snarled.

He stood up from the sofa, his posture rigid with defiance. He looked back at the camera, his middle finger raised high in the air. "This is what I think of your outrage."

The cameraman, acting on pure instinct, hoisted the heavy camera onto his shoulder and stepped forward, shoving the lens right into Aedan's face to capture the explosive moment.

The proximity was a mistake. Aedan's temper, already a lit fuse, detonated. His eyes went wide with fury. He grabbed the front of the cameraman's shirt with one hand and shoved him backward with all his strength.

The cameraman stumbled, his boots catching on a thick cable on the floor. He went down hard, the expensive camera hitting the concrete floor with a sickening crunch. Glass shattered. Plastic splintered.

Silence crashed into the room, broken only by the cameraman's groan of pain. Two production assistants rushed over to help him up, their faces pale with shock.

Aedan didn't even glance at the wreckage. He let out a cold scoff, adjusted his jacket, and turned on his heel. He strode toward the double doors of the studio, leaving the chaos behind him.

"Aedan!" Julian chased after him into the corridor, his shoes squeaking on the polished hardwood. He grabbed Aedan's arm, his fingers digging into the expensive fabric. "Are you insane? You just assaulted a crew member on live television! Your career is over! The family name-"

Aedan whipped around, his arm ripping free from Julian's grasp. His eyes were wild, his chest heaving. "The Marshall family doesn't answer to anyone!" he yelled, spittle flying from his lips. "Not the public, not the network, and certainly not you!"

Clack. Clack. Clack.

The heavy, rhythmic sound of a wooden cane striking the floor echoed from the far end of the dimly lit hallway.

Aedan froze. The fiery rage in his eyes extinguished, replaced instantly by a flicker of pure, childish fear. He knew that sound. He knew the rhythm.

Sterling Marshall emerged from the shadows. The old man's face was a mask of thunder, his wrinkles carved deep with disgust. He gripped his silver-tipped cane like a weapon.

"Family disgrace," Sterling roared, his voice booming off the paneled walls. He raised the cane high above his head.

Aedan didn't wait for the blow. He turned and ran, his expensive leather shoes slipping on the highly waxed floor. It wasn't the cane he feared, but the cold, clinical lecture that would follow-the freezing of his accounts, the confiscation of his keys, the utter stripping of his freedom. The cane was just the overture. He sprinted down the corridor, his breath coming in sharp, panicked gasps.

Sterling was surprisingly fast for his age. He chased after his grandson, the cane whistling through the air. It missed Aedan's shoulder and smacked against a porcelain vase on a side table, sending shards flying across the carpet.

"Come back here, you worthless boy!" Sterling bellowed, his face flushed red with exertion and anger. "I'll break your legs!"

Aedan didn't look back. His eyes darted around, searching for an escape. The main hallway was blocked. His only option was the side door, the one that was always locked, leading to the private wing of the estate.

He hit the door at full speed. To his shock, the heavy oak door wasn't latched. As he neared, he felt a strange, cold draft emanating from it, and saw the heavy bolt on the frame had been sheared clean off, the wood around it splintered as if from an internal blast. It swung open, and he stumbled into the dark, cavernous space of the family's private gallery.

The air in here was different-cold, still, heavy with the scent of old dust and ancient wood. Aedan's eyes hadn't adjusted to the darkness. He could barely see the towering display cases and the long, draped furniture.

"I'll teach you respect!" Sterling's voice echoed right behind him.

Panic seized Aedan's chest. He sprinted forward, his feet scrambling for traction on the slick, polished floor. He glanced back over his shoulder, seeing his grandfather's silhouette fill the doorway.

His foot caught on the leg of a display stand. The world tilted. Aedan threw his hands out to break his fall, but his momentum was too strong. He was hurtling directly toward the center of the room.

Toward the massive, gilded portrait that hung on the far wall.

"No!" Aedan screamed, his hands flailing in the dark.

He slammed into the heavy frame with the full weight of his body. The impact knocked the air from his lungs. A deafening crack echoed through the gallery as the ancient wood splintered. The entire portrait shuddered, the canvas tearing under the force of his shoe, and a strange, unsettling vibration hummed through the walls.

Chapter 2

Aedan bounced off the frame and crashed onto the floor. The wind was knocked out of him, his ribs screaming in protest. He gasped, tasting dust on his tongue.

Crack.

The heavy gilded frame gave way. The right side detached from the wall, the ancient metal brackets groaning in protest. The massive portrait swung downward, hanging at a precarious angle.

From the tear in the canvas where Aedan's shoe had punctured it, a faint, dark red light began to seep through. It was faint at first, like a dying ember, but it pulsed with a heartbeat of its own.

Sterling had just crossed the threshold into the gallery. He froze, his cane raised mid-strike. The anger drained from his face, leaving behind a sickly, gray terror. The cane slipped from his fingers and clattered to the floor.

"What have you done?" Sterling's voice was a ragged shriek, stripped of all authority, leaving only raw panic. "That is the First Matriarch!"

Aedan scrambled backward on his hands, his eyes locked on the glowing canvas. The red light was getting brighter, spilling out like blood from a wound. "What the hell..." he breathed, his throat tight.

The temperature in the gallery plummeted. The sweltering summer heat was instantly replaced by a biting, arctic chill. Aedan's breath left his lips in a thick, white cloud.

A low, resonant hum filled the room. Every glass display case in the gallery began to vibrate. The sound escalated from a hum to a high-pitched whine, the glass threatening to shatter under the invisible pressure.

The dark red light exploded outward, swallowing the dim gallery in a crimson haze. It crawled along the edges of the broken frame, illuminating the intricate carvings of wolves and thorns.

The walls began to shake. Plaster dust rained down from the ceiling, coating Aedan's hair and shoulders. The floor trembled beneath his palms.

Aedan scrambled to his feet, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. He had to get out. He turned to run back the way he came, but the heavy oak doors he had just burst through were shut. Sealed tight. He grabbed the iron handle and pulled with all his might, but it wouldn't budge.

Thud.

Behind him, Sterling dropped to his knees. The old man pressed his forehead to the floor, his body shaking violently. He wasn't trying to run. He was bowing.

The portrait tore itself from the wall completely. The massive canvas fell forward with a thunderous crash, kicking up a cloud of dust. Behind it, hidden for centuries, was a dark, hollow chamber.

Silence fell. The shaking stopped. The humming ceased.

Then, from the pitch-black void of the chamber, a hand emerged.

It was pale, almost translucent, with long, elegant fingers and nails that looked like polished bone. Blue veins traced delicate paths beneath the paper-thin skin.

The hand gripped the edge of the broken frame. The wood splintered slightly under the pressure of its grip.

A foot stepped out. It was clad in a silk slipper, the fabric aged but untouched by time, embroidered with silver thread that caught the crimson light.

A figure glided out of the shadows. She was tall, draped in a gown of heavy, dark velvet that looked like it belonged in a museum. Silver-white hair cascaded down her back, swaying with a life of its own.

Cecil stood in the center of the ruined gallery. She didn't move. Her eyes were closed, her chest rising in a slow, deliberate breath, as if she were tasting the air for the first time in centuries.

Aedan stood paralyzed by the door. His brain refused to process what his eyes were seeing. People didn't just walk out of walls. People didn't glow.

Cecil's eyes snapped open.

They weren't human eyes. There were no pupils, no irises. Just a solid, burning pool of pale gold, radiating a light that seemed to pierce straight through Aedan's skull.

She turned her head slowly, surveying the room. Her gaze swept over the cowering form of Sterling on the floor. The old man pressed himself flatter against the wood, a whimper escaping his lips.

Cecil's gaze drifted, landing squarely on Aedan.

The moment those golden eyes locked onto him, Aedan felt an icy hand grip his spine. The cold wasn't physical; it was a deep, primal dread that turned his blood to slush. His skin prickled with goosebumps. Every instinct screamed at him to run, to hide, to make himself small.

Cecil's lips parted. A sound came out, low and resonant, a language that hadn't been spoken in centuries. It wasn't a greeting. It was a verdict.

Aedan didn't understand the words, but the meaning was clear. He was being judged. And he was found wanting.

Cecil raised a single, pale hand. She flicked her wrist.

The air in the gallery twisted. A whirlwind materialized out of nowhere, sucking up the dust, the broken glass, and the splintered wood. The debris orbited Cecil in a violent spiral, a shield of destruction.

Aedan's knees buckled. It wasn't a choice. An invisible force, heavy and absolute, slammed down on his shoulders. It was like being crushed under a boulder.

His legs gave out. He slid down the door, his knees hitting the hardwood floor with a painful crack. He was kneeling. Kneeling at the feet of this impossible, terrifying woman.

Chapter 3

Cecil lowered her hand. The whirlwind died instantly, the debris clattering to the floor around her like fallen soldiers. She stepped forward, the heavy velvet of her gown brushing against the ruined floorboards.

She stopped directly in front of Aedan. He was shaking, his head bowed, his breath coming in short, ragged gasps. He didn't dare look up at those glowing golden eyes.

Cecil reached out. Her fingers, cold as ice, pressed firmly against Aedan's sweaty forehead.

A jolt of heat shot through Aedan's skull. It wasn't painful, but it was invasive. It felt like a searchlight rummaging through the dark corners of his mind, flipping through his memories, his thoughts, his very essence. He saw flashes of his own life, but from her perspective: the roar of a car engine, the artificial flash of a camera, the garbled noise of a thousand voices screaming from a flat, glowing rectangle. Countless chaotic images and words flooded her consciousness... a public trial ceremony called a "reality show," a system of digital currency, the complex web of a thing called "Hollywood." He tried to pull away, but his body was locked in place, paralyzed by the simple touch of her fingertips.

A faint, golden light seeped from beneath her fingers, casting strange shadows on Aedan's face.

Cecil closed her eyes, her expression unreadable. She held the connection for a long, agonizing moment. Then, her brow furrowed. A deep, disgusted crease appeared between her eyebrows.

Her eyes snapped open, the gold burning brighter. "Sanguis... hic tenuescere?" she whispered, the words ancient and sharp. Then, as the new language settled into her mind, her voice became clearer, laced with an archaic cadence. "The bloodline... has thinned to this? It is an insult to the family."

Aedan stared up at her, his eyes wide with shock. He understood her. And the words hit him harder than his grandfather's cane ever could. He opened his mouth to argue, to scream, to defend himself, but his throat was sealed shut. Not a single sound could escape.

Bang. Bang. Bang.

The muffled sound of heavy boots and shouting came from the hallway outside. The sealed doors shuddered in their frames.

"Security! Break it down!" a voice shouted from the other side.

The oak doors splintered inward. The cameraman Aedan had shoved earlier, his face scraped and bruised, rushed in, flanked by two burly security guards. He was holding a backup camera, the red recording light blinking furiously.

"Get off him, you freak!" the cameraman yelled, pointing the lens directly at Cecil and the kneeling Aedan.

The camera's focus locked onto Cecil's face. The golden eyes. The ancient dress. The glowing hand on Aedan's forehead. It was a viral moment captured in high definition.

Cecil turned her head slowly toward the intruders. The golden light of her eyes reflected in the glass lens of the camera.

The cameraman flinched, his hands trembling, but he kept the camera rolling. The live feed was broadcasting to the world.

Cecil stared at the black box in his hands. She could feel it. The subtle, invasive sensation of being watched by thousands of unseen eyes. The device was stealing her image, dissecting it, broadcasting it.

Her eyes narrowed. A dangerous, cold fury crossed her features.

She raised her free hand, her palm facing the camera.

The air in the room changed. It became charged, heavy with static. The hair on Aedan's arms stood on end. A sharp, metallic smell filled his nostrils-the smell of an impending storm.

The lights in the gallery flickered wildly. The electricity in the walls hummed a deafening pitch.

Inside the camera, the circuit board began to overheat. Smoke poured from the vents. The cameraman yelped, the plastic casing burning his hands.

A blinding blue arc of electricity erupted from the wall outlet. It wasn't a natural spark; it was a controlled, violent strike. The lightning bolt shot across the room and slammed into the camera.

The cameraman screamed, the shock throwing him backward. The camera was ripped from his hands and hurled into the air.

But the lightning didn't stop. The blue arc twisted in mid-air, deflecting off the exploding camera, and lunged straight for Cecil.

"Watch out!" Aedan tried to scream, but it came out as a hoarse, breathless croak.

Cecil didn't flinch. She didn't move her hand from Aedan's forehead. She didn't even blink. A faint, cruel smile touched the corners of her lips.

The lightning struck her open palm.

Instead of charring her flesh, the violent electrical current simply... vanished. It flowed into her skin, absorbed like water into a sponge. The blue light traveled up her arm, illuminating the veins beneath her pale skin, before dissipating into her core.

The golden glow surrounding Cecil flared, bright enough to cast harsh shadows across the entire room. The sheer power radiating from her was suffocating.

She opened her hand. Tiny blue arcs of electricity danced across her fingertips like playful pets. She had tamed the lightning.

The security guards and the cameraman didn't wait to see what she would do next. The cameraman, his eyes wide with terror, tried to scramble up, but his limbs wouldn't obey. The guards grabbed him under the arms, his body limp, and dragged his unconscious form from the room. They fled through the broken doors, their screams echoing down the hallway.

Cecil turned her gaze to Sterling, who was still prostrate on the floor. "Remove the insects," she commanded, her voice echoing with authority.

Sterling scrambled up, his joints cracking. "Yes, Matriarch," he stammered, his voice trembling. He hurried out of the room, shouting orders to clear the hallway.

Cecil looked back down at Aedan. She pulled her hand away from his forehead. The golden light faded, the oppressive pressure vanished.

Aedan collapsed onto his hands and knees, gasping for air. His lungs burned. His whole body was trembling. He stared up at the woman who had just caught lightning with her bare hands.

His mind, his reality, everything he thought he knew, shattered into a million pieces.

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