38. Cain #2
I think of every time Adaro smiled at my refusal of human blood.
Every indulgent tilt of his head, every sealed pouch delivered without argument, every servant instructed to place the tray exactly where I could reach it.
I thought he tolerated the preference because it amused him.
I thought I was winning a private war each time I swallowed something he didn't understand.
He understood perfectly. He didn't need to force me to drink from him when he could teach me to request the method that made it feel like choice.
The realization doesn't erase everything I did outside this room. It does something worse. It makes every memory uncertain at the edges. I no longer know where the difference begins, and the not knowing is a quieter violence than certainty.
My body lifts the pouch toward my mouth.
The motion is smooth and practical, answering hunger, answering the command buried under hunger, answering years of trained routine.
My mind says no with everything it has left, but my hand continues until the sealed edge brushes my lower lip through the plastic.
Nausea rises so violently that even the tether seems to stutter, giving me a fraction of a second where disgust becomes stronger than habit.
I pull back. My arm locks halfway between tray and mouth, muscles shaking around the conflict, and the room narrows to the cold plastic in my hand and the pressure of the leash trying to finish what it started.
Hunger presses from inside my throat. The command presses from my blood.
I force my wrist downward inch by inch, and every inch feels negotiated with something certain of me.
When the pouch finally touches the tray, the wet slap of plastic against silver sounds obscene in the quiet.
I leave it there, unopened. The next command arrives sharper, shaped by thirst and routine, telling me to drink because the body needs fuel and the body knows the source.
My hand twitches toward the tray, and I pin it flat to my thigh with the other before the leash can make grace out of betrayal.
The pressure becomes immediate, punishing.
My throat works around thirst, my fangs ache, and the hunger opens wider behind them, less refined now, closer to the animal place old vampires pretend they've outgrown.
Starvation belongs to me more than that blood does.
The thought isn't noble, but it's mine. I look at the pouch until the red stops looking like fuel and becomes only evidence, a tray full of years, a clean label over a contaminated choice.
If Adaro enters now, he'll see it untouched.
That'll tell him something. I hope it wounds his vanity before I wound the rest of him.
Somewhere below, the tower trembles.
At first the vibration is subtle enough that I think hunger has made my senses unreliable.
Then dust loosens from the seam where wall meets ceiling and drifts down in a thin grey line.
The window gives a soft tick in its frame.
My body remains seated because the command hasn't changed, but the bond pulls tight through the forced calm, and something reaches me that hasn't been smoothed by Adaro's blood.
Ozone comes first, threaded with heat that burns too bright around the edges.
Soren's close enough that I can feel his magic scraping against the outer wards, not wild in the careless way he pretends to be, but focused to the point of pain.
He's holding too much. Even through the tower's interference, I can feel the strain in the shape of him, the way his power gathers around a task he's decided matters more than the cost.
Iron follows. Ira's presence touches the bond like a hand braced against a door before impact. Ira’s fear has no softness from this distance, no hesitation, only inventory: wall, guard, angle, blade, route, blood.
Then Aven reaches me, and the room seems to dim around the shape of him, carrying the cold, crowded movement of the dead beside it.
His fear is there too, braided tightly with resolve, and underneath both is the line he's drawn again and again since he understood what the Church wanted from him.
He won't become them to save me. He's coming anyway.
My heart moves once, hard enough to hurt.
The leash answers with another command, telling me to wait, to stay, to remain where I've been placed until the family comes to collect what has been fed and preserved.
This time, I stand. The first inch is agony, because obedience resists with a smoothness that would be beautiful if it belonged to anything other than captivity.
My hands press into the mattress. My legs tremble.
The command tightens through my thighs, my spine, the backs of my knees, and I rise through the narrow spaces it hasn't sealed.
My vision darkens at the edges. Hunger claws at my throat.
The pouch waits on the tray behind me, and every instinct the leash can reach insists I turn back, drink, sit, wait, be ready when Adaro enters.
I take one step toward the door, and the floor seems to shift beneath me, though I know it's only my body trying to translate resistance into stillness.
I take another step before the pressure catches hard enough to make my bones feel locked from the inside.
At the third step, I stop.
The door is still out of reach. My body will go no farther.
I lean into the command until my muscles shake, and my right foot drags forward half an inch before the floor might as well close around it.
The leash hums through me, repeating its familiar lesson without words.
Stay. Wait. Be beautiful. Be ready. Be grateful.
I can't reach the door, but I can stand facing it.
That's what remains to me, so I take it.
The alarms begin somewhere down the corridor, not the tower's old bell but a newer shriek that cuts through stone and routine.
The floor trembles again, harder this time, and Soren's magic strikes something below with enough force that pain flashes through the bond and nearly folds my knees.
Ira's presence moves closer, violence held in a straight line.
Aven's light widens, and the dead move with him through places the living can't fit.
Ellis flickers at the edge of the bond like a cold hand laid against my shoulder, not strong enough to hold, but present all the same.
My brother is dead, bound, and still choosing the door.
There's thirst, disgust, the unopened blood on the tray, and the sound of the people I love tearing their way toward a cage built to convince me love wasn't a thing my body needed.
I fix my eyes on the iron handle while the tether keeps me three steps from where I need to be, and I stand as far as it lets me. When the door opens, I'll be facing it.