The whispered vow, “Let be your joy,” hung in the moonlit clearing, a fragile, audacious offering against the ancient silence of the rose maze. Alia’s gaze intensified, her clear blue eyes holding Freya captive, not with physical force, but with the sheer weight of her ancient, predatory focus. The moonlight caught the silver in her braided hair and seed to etch the perfect, beautiful lines of her face into sothing eternal and formidable.
For the first ti, so close that the chill of Alia’s presence was a tangible aura, Freya saw them fully. From beneath Alia’s lip, the tips of her canines had extended, not grotesquely, but with a breathtaking, lethal elegance. They were like polished ivory daggers, gleaming with an inner light, promising a pain so exquisite it blurred the line into pleasure. They were the most terrifying and the most beautiful things Freya had ever seen, the final, undeniable truth of the monster and the angel fused into one being.
A soft, almost serene smile touched Freya’s lips. She did not recoil. She did not scream. With a slow, deliberate grace that mirrored Alia’s own, she closed her eyes, tilting her head back slightly, her throat a pale, luminous column in the moonlight. It was an act of absolute surrender, a conscious choice to subrge herself in the terrifying, thrilling current of the mont.
Alia leaned closer, the scent of roses and cold stone enveloping Freya. She could feel the ghost of a breath, the promise of a touch. Alia opened her mouth, the sharp tips of her fangs hovering just above the frantic pulse in Freya’s neck. The world seed to hold its breath. Freya waited, her heart a frantic drum against the silence.
Then, nothing.
Alia withdrew. The movent was sharp, almost violent, as if recoiling from a hot fla. Freya’s eyes fluttered open in confusion. Alia had taken a step back, her expression a mask of cold, almost clinical disgust, though a strange, frustrated light burned deep within her eyes.
“If you are so willing, it ceases to be a hunt,” Alia said, her voice a low, contemptuous hiss. “It becos a… a transaction. A bloodless, sterile offering. Your eager surrender is… unappetizing.” She turned, her erald velvet gown lting into the shadows of the high hedges. “Find your own way back, little Starlight. I have lost my taste for this evening’s diversions.”
And then she was gone, leaving Freya alone in the heart of the maze, seated on the cold marble, the whisper of undone laces a stark reminder of the precipice on which she had just stood.
The mont Alia’s presence vanished, the breath Freya hadn’t realized she was holding escaped her in a ragged, shuddering gasp. Her body, which had been coiled with a strange mixture of terror and anticipation, trembled with the sudden release of tension. She slowly, shakily, retied the laces of her gown, her fingers clumsy in the cold night air.
Alia had held back. Just as she had in the West Wing gallery all those years ago, when her hand had frozen inches from her throat. Just as she had when she had entered her bedchamber, a silent storm of fury, only to leave with a single, fleeting touch. Alia, for all her monstrous power, for all her predatory talk, possessed a control that was as terrifying and as profound as her hunger.
A wave of dizzying gladness washed over Freya, so potent it almost felt like triumph. She isn’t just a creature of instinct. She thinks. She chooses. She is changing. The thought was a fierce, protective warmth against the chill of the night. Her resolve, which had been a desperate hope, now felt like a tangible certainty.
Freya looked up at the moon, a perfect silver disc in the star-dusted sky. It had watched Alia for centuries, a silent, constant companion to her long solitude. And I, Freya thought, I have only a mortal lifeti. A breath. A whisper in the wind of her eternity. But it will be enough. I will fill my short years with enough light, enough warmth, that she will have a mory of it to carry with her through the long winter of the ages to co. When I am head of this family, when the pact is my burden alone, I will ensure the generations that follow are not just tribute, but family. She will not be alone. I will make sure of it.
***
The next afternoon, Freya found Alia in her study, seated in a high-backed chair near the heavily draped window, a teacup held with delicate grace in her hand. Freya had brought her own book, settling opposite her, the silence comfortable, almost dostic. Alia’s teapot was made of a dark, unmarked obsidian, and the liquid she poured from it was not the pale gold of Freya’s chamomile blend, but a deep, opaque crimson.
Freya watched her over the rim of her own cup. Alia sipped her ‘tea’ with the sa refined etiquette with which she did everything, her posture perfect, her movents economical and elegant. She was the very picture of a noble lady taking her afternoon refreshnt. Freya’s mind briefly, clinically, wondered where the contents of that teapot ca from. Her father’s tribute had ended with Alia’s recovery. Surely, the blood of the Valerius was too precious to be used for a simple afternoon beverage. The estate was vast, the nearby villages small and isolated. The thought was a chilling one, but she pushed it aside. It was a part of the reality she had accepted.
“You seem... content," Freya observed, her voice gentle but direct. "Is this a life you chose, Alia? Or simply the one you have grown accustod to after so many years?”
Alia lowered her cup, her clear blue eyes eting Freya’s. “I am,” she replied, the admission simple, devoid of her usual irony. “I confess, I once found great pleasure in society. The balls, the intrigues of the court, the endless dance of mortal ambition. I was a fixture in the inner circles of a dozen different eras.” A shadow of ancient weariness passed over her features. “But one grows tired. The players change, but the ga remains so… achingly predictable. The silence of these walls beca a welco respite. Until, of course, it simply beca… silence.” She leaned forward slightly, a predatory glint returning to her eyes. “But now… I may find myself no longer so bored.”
Before Freya could respond, a soft knock sounded at the study door. Mr. Finch entered, a silver salver held in his white-gloved hand.
“A letter for you, Miss Freya,” he intoned, presenting it. “From the capital.”
Freya’s heart gave a happy leap. “Thank you, Finch.” She took the letter, recognizing Jane’s neat, looping script. With a smile, she broke the seal. Alia watched her, her expression unreadable.
“Good news, I trust?” Alia inquired as Freya’s eyes scanned the page.
“It is!” Freya said, her face alight with pleasure. “It’s from my friends, Jane and Anne. They are to be visiting Jane’s aunt, whose estate is only half a day’s ride from here, in a few weeks’ ti. They ask if they might… if they might visit for an afternoon.”
Dearest Freya,
I hope this letter finds you well and that your return ho has been as joyful as you anticipated. The capital feels decidedly duller without your company, and Anne is already complaining that there is no one left with your particular talent for witty observation during our literature lessons!
I write with so exciting news. My dear Aunt Elspeth has invited to her country estate for a fortnight, starting in two weeks’ ti. As her lands border your own, Anne and I were struck with a most brilliant idea! We would be so very close, and we should dearly love to visit you, if only for an afternoon, to see this grand, gloomy estate you have so often described and, of course, to see you! Anne is especially desperate for a tour.
Please do not feel obligated if the timing is inconvenient, but the thought of seeing you again so soon is a happy one indeed.
With the warst affection,
Your friend,
Jane.
Alia raised a perfectly sculpted eyebrow. “And what will you tell them?”
“Oh, I shall have to refuse, of course,” Freya said imdiately, already composing the polite, regretful letter in her mind. “It is… too complicated. They wouldn’t understand the… quiet nature of our household.”
“Why ever not?” Alia asked, her voice a low, silken drawl. “Why not let them co? I should not mind the intrusion, for an afternoon. And I am certain they would find the Valerius gardens… morable.”
Freya hesitated. Anne had been so eager to see the estate. And it would only be for an afternoon. They would have to leave long before sunset. Surely Alia, who had shown such remarkable restraint, would not act hastily. She had nothing to fear from two innocent young won.
As if reading her mind, Alia’s lips curved into a chilling smile. “Why do you hesitate, Freya? Are you afraid I will drain them dry upon the drawing-room floor?” She chuckled, a low, lodic sound that did nothing to soothe the sudden chill in Freya’s veins. “My dear child, I am not so ravenous, uncontrolled beast. My tastes are… particular. And your trust in , after all our recent… honesty… it seems remarkably fragile.”
“It is not a matter of trust,” Freya replied, choosing her words with care, eting Alia’s challenging gaze. “It is a matter of protecting my friends’ peace of mind. Our ho has… an atmosphere. A weight. It is not a place for the uninitiated. I would not wish to expose them to a sadness they cannot comprehend.”
Alia’s smile widened. “A masterful deflection. You protect them not from , but from the house itself. Very clever.” She leaned back in her chair, her fingers steepled, her eyes glinting. “But the question remains, doesn’t it? After all your vows of care, your promises of acceptance, your willingness to submit to my ‘happiness’… you still do not truly trust , do you, Freya? You still believe you must shield the lambs from the wolf.”
The challenge hung in the air, sharp and absolute. To refuse her friends now would be an admission of that very lack of trust, a confirmation that Freya still saw her as a monster to be hidden away. It would be a step backward, a retreat into the old fear. But to agree… to invite her bright, sunlit friends into this house of ancient shadows and its predatory heart… it felt like a monuntal, terrifying risk.
Freya looked at Alia, at the cool, knowing amusent in her eyes, and knew she was trapped. This was a test. The next move in their intricate, dangerous ga.
“Very well,” Freya said, her voice clearer and steadier than she felt. “I will write to them at once. We shall expect them in two weeks’ ti.”
“Excellent,” she purred, a slow, cold smile touching her lips. “How charming. I do so enjoy observing the fleeting friendships of mortals.”
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