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The Blood Contract-Chapter 109: Easy way out
Chapter 109: Easy way out
After breakfast, Serena excused herself and quietly made her way back to her room, the same dark-themed suite that, on her first night in the mansion, had felt far too imposing to offer any real comfort. The heavy velvet curtains still shrouded the windows in shadow, and the deep gray walls gave off an atmosphere that once felt unwelcoming. But now, surprisingly, it felt... familiar and safe.
She stepped in slowly and closed the door behind her with a soft click, exhaling deeply as her back met the wood. The scent of the room wrapped around her.
Serena kicked off her shoes and padded across the cool floor, moving straight to the bed where she let herself fall backward onto the mattress. The sheets were still neat, pulled tight at the edges by the maids, but the weight of the room around her invited her to sink into it, to get lost in it.
With everything that had happened the day and night before, she had no energy left in her to wander the corridors or strike up conversations. Lucian was still home, she knew that much, and knew he wasn’t going anywhere that day, and if she dared leave the room, she was bound to run into him. That thought alone kept her still, curled inward like a flame too timid to flicker.
It wasn’t that she didn’t want to see him.
That would’ve been easier to admit.
The truth, however, was far more complicated.
She was having trouble understanding the way she was feeling. Trouble processing the way her world had shifted overnight. After what had happened between them in the bunker—after she had dropped her pride, her composure, and given herself over to the moment with no restraint—she wasn’t sure how to relate to him anymore. How to look at him without remembering every gasp, every whisper, every time his hands found her skin like they had always belonged there.
Her cheeks flushed at the memory. Not from shame exactly, though that emotion lurked close by, but from something far more jarring. Pure uncertainty. Had she made a mistake? Had she been desperate? Foolish? Or had she simply responded to something that had been simmering beneath the surface for far too long?
She turned onto her side, curling into the duvet as if the thick fabric might shield her from her thoughts.
The room remained quiet, save for the faint ticking of the ornate silver clock on the far wall. Every tick seemed to count the seconds she spent lost in her own confusion, her own ache.
When the sun rose higher into the sky and the time for lunch approached, Serena hadn’t moved from her spot on the bed. A gentle knock pulled her out of her daze.
"Come in," she called softly, not sure who it was.
The door creaked open and Darrell stepped inside, his expression polite and calm as always.
"Lunch is ready and served, Madam," he said.
Serena slowly pushed herself into a sitting position, brushing her hair back from her face. Her expression remained composed, though the tiredness in her eyes was plain.
"I don’t think I’ll be coming down," she said after a beat. "I’m not really hungry. My appetite is near zero."
Darrell gave a small nod in understanding. "Okay. I’ll let them know."
"Please also let Marlowe know..." Serena hesitated for a moment, unsure if that was what she wanted, but eventually continued, "Could she prepare her special drink for the bracelet? For tonight."
His eyes flicked briefly to her wrist, where the bracelet still sat looking harmless, before he nodded again.
"Of course."
Serena smiled, a small one, but warm.
Darrell offered her a faint smile in return and bowed his head slightly in respect before retreating and pulling the door shut behind him.
As the sound of his footsteps disappeared down the hall, Serena slid back onto the bed, her spine meeting the mattress with a quiet sigh. She lay flat again, her arms stretched above her, her eyes glued to the high ceiling above.
The intricate molding up there had become a kind of silent companion, something for her to focus on while her mind drifted through the fog of the last twenty-four hours.
She traced the delicate patterns in her mind, following their swirling lines like they held answers. Her thoughts, however, kept circling the same points, looping endlessly.
The bracelet would definitely act up again that night and the next. Much as she enjoyed herself the previous night, she strangely felt the need to stop herself from repeating her actions.
***
Darrell returned to the dining room with his usual calm gait, the quiet thud of his shoes against the marble floor echoing slightly in the vast space. The air smelled faintly of roasted meat and fresh herbs, and soft sunlight streamed through the tall windows, casting geometric shadows on the polished surface of the long table.
Lucian was already seated, his tall frame relaxed in the high-backed chair at the head of the table, a plate of food before him. He was eating with mechanical precision—fork rising, food entering his mouth, chewing with slow deliberation, as if the act itself was nothing more than routine. His gaze remained fixed on his plate, unreadable.
Marlowe, however, was another story entirely. She sat in her usual spot , her elegant posture rigid with anticipation. Her fork remained untouched beside her plate, and though her food sat steaming and ready, she hadn’t taken a single bite. Her attention zeroed in on Darrell the moment he stepped into the room. Her brows lifted in question, her lips parted slightly as if to ask a question, but she waited.
Darrell stopped just short of pulling out his chair, already bracing for the conversation. He met her eyes, acknowledging the unspoken question that lingered in the air.
"She’s not coming," he began, his voice calm and respectful, but with just enough weight to make Marlowe’s brows dip.
"Why?" she asked immediately, concern creeping into her tone. "Is she alright? Did she look sick? Troubled?"
He shook his head slowly, methodically. "No, nothing like that. She looked like she’d been asleep. When I entered, she was lying down, and she took a moment to get up. There wasn’t any sign of distress in her face or her voice."
Marlowe leaned back slightly, processing his words. "So why doesn’t she want to eat?"
"She said she has no appetite. I guess she’s tired and just needs to rest." Darrel said.
Marlowe’s shoulders relaxed a fraction as she absorbed his explanation. "Alright," she murmured. "That does make sense."
But Darrell wasn’t done.
"She did ask me to pass along a message to you," he said, eyes on Marlowe.
The older woman tilted her head slightly. "What message?"
"She asked if you could prepare her special drink. The one for the bracelet. For tonight."
There was a pause. A heavy, sudden stillness fell across the table. And then, a sound cut through the quiet, sharp and unexpected.
A wicked laughter that came from the head of the table, directly from Lucian.
The sound burst from his chest in a low, cruel note. It wasn’t loud, but it rang with something almost feral. The corners of his mouth curled into a smirk that didn’t reach his eyes, and the sound of it twisted through the air like a dark thread unraveling.
Darrell turned his head toward his employer, and Marlowe did the same, her expression etched with surprise and slight unease.
Lucian leaned back in his chair slightly, fork now abandoned on his plate. He stared down at the table in front of him, eyes sharp, his jaw tight.
"Who told her she could pick the easy way out?" he said, voice low and quiet, almost like a whisper meant for himself.
Marlowe blinked, startled. Her frown deepened as she looked at him. "Is something wrong, Mr. Draven?"
Lucian turned his head slowly to face her, that smirk still lingering faintly. He tilted his head as if considering her question.
"There is nothing wrong, Marlowe," he said evenly. "Trust me. Everything is perfect."
His tone was smooth, almost too smooth, and though the smile had now vanished from his lips, the gleam in his eyes hinted that something inside him had been stirred.
He picked up his fork again with deliberate calm, stabbing a piece of roasted vegetable with an air of finality and placing it into his mouth as if the moment hadn’t been punctuated by his unnerving reaction.
Marlowe didn’t reply. She watched him for a moment longer, then looked away, her lips pressing into a thin line. The room remained quiet except for the sound of cutlery scraping against porcelain.
Darrell, expression unreadable, finally pulled out his chair and lowered himself into it slowly. He said nothing more, only stealing a glance at Lucian once more.
The effect of Lucian’s laughter still lingered in the air like smoke after a flame, and though the meal resumed, the mood had undoubtedly shifted. It was now taut, watchful, and charged with something no one could name.
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