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YOU GIVE ME TEMPTATION

To touch a Dark One is death. To talk to an immortal is suicide. Yet, I've been marked by both. A Vampire. And the King of the immortals. My life is no longer my own. And now I know the truth, my life was never mine to begin with. It was theirs. It's always been theirs. I knew their history. Probably better than most of them. I'd been studying them for most of my life, pouring over books and research with constant dread that, one day, my number would be called, and my life would be played out for me in absolute horror. Humans were like little insects that they allowed to survive only because it was necessary for their own survival. We die. They die. Therefore, we live.

JusticeFaruck · Fantaisie
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49 Chs

“And That Was Me?”

GENESIS's POV

But I was too angry to ask for it. Too ashamed to fall to my knees in front of a mere mortal and beg for her to end the pain by allowing me one solitary drop of her blood.

As if on cue, another bag of blood hit me in the head, Alex must have sensed my mood, I bit into it and looked away from Genesis's horrified expression.

"Lesson time." Alex placed some fruit and cheese in front of Genesis and clapped his hands. "Who goes first? Nobody said anything.

Genesis cleared her throat. "Maybe if you'll start by telling me what our real job is… as human breeders. All my life I've been taught a lie and now… well, now I'd like to know how this all started and what my place is."

Overwhelming her with information just might kill her. It would be like telling a child that her existence was simply for the pleasure of the parent, that she meant nothing in the grand scheme of things.

"The numbers," Mason cleared his throat, "have been called for centuries. It used to be every year, then it went to every two years, every decade — you know the trend. The last human number called was fifty years ago." His face contorted like he was going to change shape, but he gained control over himself. "Immortals, as we've said before, cannot simply procreate. They need humans for the process to be complete. Human men and women help immortals continue to populate the planet. If the balance is somehow… broken, then chaos erupts, thus the need for humans. The balance is very important for both our races."

"Okay." Genesis nodded her head slowly. "So why wait fifty years?"

You could hear a pin drop in that room, I didn't want to answer.

Mason kicked me under the table. I glowered in his direction than said as gently as I could, "Because immortals become attached to their humans in a very… possessive way. They mate for life… it's a beautiful thing, but the human always has the choice to reject their mate." Even after they've bonded, I wasn't going to say that aloud lest she rejects me. "If the mating is completed, both parties are happy, babies are born into the world, and everyone lives happily ever after — that's fantastic, but recently, humans started… dying."

"That's what we generally do." Genesis's eyes narrowed. "We don't live forever."

"After giving birth to an immortal, you should. You used to." Mason explained. "It's life's final gift… immortality for your sacrifice to us. But somehow, along the way, it stopped working."

"Oh." Genesis glanced at me.

I looked away. Not wanting her to see my pain.

"And how does Cassius fit into all of this?" she asked.

"The Dark Ones don't mate. They don't bond in the way we do. When they infuse a human mate, it's too strong for the humans to handle it, but he was… or we were… for a while, experimenting with the idea. Thought we were possibly losing our powers. He's been taking humans… to see if he can reverse it, but along the way, he became…" I sighed. "…addicted."

"What?" Genesis shook her head. "To what exactly?"

"He's part angel… part human," Mason said in a low voice. "His human counterpart wants desperately to join with humanity again — but his angelic essence won't let him. He's stuck in hell. But when a Dark One infuses a human, for those blissful weeks they last, life is perfect. Cassius is convinced if he only found the right human, he could bond eternally."

"And that was me?" Genesis croaked. "Or he thought it was me?" Because of her marking, because of her name.

The beginning. Her name meant the beginning. And our prophecies specifically stated that a woman's number would be called who represented a fresh start.

A new beginning Cassius wanted her for his selfish reasons, The rest of the immortals wanted her so mates would stop dying, and children would no longer be motherless or fatherless.

I kept my groan inside. It was even harder for the men. The minute they bonded with an immortal woman their original chemical makeup ceased to exist, relying solely on their immortal wives for nutrients, their organs simply started shutting down only days after the bond was complete.

I wanted to believe my reasons weren't selfish, but with each breath, she took, each beat of her heart, I realized I was more selfish than Cassius, because, as of right now, I wouldn't give her up even if it meant war. Even if it meant the end of my people my existence.

For being as old as I was, retraining myself wasn't going to be easy. Keeping emotional barriers between us would be necessary because my body screamed for her.

Words didn't have power, right? They were just words, strung together in sentences, big scary sentences that had me shaking. I wondered when or if the fear would ever leave, I stared at the fruit on the table, not in the least bit hungry.

"I can't just…" I found my voice and glanced up at Ethan. "I can't just sit around trapped in this house away from the world. It would be like a prison."

"A beautiful prison." Ethan smiled.

I chose not to smile back. I didn't want to encourage him or encourage my body to lean any closer to his. His body was like a magnet, even if I fought against the pull I still couldn't help it. I found myself inching my chair closer. When it scraped against the floor, everyone smirked but Ethan, He seemed angry, angry, yet he'd been the one to do that to me.

"I don't care," I said, ignoring the thumping of my heart in my chest and the fact that the closer I got to him the more it raced. "I can't just sit around here being worthless."

"You won't," Stephanie piped up. "Your life will be relatively normal. Ethan can even get you a job if you want… close by… so he can keep an eye on you, of course."

"A job?"

"Work," Ethan said slowly. "Isn't that what humans live for? A divine purpose? Though, if you'd rather stay here and cook and clean, you won't get any complaints."

"A job would be nice." Anything to get me out of the house or compound.

"Fantastic," Ethan said, his teeth snapping together.

I had a sinking feeling it was anything but fantastic, but I wasn't about to bend over backward and let him make yet another decision for me regardless of how much I wanted to launch myself at him and never let go, it was the bond, nothing more.