Chapter 29 Into the Lion's Den
ARIA'S POV
The portal to the Northern Realms opened at dawn—a swirling vortex of ice and shadow.
"Last chance to back out," Sebastian said quietly.
"Not happening," I replied, gripping his hand.
Behind us stood our witnesses: Kieran, Elena, Roslyn, the First Curse, and twenty volunteers—half human, half vampire. All willing to risk their lives to see justice done.
"Remember the plan," Kieran said. "Stay calm. Answer honestly. Show them that peace works."
"And if they attack anyway?" Elena asked nervously.
"Then we fight our way out," the First Curse said simply, her ancient power crackling. "I didn't survive three thousand years to let some pompous vampire queens kill my favorite revolutionaries."
Despite everything, I smiled. Six months ago, she'd tried to destroy the world. Now she was protecting it. People could change.
We stepped through the portal.
The Northern Realms were beautiful and terrifying—a palace carved entirely from ice, surrounded by forests of frozen trees under a sky that blazed with aurora lights. Everything sparkled. Everything was cold.
Waiting for us were the Seven: Lady Seraphina and six other ancient vampires, each representing a hidden realm. They sat on thrones of ice, looking down at us like insects.
"Lord Sebastian Thorne," Seraphina said, her voice echoing. "You stand accused of crimes against vampire-kind. How do you plead?"
"Not guilty," Sebastian said firmly. "We've broken no laws. We've only created new ones—better ones."
"You ended the Winter Feast," another queen said—this one with hair like fire. "A tradition older than most civilizations."
"A tradition built on murder," I countered. "Innocent women died every fifty years for a ritual that was never necessary. We proved that. The vampire realm didn't collapse when we stopped it."
"Because you replaced it with something worse," a male king said, his eyes like black holes. "Sanguine bonds. Giving humans power equal to vampires. Destroying the natural order."
"There is no natural order!" Elena shouted. "Just rules made by people afraid of change!"
"Silence, human," Seraphina snapped. "You speak only when addressed."
"She speaks whenever she wants," Sebastian said coldly, his power radiating. "That's what freedom means. Or have you forgotten, sitting on your thrones for five thousand years?"
The temperature dropped another twenty degrees. Ice formed on the ground beneath our feet.
"Careful, young lord," Seraphina warned. "You're outnumbered and far from home. This tribunal could end very badly for you."
Through our bond, I felt Sebastian's rage—and beneath it, his fear. Not for himself. For me and everyone who'd come with us.
"Why are you really doing this?" I asked suddenly. "It's not about the Winter Feast or Sanguine bonds. What are you actually afraid of?"
Seraphina's eyes narrowed. "Excuse me?"
"You've ruled for five thousand years," I continued. "Hidden away in your separate realms, controlling your vampire populations through fear and tradition. And now we've shown there's another way. A way where vampires don't need you anymore. That's what terrifies you—losing power."
The Seven exchanged glances. I'd hit a nerve.
"Clever little healer," the fire-haired queen said. "But cleverness won't save you. We are the law. We decide what's right for vampire-kind."
"Not anymore," Kieran said, stepping forward. "Because we're not alone. Tell them, Roslyn."
Roslyn pulled out a scroll. "I've been in contact with nobles from all Seven Realms. Vampires who are tired of the old ways. Who want what Sebastian and Aria built—real peace, real choice. They've signed this petition supporting reform."
She unrolled it. Hundreds of names. Thousands.
"Forgeries," Seraphina hissed.
"Test them," Roslyn challenged. "Blood signatures don't lie. These vampires are real, and they want change."
The Seven looked genuinely shaken.
"Even if this is real," the black-eyed king said, "it changes nothing. The majority still support us."
"Do they?" Sebastian asked. "Or have they just never been given a choice? Let's find out. Open the tribunal to all vampires. Let every vampire in every realm watch this proceeding and vote on our fate. If they choose tradition, we'll accept your punishment. But if they choose reform—"
"You'll step down," I finished. "End your dictatorships. Let the realms govern themselves."
"Absolutely not!" Seraphina snarled.
"Afraid of democracy?" Elena taunted. "Worried your own people might not choose you?"
The Seven huddled together, arguing in voices too low for us to hear.
Finally, Seraphina turned back. "Fine. We'll broadcast this tribunal across all realms. Let every vampire see your heresy. And when they vote to destroy you, you'll die knowing your own kind condemned you."
She waved her hand, and magical mirrors appeared throughout the ice palace—thousands of them, showing vampires from realms across the world watching us.
"Let the trial begin," Seraphina announced.
For the next hour, they questioned us. About the Winter Feast, about Sanguine bonds, about our vision for the future. Sebastian and I answered honestly, showing them through our bond what real partnership looked like.
Through the mirrors, I could see vampires listening. Some looked angry. Some looked curious. Some looked hopeful.
Then Seraphina asked the fatal question: "Lord Sebastian, you claim Sanguine bonds are safe. But you carry something dangerous inside yours, don't you? Something you've been hiding from everyone."
My blood went cold. She knew about Lilith.
"I don't know what you mean," Sebastian said, but his voice wavered.
"Don't lie!" Seraphina's power exploded. "We can sense her. The original vampire, trapped in your bond. You're not heroes—you're time bombs! When she breaks free, she'll destroy everything!"
The watching vampires gasped. Panic rippled through the mirrors.
"Lilith is contained," I said desperately. "She can't escape. We've kept her dormant for six months—"
"Have you?" the fire-haired queen asked. "Then explain why she's awake right now."
I felt it then—deep in our bond, Lilith's consciousness surging. Growing stronger.
"No," I whispered. "No, no, no—"
"She's been feeding on your stress," Seraphina said triumphantly. "Every argument, every fear, every moment of doubt—making her stronger. And now, with all this attention on you, with your bond strained by performing for an audience, she's finally strong enough to break free."
Through our bond, I felt Lilith laughing. Felt her pushing against the walls of her prison.
"Sebastian," I gasped. "I can't hold her!"
"Neither can I," he said, his face pale.
The ice palace began to crack. Power—ancient and terrible—flooded out of us.
And Lilith's voice echoed across every realm: "Hello, children. Did you miss me?"
Red mist poured from Sebastian and me, coalescing into a form. Lilith, free at last, standing in the center of the tribunal.
She looked at the Seven and smiled. "Now this is interesting. Seven ancient rulers and two exhausted heroes. I wonder who I should kill first?"
The Seven stood, their combined power blazing. "We knew you'd try this. That's why we chose this location—a prison designed to contain you."
Ice chains erupted from the floor, wrapping around Lilith. She laughed and shattered them with a thought.
"Your prison is five thousand years old. I'm much older. And much angrier."
She turned to Sebastian and me. "Thank you for the lovely accommodations. Six months trapped in your love was nauseating. Time for some real fun."
She raised her hands, and every vampire watching through the mirrors screamed. She was possessing them again—thousands at once.
"Stop her!" Seraphina shouted.
But Lilith was too strong. Too angry. Too free.
She looked at me, and her eyes gleamed with malice. "You wanted to prove Sanguine bonds were safe, little healer? Let me show the world what they really are."
She reached into our bond—the connection between Sebastian and me—and twisted.
Pain exploded through us both. I felt our bond tearing. Felt Sebastian being ripped away from me.
"NO!" I screamed.
But it was too late.
Our bond shattered.
And in that moment, I forgot everything. Forgot Sebastian. Forgot our love. Forgot six months of building peace.
All I knew was that I was standing in an ice palace surrounded by vampires who wanted me dead.
I looked at the man beside me—a stranger with ice-blue eyes—and fear consumed me.
"Get away from me!" I shouted, stumbling backward.
Sebastian reached for me, confusion and horror on his face. "Aria, it's me. It's—"
"I don't know you!" I screamed.
And Lilith laughed and laughed and laughed.