My books are like my future grayeard. Quiet and silent.

Showing posts with label novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label novel. Show all posts

If You Crave Vampires, Darkness & Slow-Burn Romance — This One's For You

on
Tuesday, April 28, 2026

You know the feeling.

You finish a vampire romance at 2 a.m., heart still racing, and you just lie there — staring at the ceiling, completely ruined for anything that isn't brooding immortals, candlelit castles, and a love that defies every law of nature.

If that's you? Keep reading. I wrote this for you.

The Readers Who Live for This Genre

Gothic vampire romance isn't just a genre. It's a whole world you return to again and again — because something about it speaks to a hunger that ordinary stories can't quite satisfy.

You're the reader who:

  • Devours dark, atmospheric settings dripping with old-world elegance
  • Lives for the slow burn — the tension that builds for chapters before it breaks
  • Wants a heroine who is soft but not weak, and a vampire hero who is dangerous but utterly devoted
  • Craves that delicious push and pull between a mortal heart and an immortal one
  • Needs the feels — the longing, the surrender, the forever kind of love

If you've ever found yourself whispering "just one more chapter" at 3 a.m. with a vampire romance in your hands — you already know exactly who you are.

Where to Find Readers Like You (& How to Connect)

The gothic vampire romance community is passionate, loyal, and always hungry for the next great read. Here's where they live:

BookTok & Instagram Reels Dark romance and vampire aesthetics thrive on visual platforms. Candle-lit flat lays, castle moodboards, and aesthetic edits pull in readers who are already primed for your world.

Goodreads Shelves & Groups Search "dark romance," "vampire romance," and "gothic romance" shelves. Readers actively curate and share lists — getting your book onto those shelves is word-of-mouth gold.

Facebook Reader Groups Groups like "Dark Romance Readers" and "Paranormal Romance Addicts" have thousands of members actively asking for recommendations every single day.

Reddit — r/RomanceBooks & r/Paranormal These communities have long discussions about favorite vampire heroes — brooding, possessive, and eternal are always trending topics.

Newsletter Swaps with Paranormal Authors Connect with authors in your genre for cross-promotion — your readers and theirs overlap almost completely.

A Story Built for Readers Like You

Eternally His: The Vampire Duke was written for the reader who wants more than a romance — who wants to be consumed by it.

Lana is human. Ordinary in the way that makes extraordinary men notice.

Cassian is anything but ordinary. He is the Duke. Ancient, dangerous, and utterly certain that she belongs to him — even if she doesn't know it yet.

What begins as a collision of two worlds becomes something neither of them can walk away from. A slow burn that scorches. A devotion that crosses the line between obsession and love. A story where forever isn't a promise — it's a inevitability.

And now?

The Bundle Edition — Extended Version is here.

More scenes. More Cassian. More of the slow, breathless tension you didn't want to end.

The extended scenes pull you deeper into their world — the stolen glances that last a beat too long, the moments between moments, the Cassian you only glimpse in the original and now get to know fully.

For readers who finished the original and thought I need more — this edition was made for you.


🖤 Get the Extended Bundle Edition

👉 Eternally His: The Vampire Duke — Extended Bundle Edition

Available now on Amazon Kindle.

If you love dark, gothic vampire romance with slow burn tension, an impossibly devoted immortal hero, and a love story that feels like it was fated before time began — Cassian is waiting for you.



Have you read it? Drop your thoughts in the comments — and tell me: are you Team Slow Burn or do you want the tension to snap sooner? 🖤🧛‍♂️



Sample Chapter Freedom Wears Her Name: A Domestic Romance Drama, Later in Life, Second Chance

on
Monday, April 20, 2026


Chapter 47

A woman was running toward them from the park across the road. Her coat was open, flapping behind her. Her hair had come loose from wherever she'd tied it.
She was pale with terror.
She was also the last person Ryan had expected to see in Velmoor.
In the world, really.
He stopped breathing for a moment.
She slowed when she saw him. Five steps away. Then four. Then she stopped completely.
Her lips parted.
The cobblestones were wet from the morning rain. The old stone buildings along the square rose grey and quiet on either side of them. 
Somewhere behind the park, the church bell began its slow count of the hour.
None of it existed.
"Claire," he said.
Her name came out like something he had kept in his mouth for three years, turning it over in the dark, waiting.
She said nothing for a moment. Her eyes moved from his face to Ellie, checking — quickly, entirely instinctive, the scan of a mother whose child has just run into traffic. Then back to him.
"Ryan," she said.
One word. Barely sound.
Ellie looked between them. Then she looked up at Ryan.
"Do you know my mum?"
The little girl stood in the middle of the road. She clutched an orange cat to her chest. Both of them were frozen. The cat had given up struggling and gone completely limp, the way cats did when they accepted their circumstances.
The girl looked at him with wide, dark eyes.
She was not crying. That was the first thing Ryan noticed. He had expected tears. 
Instead she just looked at him — direct and assessing, the way small children looked at things before adults taught them not to.
"You ran out without looking."
"Marmalade ran first." She held up the cat as evidence.
Ryan looked at the cat. The cat looked back, entirely indifferent to having nearly caused a traffic incident.
"Next time," Ryan said carefully, "let Marmalade sort himself out."
The girl considered this with seriousness. "He can't sort himself out. That's why he has me."
Ryan had no answer for that.
*
They moved off the road.
There was a stone bench at the edge of the park, set back beneath a chestnut tree whose leaves had just begun to turn. 
The light came through in pieces, yellow and uneven. 
Ryan and Claire sat at opposite ends of the bench. One full foot of cold stone between them.
Ellie sat cross-legged on the ground in front of them. She had set Marmalade in her lap. 
She was explaining to the cat, quietly and patiently, why he should not run into roads, in the tone of someone who had given this lecture before and expected it to fail again.
Ryan watched her.
Something in his chest had gone very quiet. The way a room went quiet after someone left it.
"How long have you been in Velmoor?" Claire asked.
Her voice was composed. He had always admired that about her. 
She could arrange her face into calm the way other people arranged furniture — quickly, deliberately, so nothing showed that wasn't meant to.
"Four days," he said.
"Work."
"Yes. There's a hospital being built on the east side. Spencer Construction has the contract. I came to review the build."
She nodded slowly. "You didn't know I was here."
"No."
A pause.
"But Ardian knew," she said.
It wasn't an accusation. It wasn't even really a question. 
She was just placing it down between them, carefully, the way you set something fragile on a surface you're not sure will hold.
"He never told me," Ryan said. "I figured that out on my own."
"I asked him not to."
"I know."
She looked at the park. At the iron fence running along its edge. At the old fountain in the centre that had been turned off for autumn. 
Velmoor was that kind of town — everything shut down in stages as the season changed, as if the whole place was preparing for a long, considered sleep.
"I'm sorry," she said.
"Don't."
"Ryan—"
"Claire." His voice was quiet but certain. "You protected yourself. You protected her." He didn't look at her. "You don't owe me an apology for that."
She was silent.
Ellie looked up. "Mum. He hasn't told me his name."
"Ryan," Claire said.
Ellie studied him. "Just Ryan?"
He looked at her. "Just Ryan is fine."
She nodded. She went back to the cat. "Just Ryan," she repeated, testing it. Then, without looking up: "You can share Marmalade if you want. Since you almost squashed him."
The corner of Ryan's mouth moved.
He looked at Claire.
She was looking at her daughter. Something in her expression had gone soft and tired at the same time.
The expression of a woman who loved someone more than she had words for, and was quietly exhausted by the size of it.


Chapter 59
Nothing changed on the outside.
That was the first thing Claire noticed.
She walked home from the Mairie the same way she walked everywhere in Velmoor — steady pace, coat buttoned, eyes forward. The certificate was folded in her pocket. It was rectangular. It was paper. It weighed exactly nothing.
The square looked the same. The baker's window had the same afternoon loaves. The fountain was still off. The chestnut tree was still losing leaves at its own unhurried pace.
Everything exactly as it had been at nine forty-five.
She picked Ellie up from school at half past three.
Ellie talked the whole way home about a disagreement she'd had with a girl named Sophie over whether a drawing of a horse looked more like a horse or a large dog.
"It was clearly a horse," Ellie said.
"Did it have a mane?"
"A very good mane."
"Then Sophie was wrong."
Ellie nodded firmly. "I know."
They walked through the gate. Claire unlocked the front door. She hung up her coat. She put the kettle on.
Ordinary. Entirely ordinary.
The certificate was still in her coat pocket.
She left it there.
Ryan had gone back to the site after Chez Marguerite.
He called at five.
"I'll be another hour," he said. "There's a delivery issue with the structural steel."
"Alright," she said.
"Have you eaten?"
"Not yet."
"I'll bring something from the boulangerie if it's still open."
"You don't have to."
"I know."
He hung up.
She stood in the kitchen for a moment after the call ended. The kettle boiled. She made Ellie's hot chocolate and her own tea and carried them to the table.
Ellie was drawing at the other end. She had moved on from the horse controversy and was now rendering what appeared to be an elaborate battle between two very serious-looking cats.
Claire sat down. She wrapped her hands around her mug.
She thought about the line she'd said in the kitchen this morning.
I'm saying yes to the legal part. The paper. The protection.
She had meant it. She still meant it.
And yet.
She kept thinking about the way his signature looked on the line next to hers. The angle of his handwriting. The way M. Delacroix had said congratulations in a voice that treated the word as entirely true.
She drank her tea.
She thought about other things.
*
Ryan arrived at six-fifteen with bread and a small paper bag from the charcuterie.
He set them on the counter without announcement. He hung up his coat. He washed his hands at the kitchen sink.
Ellie looked up from her drawing. "Did you bring anything good?"
"Bread and some cured ham."
"I know. You told me on Sunday."
Ellie looked mildly impressed that he'd remembered.
Claire set out plates. Ryan sliced the bread. Ellie rearranged the ham slices into what she described as a more interesting layout.
They ate at the kitchen table.
It was the fourth time they'd eaten together at this table. Claire knew that because she had counted without meaning to. 
The counting was automatic. A holdover from years of tracking things — how many times Daniel came home for dinner versus how many times he didn't, how many times he spoke to her in a normal voice versus not, how many days it was safe to ask for something versus not.
The counting had been a survival mechanism.
She was trying to make it stop.
She watched Ryan cut his bread. He did it efficiently, without drama. He didn't hold the knife wrong. He didn't make a performance of anything.
Small things. She noticed all of them.
"The registrar stamped it wrong," Ryan said.
Claire looked at him. "What?"
"M. Delacroix. He stamped the second copy first. I watched him do it." He picked up his bread. "I didn't say anything because it doesn't affect the legal validity."
"Why are you telling me this?"
"Because it's the only interesting thing that happened today other than the steel delivery issue, which is not interesting."
Ellie looked between them. "What did the registrar stamp?"
"Documents," Ryan said.
"What documents?"
"Grown-up documents."
Ellie accepted this with the mild suspicion of someone who suspected she was being managed. She went back to her ham.
Claire looked at her plate.
She pressed her lips together.
She was almost smiling. She could feel it at the corner of her mouth, sitting there, not quite arriving.
She picked up her bread.
*

FREE READ CHAPTER Saint of Forgotten Names #4-6 : A Dark LitRPG Progression Fantasy (Saint of Forgotten Names (Litrpg version))

on
Sunday, April 12, 2026




Chapter 23: The Undertaker's Terms
The apartment smelled like dust.
Elias sat on the floor with his back against the wall. The chair looked unstable. He had already used up his quota of bad decisions for the day.
The marks on his arm had stopped burning. They pulsed now. Slow and steady. Like a second heartbeat that had not asked permission to move in.
 
[STATUS UPDATE] 
Narrative Weight: 1.47/10.00 
Ink Level: 40% [STABLE] 
Sanity: 32/100 [UNSTABLE] 
Marked for Reclamation: ACTIVE 
Time Remaining: 3 days
 
The Undertaker stood near the writing desk.
He had not moved since Elias sat down. He just held the skull and waited. The way old machinery waits. Patient. Indifferent to whoever had to operate it.
Elias looked at the dagger.
Long blade. Silver that caught light from a direction the single lamp in the room was not pointing. Engravings along the flat of it. Clock hands. Each one frozen at a different time.
Mystical surgery, the Undertaker had said.
Potentially fatal, he had also said.
As if those two things balanced each other out.
"You came through a locked door," Elias said.
"Yes."
"My windows were also locked."
"Yes."
"So you can go wherever you want."
The Undertaker tilted his head slightly. The brim of his hat shifted. The shadow under it did not.
"Within certain parameters," he said.
Elias thought about that. He was good at noticing the edges of things. The places where explanations did not quite cover what they were supposed to cover.
The Undertaker had not said yes this time. He had qualified.
 
[OBSERVATION SKILL: ACTIVE] 
Discrepancy detected: Undertaker cannot access Fragment without consent. 
Implication: He needs you willing, not just present. This is leverage. Use it carefully.
 
"You could not take the fragment while I was unconscious," Elias said. "You are here because you need my cooperation."
Silence.
Not the heavy cosmic kind. The kind where someone is deciding how much to confirm.
"The digestion process has already begun," the Undertaker said. "Removing the fragment now requires the host's active participation. Otherwise the extraction damages both the artifact and the consciousness containing it."
"So you need me awake and willing."
"Cooperative, yes."
"That is a different kind of yes than your earlier ones."
The Undertaker did not respond to that. The skull in his hand pulsed faintly. Letters rearranged across its surface. Elias did not look directly at them. Looking at them too long made his eyes water and his thoughts feel slippery.
He pressed his marked palm flat against the floor. The cool of the boards helped him think.
"What happens if I refuse and you take it anyway?" Elias asked.
"Personality dissolution. Or consciousness fragmentation. Either outcome renders the fragment non-functional."
"So you lose the thing you came for."
"Yes."
"And I lose myself."
"Yes."
"We both lose."
"Yes."
 
[NEGOTIATION ANALYSIS] 
The Undertaker is not lying. His logic is internally consistent. 
Problem: clean logic can still rest on a wrong foundation. Investigate the foundation.
 
Elias exhaled slowly. That was the problem. 
Everything the Undertaker said fit together without gaps. But clean logic could still be built on a wrong foundation.
"Why do you want the fragment?" Elias asked.
"The Order of Pale Scripture requires it for containment purposes."
"The Order sent you."
"I operate on contract. The Order is the current contracting party."
Current. Not only. Not always.
"Who contracted you originally?" Elias asked. "The contract with my name on it. Who made it?"
The Undertaker was quiet for long enough that the silence became its own answer.
"The contracting party's identity is sealed," he said finally.
"But the contract exists."
"All contracts exist."
"And you enforce them regardless of whether the contracted person agreed to them."
"I enforce valid contracts," the Undertaker said. "Validity is determined by the terms and the authority of the contracting party. Not by the awareness of the subject."
Something in that bothered Elias at a structural level. Like a sentence that was grammatically correct but meant something the speaker had not intended.
"Can a contract be renegotiated?" he asked.
 
[SYSTEM: Relevant query detected.] 
The Pale Notary's function is contractual. Counter-offers made before original terms execute are binding on both parties. You did not know this. Now you do.
 
Another pause. Different from the first. This one had weight in it.
"Under specific circumstances," the Undertaker said.
"What circumstances?"
"If the subject presents a counter-contract of equivalent or greater value before the original terms are executed."
Elias looked at the dagger again. Still there. Still patient. Silver still catching light from the wrong angle.
He had maybe two minutes before the Undertaker decided this conversation had gone on long enough.
"I need three days," Elias said.
"The digestion process —"
"Three days." He did not raise his voice. "After which I will either present a counter-contract or cooperate with the extraction. Voluntarily."
"Voluntary cooperation does not alter the risk to your consciousness."
"I know. But it changes whether this is something I chose or something that happened to me. That matters."
The Undertaker was still.
Elias watched him the way you watched ice. Looking for the first crack.
"Three days," the Undertaker said finally. "After which the original contract terms resume."
He reached into his coat. The fabric swallowed his hand up to the wrist. He pulled it back out. In his gloved fingers was a card. Not paper. Something thinner and harder. Pale and smooth.
Elias took it.
It was warm. Warm in a way that suggested it had been against something living. On one side, an address in Cradle. On the other, a single line of small clean text.
Arrive before the address changes.
"The location shifts every seventy-two hours," the Undertaker said. "Come before then."
"And if I come after?"
"Then the contract defaults to its original execution terms. And we have this conversation again under less favorable conditions for you."
He moved toward the wall. Not dramatically. He stepped into it the way you step through a doorway, except there was no doorway. Just wall. And then less wall. And then nothing.
No sound. No flash of light. The room was the same room it had been before.
Slightly emptier.
 
[QUEST UPDATED: Survive] 
New Objective: Present counter-contract to Pale Notary Time 
Limit: 3 days 
Failure Consequence: Original terms executed 
Original Terms: Unknown [SEALED] 
Note: Unknown terms are rarely favorable. Note: Unknown knowledge usually can be retrieved from the Catacombs.
 
Elias sat on the floor for a moment longer.
His arm pulsed. The marks caught the lamplight and held it the way water held reflection. Briefly. Then let it go.
He was hungry.
That was the thing he kept coming back to.
He had absorbed fragments of cosmic knowledge. He had been rewritten at a fundamental level. He had apparently made contracts with himself across timelines he could not remember.
And he was hungry.
He stood carefully. Checked his pockets.
Empty.
No money. No identification. No memory of having either. 
He had a pulsing arm full of living scripture, a fragment of primordial gospel pressed against his ribs inside his jacket, and a card made of something that was not quite bone and not quite paper.
He had three days.
He looked around the apartment. Small. Someone had lived here before. The walls had faint outlines where pictures had hung. 
A coffee ring on the windowsill, dried out. A coat hook by the door with nothing on it.
His home. Presumably. The fragment had recognized it when they arrived. But nothing in it felt familiar the way a home should feel familiar.
He went to the window.
Cradle was dark. It was always dark. 
The perpetual twilight pressed down on the buildings below and the buildings pressed back. The result was the specific gray that Cradle called night. 
Gas lamps marked the streets in yellow points. Smoke drifted from chimneys that should not have still been burning at this hour.
Somewhere below, someone was having an argument in a language he did not speak. 
A door slammed. A dog barked twice and stopped.
Normal sounds.
He pressed his forehead against the glass. The cold helped.
"Any thoughts?" he said to the room. Specifically to the jacket.
The fragment was still.
"Right," Elias said. "Helpful."
 
[FRAGMENT OF INVERTED GOSPEL] 
Synchronization: 94% 
Status: Observing 
Communication: Unavailable [Resting] 
Note: Even cosmic artifacts need downtime apparently.
 
He looked at the card. The address was in a part of Cradle he did not recognize. Which was most of it. But still.
He needed food. He needed information. 
He needed, in some order he had not determined yet, to understand what kind of counter-contract could satisfy an entity like the Pale Notary. 
And why his own past self had apparently contracted with that entity in the first place.
He put the card in his pocket. Straightened his jacket. His hands needed something to do.
Then he unlocked the apartment door and went out to find something to eat.
If he was going to renegotiate a contract with a cosmic enforcement agent, he was going to do it on a full stomach.
The stairwell was dark. It smelled like mildew and old cooking. 
Someone on the second floor was listening to a radio program at low volume. 
The words were too quiet to make out. But the rhythm was identifiably the kind of mystery serial that required a lot of dramatic pauses.
He went down the stairs.
Outside, the city was cold and gray. Full of people who did not know what was happening to it.
That was perhaps the most honest thing about Cradle.
He walked.




Free Read Divine Light System #3: A Litrpg Adventure From 50th Failure to Divine Deity

on
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Chapter 27
"Always."
"Then reach for me. Not with your body. With your power."
"But we're too far—"
"Distance doesn't matter if we choose to be close."
He reached out. Not with his hand. With his light. Let it flow across the chamber toward her.
A bridge of golden radiance spanning the impossible distance.
Elena understood. She reached back with her lunar energy. Silver light meeting gold in the middle of the chamber.
They touched.
[SUN & MOON SYNCHRONIZATION: RESTORING]
[43%... 56%... 71%... 89%... 100%]
[DIVINE RESONANCE: MAXIMUM]
[NEW ABILITY UNLOCKED: TWILIGHT BRIDGE]
[BOND EVOLUTION: COMPLETE]
[THE GODS ARE DEFINITELY NOTICING NOW]
The power that surged between them was incredible. Not gold or silver but both at once.
A twilight radiance that was somehow stronger than either alone. Like the moment between day and night when both exist together.
The shadow chains shattered like glass.
Levi and Elena ran toward each other. Met in the center of the chamber. Their hands clasped. And light exploded outward in a wave that shook the very foundations of the mountain.
Vex screamed. His form flickering. "Impossible! The separation should have broken you!"
"We're not that easy to break," Levi said.
They struck together. Moving in perfect sync like they'd trained together for years. Levi's right hand blazing gold. Elena's left hand glowing silver. When they hit Vex the impact sent the Avatar flying across the chamber.
He crashed into the machine. The collision disrupted the extraction. Sparks flew. Dark energy leaked from cracked pipes. The false Mera's screams turned to static.
"You little—" Vex started.
Aldric moved.
The professor had been standing still. Watching. Waiting. Fighting the collar's commands with every ounce of will he had. Bleeding from his nose and ears from the effort.
Now he grabbed the control panel. Started entering commands with shaking hands.
"What are you doing?" Vex demanded. "I command you to stop!"
"I'm... trying..." Aldric was crying. Blood running from his nose and ears and the corners of his eyes. "But some things... are worth... dying for..."
His fingers hit the final sequence.
The machine reversed.
All the stolen essence. All the shadow energy binding the Fragment. It started flowing backward. Into the false Mera. The copy that had been nothing but a puppet.
Her eyes snapped open. But they weren't empty anymore. They blazed with silver fire.
"What—" Vex took a step back.
The false Mera stood up. The shadow chains around her dissolved like smoke. The cage shattered. And she began to change.
Her form shifted. Grew. Became something older. More powerful. More real than anything in the chamber.
Until standing in the machine's ruins was a woman. Maybe thirty years old. With silver hair that flowed like liquid moonlight. Violet eyes that held the depth of eternity. Wearing robes made of starlight. Wings spreading wide behind her.
"Hello little shadow," she said. Her voice layered with ancient power that made the air vibrate. "Did you miss me?"
"Selene," Vex whispered.
"Not quite. I'm just an echo. A fragment of the Moon Goddess's power given form by desperation and stolen essence and a foolish old man's genius." The woman smiled. It was beautiful and terrible. "But I remember. I remember everything they did to me. To Aseraph. To all the mortals who dared to dream of something better."
She raised her hand. Pure lunar power gathered around her fingers. Condensed into a spear of solid moonlight.
"And now I'm going to make sure you remember too."
She threw the spear.
It hit Vex directly in the chest. The Avatar screamed. His shadow form began to peel away. Layer by layer. Like burning paper revealing what lay beneath.
Not a divine being. Not a servant of the gods.
Just a man. Middle-aged. Balding. Wearing torn scholar's robes from centuries ago.
"No," Vex gasped. His human voice weak. Frightened. So very human. "I can't go back. I can't be weak again. I can't—"
"You never stopped being weak," the Selene-echo said gently. "You just hid it behind someone else's power."
The last of Vex's shadow burned away. He fell to his knees. Staring at his own human hands like he didn't recognize them.
"I was... I was a teacher once," he whispered. "Before Nyx found me. Before I traded my soul for eternity and power and the promise of never being helpless again."
"I know," the echo said.
"I've done terrible things. Hurt so many people." Vex looked up at her. "Can I... is there any way to..."
"To be forgiven?" The Selene-echo knelt beside him. "That's not for me to decide. But I can give you peace."
She touched his forehead.
Light and shadow swirled together. Not fighting. Merging. Finding balance at last.
Vex's face relaxed. The fear and pain melting away. Replaced by something that looked almost like relief.
"Thank you," he breathed.
Then he simply faded. Like mist in morning sun. His last expression one of peace he probably hadn't felt in centuries.

Free Read Bite The System! #9: A Dark Academy LitRPG Adventure eBook

Free Read Chapter Vol. 8


Chapter 91
The corridor was exactly what old infrastructure looked like — pipes overhead, cables running along the walls in bundles, the kind of utilitarian construction that exists for function and nothing else. The floor sloped gradually downward for twenty meters and then leveled out.
Derek walked with one hand trailing the wall. Not leaning on it. Just keeping contact in case his legs decided to stop cooperating.
"The arena is still running," he said.
Kael had been thinking the same thing. Above them, distant but audible through the layers of concrete and soil, the crowd noise hadn't stopped. Muffled and indistinct but consistent. 
The tournament was continuing without them. Another match, another story, another two people who couldn't escape and didn't have a drone-killing trick available.
"We can't help them from here," Kael said.
"I know." Derek's jaw was tight. "I'm just noting it."
"Noted."
The corridor reached a junction. Four directions. Kael stopped.
"Your mother," Derek said. "Detention Block C."
"I know."
"The message said forty-eight hours. That was—" Derek calculated. "Maybe six hours ago. We have time. But not a lot."
Kael was already looking at the junction. North corridor had a ventilation draft coming through it — recycled air from somewhere that had HVAC. 
That meant a larger space. Administrative, possibly. South corridor sloped down further, which meant deeper into the facility, which meant further from any exit. 
East ran parallel to the direction they'd come from — probably circled back toward the arena complex.
West ran straight and had nothing notable about it at all.
"West," Kael said.
"Again with the boring option."
"The boring option kept us alive twice."
"Fair point."
They went west.
*
Eighty meters in, the corridor opened into a room that made both of them stop.
Maintenance junction. The functional heart of the facility's infrastructure — power conduits, water systems, environmental controls, data lines. 
Everything that kept a building alive ran through a room like this. It smelled like metal and recycled air and the low electrical hum of systems that never turned off.
But it also had a terminal.
Old. Industrial. The kind that facilities forgot about because they'd been superseded by better interfaces and left running because turning them off required paperwork.
Kael crossed to it. The screen was on. Basic system display — power loads, temperature readings, automated maintenance logs.
And a facility map.
Derek appeared beside him. "There."
The map showed the full structure. Kael found their location — maintenance junction, west sublevel. He traced outward.
Detention Block C was four levels up and two sections north. The path there was complicated — it went through areas that were clearly active, staffed, monitored. Not impossible. Not clean either.
But there.
He kept looking. Found the data that mattered less immediately but mattered more eventually.
The server room he'd touched briefly before the escape — it was directly above their current position. 
One level up. The processing facility where Council was storing harvested consciousness. Still running. 
He could see the power draw on the maintenance display — enormous, constant, the kind of draw that didn't fluctuate because what it was running never paused.
He thought about the signal he'd touched. The one that felt like… 
Riley.
He filed it away. Not now.
"We have a problem," Derek said.
Kael looked where Derek was looking. The map had a secondary overlay — security deployment. Dots indicating patrol routes and positions.
Between their current location and Detention Block C, there were a lot of dots.
Council had anticipated that if anything went wrong in the execution chamber, escaped subjects would try to reach prisoners. 
The route to Block C was not an oversight. It was a funnel.
"They're expecting us to go there," Kael said.
"Yes."
"So we don't."
Derek looked at him. "Your mother is in there."
"I know. We don't go the direct route." Kael studied the map. "Service tunnels. They run parallel to the main corridors. They're not on the security deployment overlay, which means they're either unmonitored or they're assumed impassable."
"Why would they be assumed impassable?"
Kael found the answer on the maintenance log. "Flooding. Lower service tunnels have had intermittent water intrusion for three months. Maintenance keeps logging it and nobody fixes it." He checked the current status. "Currently at sixty centimeters in the lowest section."
Derek stared at him. "You want to walk through sixty centimeters of water."
"I want to walk through sixty centimeters of water past the security deployment to reach Detention Block C without being shot."
"I hate this plan."
"Better than the alternative."
Derek looked at the security dots again. Looked at the water notation. Looked back at Kael.
"You're buying me new boots after this," Derek said.
"Easy."
Kael pulled up the access point for the service tunnels on the terminal. Found the nearest entry point — a floor panel twelve meters back the way they'd come, marked on the maintenance map with a small wrench icon.
He memorized the route to Block C through the service tunnels. Committed the relevant security positions to memory alongside it.
Then he killed the terminal's display. 
Not turning it off — just clearing the screen back to its default view. Anyone checking it would see normal maintenance data. Nothing to indicate it had been used.
Small thing. But small things had kept them alive so far.
"Ready?" he said.
Derek cracked his neck. The burns on his arm had closed another few millimeters while they'd been standing here. 
The temporary bridge Kael had built was doing its job. 
"No," Derek said. "Let's go anyway."
They went back into the corridor.

Free Read Bite The System! #8: A Dark Academy LitRPG Adventure eBook

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Monday, March 23, 2026
Chapter 78
6:28 PM.
One hour and thirty-two minutes until Kael had to kill his best friend on live television.
The cell was getting smaller. Or maybe that was just his brain playing tricks. Probably the latter. 
Concrete walls didn't move. Physics still worked that way even in a world where vampires ruled and the System turned people into video game characters.
Focus. Stop spiraling. Think.
But thinking wasn't helping. Every thought led back to the same impossible problem. 
Derek was brainwashed. The tournament rules were absolute. One of them had to die.
No exceptions. No loopholes. The System didn't do loopholes.
Kael's restraints hummed with power suppression. He'd been testing them for the last three hours. Pulling. Twisting. Trying to access even a fraction of his bridge consciousness.
Nothing. The restraints were too good. 
Whatever technology the Eternal Council had developed, it shut down System abilities completely. 
He was weaker than a normal human right now. Probably couldn't even win an arm-wrestling match against a teenager.
Great survival strategy. Very helpful.
The screens in his cell never stopped. Constant coverage of the tournament. Interviews with officials. 
Behind-the-scenes footage of the arena preparation. Promotional materials that made his stomach turn.
Right now they were showing highlights from previous tournaments. Fights from the test runs they'd done before going public.
A vampire woman fighting three humans at once. She moved like liquid death. The humans didn't stand a chance. Lasted maybe forty-five seconds combined. The crowd in the stands screamed with bloodlust.
Two hybrid creatures tearing each other apart. Both of them classified as "corrupted specimens" according to their System interfaces. Both of them fought like they had nothing left to lose. The match went for twelve minutes. Left the arena floor covered in blood and viscera. One hybrid finally collapsed. The crowd cheered as the winner consumed what was left.
They're literally eating the losers. In front of billions of people. And this is legal now.
Another fight. This one between former allies. The announcer provided backstory like it was a sports match. 
"These two served in the same resistance cell for three years! But when Registration Day came, one chose cooperation while the other chose defiance! Now they meet in the arena to settle their differences!"
The fight was brutal. Personal. They knew each other's moves. Each other's weaknesses. 
Made it worse somehow. More intimate. The registered fighter won. 
Stood over his former friend's body. Looked into the camera. 
"I chose the winning side. Everyone else should too."
Propaganda. All of it. Designed to make people accept the new order.
And it's working. The view counts keep going up.
Kael turned away from the screen. Focused on his cell instead. Looking for anything useful.
Nothing. 
They'd designed these cells specifically for System users. 
Reinforced concrete that blocked dimensional travel. Power dampeners built into the walls. 
The door was solid metal. No windows except the small reinforced ones looking out into the corridor.
Other cells lined the hallway. Kael could hear the prisoners inside. 
Some had given up. Accepted death. 
Others were still fighting mentally, trying to find solutions that didn't exist.
Cell 003 held a vampire who kept muttering calculations. Probability equations. Win scenarios. 
His voice had gone hoarse hours ago but he kept going. "If I dodge left and counter with a 2.3-second delay, survival odds increase to 31%. But if the opponent adapts, then I need to—"
Cell 007 had a hybrid female who just cried. Soft sobs that never stopped. Sometimes she called out for someone named Demian. No one answered.
Cell 012 held a human. No System access. Arrested for harboring unregistered vampires. He'd been silent for hours. Then suddenly started laughing. Manic. Broken. "They said it was safe. They said the resistance would protect us. Liars. All liars."
Kael wanted to say something. Offer comfort. Hope.
Didn't have any to give.
His own survival odds were 23%. And that was before fighting Derek.
Derek. God. Derek.
The video of Derek's brainwashing kept playing in Kael's head. 
On loop. 
Like his brain wanted to torture him. Derek screaming. Fighting the restraints. 
The technicians pumping corrupted data into his System interface. Rewriting his memories one neural pathway at a time.
They'd turned Derek's entire worldview into a weapon. Made him believe Kael was the villain. The betrayer. The one responsible for all his suffering.
And the worst part? 
Kael could see the logic. If you changed just a few key memories, altered some timestamps, edited the security footage—it would look exactly like Derek believed. 
Like Kael had escaped alone and left Derek behind to rot.
Complete fabrication. But Derek doesn't know that. To him, it's real. It's truth.
The screens switched to a new segment. "Tournament Spotlight: Featured Fighters!"
Kael's stomach dropped.
His face appeared on screen. Not a flattering angle. 
They'd pulled it from his arrest footage. He looked disheveled. 
Angry. Dangerous.

Free Read Book 6 Noir A Dark Colleague Romance

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Thursday, March 19, 2026

Chapter 50
Alwin gripped the neckline of Ben's housecoat and said it again. “The ugliest look I've ever seen in my life. No amount of fancy designer clothes and money can change your dress sense for the better. All this stuff looks cheap when you wear it.” 
“P-please... p-pleaseee...,” Ben pleaded, water pouring from his eyes, nose and mouth. “Take it off... g-go please. P-please...,”
“Please what?”
Ben squeezed Alwin's thighs and buried his face in Alwin's legs that were still grinding his cock. He didn't know what he wanted.
“Please what?” Alwin repeated.
Ben was getting confused. Suddenly he felt he deserved to be treated like this. He was both tormented and enjoying it. The long-fingered hand on his neck felt like an angel's touch, so gentle. His sprawling cock under Alwin's foot still briefly twitched erect and even started to cum.
But the pleasure was only momentary. Because after that Alwin pressed his throat with the tip of his thumb and squeezed until he was out of breath. 
Ben gasped for air. His hands flailed against Alwin's trying to break free. Did he choose the wrong host? Had he actually hired a serial killer? His eyes rolled back almost unconscious.
“What is it? Fainted already? Huh?” Alwin slapped Ben with his other hand. “Hm, so weak. I guess this is the only way you can survive?”
Perhaps he had actually lost consciousness for some time. Because suddenly he was on his back on the sofa and something big and hard had filled his back hole. She felt so full that there was no room left. 
His body jerked back and forth as Alwin pounded him back and forth from behind. Ben began to sigh and moan in pleasure. 
“Aargh... arrghh... ahhh...,”
“Already awake, hm?” Alwin mocked. “If you are weak you should just order the cuddling package, you are piece of shit. You waste my time for I have to fucking an unconsious weak man like you!” Alwin grabbed the front of Ben's neck and pulled him back roughly. 
“You like to dominate poor young men because you think they're weak, right? They're easy targets for you, right? Hm?”
“Kkk... kkk...,” a pathetic strangled moan escaped Ben's gaping mouth. 
Alwin continued to pound Ben's rectum mercilessly. Faster and deeper. He penetrated haphazardly and blindly because Ben deserved it. Alwin was sure he was doing the same thing to his victims. Maybe even worse.
And Ben himself knew, deep down, he deserved less than this.
“Aarghh... ahhh... kkkk... kkkk...,” Ben came again. His body was shaking and limp. His sperm spurted all over the expensive sofa. He fell to his knees. He was breathing heavily. He almost lost consciousness again.
“Hm, you came twice.” Alwin said coldly. “I haven't even come out yet.” He laughed mockingly. “Do you want some more? You said you could only come once or twice. I'll give you a bonus if you want. I'm not satisfied with torturing a bastard like you yet.”
“A-a-aa... mercy.” he stammered. His hands shot up, trembling. “L-let's stop here! Oh my...!”
                                          *
BAMMM!!!
The entire class jolted in shock at the sudden sound, their heads whipping toward its source. Even Arya, who had been fast asleep, shot up in surprise, her body jerking from the force of the sound.  
Alwin had just slammed his forehead into the edge of the desk, creating a deafening thud. Dazed, he slowly lifted his head, one hand bracing on the edge of the desk while the other pressed against his throbbing forehead.  
The entire class stared at him in a mix of concern and amusement, wondering what had happened to make him lose his balance so suddenly. Alwin rubbed his temples, trying to steady his disoriented mind.  
Usually, he would step out of class for a quick break before the afternoon's medication hit its peak effect, leaving him weak and wobbly. But this time, he’d been too slow. He was already dizzy before he could find a place to lie down.  
"Alwin, are you okay?" the instructor called out, her voice laced with concern. "You don’t look well. Maybe you should head to the infirmary."  
"Argh, shit..." Alwin muttered under his breath, wincing as the pain in his head intensified.  
He struggled to focus on the instructor’s words, but his body swayed, and his vision blurred. His hands gripped the edge of the desk for stability, his breathing growing shallow and erratic as another wave of dizziness hit.  
His pulse hammered in his ears as he fought to stay conscious, the world spinning around him. Alwin squeezed his eyes shut, trying to calm his racing heart and regulate his erratic breathing.  
Arya, witnessing the whole situation unfold, had to resist the urge to laugh or offer sympathy. However, a chuckle eventually escaped her lips, loud enough to catch the attention of the entire class.  
Seeing Arya laugh, the rest of the class followed suit, their chuckles filling the room.  
"Imagine waking up from a nap, then just laughing at your friend who’s about to pass out," someone teased. "If your friend’s sick, maybe try taking them to the infirmary instead of laughing!"  
"Huh?" Arya blinked, realizing the joke was about her. She was still in the middle of waking up, her brain foggy from the nap. "Oh, right, right," she mumbled, her voice still groggy. She stood up, walking over to Alwin's desk.  
"Hurry up, get up!" she barked, grabbing his arm and yanking him upright. "Let’s go!" she added, now more commanding than before.  
Alwin, half-conscious, barely managed to stand. His legs wobbled beneath him as he swayed dangerously from side to side. Arya immediately wrapped an arm around him, steadying him.  
"Come on, get up! Hey! Hey! Wake up!" She slapped his cheek several times, trying to snap him out of his daze. But all Alwin could manage was rolling his eyes, his gaze vacant as the whites of his eyes were the only visible part.  
"Whoa, what’s this?" someone from the class called out, laughing at the sight of Arya slapping Alwin. "Maybe it’d be better we carry him instead!"  
"Oh, relax, he’s fine," Arya responded nonchalantly, her grin wide. "I’ve got him under control."  
Her arm looped around Alwin’s waist, pulling him tightly against her side, pressing his body against hers as she began to drag him out of the classroom.  
"Ugh, heavy!" she muttered under her breath, her tone sharp as she struggled to support his limp weight. "A little effort to lighten up your body wouldn’t hurt, Alwin."  
With one last sarcastic comment, she gave a mock salute. "Excuse us, ma’am."  
As they made their way down the corridor, they became the center of attention, every other class in the hallway pausing to watch the spectacle of Arya pulling an almost-unconscious Alwin behind her.  
The grip she had on his arm was firm, but it felt as though he could drop to the floor at any moment. Students quickly stepped aside to avoid blocking their path as Arya moved quickly toward the elevator.  
The doors slid shut just as she stepped back, eyes flicking nervously to Alwin’s body, now slumping further, his breath shallow and erratic as he struggled to maintain his balance. Suddenly, the lift jerked into motion, causing both of them to stumble and crash against one side of the elevator.  

Free Read Book 5 Noir A Dark Colleague Romance

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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Chapter 41
Alwin always moved through his own house like a ghost, slipping past unnoticed, as though he had never existed at all. That day began with a series of medical examinations at the hospital, the relentless hum of machines monitoring each breath, each heartbeat. 
But when night fell, he returned to the grand mansion that had once been his pride. It was surrounded by luxury—everything gleaming, pristine, and empty. None of it held any meaning for him anymore.
Ranti had decided to bring him home. A private medical team was hired to care for Alwin day and night, ensuring his treatments were followed rigorously. New prescriptions had been issued to calm his mind and stabilize his heart. Yet, despite the medications coursing through his veins, Alwin’s mind remained sharp, his anger far from being quelled.
Tonight was the grand Windermere clan dinner, a tradition held twice a year. The long dining table in the grand hall was laden with exquisite dishes, as if it were a royal banquet, bathed in the soft glow of the crystal chandelier, amplifying the grandeur of the occasion.
But Alwin was not there.
Instead, he lay in his darkened bedroom on the upper floor, drifting in and out of restless sleep. His body remained motionless, but his mind raced, trapped in an unending cycle of torment—flashes of the accident, the screams, the blood, and the inescapable weight of his fate.
His nightmares repeated endlessly, even under the influence of medication.
Downstairs, however, Ranti sat calmly at the head of the table, poised and graceful. She had spent the entire day ensuring everything was perfect for the dinner. She coordinated the chefs, decorators, and staff while simultaneously tending to Alwin’s needs at home. To everyone else, she was the picture of strength. A mother who would do anything for her troubled, precious son. But to Alwin, she was just another one of many people pretending to care.
The dinner proceeded smoothly, with members of the Windermere clan exchanging pleasantries as usual. 
Alwin's grandfather, Theodore, glanced around the table before asking, "Where is Alwin?"
Ranti paused, her fork hovering above her plate. The question hung in the air, drawing the attention of everyone at the table.
"He’s resting," Ranti replied coolly, though the concern was evident in her eyes. "The doctors just adjusted his medication, and the transition has been difficult. His health has been deteriorating, and he’s had several cardiac arrests lately. It’s more complicated than we anticipated. He needs time and full care to stabilize."
Her explanation was flat and detached, the words coming out in a tone that seemed almost rehearsed.
Theodore nodded, accepting her answer without pressing further, and the conversation soon shifted to safer topics.
However, it wasn’t long before the conversation circled back to Alwin. His grandmother dabbed her lips with a napkin before speaking up. "I received the latest report. Alwin is still qualified for the assessment this year, although there are medical concerns that need to be addressed."
"We all know Alwin was always the favorite," Theodore said, his voice tinged with a mix of pride and bitterness.
"Yes, but that was before he fell into a coma," his grandmother replied firmly. "And before his position was overtaken by someone else. The Ashford family’s child."
The room fell silent, the tension palpable as everyone at the table absorbed the gravity of Alwin’s situation. Once, he had been the golden child—the heir apparent to the organization. Now, with his health declining and others starting to fill the void he left behind, the question arose: Could Alwin reclaim his position, or would the Ashford heir surpass him forever?
Whispers began to ripple through the room.
Piers, one of Alwin’s uncles, leaned back in his chair, arms crossed over his chest. "We must ensure he’s in the best condition for the assessment. Our family’s position in the organization depends on it."
Ranti nodded in agreement, her voice calm but edged with a determination that echoed her words. "Of course," she replied. "I will do whatever it takes to make sure everything goes smoothly."
The conversation continued, each family member offering their opinion on how best to manage Alwin's situation. But none of them suggested checking on his condition or even visiting him to see how he was faring. 
To them, Alwin wasn’t a son, a brother, or even a human being. He was a tool, a pawn to be managed, a variable carefully controlled. In their eyes, he was nothing more than a means to an end—a stepping stone for their power.
Upstairs, Alwin lay in the dark. The muffled sounds of dinner floated through the thick walls. His mind drifted, caught between the haze of reality and the fog induced by the medication. He could almost hear them, their voices discussing him as if he weren’t there, as though he was no more than an abstract concept, something distant and easily discarded. 
That was how they always treated him. 
To them, Alwin wasn’t Alwin—the person, the human. He was Alwin, the instrument for power. The child who survived, only to return broken. And now, once again, they were planning his future without him, making decisions about his life as if he had never existed.
The dinner came to an end, and one by one, the guests left the house, content with the meal and the discussions of the day. Ranti escorted them out with a warm smile, maintaining the perfect demeanor she always wore. But once the door clicked shut, her smile faded, replaced by an expression of worry. 
She walked upstairs, her light footsteps echoing softly against the marble floors. When she reached the door to Alwin’s room, she stopped, her hand hovering over the door handle, unsure. 
She hadn’t seen him since they brought him back from the hospital, too afraid to face him. But now, she could no longer avoid it.
With a deep breath, Ranti slowly opened the door, peering inside. The room was shrouded in darkness, illuminated only by the faint light of a bedside lamp casting shadows on the walls. 
Alwin lay motionless in bed, his chest rising and falling in a steady rhythm. As the door creaked open, his eyes fluttered open, slowly. He turned his head just enough to meet Ranti’s gaze, his eyes sharp, unfathomable.
"Alwin," Ranti whispered, her voice trembling. "How do you feel?"
Alwin didn’t respond immediately. He simply stared at her, his expression unreadable. After a long pause, he finally spoke, his voice low and hoarse, laced with bitterness.
"You’re only here because of the assessment, aren’t you?" His words were cold, biting, and cutting. "You’re keeping me alive just to use me like you always did."
Ranti flinched, the accusation hitting her harder than she had anticipated. She fought to keep her voice steady as she replied, "Alwin, that’s not true."
Alwin let out a hollow laugh, bitter and empty, a sound that chilled the room. 
"Don’t treat me like a fool," he said, his voice dripping with disdain. "You only care about what I can do for you—what I can do for your family. The power you gain through me. You don’t care about me."
Ranti’s chest tightened, the weight of his words sinking deep. She wanted to deny it, to refute everything he said, but a gnawing truth lingered at the edge of her conscience. In a way, Alwin was right. 
She had failed him in so many ways. She had always seen him as a means to an end, and now, she couldn’t help but realize how far she had drifted from the love and care a mother should have for her son.