Chapter 19 Silas's Secret Research (Cain POV)
I find the journal by accident.
It's three in the morning, and my hands have finally healed enough to grip things without wincing. I'm in Silas's office looking for a book on Shadowborn physiology… something that might help Mira develop better control without the constant agony… when I knock over a stack of papers on his desk.
The leather journal tumbles out from between two ledgers, landing open to a page covered in Silas's precise handwriting. I shouldn't read it. It's clearly private research, hidden intentionally.
I read it anyway.
Day 7,847 of research. Twenty years, four months, thirteen days since I first encountered the prophecy's alternative translation. The original Latin is maddeningly ambiguous… "sanguis venenatus salvatio fiet" could mean "the poisoned blood shall become salvation" or "the poisoned blood shall bring salvation." The difference is crucial.
If the former interpretation is correct, the Shadowborn herself transforms. If the latter, she's merely a catalyst for something else entirely.
My stomach drops. I flip back through the journal, finding pages and pages of notes dating back two decades. Sketches of alchemical symbols. Translations of ancient texts. Accounts from vampires who claimed to have witnessed something they called "the Inversion."
The Inversion, one entry reads, requires three components: a Shadowborn host, a vampire bonded through genuine emotion rather than compulsion, and mutual blood exchange performed during the moment of death. If successful, the Shadowborn's toxic nature inverts. Instead of poison, immunity. Instead of death, cure.
The vampire who drinks from an Inverted Shadowborn doesn't die. They transform. Return to humanity with all memories intact but no supernatural abilities. No bloodlust. No immortality. Simply human again.
I keep reading, my hands starting to shake.
The risks are considerable. The Shadowborn must die… actual death, not near-death… and be resurrected through the vampire's venom within sixty seconds. The vampire must maintain the blood exchange throughout, despite the Shadowborn toxicity that will be destroying them. If either fails, both die.
Success rate from historical accounts: approximately thirty percent.
Thirty percent.
Silas has been researching a ritual with a seventy percent fatality rate for twenty years. A ritual that requires Mira to die.
The office door opens behind me.
"I wondered when you'd find that." Silas's voice is calm, unsurprised. He moves to the liquor cabinet, pouring himself whiskey with steady hands. "Though I expected it to take longer than three weeks. You've been quite focused on Miss Ashford."
I spin to face him, journal clutched in my hands. "How long have you known?"
"About the Inversion ritual? Twenty years, as the journal indicates. About Mira specifically?" He takes a sip. "Since before she arrived. Victoria's been planning this Ascension for seventeen years. I've been planning my counter-move for nearly as long."
"You're using her." The words taste like betrayal. "Just like Victoria. You've been manipulating her, offering sanctuary, teaching her control, all so you could turn her into some kind of cure for vampirism?"
"That's one interpretation." Silas settles into his chair, maddeningly relaxed. "Another interpretation is that I'm offering her an alternative to dying in Victoria's ritual. At least with the Inversion, there's a chance of survival."
"Thirty percent isn't a chance. It's a coin flip weighted toward death."
"Still better odds than the Ascension, which has a zero percent survival rate." He gestures to the chair across from him. "Sit. If we're going to have this argument, let's do it properly."
I don't sit. Can't sit. Energy crackles through me, the barely controlled violence that comes from two centuries of predatory instinct.
"You lied to her. To all of us. You said you were giving her sanctuary, time to decide what she believes. But you've been planning this all along."
"I haven't lied once." Silas's voice hardens. "Everything I told Mira is true. The Ascension will kill her. Victoria is using her as a weapon. I am offering her choices. The fact that one of those choices involves the Inversion ritual doesn't negate the others."
"Does she know? About this alternative?"
"Not yet. I wanted her to develop control first, learn to trust her own judgment, understand what she's capable of before presenting options that require sacrificing herself." He swirls his whiskey. "Though I suspect I'll need to tell her soon. Victoria's timeline is accelerating."
"You suspect?" I laugh, bitter and sharp. "You've been planning this for two decades and you suspect you'll need to tell her? What were you waiting for, permission?"
"I was waiting for her to have a reason to choose it." Silas meets my gaze directly. "The Inversion requires genuine emotion between the Shadowborn and the vampire. Not compulsion, not manipulation, but real connection. That takes time to develop."
The implication hits me like a physical blow.
"You wanted her to fall for me. That's why you made me her handler. Why you encouraged the probation instead of execution." My voice drops to something dangerous. "You've been orchestrating this entire relationship."
"I've been creating conditions for it to develop naturally, yes." He doesn't even have the grace to look ashamed. "But I didn't manufacture your feelings, Cain. I didn't force you to care about her, to burn yourself touching her, to vouch for her against the entire coven. You did that on your own."
"Because you manipulated the circumstances!"
"I created opportunity. You created the relationship." Silas stands, moving to the window. "Tell me, would you have fallen for Mira if I'd locked her in the dungeons instead of giving her probation? If I'd forbidden contact instead of making you her supervisor? If I'd treated her like the threat everyone else saw instead of like a person deserving choices?"
I want to say yes. Want to believe my feelings for Mira are entirely independent of Silas's machinations. But the truth is more complicated.
"You still used us both," I say finally. "Me as the vampire component, her as the Shadowborn. We're just pieces in whatever plan you've been building for twenty years."
"Partially true." He turns back to face me. "But ask yourself this: what's my actual goal here? What do I gain from the Inversion ritual succeeding?"
"A cure for vampirism. The ability to return vampires to humanity."
"Exactly. Not power. Not territory. Not victory in some eternal war. Just the option for vampires who are tired of immortality to choose something else." His voice softens. "I'm four hundred years old, Cain. I've seen everything worth seeing, done everything worth doing. I'm exhausted. And I know I'm not the only one."
The admission catches me off guard. In all the decades I've known Silas, he's never shown weakness. Never suggested that existence might be a burden rather than a gift.
"You want to be human again," I realize.
"I want the choice. And so do hundreds of other vampires who've lived too long, lost too much, carried too much grief." He gestures at the journal. "The Inversion doesn't force anything on anyone. It simply offers an option that hasn't existed for centuries. Return to mortality with memories intact. Die eventually of natural causes instead of violence or despair. Have the chance to experience being human again."
"By risking Mira's life."
"By offering her a choice that might save her life and give others the option Victoria would deny them." Silas returns to his desk, picking up the journal. "Victoria wants to weaponize Mira's death into a plague that kills thousands of vampires. I want to transform her death into a cure that saves them. Both options require her to die. Only one gives her the chance to come back."
The logic is sound, which makes it worse somehow. Because he's right… thirty percent is better than zero percent. A chance at survival is better than guaranteed execution.
But it's still using her. Still treating her like a tool instead of a person.
"Does the ritual require her consent?" I ask.
"Technically, no. It could be performed without her knowledge if you were willing to betray her trust completely." Silas's expression is grave. "But it would almost certainly fail. The Inversion requires genuine emotional connection. You can't manufacture that through deception."
"So she has to choose it. Knowing it will probably kill her."
"Yes. Which is why I haven't told her yet. Because asking someone to die for a thirty percent chance at resurrection is monstrous." He pauses. "But so is letting them walk into Victoria's ritual with zero chance of survival when an alternative exists."
I sink into the chair finally, exhausted. "When were you planning to tell her?"
"Soon. Before the winter solstice. She deserves time to consider her options, to research the ritual herself, to make an informed decision." He sets the journal on the desk between us. "The question is, what will you do with this information?"
"What do you mean?"
"You know about the Inversion now. You know it exists as an alternative to the Ascension. You know it requires your participation… your blood, your venom, your willingness to potentially die alongside her." Silas leans forward. "So what will you choose when the time comes?"
The question hangs in the air like a blade.
"If Mira decides to attempt the Inversion," I say slowly, "you're asking if I'll be the vampire component. If I'll drink from her while she's dying and potentially die myself when her toxicity destroys me."
"Yes."
I think about Mira in the forest clearing, forcing her Shadowborn nature into an agonizing internal loop just so she could kiss me for ten seconds. Think about her researching her own nature at midnight, desperate to understand what she is. Think about the way she looks at me like I'm a person instead of a monster.
"Of course I would," I say. "If she chooses it, if she wants to attempt the ritual, I'd do it without hesitation."
"Even knowing you'll probably die?"
"Even knowing." I meet his gaze directly. "Because she'd be doing it to save people. To give vampires like you a choice. That's worth dying for."
Something shifts in Silas's expression. Approval, maybe. Or recognition.
"You love her," he says quietly. "Not infatuation or cosmic attraction. Actual love."
I want to deny it. Want to claim it's too soon, we barely know each other, it's just intense circumstances creating false intimacy.
But sitting here in Silas's office at three in the morning, discussing my willingness to die for Mira, the denial seems pointless.
"Yes," I admit. "I love her. Which is probably the stupidest thing I've done in two centuries."
"Or the smartest." Silas actually smiles. "Love makes the Inversion more likely to succeed. The ritual requires genuine emotion, and you certainly have that."
"I also have questions about the ritual itself. The journal mentioned mutual blood exchange, but it didn't specify method or duration. If I'm going to potentially participate in this, I need to understand exactly what's required."
"Fair enough." He pulls out several more journals, older ones, and spreads them across the desk. "The mechanics are complex. The timing is crucial. And there are preparations that would need to be made in advance to maximize success probability."
"Such as?"
"Mira would need to fast for twenty-four hours beforehand. Reduce the toxicity concentration in her blood to survivable levels. You would need to feed heavily in the hours before… old blood, powerful blood, anything to strengthen your system against the poison." He points to a sketch. "The exchange itself must be maintained for a minimum of ninety seconds after her heart stops. Any less, and the inversion won't complete. Any more, and you'll likely die from the toxicity."
"Ninety seconds of drinking poison that's actively destroying my vampire nature."
"While simultaneously injecting your venom into her system to trigger resurrection. Yes." Silas doesn't sugarcoat it. "The pain will be extraordinary. Your every instinct will scream at you to stop, to release her, to save yourself. You'll have to maintain the exchange through that."
"And if I succeed?"
"Her nature inverts. The Shadowborn toxicity becomes immunity. Her blood can cure vampirism through voluntary consumption… one dose returns a vampire to humanity permanently. She survives. You survive. Everyone wins."
"Except for the seventy percent chance we both die horribly."
"There is that." He closes the journals. "Which is why this has to be her choice, Cain. Not mine, not yours, not anyone else's. We can present the option, explain the risks, offer support. But ultimately, Mira has to decide if thirty percent odds are worth gambling her life on."
I think about what Lyra said, about Thomas turning her while she burned and then killing himself from guilt. About love between natural enemies ending in tragedy.
This ritual is just another version of that story. Another way for impossible love to destroy everyone involved.
"When will you tell her?" I ask.
"Within the week. Before Victoria can move the timeline up again, before circumstances force decisions instead of allowing choices." He looks at me seriously. "But Cain? Don't tell her yet yourself. Let her learn about it from me, with full context and documentation. If she hears about it from you first, she'll think it's what you want. She'll sacrifice herself because she loves you, not because she's made a reasoned choice."
He's right, which is infuriating.
"Fine. I won't tell her. But I'm researching this myself. Finding everything I can about the ritual, looking for ways to improve those odds." I stand, gathering several of the journals. "If she chooses this, I want us to have the best possible chance of survival."
"Agreed. Take whatever you need from my research. But Cain?" Silas stops me at the door. "Be prepared for her to choose the ritual. Because I know Mira's type… she's a protector. If she learns her death could save thousands of vampires from Victoria's plague, she'll choose that over saving herself. The question is whether you can let her make that choice."
I leave without answering, because I don't have an answer.
I spend the next three days buried in research.
The library's restricted section has texts on blood magic, alchemical transformation, the few documented cases of Shadowborn-vampire interaction that ended in something other than mutual destruction. I read everything, taking notes, looking for patterns.