Chapter 72 Three Weeks Later - Silvercrest Thriving
MIRA
I wake at 7 AM to my alarm and the immediate awareness that today is a donation day.
I shower, dress, head to breakfast. The campus is busy… more students than when I arrived last September. Word spread that Silvercrest is safe, functional, actually delivering on the coexistence promise.
Applications tripled. Enrollment is at capacity. Vampires, werewolves, witches, and humans all studying together. Living proof that coexistence works.
"Morning," Zara greets me in the dining hall. She's already eating, laptop open, working on something. "You look tired."
"Donation day."
"Right. Geneva this afternoon?"
"Yeah. 9 AM extraction here, preserved and transported to the repository, afternoon distribution." I grab coffee. "How's the journalism thing going?"
"Good. Professor Keating is helping me develop the curriculum. Supernatural-focused journalism program starting next fall. Teach students how to report on supernatural-human relations accurately instead of sensationalizing."
She shows me her laptop screen. "I'm working on an article about the reformed Silver Dawn. Aleksander gave me interview access to hunters who defected. Their perspective on choosing protection over extermination."
"How's that going?"
"Complicated. Some regret defecting. Miss the certainty of traditional doctrine. Others are relieved. Glad to stop hunting based on species." She closes the laptop. "I'm trying to present both perspectives honestly. Show that reform is messy but possible."
Jax joins us, looking exhausted. "Training ran late. Pack stuff."
"How many now?" I ask.
"Seven. Three new wolves this month. All aged out of foster care, nowhere else to go. We're teaching them that pack means protection not violence."
"Tyler would be proud," Zara says gently.
"I hope so." Jax grabs food. "It's hard. They've all been traumatized by the system. Don't trust authority. Don't know how to be pack. But we're working on it."
CAIN
Morning classes on supernatural law.
I'm not required to attend… I've been vampire for two hundred years, I know the laws. But Professor Keating suggested it helps students to see older supernaturals engaging with the curriculum instead of just relying on experience.
So here I am, in a classroom with thirty students, discussing legal frameworks for vampire-human relationships.
"The key issue," Professor Keating lectures, "is informed consent. Humans entering relationships with vampires must understand the implications. Power dynamics. Lifespan differences. Biological incompatibilities. Consent requires understanding."
A human student raises her hand. "What about the cure? If a vampire can become human, doesn't that solve the lifespan issue?"
"Only if the vampire wants to transform. The cure requires consent. You can't compel someone to abandon their nature for a relationship."
"But what if both people want it? The vampire wants to become human, the human supports that choice?"
"Then it's valid. But the choice must be the vampire's, not coerced by relationship pressure." Professor Keating looks at me. "Cain, you've been in vampire-human relationships. Perspective?"
I wasn't expecting to be called on. "Uh. Yes. Two centuries ago I loved a human named Adelaide. We had twenty years together before she died naturally. I stayed vampire. She stayed human. We made it work through accepting the lifespan difference."
"Did you consider becoming human for her?"
"The cure didn't exist then. But even if it had, I don't think I would have. Being vampire is part of who I am. Adelaide understood that. Loved me anyway."
"And your current relationship?" a student asks. "With Mira Ashford? She's not fully human anymore but also not vampire. How does that work?"
"Complicated," I admit. "She's something new. We're figuring it out together. Therapy helps. Communication helps. Accepting that neither of us is perfect helps."
After class, Professor Keating approaches. "Thank you for sharing. Students benefit from hearing lived experience instead of just theory."
"Happy to help. Though talking about my relationship publicly is weird."
"Everything about your relationship is public. She's the cure source. You're a two-hundred-year-old vampire. The media covers you constantly."
She's not wrong. The "Shadowborn and her vampire boyfriend" is apparently fascinating to journalists covering supernatural-human relations.
ZARA
Lunch is gossip hour.
Mira, Jax, me, and a few other students gather in the quad. Someone brought up supernatural representation in media, and now we're debating whether the latest vampire romance movie is accurate.
"The vampire glitters in sunlight," Jordan says. "That's not how it works. Sunlight burns."
"Unless you're old enough to build resistance," Marcus counters. "I've seen four-hundred-year-old vampires tolerate brief sun exposure."
"But sparkling? That's just ridiculous."
"It's metaphor," I argue. "The glittering represents vampire nature being visible, beautiful but dangerous. It's not literal."
"That's generous interpretation," Mira says. "I think they just wanted pretty vampires and didn't care about accuracy."
"At least they're not evil," someone else adds. "Traditional vampire media always makes them villains. This shows them as capable of love and choice."
"While completely misrepresenting their biology. Trade-off."
"How's therapy going?" I ask Mira when the group disperses.
"Good. Dr. Morrison is helping me process the guilt without letting it consume me. Recognize what I can control versus what I can't."
"And Cain?"
"Couples therapy is helping. We're learning to communicate instead of just reacting. It's slow but working."
"I'm glad."
"How about you and Jax?"
"Good. The mate bond is less overwhelming now. We've figured out how to be together without being enmeshed. Separate goals that complement instead of consume each other."
"That's healthy."
"It's work. But worth it." I check my phone. "I have to meet with Professor Keating about the journalism curriculum. You okay?"
"Yeah. Donation in thirty minutes but I'm fine."
I leave her in the quad, heading to Keating's office. Life is normal. Complicated. But normal.
MIRA
The donation happens at 2 PM.
Geneva via portal. Dr. Stephanie extracts blood while I try not to think about the discomfort. The hour passes slowly.
When it's done, I'm exhausted but functional. This batch will serve approximately forty vampires. Forty more choosing humanity voluntarily.
"Your vitals are stable," Dr. Stephanie reports. "But you're pushing limits. Three times per week is sustainable but barely."
"I know."
"If demand continues growing, we'll need to address the bottleneck problem. You're one person providing a resource thousands want."
"What's the alternative?"
"Research. See if we can synthesize the cure. Replicate your inverted Shadowborn blood artificially instead of relying on direct donation."
"Is that possible?"
"Unknown. Your blood is unprecedented. We've never had inverted Shadowborn biology to study. But if we could replicate it, we'd eliminate the dependence on your donations."
"How long would that take?"
"Years. Maybe decades. Biological research is slow." She's packaging the preserved blood for distribution. "But it's worth investigating. Relying entirely on you isn't sustainable long-term."
She's right. But the idea of my blood being synthesized and mass-produced feels wrong. Like losing control of something deeply personal.
"Think about it," Dr. Stephanie says. "No immediate decisions needed. But long-term, this is something we should explore."
I agree to think about it and return to Silvercrest exhausted.
CAIN
Evening date is a movie.
Normal. Mundane. We're trying to do regular relationship things instead of just surviving crisis together.
The film is a supernatural thriller. Vampire detective solving murders. It's terrible.
"That's not how vampire compulsion works," I whisper halfway through.
"Shh," Mira responds. "I'm trying to enjoy the terrible accuracy."
"He just compelled someone through a phone call. That's not possible."
"It's a movie. Suspend disbelief."
"I'm trying. But the inaccuracies are distracting."
We make it through despite my complaints. Afterward, walking back to campus, we discuss whether supernatural representation in media matters.
"It shapes how humans see us," I argue. "If every vampire movie shows us as glamorous seducers or mindless monsters, that's what people expect."
"But it's entertainment. Fiction. Not documentary."
"Fiction influences perception. That's why Zara's journalism program matters. Accurate reporting instead of sensationalized storytelling."
"You sound like Professor Keating."
"She makes good points."
We're at the edge of campus now. Mira is exhausted from the donation. I can see it in her posture.
"You okay?" I ask.
"Tired. But okay." She takes my hand. "Thanks for normal date. We needed that."
"We did. Though I maintain the vampire detective movie was terrible."
"Agreed. But terrible together is better than good alone."
"Philosophical."
"I've been in therapy for three months. I'm allowed to be philosophical."
We say goodnight at her dorm. Gentle kiss. Nothing urgent or desperate. Just choosing each other in this moment.
Normal. Imperfect. Theirs.
MIRA
Night meeting about repository management.
Aleksander is visiting as liaison between reformed Silver Dawn and Silvercrest. We meet in Silas's old office… now administrative space for coalition coordination.
"Traditional hunter organizations are watching the repository," Aleksander reports. "Some with interest in potential reform. Others with hostility toward voluntary vampire transformation."
"Hostility how?" I ask.
"They see vampires choosing humanity as weakness. Betrayal of vampire nature. Some traditional hunters consider the cure an attack on supernatural identity rather than offering of choice."
"That's backwards. The cure offers choice. It's not forcing anyone."
"To hunters who've spent centuries eliminating vampires, any reduction in vampire population is good. They don't care if it's voluntary." He pulls up intelligence. "We've intercepted communications suggesting some traditional organizations want to weaponize the cure. Force transformation without consent."
That makes my blood run cold. "That's not possible. The cure requires willingness. It doesn't work on compelled vampires."
"We know. But they're researching ways around that. Trying to modify the mechanism to strip consent requirements."
"Can they do that?"
"Unknown. Your inverted blood is unprecedented. We don't know what's possible." Aleksander looks grim. "But if anyone could figure it out, it would be traditional hunters with centuries of biological and magical research experience."
"So the cure I'm providing might be weaponized into forced transformation."
"It's a possibility we need to prepare for. Enhanced security on repository samples. Stricter preservation protocols. Monitoring for theft or attempted modification."
We discuss security measures for an hour. It's exhausting on top of the donation exhaustion.
But necessary. The cure offers choice. Weaponizing it into forced transformation would pervert everything we're building.
CAIN
I find Mira afterward, walking alone near Moonstone Forest.
"You okay?" I ask, joining her.
"No. Aleksander says traditional hunters might weaponize the cure. Strip the consent requirement. Force transformation on unwilling vampires."
"That's not confirmed. Just a possibility they're preparing for."
"It's still horrifying. I'm donating blood three times per week to offer choice. The idea that someone might pervert that into forced transformation makes me sick."
"Then we prevent it. Enhanced security. Strict protocols. Monitoring." I take her hand. "Mira, you're doing something revolutionary. Offering vampires choice they've never had. Of course people will try to corrupt that. It doesn't mean you stop."
"What if I'm wrong? What if offering the cure creates more problems than it solves?"
"Then we adapt. Adjust. Fix problems as they emerge." I stop walking, facing her. "Three months ago you chose the complicated answer. Coalition management. Requiring consent. Building something that prevents exploitation. It's working. Six hundred vampires chose humanity voluntarily. That's six hundred lives changed because you did something difficult."
"And now someone might weaponize it."
"Might. Not has. Not will. Just might." I squeeze her hand gently. "We prepare for that possibility while continuing to help people who actually want the cure. That's how you handle complicated problems. You don't stop doing good just because bad might emerge."