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"He Asked Me To Kill Him" Chapter 70 The Night Before the End

 

The world started ending properly three days later.

Not metaphorically this time.

Actually.

By then the rebel alliance had stopped pretending survival and victory were separate goals.

Every remaining sanctuary network across Europe converged toward the Swiss tunnels beneath the mountains while human resistance groups sabotaged Church supply routes from the inside.

Former Blackthorn hunters shared cigarettes with vampires between tactical briefings.

Children slept inside converted train cars painted with protective symbols from both religions and blood rites because nobody cared anymore which tradition worked as long as something kept the nightmares away.

War had stripped ideology down to usefulness.

And somehow—

somewhere inside the catastrophe—

people started becoming honest with each other.

Seraphina stood inside the central command tunnel watching the alliance prepare for what everyone privately suspected might be the final assault.

The underground station buzzed constantly now.

Weapons being repaired.

Maps updated.

Medics moving through overcrowded infirmaries.

Exhausted volunteers carrying soup containers between refugee cars while distant train engines hummed softly through the cavernous tunnels.

It should’ve felt hopeless.

Instead it felt strangely intimate.

Like the entire world narrowed down into one desperate stubborn decision:

We stay together anyway.

Lucien emerged from the western operations room sometime near midnight wearing black tactical gear half-covered by dried blood and snow.

The corruption reached the side of his jaw now.

Still hidden mostly beneath shadows and high collars.

Still impossible for Seraphina not to notice instantly.

God.

Fear lived inside her bloodstream permanently lately.

Lucien spotted her immediately across the crowded station platform.

And despite everything—

the exhaustion,

the war,

the literal apocalypse unraveling above them—

his entire expression softened.

Always immediately.

Seraphina crossed toward him automatically while resistance fighters moved around them carrying silver ammunition crates and radio equipment.

“You disappeared for six hours.”

Lucien removed one glove slowly before reaching for her hand.

Tiny thing.

Still enough making her chest ache now.

“I was handling eastern evacuation routes.”

“Translation?”

“A diplomatic disaster involving vampire nobility and three stolen helicopters.”

“Ah.” Seraphina nodded seriously. “A normal Tuesday.”

A faint tired laugh escaped him.

God.

She missed his laughter every single time it appeared.

Lucien brushed his thumb slowly across her knuckles afterward while looking at her with that same unbearable expression he’d been wearing lately.

Not grief exactly.

Witnessing.

Like he kept memorizing her in small pieces.

The way she stood.

The way she frowned while worried.

The tiny scar near her wrist from Prague.

Everything.

Seraphina noticed all of it.

And instead of terrifying her now—

it made something calmer settle inside her chest.

Because she realized she was doing the same thing.

Cassian interrupted before either of them spiraled emotionally again.

“Good,” he announced while approaching with several tactical folders tucked beneath one arm. “You’re both awake and emotionally codependent. Perfect timing.”

Seraphina took the files from him automatically.

“What happened?”

Cassian’s expression darkened immediately.

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“We intercepted Church transmissions from Prague.”

The station noise around them seemed quieter suddenly.

Lucien’s posture sharpened beside her.

Cassian unfolded a weather-stained map across the nearby train platform table.

Ancient symbols covered the cathedral district beneath Saint Vitus.

Concentric ritual circles.

Blood-marked pathways.

Something enormous buried beneath the city itself.

“Aldric isn’t just escalating the war anymore,” Cassian said quietly. “He’s trying to open something.”

Seraphina frowned.

“What does that even mean?”

Cassian handed Lucien a translated manuscript page.

Lucien read silently for several seconds.

Then went completely still.

No.

Seraphina watched the color drain from his already pale face.

“What?”

Lucien looked up slowly.

“The Crimson Gate.”

The name settled wrong immediately.

Ancient.

Rotting.

Like history itself recoiled from remembering it.

Cassian crossed his arms tightly.

“Please tell me that’s dramatic mythology and not actual apocalypse terminology.”

Lucien’s voice lowered.

“Before the Church existed, vampire blood rites believed immortality came from a fracture between worlds.” His gaze shifted back toward the manuscript. “The Gate was the place where that fracture first opened.”

Seraphina felt cold move slowly through her chest.

“And Aldric wants to reopen it?”

Lucien nodded once.

“If the ritual succeeds, the corruption won’t stay contained inside Europe.”

God.

Cassian exhaled sharply.

“So our options are prevent ancient blood apocalypse or die screaming. Excellent.”

Fair honestly.

The station alarms suddenly flickered red overhead.

Not attack warnings.

Atmospheric warnings.

People throughout the underground platforms slowed instinctively afterward.

Something changed.

Seraphina felt it immediately.

Pressure.

Like the air itself thickened unnaturally.

One of the younger resistance scouts pointed upward toward the tunnel entrance leading outside.

“Uh…”

Everyone turned.

The sky above the mountain pass had turned red.

Not sunset red.

Wrong red.

Deep crimson light spread slowly across the clouds like blood dissolving through water while distant thunder rolled somewhere far beyond the Alps.

Silence swept through the station.

Refugees stopped moving.

Children stared upward through the tunnel openings.

Even the vampires looked unsettled now.

Lucien stepped closer beside Seraphina automatically.

Protective instinct.

Always.

But this time she noticed something else too.

Fear.

Real fear.

Not for himself.

For everyone.

Morvena appeared from the eastern platforms already shouting emergency orders while radios exploded simultaneously across the station.

Church ritual activity confirmed in Prague.

Mass casualty events spreading through quarantine sectors.

The infected growing more aggressive under the red sky.

God.

Aldric had started the ritual already.

Seraphina looked toward Lucien.

He looked ancient suddenly beneath the crimson light spilling into the station tunnels.

Exhausted.

Dying slowly.

Still standing anyway.

And somehow that steadied her more than anything else.

Lucien reached for her hand again.

This time gripping tightly.

No hesitation left now.

No emotional distance.

Just them against the end of the world.

“You still with me?” he asked quietly.

Seraphina looked around the underground station afterward.

At the terrified refugees.

At Cassian barking evacuation plans beside armed sanctuary fighters.

At humans and vampires preparing together beneath a bleeding sky.

Then back toward Lucien.

Always back toward him.

She squeezed his hand hard enough he felt the answer before she spoke it.

“Till the world ends.”

Lucien’s expression broke softly at that.

Not sadness.

Something deeper.

Like love finally stopped feeling smaller than fear.

Then somewhere far above them—

beyond the mountains,

beyond the war,

beyond the burning cities—

something enormous screamed across the red sky.

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