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Fight for Blood (Blood Origins Book 2)

Page 6

by Tiffany Heiser


  ways,” Giorgia said, nodding thanks to a servant as the tea tray was brought in. She poured a cup and passed it over to me, but I couldn’t bring myself to drink. I just held the tea cradled in my hands,

  drawing comfort from its warmth. “The first trial will assess your

  mental abilities. You will be faced with questions and requests from the people of La Oscurità and asked to resolve them. Judgment will

  be made based on how well you do.”

  “Hang on,” I objected. “You’re going to have me make

  decisions that will actually impact these people’s lives before I’ve passed the trials?” I wasn’t sure I was ready for something like that.

  “What if I choose wrong?”

  “Nothing to worry about,” Giorgia assured me. “The trials

  are just tests, Rena. Just simulations. You’ll be making your choices in a virtual reality chamber, and we’ll be evaluating your responses, but there will be no impact on the real citizens of La Oscurità.”

  “Well, that doesn’t sound so bad,” Cecile said. “She just has

  to pass the test.”

  It sounded plenty stressful to me. If I made the wrong

  choices, I would fail, and then what? But Cecile was right that it

  didn’t sound as bad as anything I had been imagining. It wasn’t

  going to be painful. It would just be anxiety-inducing, like every

  other test I’d ever had in my life.

  Still...Giorgia had mentioned three trials. “What’s the second

  trial?” I asked.

  “The second trial tests you physically,” Giorgia said.

  I frowned. “I’m not an athlete. I never have been.”

  “That isn’t a problem,” Giorgia said. “When your full

  vampire abilities come in, you’ll be much stronger, faster, and more agile than you are now.”

  Which was great, but I didn’t have those abilities yet. How

  was I going to pass this trial while I was still part human?

  Cecile seemed to be thinking along the same lines. “That’s

  not fair,” she said. “You can’t ask Rena to pass a trial designed to test vampire skills before she’s finished her transition. There’s no way she’ll be able to do it.” She glanced at me. “Sorry, Rena.”

  “Don’t apologize.” I was glad she’d spoken up. She’d saved

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  me from having to say it.

  “Not to worry,” Giorgia said smoothly. “We’ll inject you

  with a serum that will temporarily grant you full vampire abilities.

  You’ll be physically capable of completing the trial, but we’ll be

  evaluating your reaction time and your ability to trust yourself. It will be difficult, since you’re not accustomed to having this extra

  strength, but a royal must be able to rely on him- or herself.”

  That sounded a little more intimidating than the first trial. In

  the first one, I would just be using logic to make decisions. I’d been doing that all my life. But the second trial would require me to

  utilize skills I’d never had before. “What’s the third trial?” I asked, already fearing the answer.

  “The third trial tests your emotional ability,” Giorgia said.

  She spoke softly now, and I could tell that for the first time since I’d arrived, she was truly being gentle with me. “You’ll come face to

  face with the greatest trauma of your past, and your response will be evaluated. A ruler must have the ability to overcome great emotional strife.” The greatest trauma of my past.

  I knew instantly what that would be. The death of my

  parents. It was something I didn’t like to think about, because every time I did, I felt as though I was going to fall apart. But in the third trial, I wouldn’t be able to fall apart. I would have to face the horror of my parents’ death and be strong.

  I don’t know if I can do this.

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  Chapter Seven

  Thank God for Cecile. She seemed to understand

  immediately how freaked out I was by everything Giorgia was

  saying. She had always been able to read me like a book, and I truly didn’t know how I would have been able to manage my new life

  without her.

  It’s hard to say you’re grateful that your best friend has been

  turned into a vampire. The thought made me feel selfish and

  uncaring. But I couldn’t deny that I was overwhelmingly glad to

  have her with me, and I knew I always would be.

  As Giorgia finished describing the trials, Cecile slid closer to

  me on the couch, her shoulder pressing into mine, giving me

  comfort. She might as well have been talking to me, whispering

  words of encouragement, telling me that she knew I could get

  through the trials. I felt immediately bolstered. She had always been able to do this when I’d felt anxious or upset. She really was as close and as wonderful as a sister to me.

  The only thing that would have been better would have been

  having Cryder there too. I was shocked by how much I had come to

  depend on him in the short time we’d known each other. But he was

  every bit as skilled as Cecile was at calming me down and making

  me feel safe. I wished he were with us now.

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  Why on Earth had this day’s activities been split up along

  gender lines? Another vampire tradition, I supposed. Thanks to my

  upbringing—the loss of my parents at a young age and my

  incorporation into my best friend’s family—I’d never had a lot of

  traditions that I clung to. I knew other people found them important and reassuring, but I didn’t really get what the fuss was about. I

  would have felt better if my boyfriend—my fiancé—was here. It

  sucked that he had to be apart from me because of some tradition.

  Don’t dwell, I told myself firmly. Make the most of this time with the queen. It was an opportunity to learn more about what my future held, after all, and that was important. I should take advantage of it, not just moon around about Cryder.

  Cecile seemed to be thinking along the same lines. “Why

  does La Oscurità need a new king and queen anyway?” she asked.

  “I’ve never really understood that. I mean, in the human world there has to be a line of succession in case the royals die, but you and

  Samuele aren’t dying.”

  Giorgia favored us with a chuckle. “No, we’re not,” she

  agreed. “But ruling is hard work, and eventually every ruler wants to step aside. Samuele and I have decided that time has come for us.

  We’re well over a hundred years old, you know.”

  I’d actually had no idea how old she was. It hadn’t seemed

  polite to ask. She looked as if she could be any age—twenty-three or forty-four or seventy. It was something about the clear skin and

  youthful features combined with the wise expression and the

  dignified way she carried herself. “I guess if I’d been doing

  something for that long, I might want some downtime too,” I said.

  “And eventually you will,” Giorgia agreed. “Eventually you

  will have had enough of ruling, and you’ll be ready to pass the

  crown to whomever comes next. Samuele and I are looking forward

  to a long vacation together. A quiet retirement.”

  Cecile burst out laughing. Even I had to smile. “I’m sorry,”

  Cecile giggled. “It’s just that hearing you talk about retirement like that—you sound so normal.”

  “So human, you mean?”

  “Yes,” Cecile said. “But I mean normal too. I don’t just
<
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  mean you sound mortal, and like you’re not a vampire. I mean you

  sound like you’re not a queen. It’s hard to imagine a queen talking

  about retirement.”

  “I guess most of them probably don’t,” I pointed out.

  “Human queens rule for life.”

  “Exactly,” Cecile said.

  “You can see why that sort of arrangement makes less sense

  for us, though,” Giorgia said. “It isn’t just because our rulers tire of ruling after a while. The people of La Oscurità appreciate having

  new rulers. New ideas. It’s the only way anything ever changes

  around here.”

  “I think I understand,” I said.

  “Very good,” Giorgia said, smiling. “I’ve had a wonderful

  time with you girls today. I want to thank you for spending your day with me. It’s been so long since I’ve met anyone who’s new to this

  life, and it’s very refreshing to speak to young people.” She smiled at me and took my hand. “I think Cryder made a wonderful choice in

  you, dear. The people of La Oscurità are going to get a splendid new queen. I know you’ll do a good job tomorrow.”

  “Tomorrow?” A chill ran down my spine. She couldn’t

  possibly mean what I thought she meant, could she?

  “The trials will begin first thing tomorrow morning,” Giorgia

  said. She sounded almost apologetic, as if she knew exactly how

  hard those words would be for me to hear.

  “That’s probably good, right?” Cecile asked, leaning her

  shoulder into mine a little harder. “The sooner they start, the sooner they’ll be over, and you won’t have to worry about them.”

  I knew she was right. It would be good to have the trials

  behind me, and to move on to whatever came next. But at the same

  time, it was hard to face the fact that the terrifying things Giorgia had told me about would be starting tomorrow. I wouldn’t have any time to study or to prepare myself. I was just going to be thrown in, and I would either have to handle it or not.

  I supposed that was the point. If I couldn’t do it without a

  bunch of preparation, I probably couldn’t do it at all.

  “You’d better get some sleep,” Giorgia said. “You’ve got an

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  early day tomorrow.

  It was all I could do to nod and allow Cecile to lead me from

  the room.

  ***

  “Rena?” Cecile said quietly. “Are you up for a visitor?”

  I had been lying on my bed, staring at the ceiling and willing

  sleep to come for me, for the past half hour. Now I glanced over at

  my friend. She was watching me apprehensively, as if she was afraid

  I might completely freak out at any minute.

  “It’s Cryder,” she said.

  If anyone in the world could make me feel better about what

  I was facing, I knew it was him. “Yes,” I said. “Yeah. I want to see Cryder.” I sat up and did my best to arrange my hair in something

  resembling a style.

  Cryder came in. He was dressed more casually than I’d ever

  seen him in my life, in flannel pants and a white t-shirt, and he sat down on the bed beside me and pulled me into his arms. I was

  immediately comforted. He was a reminder of the fact that not

  everything about this new world was strange and frightening. Some

  aspects of it had been wonderful.

  “I missed you today,” he said quietly, smoothing my hair, his

  skilled fingers having much more success at taming it than mine

  had. “What did you do?” I asked, longing for a distraction.

  “Not much,” he said. “Went around La Oscurità and saw the

  people. It wasn’t a formal tour, like you and Cecile got. Drake and I grew up here, so we know the city just fine. But we saw some of the

  old familiar sights, and that was nice. Did you have a good time with my mother?”

  “She was very kind,” I said.

  “You’re nervous.” He stroked my hair gently.

  “Is it that obvious?”

  “Your heart’s beating really fast.” He slid two fingers down

  the line of my jaw and brought them to rest on my neck, feeling my

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  pulse. “You need to try to relax, Rena, or you’ll never get any

  sleep.” “There’s no way I’m going to be able to relax,” I said. “The trials are tomorrow. Did you know they were going to be

  tomorrow?”

  He hesitated. “I did,” he said finally.

  I sat up. “You knew? And you didn’t tell me? You didn’t

  prepare me at all?”

  “Rena, there was nothing I could have done about it,” he

  said. “There was nothing I could have done to help you feel better

  prepared. You always would have been feeling like this. And I

  didn’t want you to spend more time than necessary worrying about

  it. I wanted you to be able to have fun on your first day in La

  Oscurità. You don’t really wish you’d spent the whole day thinking

  about the trials, do you?”

  “I suppose not,” I admitted begrudgingly.

  “Besides,” he said, “you’re going to be fine. I have faith in

  you.” “Did your mother have to face trials?”

  “Of course. Every potential ruler does.”

  “Did you?”

  “Yes, but I faced them before you knew me,” he said. “When

  I was younger. Years ago.”

  “You were a child?”

  He laughed. A moment later I realized my mistake. “No. Of

  course you weren’t.”

  “I was the age I am now,” he said. “Physically speaking, at

  least. Mentally speaking. I was old enough to take on the challenges of the trials.”

  “And you passed.”

  “And so did my mother,” he said. “And so did my father.”

  “Has Drake done it?”

  “No,” Cryder said. “Drake never considered challenging for

  the throne. If he had wanted to stake a claim, he would have had to

  face the trials.” He hesitated. “My aunt tried it. My mother’s sister.”

  I knew without asking how that story was going to end, and I

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  was sure I didn’t want to hear it, but I couldn’t hold back from

  asking. “She didn’t pass, did she? That’s why she didn’t assume the

  throne in your mother’s place?”

  “That’s right,” Cryder said.

  “Tell me about her.”

  He shook his head. “It isn’t important, Rena. You don’t want

  to hear this story right now You should be getting some rest

  instead.”

  “Cryder, there’s no way I’m going to be able to sleep tonight

  and you know it. I’m much too nervous. If you tell me about your

  aunt, at least I’ll be able to relax a little bit.”

  “Okay,” he said. His voice held a note of reluctance. “But

  you have to understand, Rena, what happened with her—it wasn’t

  the norm. She was never supposed to undergo the trials. My mother

  had been chosen for the throne, and my aunt sought it because she

  was selfish and power hungry. She didn’t care about the people of

  La Oscurità.”

  “What happened?”

  “Well, she couldn’t complete the third trial,” Cryder said.

  “The emotional trial.”

  “The one where she would have come face to face w
ith the

  trauma of her past?” I asked, remembering Giorgia’s harrowing

  description.

  “That’s right. I don’t know what she saw—the trials are

  conducted privately—but whatever it was, she was unable to

  overcome it.”

  “So, what happened to her?” A terrible thought suddenly

  occurred to me. “It didn’t kill her, did it?”

  “No, no, it didn’t kill her.” Cryder bit his lip. “It drove her

  mad.” I felt a wash of horror pass through me. “What do you

  mean?” “She was never the same again,” Cryder said quietly.

  “Before the trials, she was vain and self-centered, but she was also exceedingly clever. Afterward, she was a shell of her former self. It was as if the woman she had been, was lost.”

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  “Is she still here?” I asked. “Does she still live in La

  Oscurità?”

  “She does,” Cryder said. “But she doesn’t visit the palace

  anymore. She’s been committed to a psychiatric ward.”

  I felt as if I was floating upward, away from my bed, away

  from my body. “Cryder,” I whispered.

  His hand came to rest atop mine. “That won’t happen to

  you,” he said. “You’re stronger than she ever was.”

  “What if I’m not?”

  He kissed me gently, but I couldn’t lose myself in the

  pleasure of his lips. If I had had any other choice, I knew, I would have backed out right then. I would have refused to participate in the trials and gone back home to the States.

  But dangerous vampires awaited me there. This was the only

  place that was safe. This life was my only choice.

  Provided I could survive.

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  Chapter Eight

  Dear Rena—

  Please dress comfortably today and join us in the dining

  room for breakfast. We look forward to your arrival. Do not

  worry—everyone has great confidence in your ability to do well

  today! Giorgia

  I crumpled the note in my hand as I watched Cecile whirl

  around the room, getting ready. Her note hadn’t said to dress

  comfortably. She had been told to wear something semi-formal.

  Even though I was happiest in my sweats, I wished today that I

  could have traded places with her. I would much rather be putting

  my hair up and picking out a dress than facing down the ordeal of

 

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