Total pages in book: 115
Estimated words: 105939 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 530(@200wpm)___ 424(@250wpm)___ 353(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 105939 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 530(@200wpm)___ 424(@250wpm)___ 353(@300wpm)
“Charlotte, if this knowledge is so dangerous that it requires hiding—”
“Then it needs to survive until someone wise enough to use it properly has opportunity to recover what was lost.” She smiled with determination that could reshape reality rather than accept limitation. “For when you need to remember how much we meant to each other, and how much we were willing to risk to preserve that meaning.”
She sealed the hiding place with symbols that burned themselves into living wood, creating wards that would recognize only specific bloodline signatures. “Promise me,” she whispered, her hands covering his as they completed the concealment. “Promise you’ll find this when the time comes to choose between preserving love and accepting separation.”
“I promise.”
The kiss that followed tasted like earth and growing things, like hope that could survive any burial, any separation, any force that would claim their connection was too dangerous to preserve.
The memory shattered as understanding crashed over him with the force of revelation. Delphine wasn’t just accessing fragments of Charlotte’s knowledge through genealogical inheritance—she was being guided to complete the network using resources that had been buried for exactly this moment.
The journal contained more than historical documentation. It held the missing components needed to transform theoretical soul-binding into actual power capable of reshaping fundamental laws.
“We have to work together,” Bastien said, addressing both pack members and vampire nobility. “Whatever's coming, it's bigger than territorial disputes or species politics.”
Tib and Marcelline exchanged glances—alpha werewolf and vampire court leader finding common ground in the face of forces that threatened everything they'd spent lifetimes building.
“What do you need?” Tib asked.
“Time,” Bastien replied, checking his watch. Just past eleven. “And whatever defenses you can maintain around marked individuals. If the network completes itself, Gabriel and the others might not survive the process.”
And somewhere in the Quarter's Archive stacks, a woman who carried the soul of history's most dangerous theorist was preparing to answer with authority that could reshape how consciousness operated across the boundaries between life and death.
“Until we discover whether love preserved across centuries can survive the kind of evolution that makes angels fall and gods tremble.” Bastien met eyes of every person in the room—werewolf, vampire, human. “Whatever Charlotte buried beneath that cypress tree, it’s the final component needed to complete work that could reshape how consciousness itself operates.”
The locket blazed against his chest with intensity threatening to burn through fabric and flesh alike. After two and a half centuries of patient service, Charlotte’s most sophisticated creation was finally guiding him toward whatever destiny she’d prepared with meticulous care and infinite patience.
Whether that destiny included room for individual choice, whether it preserved the love that had motivated its creation, whether it would recognize the difference between willing transformation and cosmic violation—all of that remained to be discovered in the moments that separated them from whatever midnight would bring.
He left them there—supernatural factions that had maintained careful separation for generations now working together because circumstances demanded cooperation over comfort. The sight would have been remarkable under normal conditions.
But as Bastien drove through parishes where reality grew thin enough for impossible things to bleed through, he understood that nothing about their situation qualified as normal anymore.
The network was calling across lifetimes.
Something was preparing to answer.
And in a cypress grove that had guarded secrets for over two centuries, a woman who carried the soul of history’s most dangerous theorist was about to complete work that would either preserve consciousness across infinite lifetimes or destroy everything that made existence worth preserving.
The crimson veil between worlds was about to be torn away completely.
Twelve
The protective wards carved into Bastien’s office doorframe exploded at eleven forty-seven.
Silver fire consumed ancient symbols in seconds, leaving nothing but char and the acrid scent of burning lacquered lumber. His phone rang before the last sparks died—Maman Brigitte’s number, but her voice carried strain he’d never heard before.
“They took Vincent. Walked through his apartment walls like they owned the place.” No greeting, no explanation of who ‘they’ were. She knew he’d understand. “Meet me at St. Louis Cemetery. We need to see what Charlotte really built there.”
The line died, leaving him staring at his phone while dread settled in his chest. Vincent Broussard—the psychic musician, Jacques’s cousin—had been showing early signs of the spreading contamination. If entities were escalating from marking to abduction, everyone touched by the soul-binding curse faced immediate danger.
Bastien grabbed weapons that felt pathetically inadequate—blessed silver, iron stakes, salt charged with divine energy. But he suspected whatever hunted marked souls operated beyond physical law, in dimensions where conventional protection offered little more than psychological comfort.
The cemetery gates stood open despite the midnight hour, wrought iron swinging in humid air that carried no breeze. St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 spread before him in neat rows of marble tombs and weathered stone, above-ground burial necessitated by the city’s relationship with water and yellow fever.