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The Price of Devotion - A Dark Marriage Between a Vampire and a Human

WARNING: DARK ROMANCE, MATURE The judge's lips curved into a thin, wicked smile as her gaze locked onto Asher. She stepped forward, her black lace gown trailing behind her like a dark, flowing shadow. Beneath the mask that obscured her eyes, something cold and knowing gleamed—a predator sizing up its prey. Asher’s pulse quickened. He hadn’t expected this. No one had. From his seat, Mr. Evergland studied the scene with careful detachment, one hand resting casually on the arm of his throne-like chair. The room was tense, a ripple of hushed murmurs passing through the vampire assembly. Some watched with fascination. Others with growing unease. A few even looked outright afraid. The judge’s voice shattered the silence, calm but laced with a chilling authority. "You’ve made your choice," she said, each word deliberate. "You want to challenge this union, to save your sister... but you offer yourself as the prize. Very well. Let’s make it official." Asher froze, his breath caught in his chest. Official. The word settled over him like an iron weight, suffocating the air in the room. He had walked into this with no plan, no backup—but now it was too late to back down. The judge raised her hand, and the crowd fell into stunned silence. Her voice rang out again, carrying a finality that reverberated through the cold marble walls. "Tonight, Asher of the Kapella family," she declared, her tone unwavering, "you will not only interrupt our ceremony—you will replace it. We will honor the bond you’ve offered, and in doing so, I will bind you to me." A collective gasp swept through the room. Eyes flicked nervously between Asher and the judge. He could feel the weight of every gaze, but his own mind was spinning. This can’t be happening. This wasn’t part of the plan. "What do you mean?" he stammered, panic creeping into his voice. He had thought he was making a stand, but now it felt like the ground was slipping out from under him. "I... I didn’t mean—" The judge’s smile deepened, cruel and sharp. She tilted her head, as if savoring his discomfort. "Did you really think there would be no consequences?" she asked, her voice silk over steel. "You’ve disrupted our world, Asher. You’ve made your offer, and now... you’ll fulfill it. In the most fitting way." ______ In the desolate world of Rakan, the Evergland Clan reigns supreme as the most powerful royal vampire family. In a bid to secure an alliance, they seek a marriage candidate for their son and turn to the most coveted human family in the land, the Kapellas, who, despite their status, live in poverty and misfortune. This human family consists of a widowed mother, an eldest daughter, and two sons: the youngest son, who is mute, and the eldest son, Asher, who is terminally ill. The Evergland Clan arranges a grand dinner and ball to unite the families. Though the eldest daughter, the family’s pillar of strength, has already found love with another human, she is nonetheless chosen to marry the vampire heir. Bound by duty but conflicted by her heart, she is set to fulfill the Evergland Clan’s wishes. During the proceedings, Asher, determined to protect his sister from a loveless union, takes a bold step. He interrupts the wedding and takes over, giving himself up to a mysterious women. Unaware of the consequences this declaration will bring, Asher unknowingly opens the door to a fate far darker than he could have anticipated.

Ky_Sade · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
20 Chs

The Honeymoon Prt.2

The moment lingered, taut with tension, as if the very air around them had thickened with an unspeakable weight. Asher's breath came in shallow, uneven bursts, and his mind raced, a thousand thoughts crashing into each other—none of them clear, none of them helpful. He knew this wasn't real. She wasn't real. But the way she held him, the way her fingers traced his jaw so gently, so possessively, made him question that very belief.

He had to remind himself why he was doing this. Why he had allowed himself to be dragged into her world in the first place. She was a vampire. She had marked him, claimed him in front of everyone, and he had fought back. But there was no denying it—her power was intoxicating. His body betrayed him every time she touched him, every time her voice brushed against his skin like a fevered whisper.

His gaze locked onto hers, and for a brief moment, he saw something in her eyes—something that made his stomach churn. It wasn't just the hunger of a predator; it was something deeper, something more primal, a dangerous kind of warmth that both terrified and aroused him.

"Look at me, Asher," she murmured, her voice as soft as velvet, yet edged with a knowing hunger. "I know you feel it too."

He couldn't look away, though every part of him screamed to break free. His heart hammered in his chest, not just from fear or disgust, but from the undeniable pull of her presence.

"I told you," she continued, her fingers sliding from his jaw to his throat, "you're mine now."

He clenched his jaw, the words burning in his chest. No. I'm not yours.

But as her fingertips brushed over his pulse, something inside him clenched. That heartbeat. That constant reminder of what was happening to him. He was losing himself. Little by little, piece by piece, the man he had been was slipping away, consumed by this twisted connection, by the bond she had forged between them.

"I don't want to be yours," he whispered, his voice hoarse, but he knew the words held no real conviction. His lips were trembling. He was on the edge, and if he didn't do something soon, he was going to fall.

Her smile widened, a flash of amusement dancing in her eyes. "You say that now," she teased, leaning in close, her lips almost brushing his ear. "But give it time. You'll learn to crave this. Crave me.."

For a moment, he considered pushing her away, breaking free, but the words stopped him.

"Give it time, Asher. You'll understand what it means to be mine."

And then, without warning, she pressed her lips to his neck—just above where he'd felt the sting of her bite earlier. The sensation sent a shock through him, a sharp tremor that went straight to his bones. She kissed the mark she'd left, and he felt it in the pit of his stomach, a cold shiver spreading through his veins.

Asher's eyes fluttered shut, and he cursed himself. He couldn't lose this battle. Not now. But as she lingered there, so close, so overpowering, a small voice in the back of his mind whispered, What if... what if you already have?

Suddenly, without him realizing it, he found himself leaning into her touch, his body betraying him in a way that felt like betrayal of everything he once stood for as his hands found her thighs. His thoughts blurred, his resistance slipping, as the dark, seductive allure of her nearness pulled him deeper into her world.

And then, in the stillness of the room, her voice cut through the fog.

"I can make it stop, you know. All you have to do is give in."

Asher's chest tightened, and he knew—he knew—that if he wasn't careful, if he wasn't vigilant, he might just do the one thing he feared more than anything.

He might let her win.

The room felt like it was closing in on him, the dim candlelight flickering against the walls as though the shadows themselves were alive, watching.

For a brief moment, Asher closed his eyes, feeling the weight of his own uncertainty, the raw power of the bond they'd forged between them, and the terrifying knowledge that he might already be too far gone to fight back.

And then... he heard it.

A sound—something sharp, something crackling—coming from the corner of the room. It was almost imperceptible at first, but the longer it lingered, the clearer it became.

The unmistakable sound of a door creaking open.

Asher's heart stopped.

Something—or someone—was coming.

The door creaked open slowly, the sound like nails scraping against stone. Asher's pulse quickened, his instincts firing, his body tensing as his eyes darted toward the darkened corner of the room where the sound had come from. He could feel the judge's breath still warm against his neck, but it wasn't her proximity that had his heart pounding now—it was the presence of something else. Someone else.

The judge's grip on his throat tightened slightly, as though she sensed the shift in his focus. Her fingers were still on his skin, but her hold had become possessive, almost territorial, as if warning him not to move.

"Relax, Asher," she purred, her lips brushing his ear as she pulled away just slightly to look toward the door, her red eyes flicking toward the sound. "It's nothing you need to worry about."

But the tension in the room had shifted. Asher could feel it—the way the shadows seemed to deepen, the way the air became thick with something dangerous. This wasn't right. The calm assurance in her voice, the way she tried to soothe him, only made his sense of dread escalate.

The door had opened fully now, and a figure stepped into the flickering candlelight.

The woman entered with a quiet grace, a short figure in a long maid's dress, the hem of her uniform sweeping gently along the floor as she pushed a cart ahead of her. Her movements were deliberate and precise, but there was something about her presence that unsettled Asher, something he couldn't quite place.

She lowered her head in a respectful bow, her voice soft but carrying through the room.

"I apologize for interrupting, Judge and Court Consort. I have brought what you requested."

Asher blinked, staring at the maid's unassuming figure, trying to reconcile her appearance with the sharp, disorienting reaction that surged through him. There was nothing threatening about her—nothing that screamed danger—but still, he couldn't shake the feeling that something was off. He was rattled, his mind racing to understand why her presence had unnerved him so deeply.

His breath hitched in his chest. What was it? He couldn't place it. Maybe it was the way she moved, or the unsettling silence she brought with her. It was almost as if her very existence had disrupted the fragile atmosphere the Judge had carefully cultivated.

The Judge's gaze flickered toward Asher, her eyes narrowing as she caught the tension in his face. She could sense his unease, and it irritated her—it was ruining the mood she'd so carefully orchestrated. The perfect moment shattered by an innocent maid and her unassuming cart.

"Bring the cart over here and leave," the Judge hissed, her voice low and dangerous, like a sharp blade sliding through the air. She turned her attention back to Asher, reaching out to caress his face, her touch meant to soothe, but with an undercurrent of frustration. "And hide your presence better next time. You're scaring him."

The maid, clearly rattled by the Judge's tone, quickly apologized, her voice trembling slightly. "Ah—! I'm so sorry, Court Consort! It won't happen again." She hurriedly wheeled the cart toward them, avoiding Asher's gaze, and then gave a deep, flustered bow before retreating as quickly as she'd come.

Asher remained frozen, his heart still thumping in his chest, though the maid had already left. He couldn't understand why he was so shaken. The brief encounter had been so ordinary, yet... nothing about this place felt ordinary anymore. The tension in the room had been thick, suffocating even, and now the air felt even heavier in her absence.

The Judge didn't seem to notice Asher's lingering discomfort. Instead, she turned her full attention to the cart the maid had left behind, her expression already shifting back to its usual cold composure.

"Now, where were we?" she murmured, but Asher didn't reply immediately. His mind was still spinning from the strange sensation left behind by the maid's brief presence. Had it just been him? Or had there been something else in the air?

The Judge's eyes flicked over the cart, her fingers running delicately over the top of the lid, as though inspecting something of great importance. But Asher couldn't focus on what she was doing. His mind was still trapped in that strange, unnerving moment, his eyes drifting toward the door as if expecting the maid to reappear. He swallowed hard, trying to push the feeling of unease from his chest, but it clung to him like a heavy fog.

The shadows in the room had not lightened, and the air remained thick with something sinister. The familiar warmth of the Judge's presence—the kind that usually grounded him—felt colder now, distant.

"Asher?" The Judge's voice, now sharp, cut through his haze. She was looking at him, waiting for a response. Her eyes narrowed slightly as she noticed his distraction.

He blinked, shaking his head as if waking from a dream. "Sorry," he muttered, his voice a little strained. "I just—"

"You're still unsettled," she observed, her tone laced with both amusement and annoyance. "By her?" Her gaze flickered briefly toward the door, though the maid was long gone.

Asher nodded, though he couldn't bring himself to explain it. How could he? The maid had been harmless enough, but the way the air had shifted when she entered... it was as if she carried something with her. A presence, maybe, something that was impossible to ignore.

The Judge's lips curled in a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "You are far too sensitive for your own good," she said, her voice softening just a fraction, though the underlying edge remained. "She's nothing. A servant. And yet... if you want to understand what you're feeling, you should know that she is more than she seems."

That stopped Asher in his tracks. He leaned forward slightly, his gaze sharpening. "What do you mean?"

The Judge's fingers lingered on the cart's lid, her eyes darkening as she looked back at him. "Not all servants are simply servants, Asher. Some are... entrusted with far more than they appear to be. Some carry within them a purpose, a duty that goes beyond the realm of ordinary tasks." She smiled again, though this time it was colder, more calculating. "That maid may look insignificant, but she's tied to something far older. Far darker."

Asher felt a cold shiver run down his spine. His eyes darted back to the cart, still unsure of what was so unsettling about it, or the maid, for that matter. But the Judge's words hung in the air like a warning bell.

"What do you mean, tied to something?" he asked, though his voice sounded distant, as if the question was more for himself than her.

"Nothing you need to worry about," she said quickly, her tone almost too dismissive. "This is not your concern."

Asher's jaw tightened. Not my concern? How could something so obviously wrong be dismissed so easily? The feeling—the oppressive weight—was still pressing down on him. He couldn't shake the sense that the room, the very walls, were closing in.

The Judge was watching him carefully now, her amusement replaced by something darker, more knowing. "Tell me, Asher," she purred, her voice turning soft and dangerous. "Do you ever wonder what it would be like if you truly understood what happens here? What goes on in this place, in this court? What the Court Consort really does?"

His heart skipped a beat. He had always been a step behind the Judge, caught in the wake of her power and influence. But now, there was a nagging thought, a seed planted deep in his mind, whispering that there were things she wasn't telling him. Things he was not yet ready to know.

He tried to mask the unease creeping up his throat, his voice strained. "What are you talking about?"

The Judge's smile deepened, a dangerous glint flashing in her eyes. "I'm talking about power, Asher. The kind that doesn't just sit in a room, waiting to be used. The kind that whispers and shifts, in the cracks and shadows. Power that isn't seen, but felt."

The candlelight flickered as the air grew colder, and for a moment, Asher thought he saw something in her eyes—a glimpse of something ancient, something not entirely vampire. It was gone as quickly as it came, but the lingering feeling it left behind was enough to make his blood run cold.

"You feel it, don't you?" the Judge continued, her voice lower now, almost hypnotic. "You feel that there is more beneath the surface. More in the dark corners of this court. Something is always watching, Asher. And it's waiting for you."

Asher's breath caught in his chest. He couldn't tear his gaze away from her now, the truth slowly beginning to sink in. She was no ordinary ruler, no mere figurehead of power. She was part of something vast and ancient. And perhaps—just perhaps—he was being groomed to be part of it too.

"I—I don't understand," he said, his voice barely above a whisper.

"Maybe you don't," she murmured, her lips curling again, this time with more than just amusement. "But you will." She took a step closer, the shadows around her seeming to bend and twist, as if alive. "In time, you'll see exactly what this place is—and what you are meant to become."

Asher's heart pounded in his chest, the weight of her words settling like lead in his stomach. The maid. The shadows. The Judge's cryptic words. Everything was starting to tie together in ways he didn't want to understand, but couldn't seem to escape.

The question remained: What was going on here? And why did he feel like he was standing at the edge of something far darker than he could imagine?