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"The Blood He Waited For" Chapter 16

The room assigned to Vivienne was expansive, yet it felt less like a guest suite and more like a gilded cage designed by a mind obsessed with permanence. Heavy velvet curtains, the color of dried blood, blocked the moonlight, while the air inside carried the distinct, oppressive scent of lavender and ancient dust.

She collapsed onto the bed, the mattress sinking under her weight, but sleep did not come with the gentle invitation of a welcome guest. It descended like a shroud.

The transition was not a fading of reality, but a violent tearing of it.

Suddenly, the cold, clinical silence of the Valmont estate evaporated, replaced by the howling of a wind so ferocious it felt as though it were flaying the very skin from her bones. Vivienne stood in a place she had only ever seen in the fragmented, terrifying flashes of her recent nightmares—but this time, the world was vivid, textured, and terrifyingly real.

She was standing at the base of a jagged cliff. Above her, looming against a bruised, indigo sky, sat the Valmont Castle. But it was not the modernized, stone-fortified manor she had entered tonight. It was a monolith of dark, raw stone, its spires clawing at the heavens like the fingers of a drowning giant.

Her breath hitched, and she realized with a jolt of primal horror that she could not move her arms. Her wrists were bound by heavy, iron manacles, the cold metal biting deep into her skin, chafing raw. She was clad in a simple, coarse shift of undyed wool, her feet bare against the frozen, unforgiving mud of the mountain path. A procession of hooded figures—silent, faceless, and terrifying in their rhythmic devotion—marched behind her, their low, chanting whispers sounding like the buzzing of locusts in the winter air.

She was not a guest. She was a sacrifice.

The gates of the castle—massive, iron-wrought barriers that hummed with a dark, resonant energy—groaned open as they approached. She felt the heavy, suffocating aura of the place press against her chest, a tangible weight that tasted of stale centuries and unquenched hunger. She was being led into the belly of the beast, to the center of a labyrinth from which no human had ever returned.

Vivienne tried to cry out, to scream, but her voice was trapped in a throat constricted by a terror far older than her own life. She stumbled, and the guards behind her shoved her forward with a brutality that left no room for hope. They were leading her up the grand stone staircase, the echoes of their footsteps ringing through the hollow halls like a funeral toll.

As they reached the heavy oak doors of the Great Hall, she felt a sudden, inexplicable shift in the air. The temperature plummeted, and a scent hit her—a blend of ozone, crushed lilies, and something deeper, something ancient and metallic.

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Blood.

The memory sharpened, becoming impossibly precise. She wasn't just observing this; she was living it. She felt the heavy doors swing open, revealing a hall lit by thousands of candles, their flames flickering in a draft that shouldn't exist. At the far end of the hall, seated upon a throne that seemed carved from the bones of history, sat a figure in white.

Even in the haze of her dream-memory, she knew him. His silver hair fell around his shoulders like moonlight trapped in silk, and his eyes—those glacial, haunting eyes—were fixed on her.

She stopped, her body shivering, not from the cold, but from the terrifying intimacy of his gaze. He didn't look like a master; he looked like a man who had been starving for a thousand years.

The leader of the procession leaned down, his voice a gravelly rasp in her ear. "You are the tribute, girl. Do you know why you are here?"

Vivienne tried to shake her head, but her body betrayed her. She watched, detached yet agonizingly present, as her own mouth opened. The voice that emerged was not her modern, shaky medical student's tone. It was melodic, firm, and layered with a sorrow that transcended time. It was the voice of a woman who had accepted a fate she did not choose.

"To feed a monster," she said.

The words hung in the air, heavy and absolute. The man on the throne stood, his movement as fluid and lethal as a predator's strike. He descended the steps, his gaze burning into hers, ignoring the guards, ignoring the ritual, ignoring everything but the woman in chains.

Vivienne felt the heat of his presence, a stark contrast to the deathly cold of the hall. He reached out, his long, pale fingers hovering just inches from her face, tracing the air as if afraid that touching her would cause her to shatter like brittle glass. His expression was a volatile mixture of agony and worship, a look of a man looking at a miracle he had destroyed.

"Aurelia," he whispered.

The name didn't sound like a name; it sounded like a prayer, a curse, and a vow all at once. The pain in his eyes was so profound that it reached through the barrier of the dream, anchoring itself into the marrow of her bones. She wanted to tell him she wasn't her, that she was Vivienne, that he had mistaken his ghost for a girl who had a life, a career, and a future. But she couldn't. The chains held her fast, and the memory tightened its grip, pulling her under.

The scene began to swirl, the castle walls dissolving into shadows, the candlelight bleeding into darkness. She felt the weight of the manacles slide off her wrists, the sensation of falling, of slipping through the cracks of time itself. The roar of the wind returned, louder and more insistent, pulling her away from the Great Hall, away from the man in white, and back toward the waking world.

Vivienne gasped, her body jerking violently as she snapped awake.

She sat up, her heart hammering against her ribs so hard it felt like a bird trapped in a cage. Her bedroom was dark, silent, and suffocatingly still. She was back in the Valmont estate, her wrists free, the air thick with the scent of lilies.

She clutched her head, trying to quiet the ringing in her ears, the phantom sensation of the cold iron still ghosting her skin. Her breath came in ragged, uneven hitches. She looked around the room, searching for something familiar—her watch, her bag, anything to ground her in the twenty-first century.

But as she reached out, her fingers trembling violently, her mouth moved before she could stop it. A string of words, elegant and archaic, spilled out with a fluidity that terrified her.

"Le sang ne meurt jamais," she whispered, her voice cracking in the darkness. "Il attend seulement que le monstre se réveille."

She froze, her hand clamped over her mouth. Her heart turned to ice. She had spoken French—not the academic, fragmented French she had learned in a night class, but the fluid, melodic tongue of a woman who had lived in the halls of an ancient, forgotten court.

She wasn't just dreaming. She was being remade.

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