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I woke again at exactly 1 a.m.
For the seventh night in a row.
In my dreams, a presence descended-cold, spectral, a whisper in the dark. A chill that was not of this world wrapped around me, not as a touch, but as a weight, an imprint left on the air where something unseen had passed.
I couldn't move. No matter how hard I tried to scream or resist, I remained trapped-fully aware, wholly helpless-as fear bled into something darker, more profound.
Then... a voice.
Deep, ancient, and devastatingly calm.
"Don't be afraid. It will be over soon."
A profound chill swept through me-not pain, but a deep, unsettling cold, as if my very essence was being gently, irrevocably altered. My senses blurred, and just before unconsciousness took me, I heard a sigh beside my ear.
A sigh filled with... grief? Regret?
That was the beginning. Of what, I didn't yet understand. Only that it wouldn't end anytime soon.
******
My name is Clara. Clara Duskgrave.
Heir to a cursed bloodline-descendants of those who once offered their daughters to the Crimson Court in exchange for survival.
They say I carry a key in my blood.
Not a key to power.
A key to obedience.
And now, the one I was promised to... has come to collect.
I am his bride.
But more than anything-
I am a sacrifice.
From that night on, the dreams came often, dragging me into a world of blood and shadow, where pain lingered long after I woke.
My father called it the Crimson Bond-a blood pact sealed between a virgin and an immortal of the night. In their words, it was an ancient vampire rite, older than the Roman gods, forbidden by most clans but still whispered in dark corners of the world.
My family wasn't what most would have called normal.
We lived at the edge of society-just far enough to avoid questions, just close enough to remain useful.
Over the generations, the Duskgraves had dealt in things that most people feared:
Pathologists, morticians, relic hunters, and spiritual "consultants."
My father, being the eldest son, had inherited the family's not-so-small antique business-a front, really, for sourcing and reselling "objects of unease."
Artifacts soaked in sorrow. Jewelry that whispered. Mirrors that never reflected quite right.
Duskgrave. Grave by name, grave by nature.
Sometimes, I wondered if my great-grandfather really had crawled out of a crypt one night and decided to start a family.
That would have explained a lot.
Especially why I had turned out to be the one cursed the most.
The year I was born, something shifted.
Death swept through our family like a cold wind in a sealed crypt.
Not everyone died-but the ones who mattered most did. The strong. The promising. The ones who still carried the family's blood duties in their bones.
My great-grandfather never explained it fully. He only said that the Duskgrave name had drawn too much attention. That we had broken an old balance-one forged in blood and sealed long before any of us were born.
The night of my birth, the sky cracked open. Thunder roared. A flash flood destroyed the only bridge connecting our village to the city.
My mother gave birth at home, surrounded by candlelight, soaked in stormlight.
I cried. The moment I did, my great-grandfather found something on the family altar.
A ring.
Deep red. Smooth and warm like living flesh. It glowed faintly, pulsing-like it remembered something.
No one knew where it came from.
My great-grandfather just stared at it, then sighed and whispered, "It has returned."
I was sixteen when they brought me to the cellar beneath the old Duskgrave estate.
Not a cellar, really.
It was a crypt-once belonging to a forgotten noble family, hollowed out centuries ago and sealed in stone and silence.
In the center of that chamber stood a sarcophagus, carved from obsidian and lined with crimson velvet.
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