home

search

One Step Closer

  Beneath layers of reinforced steel and anti-surveillance measures, a highly classified underground facility pulsed with low, artificial light. The air was thick with the scent of sanitized metal, old papers, and the faint chemical sting of experimental labs nearby.

  The walls were lined with servers humming softly, while overhead, cables and tubes snaked like artificial veins. A massive steel door hissed open, revealing a room hidden deep within the facility—The Black Room.

  Inside, a long, polished table stretched across the darkened chamber, its occupants shrouded in shadow.

  The only illumination came from a holographic projection, its flickering blue light casting eerie reflections over the suited men surrounding it. They were faceless, nameless, powerful.

  On the screen, an image formed—a tortured, wretched version of Tenebrae.

  Or rather, Subject: DEATH.

  “Executive Brownlee.”

  A sharp voice cut through the silence.

  Simon Brownlee—ex-husband of Eliza, head of Project Helios—stepped forward, adjusting his tie as he took his place at the center podium.

  With a flick of his wrist, the hologram shifted, showing grainy security footage of the subject writhing in agony as the crown was removed.

  Simon cleared his throat.

  “As we suspected, the subject has returned to its realm.”

  Another flick of the screen. Old historical texts. Ancient carvings. Black-and-white photos of strange occurrences throughout time.

  “Throughout history, our species has encountered Death in various ways. At first, we believed Death was merely a force of nature—an inevitable conclusion to life. But now, we understand that Death… is living.”

  The room remained silent, save for the quiet whirring of machinery.

  “We had it in our grasp,” Simon continued, voice sharpening.

  “And when we removed its crown, we witnessed something incredible—it became vulnerable. It felt pain. It bled. And now that it has reclaimed its crown, it has regained its full autonomy.”

  The screen flickered, displaying images of strange energy surges detected across multiple-dimensional scanners.

  “Gentlemen,” he said, turning to face the silent figures, “we believe we may have the ability to access the Realm of Death itself.”

  A pause.

  “If possible… we could release Project Helios into it. Eradicating the realm.”

  A heavy silence fell over the table.

  Then, a man shifted in his seat.

  His presence alone commanded the room.

  A heavyset fellow, white hair brushed back neatly, his thick fingers drumming against the table.

  His voice was gravelly, like a man who had chewed through glass and smiled.

  “IT?”

  The single word carried weight.

  Simon swallowed.

  “Yes, sir. Eradicating Death ITself… the entire realm.”

  The older man leaned forward, the glow of the hologram reflecting in his cold, beady eyes.

  “We had Death in the palm of our hands, and you let it escape.”

  Simon opened his mouth to respond, but the man slammed his fist against the table.

  “We had its power, and your only solution is to burn it before it can claim your lives?”

  “Sir—”

  “Shut up and listen, boy.”

  Simon flinched.

  “That’s your damn problem. You don’t listen.” The old man’s voice was venomous, his fingers tapping slowly.

  “Well, listen to this. Capture Death again. Alive. I want that crown. And I want that creature on my table, ready to be dissected, in one week. Or it will be you I cut open to see how you twitch.”

  A suffocating silence followed.

  “Dismissed, boy. The adults have to talk.”

  Simon’s jaw locked in frustration, but he turned sharply, storming out.

  Rage churned beneath Simon’s skin as he stalked to his office, barking orders at his secretary, a timid young woman who flinched at his every demand.

  But before he could unleash his full wrath, a message crackled through his earpiece.

  “Sir, you’re needed in Helios Containment.”

  His anger froze.

  Then, without hesitation, he turned and took the elevator down.

  The descent felt endless.

  With each level lower, the air grew colder—not from temperature, but from something… unnatural.

  By the time he reached the final sublevel, the screams had begun.

  “Helios…”

  His voice barely escaped his lips as something beyond the glass stirred.

  The screams ceased.

  And the scientists watching smirked.

  The stone corridors of Goodnight Kingdom stretched endlessly before them, lined with flickering torches casting their golden glow against the blackened walls. Wine-filled laughter echoed through the halls, bouncing off the towering stone arches as Eliza swayed playfully beside Tenebrae.

  Her cheeks were flushed from the RK Muscadine Wine, her steps uneven but full of life. Ten, though not as easily affected, indulged in the warmth of the drink, allowing himself this fleeting moment of carefree indulgence.

  Eliza hiccupped, then twirled, stopping abruptly to jab a finger at him with a mischievous grin.

  “Okay, okay, my turn! Never have I ever… ridden on the back of a dragon!”

  Tenebrae arched a brow, his expression shifting into something unreadable before his lips curled into a smirk.

  “Oh?” he drawled, crossing his arms.

  She wiggled her fingers at him. “Ha! Thought so! Guess your world isn’t that special af—”

  “No, we do have dragons.”

  Eliza froze mid-taunt. “Wait—what?”

  “Not only do we have dragons, but I have ridden on the back of one.”

  She blinked in disbelief.

  “Bullshit.”

  Ten simply took a slow sip of wine, his smirk widening.

  “A mighty beast,” he mused, “with wings that could blot out the sky, scales as black as the abyss, and a roar that could shake the very mountains—”

  Eliza gasped dramatically, placing a hand over her heart. “Oh my gods, tell me more, oh wise one!”

  This book is hosted on another platform. Read the official version and support the author's work.

  Ten chuckled, leaning against the cool stone of the balcony.

  “His name was…” he paused for effect, squinting as if deep in thought.

  “Bob.”

  Eliza nearly choked on her wine.

  “BOB?! What kind of dragon is named Bob?!”

  “Or was it Tracy…?” Ten tapped his chin, feigning deep contemplation. “It was something really simple. Uniquely simple.”

  Eliza stared at him, slack-jawed.

  “You’re shitting me.”

  “Absolutely not. Bob… or Tracy… was a magnificent beast. And I flew on his back more times than I can count.”

  She narrowed her eyes.

  “I don’t believe you. Show me.”

  Ten leaned in slightly, his glowing green eyes glinting with mischief.

  “One day, I will introduce you.”

  She paused, assessing him for any sign of deception.

  “You’re serious?”

  “Completely.”

  Eliza pursed her lips, considering. Then, with a huff of defeat, she tipped her head back and took a deep drink of wine.

  Ten chuckled as she downed the rest of her glass, shaking his head.

  The moonlight bled through the high stone arches, bathing them in pale silver luminescence, casting deep shadows that stretched endlessly across the empty banquet hall. The torches flickered softly, their light wavering with the pull of the ever-present night air.

  The wine glasses glowed faintly, their edges traced with magic—the only way an undead could taste indulgence could feel the drunken warmth seep into hollow bones and forgotten flesh.

  Eliza stared at her drink, rolling it between her fingers. She had no idea how she felt at this moment.

  He looked like her next mistake.

  Or he looked like the person she wouldn’t mind spending the rest of her life with.

  However long that was in this world.

  She let out a slow breath, feeling the wine settle in her limbs, her thoughts drifting into the dark pools of her mind. Her body wasn’t quite the same anymore—toned in ways she hadn’t expected, yet still marked with the stretch of time, of battles, of wounds that never truly left.

  She thought about the woman she used to be.

  The young girl who could turn the bad boys into good.

  Would she have fallen in love with this place, with him, in another life?

  Would she have embraced the fantasy, let herself be swept away in the dark fairytale?

  Now, she wasn’t sure she had it in her anymore.

  And the truth was, part of her didn’t care.

  Her mind flickered to Lilith.

  What kind of woman could break an undead heart?

  She didn’t realize how quiet he had become, watching her with that unreadable gaze, those burning green eyes that saw through the veils of her mind.

  She met his stare.

  “How do I look to you?”

  Her voice was quiet, barely above a whisper, but it carried through the silence like a confession.

  Tenebrae didn’t answer immediately.

  Then, in a voice that felt like velvet and ruin, he murmured:

  “Like my favorite nightmare.”

  The words struck something inside her, and she wasn’t sure why they hurt.

  His live hand brushed against her face, tracing along her cheek, his touch warm—too warm for a creature that walked the line between death and life.

  “I love nightmares…” he said softly, his voice carrying a weight only he understood.

  “It’s sweet dreams I can’t trust.”

  Her heart tightened, her breath catching in her throat.

  At that moment, she didn’t care that he was hundreds of years old, that he was a Lich, that he had lived more lifetimes than she could comprehend.

  Right now, he looked no older than her.

  And in her world, men only wanted love when it was tangled in reckless daydreams.

  But this was something different.

  She hesitated.

  “Will you be my biggest mistake in life?”

  Her voice shook, but not from fear.

  Tenebrae stared at her, his lips parting slightly as if searching for an answer—or maybe fighting against one.

  He had planned to get rid of her, at first.

  To leave her behind, to break the fragile bond before it could become something… dangerous.

  But she had made him feel—truly feel—things he hadn’t felt since he became a Lich.

  He tried to ignore it.

  But he refused to anymore.

  A slow smirk curled at his lips.

  “No, I won’t be your biggest mistake.”

  His cold hand ghosted over the pulse at her throat, feeling the warmth, the life, the delicate fragility of her mortality.

  “Will you be my twisted little nightmare?”

  Her breath hitched.

  He was afraid to ask it.

  He didn’t want perfection—he didn’t want some porcelain doll, a woman with no scars, no weight, no burdens.

  He didn’t want a dream that would shatter the moment the sun rose.

  He wanted her.

  Flawed. Beautiful. Torn. Whole.

  “I don’t want someone who is more corpse than life,” he murmured, his voice a spell, wrapping around her like silk and shadow.

  “I don’t want someone who is blank space.”

  He was inches from her lips.

  And he was afraid.

  “What if—”

  He silenced her with a shake of his head.

  “No more running. No more hiding.”

  His breath brushed against her lips, sending a shiver racing down her spine.

  “I am going to turn you into my favorite little twisted nightmare… one that will last for an eternity.”

  She was hesitant, her heart pounding so loud she swore he could hear it.

  “Just say my name.”

  His voice was a command. A plea. A vow.

  She swallowed, her hands trembling.

  She knew what he meant.

  Not “Ten.”

  His real name.

  The one she had sworn never to utter unless he asked.

  The weight of it felt heavy in her chest, a name she had no right to say—and yet, here he was, asking.

  She wanted to laugh.

  How ironic.

  Of all the men she had ever loved, of all the lovers who had whispered empty promises, who had taken and taken and left her with nothing—

  This one—this man, this monster, this Lich—

  Had been the first one to fix things without asking.

  Had been the first one to carry her weight without demanding her to be lighter.

  Had never blamed her for the past.

  Had never made her feel like the world’s problems were her fault.

  She parted her lips.

  And spoke his name.

  The castle was quiet.

  Not the eerie stillness of forgotten ruins, nor the hollow silence of death, but the kind of quiet that settled between two souls, holding its breath as if it dared not disturb what was about to unfold.

  The eternal moons of Goodnight Kingdom cast their silver glow through the towering glass windows, their light weaving through the curtains like silken whispers, painting the chamber in hues of deep blue and soft violet. The air smelled faintly of aged musk, roses, and the lingering embers of the torches outside.

  Eliza stood at the center of it all, bathed in moonlight, her breath caught somewhere between hesitation and surrender.

  And Tenebrae was watching her.

  Not with hunger. Not with demand. But with something deeper, something heavier—as if she were the only thing in this world that still felt real to him.

  He had spent centuries mastering death, but tonight, he wanted to learn how to live.

  “I have waited too long for this,” he murmured, closing the space between them with the slow patience of a man who had all the time in the world—and yet, for the first time, felt like he had none at all.

  Eliza swallowed hard, her pulse hammering against her throat, the heat in his gaze spreading fire beneath her skin.

  “Then take me.”

  The words were a whisper, a vow, a surrender, a command.

  His live hand was the first to touch her—tracing the line of her jaw, running along the curve of her throat, down to the place where her heart beat the hardest.

  “So fragile,” he murmured, his voice reverent. “So warm.”

  His other hand, the skeletal one, followed next, fingers tracing over her as if committing every part of her to memory.

  Where his warmth touched, she burned.

  Where his cold touched, she shivered.

  Together, they ignited.

  The room disappeared around them.

  The war. The crown. The looming threat of everything that wanted to pull them apart.

  None of it mattered.

  Not now.

  Not as he lowered her onto the bed, the sheets a cool contrast to the fire in her blood.

  Not as he leaned over her, his long white hair falling around them like strands of silver silk, shielding them from the rest of the world.

  Not as he pressed his forehead to hers, breathing her in, feeling her, learning her.

  She arched into him, her hands threading into his hair, pulling him closer as his lips finally found hers.

  The first kiss was gentle.

  Tentative.

  As if neither could quite believe this was real.

  The second was fire.

  A silent promise. A breaking of walls. A collision of souls.

  She was drowning in him, and he was in her.

  The nights of war, of running, of torment and pain—all of it melted away, replaced by the slow, aching rhythm of them.

  She breathed his name, and he gave her his soul.

  Time stopped.

  Far away, in a kingdom bathed in decadence and shadows, beneath towering spires that pulsed with sorcery and sin, Lilith sat on her throne of midnight silk and shattered oaths.

  She had spent a century knowing.

  Knowing that no matter where he was, no matter who he held, no matter what name he took upon himself, his heart had always been hers.

  Until now.

  Her fingers trembled, nails digging into her palms as she watched in horror—the cursed black heart she kept in a jar on her altar, the one that had always throbbed weakly, as if clinging to something just beyond reach, suddenly convulsed.

  Then—

  It stilled.

  A heartbeat was lost.

  A tether severed.

  A claim was destroyed.

  She let out a sharp, shuddering breath, her throat tightening as she reached for it as if her touch alone could reverse whatever had just happened. But before she could grasp it before she could even speak the incantation to pull him back—

  The heart shriveled in an instant.

  A sickening, withering collapse.

  Turning to ash between her fingers.

  Lilith gasped, staggering back, a scream caught somewhere between her chest and her lips.

  Gone.

  The one thing that had kept her tethered to him—the one thing that ensured he would never forget her, never move on, never be free—

  Gone.

  Her breath came in shallow gasps as panic gripped her like a vice.

  “What is this magic?” she whispered, voice trembling with rage and something far more terrifying—fear.

  The spell she had cast upon his heart had been absolute.

  Even her name had been etched into his bones, carved into the very essence of his existence.

  He could have forgotten his kingdom. His crown. His purpose.

  But he could never have forgotten her.

  And yet—

  “What have you done?” she seethed, clenching her fists, her magic coiling around her like a storm.

  She closed her eyes, trying to grasp at the threads of her control over him, trying to reach into the labyrinth of his mind, to whisper to him, to call him back to her, to remind him who he truly belonged to—

  But there was nothing.

  A vast, empty void where his true name had once been etched into eternity.

  As if it had never existed.

  As if someone had erased it.

  Her own spell—her most powerful, binding spell—was undone.

  A slow, creeping horror slithered through her veins.

  “How?”

  It wasn’t just some woman in his bed.

  It wasn’t just lust or infatuation.

  This was True Love, and with it magic so pure, so powerful, that it had done what she thought impossible.

  It had made him hers no longer.

  Lilith’s lips curled in a silent snarl, her jealousy burning like a brand upon her skin.

  She wanted to tear something apart, to shatter every mirror in her castle, to rip the stars from the sky if it meant undoing whatever curse had been cast upon her place in his soul.

  “Who?” she demanded, the rage twisting in her chest like a serpent.

  Who had the power to do this?

  Who had replaced her?

  Her magic surged, the walls of her chamber groaning beneath the weight of her fury, but beneath all of that anger, beneath the rage, the pride, the sheer hatred for the woman who had taken her place, one thing sat at the pit of her stomach, cold and unrelenting.

  Terror.

  For if such magic existed—if such magic could erase even her—then she was no longer the most powerful force in his world.

  And that meant, for the first time in over a century—

  She was afraid.

Recommended Popular Novels