🩸 CHAPTER ONE
The city never really slept.
It just… changed.
By day, it wore glass and light—polished buildings, hurried footsteps, voices layered over each other like noise that never settled.
But at night—
It breathed differently.
Slower.
Darker.
Like something unseen had finally opened its eyes.
Amara pulled her coat tighter as she hurried down the quiet street, her footsteps echoing just a little too loudly against the pavement. The last bus had left without her—again—and now she was stuck taking the longer route home.
She hated this part of the city.
Too empty.
Too quiet.
Too… watchful.
A flicker of movement caught her attention.
She stopped.
It came from the alley just ahead—narrow, shadowed, the kind of place people avoided without needing a reason.
Amara hesitated.
Then—
A low, strained sound broke the silence.
Someone was there.
His chest tightened. Logic told her to keep walking. To mind your business. To pretend she hadn't heard anything.
But her feet didn't listen.
“Hello?” she called softly, stepping closer. “Is someone there?”
No answer.
Just the faint sound again—ragged, even breathing.
She swallowed and moved into the alley.
The air shifted immediately.
Colder.
Heavier.
Wrong.
And then she saw him.
A man slumped against the wall, his dark clothes blending into the shadows, one hand pressed tightly against his side. Blood seeped through his fingers—too dark, too much.
“Oh my God—” Amara rushed forward, dropping to her knees beside him. “You're hurt—”
His hand moved.
Too fast.
He caught her wrist before she could react.
Her breath hitched.
His grip wasn't just strong—it was unyielding.
Inhuman.
Slowly… very slowly… his head lifted.
And her heart stopped.
His eyes—
They weren't normal.
They burned.
Not bright. Not glowing.
But deep. Dark. Alive with something that didn't belong in any human gaze.
Something ancient.
Something dangerous.
“You shouldn't be here,” he said.
His voice was low.
Steady.
Not weak like someone bleeding out in an alley.
Amara's pulse stumbled. “You're injured—let me help you.”
For a moment, he just looked at her.
Studied her.
Like she was something unexpected.
Something he didn't quite understand.
Then his grip tightened slightly.
Not enough to hurt.
Just enough to remind her she couldn't pull away.
“Help me?” I repeated softly.
There was something strange in the way he said it.
Like the word didn't belong to him.
Amara forced herself not to panic. "You're losing blood. You need a hospital—"
"No."
The refusal was immediate.
Absolute.
Her brows pulled together. “Then at least let me call someone—”
“No one,” he said again.
This time, there was a quiet edge beneath it.
A warning.
Silence stretched between them.
Amara's heart pounded, but she didn't move. Didn't run.
She should have.
Every instinct told her to.
But something in his gaze held her there—sharp and unreadable, like he was waiting for her to break.
She didn't.
“…Then what do you want me to do?” she asked, her voice quieter now.
For a second—
Just one—
Something changed in his expression.
Not softness.
Not warmth.
But something close to… decision.
He released her wrist.
Reaching into his coat with slow, deliberate movement, he pulled out a small object and pressed it into his hand.
It was cold.
Metal.
A ring.
Dark silver, etched with markings she couldn't understand.
“If you want to help me,” he said, his voice dropping lower, deeper—something almost dangerous threading through it now,
“then you'll wear that… and agree to the terms.”
Amara blinked. “What terms?”
His gaze locked onto hers.
And this time—
There was no mistaking it.
Power.
Cold. Controlled. Absolute.
“Your life,” he said quietly,
“in exchange for mine.”
The world seemed to still.
Amara stared at him, her thoughts scrambling to catch up.
“That doesn't make any sense—”
“It doesn't need to,” he cut in.
A faint breeze moved through the alley, carrying something strange with it—something metallic… sharp.
Her fingers tightened slightly around the ring.
“This is insane,” she whispered.
“Yes.”
He didn't deny it.
Didn't explain.
Just watched her.
Waiting.
Like he already knew what she would do.
Amara looked down at the blood on his side.
At the way it still flowed—steady, unnatural.
At the way he didn't seem weak enough for someone losing that much.
Nothing about this felt right.
Nothing about him was normal.
And yet—
If she walked away—
He would die.
Her chest tightened.
“…If I agree,” she said slowly, “you'll live?”
His gaze didn't waver.
“Yes.”
“And that's it?”
A pause.
Just long enough to matter.
“That,” he said,
“It depends on you.”
Not a real answer.
Not even close.
But something in his voice—
Something certain—
Made her believe him anyway.
Amara swallowed.
Then, before she could overthink it—
She slid the ring onto her finger.
For a heartbeat—
Nothing happened.
Then—
Pain.
Sharp. Sudden. Burning through her hand like fire under her skin.
She gasped, her body jerking forward—
And the world shifted.
The air cracked—like something invisible had just snapped into place.
A force she couldn't see, couldn't understand, wrapping around her—binding, tightening—
Sealing.
Her breath came fast, uneven.
“What—what did you—”
“You agreed.”
His voice was different now.
Stronger.
The weakness is gone.
Amara looked up.
And freeze.
The man in front of her was no longer barely holding himself together.
He stood.
Slowly.
Effortlessly.
The blood… was gone.
The wound… gone.
As if it had never existed.
Her stomach dropped.
“You—”
Her voice failed.
His gaze settled on her hand—the ring now resting perfectly against her skin.
Unmovable.
Unbreakable.
Then he looked back at her.
And for the first time—
A faint, almost imperceptible smile touched his lips.
Not kind.
Not warm.
Something far more dangerous.
“You should have run,” he said softly.
Amara's breath caught.
He stepped closer.
Too close.
Close enough that she cou
ld feel the cold radiating from him.
Close enough that escape no longer felt possible.
“But you didn't.”
His voice dropped—
Low. Final.
“And now,” he murmured,
“You belong to me.”