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"He Asked Me To Kill Him" Chapter 40 Bells Before Sunrise

The bells started screaming before Seraphina fully woke up.

Not church bells.

War bells.

Heavy iron alarms echoing through the monastery ruins hard enough to shake dust from the ceiling beams overhead.

Lucien moved before the second bell finished ringing.

One second he was beside her beneath tangled blankets and fading firelight.

The next he stood fully dressed at the shattered stained-glass window with a blade already in his hand.

Predatory instinct took him instantly.

Seraphina pushed upright in bed, pulse slamming violently awake.

“What happened?”

Lucien’s expression darkened as he looked toward the monastery grounds below.

“Sanctuary breach.”

The words hit like ice water.

Outside, shouting echoed faintly through the snowstorm while distant explosions rolled across the mountainside beneath the dawn sky.

Seraphina grabbed her weapons immediately.

No hesitation now.

No emotional confusion.

Just survival.

The room smelled suddenly like smoke drifting through old stone corridors.

Lucien crossed toward the chamber door while loading silver rounds into a handgun with terrifying efficiency.

“Stay behind me.”

Seraphina stared at him.

“That’s adorable.”

“This isn’t negotiable.”

“You’ve met me for more than ten minutes.”

A sharp crash echoed somewhere deeper in the monastery.

Then screaming.

Human screaming.

Lucien went visibly colder afterward.

Not emotionless.

Focused.

That was worse.

Seraphina had learned the difference now.

They burst into the corridor together.

Chaos swallowed the monastery instantly.

Sanctuary vampires sprinted through smoke-filled hallways carrying weapons and injured civilians while emergency lanterns flashed red against ancient stone walls.

Someone shouted:

“Eastern tunnel collapsed!”

Another voice:

“Hunters breached the south gate!”

Gunfire cracked somewhere nearby.

Seraphina’s stomach dropped.

This wasn’t a raid.

This was extermination.

Lucien caught the arm of a passing sanctuary guard.

“How many entered?”

The vampire looked terrified.

“Too many.”

Not helpful.

The guard swallowed hard.

“They knew every access route.”

Silence.

Short.

Deadly.

Lucien’s eyes sharpened immediately afterward.

Betrayal.

Someone sold the location.

Seraphina saw the realization hit him in real time.

And somehow that hurt almost worse than the attack itself.

Because sanctuary locations were sacred.

Hidden.

Protected across generations.

Someone inside broke that.

Another explosion shook the monastery hard enough to crack plaster from the ceiling overhead.

Lucien grabbed Seraphina’s wrist instantly and pulled her sideways just before a section of corridor collapsed where she’d been standing seconds earlier.

Stone shattered violently across the floor.

Dust filled the air.

“You all right?”

The question came immediately.

Always immediately.

Seraphina coughed once through the debris cloud.

“I’m beginning to miss normal relationship problems.”

Lucien almost smiled.

Almost.

Then gunfire erupted again nearby.

Three Church execution operatives rounded the corridor corner through smoke and debris with sanctified rifles raised.

Seraphina reacted first.

Knife.

Shot.

Movement.

One operative dropped instantly before the others fully processed her position.

Lucien hit the second hard enough to crack the monastery wall behind him.

The third managed one silver round before Lucien tore the weapon away barehanded.

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The sanctified metal burned visibly against his skin.

He ignored it completely.

Seraphina noticed anyway.

“Lucien—”

“I’m fine.”

Lie.

Absolute lie.

The operative tried reaching for another blade.

Lucien grabbed him by the throat first.

And for one terrifying second—

Seraphina saw exactly why ancient vampires became myths.

Not rage.

Worse.

Efficiency.

Lucien looked at the man the way storms looked at buildings.

The operative froze instantly beneath that attention.

“Who gave you the sanctuary routes?” Lucien asked quietly.

The man spat blood instead.

“Humanity wins eventually.”

Lucien’s grip tightened.

Not enough to kill.

Enough to terrify.

“We found your hidden children,” the operative snarled. “Your shelters. Your breeding dens—”

Lucien slammed him against the wall hard enough to silence the rest.

The monastery corridor went frighteningly quiet afterward.

Because Seraphina realized suddenly—

Lucien wasn’t angry about himself.

He was angry about civilians.

Children.

Families.

The sanctuary.

That made him infinitely more dangerous.

Another vampire sprinted toward them through smoke.

“Lucien!”

Young.

Injured.

Terrified.

“The western chambers are gone.”

Lucien released the operative immediately.

“What about evacuation?”

“We lost contact with Cassian’s group.”

Everything stopped for one horrible second.

Lucien straightened slowly.

“What do you mean lost contact?”

The younger vampire swallowed visibly.

“He stayed behind near the lower gate to buy civilians time.”

No.

Seraphina saw the answer hit Lucien instantly.

Not dead.

Worse.

Captured.

Because Cassian would never abandon civilians first.

Lucien moved immediately toward the lower corridor tunnels.

Seraphina caught his arm.

“Wait.”

He looked at her.

And for the first time since she met him—

she saw genuine panic.

Not fear for himself.

Fear for someone he loved.

Cassian wasn’t just an ally.

He was six centuries of history.

The last surviving witness to who Lucien used to be before the world turned him into myth.

“We’ll get him back,” Seraphina said quietly.

Lucien’s jaw tightened hard enough she thought his teeth might crack.

Smoke drifted through the ruined corridor around them while attack bells continued screaming across the monastery grounds overhead.

Then another realization hit.

Seraphina looked toward the collapsed southern wing.

“They knew exactly where to strike.”

Lucien’s gaze darkened immediately.

“Yes.”

“Someone betrayed you.”

The words settled heavily between them.

Not theory anymore.

Fact.

Somewhere inside the sanctuary, someone sold out civilians to the Church.

And judging by the devastation surrounding them—

Aldric planned to turn love itself into a weapon.

Again.

Just like centuries ago.

Aurelia.

Lucien.

History repeating with horrifying precision.

Except this time—

Seraphina stood beside him willingly while the monastery burned around them.

Lucien looked toward the lower tunnels where Cassian disappeared.

Then back toward her.

And despite the chaos—

despite smoke and blood and collapsing stone—

his hand still found hers instinctively for one brief grounding second before he let go again.

“Stay close to me,” he said quietly.

Not command.

Prayer.

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