He woke up in a cell reeking of the corpses that were lying beside
him. The cell seemed to be made from very powerful steel and
was protected by four Vaermiraiit guards. They were wearing
void-black robes with silver belts on them. Hoods covering their
heads and each of them was wearing a bizarre steel medallion
and a silver ring with a red gem attached to it.
‘What?! What is this? Where am I?!’ He shouted.
He tried to stand up, still very injured from the recent battle. He
put his hand on his aching head. He was exhausted, nauseous,
heavily dehydrated and weak. He felt strong and sharp pulses
of pain going all the way from his head to his toes.
‘What have you assholes done to me?!’ He asked.
He suddenly noticed he was naked, his skin full of semi-healed
bite marks. His waist, chest, neck, hands and legs were filled
with pairs of holes surrounded by dry blood.
‘Wha-? AAAAA!!! WHAT DID YOU DO TO ME?! AAAAAAAAA!
I’LL KILL YOU!!! I’LL KILL ALL OF YOU!!! YOU SICK MON-
STERS!!!’ He screamed in utter fright and began sobbing.
‘Shut up back there!’ The second guard from the right shouted.
He couldn’t control himself and continued screaming even harder.
He walked his fingers around the wounds, feeling the cuts and
the coagulated blood. He could not fathom what he was seeing.
‘I told you to shut up!’ The guard yelled and bashed his spear
on the metal bars, staring straight into Alduin’s frightened eyes.
‘FUCK YOU! YOU KILLED MY PARENTS! YOU KILLED EV-
ERYONE! I HATE YOU! I HATE YOU, I HATE YOU!’ He shouted,
his cheeks soaking with tears.
The leftmost guard nodded to his friend, as a way of approving
of his next act. He opened the cage door swiftly with the key and
punched Alduin straight back to the ground, almost rendering
him unconscious. Alduin spit out blood and continued cursing.
‘I told you to shut up didn’t I?!’ The guard yelled and began
kicking Alduin fiercely in the stomach.
He kept trying to stand up using his weakened arms to get his
face off the ground, but was immediately met with the force of
the prison guard’s foot. Eventually, and fortunately, the guard
got bored and exited the cage, locking its door to prevent the
gravely-injured child from escaping. Alduin was puking relent-
lessly but was nothing aside from his digestive juices came out.
He barely managed to get back on his feet, hunching forward.
‘How... How much time was I out for?’
‘About four days by now,’ the second guard from the left
chuckled.
‘W-what?! What is wrong with you?! You’re fucking mon-
sters! Why did yo-How could you do this to me?! To us?! We’ve
never done anything to you so why did we deserve this?! You
murdered everyone I loved! Why?! Tell me why?! I hope god
smites you down in your sleep, along with your children, you
monsters! You’ll see! I will get justice! All of you will see!’ A few
more tears fell out of his eyes. ‘There are only six gods and believe me they don’t give a flying fuck about you! You’re nothing!
Food shouldn’t even be talking in the first place, so shut up!’ The
rightmost guard yelled out.
Alduin fell down to his knees, his legs spread out to the sides.
‘Why did you let me live? Why me?!’ He said desperately, his
empty eyes staring at the earth beneath him.
‘SHUT, UP!’ The second guard from the left yelled out in
anger, he had finally lost his cool.
The cell had become his new home. They gave him old and ragged
clothes and were providing him with two meals a day, not fitting
of an Elf his age but just enough for him to stay conscious and
alive. In terms of water... Well... Let’s just say he had to use a
few of his survival skills when it came to staying hydrated. Days
went by where all he had been doing was kicking the rotten bod-
ies in his cell, shouting, screaming, sobbing or just annoying the
guards that were unlucky enough to be assigned to his cell. He
would occasionally eavesdrop to the their conversations, learn-
ing their native tongue as he thought it would come in handy
someday... Maybe... Probably... It was hard for him to remain
optimistic though he knew he would lose his mind the moment
he would lose his temper, therefore staying positive was the key
to keeping his sanity intact.
His cell was positioned in such a way that he could see
their social gatherings, mostly consisting of slave trade or grand
feasts of humans, or ‘livestock’ as they used to call them. He
could see vampires eating and raping men, women and children
and their screams kept him up at night. If not already killed
the raped women would end up giving birth to mutated hybrids
who were only human in their appearance, their brain and in-
ternal organs mutated to the point of never-ending bloodthirst.
In short, the babies ate their mothers; some during the preg-
nancy and some only after their birth. His eyes grew darker and
darker as time passed by... They used to enjoy torturing him but
at this point it seemed like it didn’t bother him quite as much
anymore. As though he had gotten used to the mental and physical pain. The bites didn’t hurt him anymore nor their ‘research’
on the Snow Elves’ regenerative abilities. He didn’t cry for help
anymore. Didn’t really talk much anymore. He became neutral,
apathetic or maybe that is just how his brain decided to deal
with these mental traumas. Sometimes the guards would slip
him an extra piece of bread, excusing it by saying thin bodies
are just not as tasty. In those situations he would keep a logi-
cal mind and save it for later, burying it in the ground so they
wouldn’t steal it from him.
‘I need to survive as much as I can... If they wanted me
dead they would have killed me already,’ he would say to himself
hoping it would cheer him up.
He woke up and found it hard to stand up. Yet again he tried to
keep a positive mindset.
‘Good morning,’ he whispered to himself.
It wasn’t clear if it really was morning as he was living in a cave
but it mattered not. The guards felt the sudden vibration in the
ground and realized he had woken up.
‘Good morning, insect! Did you sleep well? My friend here
decided to make it extra hard for you to fall asleep yesterday!’
Zera laughed and shouted with glee.
‘Yes, yes, I realized. Anyways, where is my breakfast?’ He
sighed.
‘Do not speak to us that way! I will excuse your rudeness for
now. Here,’ Zera said and threw him an apple.
It was already half eaten.
‘This will be your breakfast, less than the usual because you
made me upset. Enjoy!’
She smiled with her teeth fully showing.
‘I am already used to your mind games, Zera. Thank you for
the food. Now let me eat in peace please.’
Zera took her spear and threw it at him, hitting the ground
about one millimeter away from his foot. He didn’t even try to
evade it. Did not even flinch.
‘You are walking on very thin ice, mortal! Mind your man-
ners or I will make tonight’s feeding extra painful for you, do
you understand?!’
‘Yes.’
‘Yes, what?’
‘Yes, lord Zera,’ he sighed.
‘Good. That’s better,’ she laughed and smirked.
He ate half of the remaining apple and kept the rest in his pocket
for later. He knew that his meals were not satisfactory and
preferred staying hungry in the morning rather than dealing
with starvation post-lunch. During his time in the cage he had
invented a few games for himself to pass the time. In one, he
would take a few of the human bones that were lying around
and would try to juggle them. In another, he would test how
many sit-ups and push-ups he can manage to do before losing
his consciousness. After all, losing consciousness is like forcing
sleep upon yourself and it wasn’t like his time while conscious
was in any way more fun than the imaginary and infinite world
of one’s dreams.
Another game included testing how long he could hold his
breath for or how much time he could stand on one leg without
falling et cetera. These games were all so terribly boring but
he had a lot of time on his side and absolutely nothing more
interesting to do. A few hours flew by as he was playing around
until he began hearing the familiar noises of screaming he had
started to enjoy. I am obviously kidding of course...
‘Don’t you ever get bored of torturing people?’ He said to
Zera, pushing his luck again.
Was he trying to get himself killed?
‘We love human meat, what else can I say? Would you like a
slice of a woman’s butt-cheek for lunch today?’ She laughed.
‘No, thank you.’
‘Like I’d ever share my food with you! Keep dreaming!’ She
shouted and laughed.
‘Fucker...’ He whispered to himself.
‘What did you just say?’ A guard seemed to have heard him.
‘Nothing... Nothing...’
‘I haven’t heard you complain in such a long time, I almost
started missing that angry whiny voice of yours! Hey, you know
what? If you manage to make one of us laugh tonight I’ll give
you an extra piece of meat! What do you say?’ He chuckled.
‘How exactly? Your sense of humor is really hard to under-
stand,’ Alduin asked, confused.
‘Dance for us!’ The other guard said, smirking and grinning
with a huge smile on his face.
Alduin obeyed because more meat meant he could grow stronger,
maybe even enough to break out of here someday. He started
mimicking his fallen sister’s dance moves, a traditional snow
elvish dance that the villagers would do during matrimonial cer-
emonies, named ‘Shenze’. It consisted of a few stomps on the
ground in a specific rhythm, followed by a long-lasting pirouette,
followed by two backflips and then a pirouette while standing on
one’s hands. Then, one would take his partner’s arms and they
would both throw each other in the air performing a slightly
tilted pirouette and landing in a broad split. This would be re-
peated a few times with periods of free-styling in between, to
the sounds of traditional music in the background. The dance
routine would end with a showcase of self-chanted fireworks
using snow Elvish magic. He was too weak for this ancient
routine. As he started stomping on the ground his steps grew
slower and slower until he fell on his face on the dirty mud, a
few millimeters away from dried-up feces.
‘You’re lucky you didn’t fall on your shit, child! Fine, you’ve
earned your extra slice! Hey, Zera, go get a piece of meat for
him. He deserves it!’ The guard said and continued laughing.
Zera tossed a cow’s leg to Alduin and he was almost too weak to
catch it. It was both raw and overcooked at the same time. Some
parts were all black and some were almost completely pink.
‘This is better than nothing...’ He said to himself and nod-
ded in thanks.
Many days went by in this manner and it seemed like they were
growing shorter. Alduin would occasionally entertain the guards
for extra food. Days turned into weeks, and then a month and fi-
nally a whole year. Suddenly, Zera opened his cage and shouted.
‘Yo, wake up! Our leader wants you to see him! On your feet!
Move! Do you want me to hit you again?!’
He stood up and let Zera cuff him up before escorting him to
the clan leader’s court.
‘Fine,’ Alduin sighed.
‘Stay quiet,’ she said.
They began walking and finally entered the main hall.
‘Oh, finally. Hello! Did you sleep well? Oh, who am I kid-
ding? Anyways... Let me get straight to the point. Do you see
this general over there, the one I am pointing at? You are familiar
with each other I presume?’ The lord said, smiling and laughing.
‘Yes, I’ve met him,’ Alduin sighed.
‘His name is Gozo. For some reason he decided that you
should go through our traditional trial of the necklace. Have
you heard of it?’
The leader had long brown hair, a silver tear tattooed onto his
left cheek and eyes glowing in the color of roses. He was wear-
ing dark-brown royal robes with platinum decorations. His
expression was neither serious nor playful. He was pointing
at a Vaermiraiit wearing a crimson mask attached to his long,
black hair. His dark-blue shirt had black bear fur connected to
it using golden strings.
‘He would never pass... It always ends the same way. With
a fresh body to feast on...’ The clan leader thought and grinned.
‘No, what is it? I fucking hate tests,’ Alduin responded.
‘Understandable. Though you have heard of Vaonie, right?
One of The Originals, or The First.’
‘Only in legends and books. We are not allowed to pray to
them,’ he responded, very confused by the situation.
‘Well, I don’t know what lies they used to teach you so I’ll
just tell you in short. Vaonie, alongside Austomia, was the parent
of the gods your kind follows, those whom we call The Second,
or The Overseers. The First created together the realm we live
in, Vanthea. For some horrendous reason Austomia refused
to let Vaonie interfere or even interact with it. Eventually a
battle ensued and The Second picked a side to fight for. One of
them was killed and the others were banished into the realm
of Tyronah alongside Vaonie. The ones who picked Austomia
were later known as The Pure or Sarathiin and the ones who chose
Vaonie’s side were named The Unpure or Araqhaiit.’
‘Mhm...’ Alduin responded in confusion.
‘Do you see this necklace I am holding? This is one of Vaonie’s
artifacts in our planet, it sends mortals through Vaonie’s trials
in order to find a fitting successor for Lodus, the fallen Araqhaiit.
Gozo believes you would be able to pass it, or at least that it
would be very entertaining to watch you try. Refusal is not really
an option. Take it and begin immediately.’
‘Right now? Can I at least eat before I begin? I need my
entire potential for this test after all,’ Alduin responded, trying
to sneak his way into an additional meal.
‘I said now,’ he grabbed the raven-black spear that was sit-
ting on his back and pointed it toward him.
‘Fine, fine! Here! ’ He shouted.
When Alduin wore the necklace it pierced his skin and he imme-
diately collapsed to the ground. It felt like his consciousness was
being transported to another realm. He suddenly woke up in a
strange place, very dark. The sky was crimson red and he stood
on a circular platform that seemed to be floating. He could not
see any ground beneath this platform so he would better not
fall.
‘Where am I? What is this place?’ He screamed in panic.
Then, he heard a voice shouting to him.
‘Welcome! I will be brief. This test consists of several seem-
ingly infinite rounds. In each round you will be given a weapon,
with which you must try to defeat a shadow of yourself who also
has that exact same one. Shall you die, you will be resurrected
here with a different armament. The moment I run out of ideas
for weapons will also be your last, and your body in Vanthea will
rot and die. This is it. Good luck!’
‘Wait! Who are you? What am I doing here?’ He shouted
but to no avail.
A few seconds later a shadow of himself had appeared right in
front of his eyes, wielding the same weapon he had – a spear
with black gems attached all around it. He had never fought
with a spear before, only with a dagger, a sword and a bow.
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
‘How am I supposed to defeat myself exactly? I don’t even
know how to use this thing!’ He said.
The shadow began charging towards him, trying to cut him up
with its spear. Alduin dodged all of its attacks but forgot he
was fighting himself. After all, the shadow possessed his mind
and technique and knew exactly which weaknesses he had, very
specifically. With a swift round kick that took Alduin off the
ground the shadow spiked him with the spear right through the
heart. It was over for him. He shouted from pain as he began
losing consciousness.
This time he held two black daggers. A green gem was at-
tached to each handle. When he practiced slashing with it, it
seemed the daggers were producing strange green-colored light
beams. The beams looked as though they could cut through
objects. He began his regular routine of sidesteps and quick
slashes. Each slash produced a projectile slash of light which
the shadow had decided to rudely avoid. A change in pace, mo-
mentum, angle and so forth only brought Alduin to his knees
from exhaustion.
Suddenly, the shadow decided to use Alduin’s signature
move. It was a frontflip that then turned into an upside-down
pirouette with the dagger pointing towards the enemy. An airborne spin attack of sorts. Alduin was familiar with this move as
he had a habit of abusing it against low-class enemies in order
to further enhance his self esteem. It seems that the shadow
had also inherited his arrogance... He used his supernatural
eyes to make his perspective of time a lot slower. When he got
his opponent’s head in his line of sight, he immediately stabbed
it in the head. It fell to the floor and began making screeching
and screaming noises. Victory was closing in, slowly but surely.
Alduin started stepping towards it cautiously. It was covering
its head with its arms and appeared to be harmless now.
The shadow’s hands began glowing in gold so he decided to
make haste and not let it heal itself. If the shadow manages to
regain its power his first chance at ending this nightmare would
be over. He stood behind it and prepared a vertical final strike.
One full of glory.
—
‘We have gathered you here, children, for a very special reason.’
‘What is it?’
‘I will explain in just a bit, Hanali.’
‘Alright.’
‘Vaonie and I decided to gift you something. Activate your
aura detection and tell me what you feel.’
‘I feel an unfamiliar aura.’
‘Very good, Kans. Can you try to locate this aura?’
‘I feel like it is coming from an unknown source. Not from
this realm. Did you create a new one?’
‘Very good observation! We created three new realms for
you to explore. The first one I named Vanthea, the second I
named Tyronah and the last one I have neither found a name nor
a purpose for. Why did we even create it, Vaonie?’
Imagine in that fabulous brain of yours that Vaonie’s orb-shaped
body shrugged in response.
‘What is the purpose of Vanthea and Tyronah then?’ Anor
asked.
‘The realm of Vanthea will be inhabited by mortals. Tyronah
is where bad mortals shall forever remain. Heonmeyu, our cur-
rent location, will be inhabited by the good mortals, the one that
succeeded in following our rules.’
‘What are mortals?’ Fema asked in her curiosity.
‘Mortals are a new type of being we created, existing for
a period of time that is specific to their species and are later
judged for their actions.’
‘Don’t forget, Austomia, we also decided on meanings for
your names!’ Said Vaonie.
‘Oh! What are they?’ Anor asked.
‘Vanthea has twelve laws in total, one for each of you chil-
dren. For each of you we picked the most dominant personality
trait that we deem positive and assigned it as your name’s sig-
nificance. However, this gift also comes with responsibilities.
Each of you must make sure that the mortals keep and stay true
to your virtue. In short, your names are now commandments
that mortals must follow and should you witness a mortal break-
ing it you are allowed to punish them accordingly. Should it be
a drastic break of your tenet, kill them so Austomia and I will
judge them accordingly. Should it be a minor violation, you may
punish as you see fit.’
‘Ah, are we their gods then?’ Fema said and sounded very
excited to hear the news.
‘Yes. You and us rule and oversee the mortal realm of Vanthea’
Vaonie said.
‘I feel bad for those mortals. To have been created strictly
for the purpose of being judged, especially when they are born
with a shred of evil in their hearts...’ Kans responded.
‘I think that we should see ourselves more like guides rather
than gods,’ Pholexu added.
‘I agree with you, sister. In general, I think we shouldn’t
look down on them but rather see them eye to eye. They lack the power we possess and therefore may actually grow stronger
than us in character, in their ability to face hardship and pain,’
Fema said.
‘You can count on me!’ Hanali said in excitement.
‘Our goal was to simply make you happy, my children,’ Vaonie
said.
‘Entirely and strictly that! Therefore, we grant you almost
complete autonomy over this. I hope you will enjoy it!’ Austomia
added.
‘Thank you!’ They all said in unison.
‘Now, go and explore! I am not quite done creating every-
thing yet so new things will continue to appear!’ Austomia de-
clared.
—
The shadow moved its left leg a bit, probably stretching it out so
it could resume the battle. It was unaware of Alduin standing
right behind it with his weapons drawn. The dagger touched the
top of the head but instead of successfully piercing it, Alduin had
stopped midway. He felt a sudden shock of coldness and blood
was dripping down from his mouth. He looked down and saw
a blade coming out from the front of his chest. He turned his
head around, gazed at his back and witnessed a dagger piercing
it all the way through. It was attached to a chain and when his
eyes began following it in order to locate the other end – there
lied the shadow’s left leg.
It was then that he realized that the shadow wasn’t simply
stretching its legs. It was launching an attack that was strate-
gically delayed just for the purpose of surprise and seemed to
have worked wonderfully. Alduin choked on his blood and began
losing balance, falling on his chest. He felt dizzy.
‘Oh, did I forget to mention? The shadow every fighting
style that exists in Vanthea. Try to beat it!’ The unfamiliar voice appeared again, laughed, and then faded away instantly.
‘Goddamn it! How am I supposed to defeat such a fighter
when I am not even a Hekket yet?! This is impossible! Morale
is important but also being realistic, I just can’t!’ He thought to
himself while losing his consciousness.
He failed the task again and again. Each time it seemed as
though his spirit was being sucked away from him. He’d already
passed ten different weapons and was beginning to lose hope
almost entirely. This time he was given a black sword that was
floating around. It had dark red wings attached to the handle,
a silver horned skull and a little medallion hanging on it. Its
sheath was also floating around, crimson red with a black Deovhaiit eye in the middle. Once he tightened his grip, the black
core in the middle of the blade started glowing and produced
black and white flames in monochrome that engulfed it. He
started charging forward. He slashed his opponent and then
dodged the upcoming attack as an utter reflex. He began rec-
ognizing his own moves being used by the shadow and tried to
adapt to them. A swift kick there, a punch there, a twirl there
and vertical slash there. Despite this iteration being the most
successful one so far he still possessed many grave injuries and
hope was very hard to keep intact.
His opponent went for a pirouette and then two horizontal
strikes. One for Alduin’s legs (for mobility related injuries) and
the other for his heart. At the same time he also shot ice spikes
in order to lure him in a specific spot while also trapping him in
place. He was suddenly reminded about the whirlwind spider.
Despite not having mastered it yet he bravely decided to try it
out again. He managed to dodge only the slash to his heart
which meant he had lost one leg. Then, he did a backflip but
landed on his stomach rather than on all fours like the technique
demands. It seemed the shadow, like him, was just incompetent
enough to not take advantage of this opportunity. It took less than a second for Alduin to enter the next step of the technique
and he launched himself in the air for a vertical strike aiming
for the head. He missed by just a slight bit but managed to
slice the shadow from its right shoulder to its left leg. Mission
failed successfully. The shadow produced a screeching sound
and faded out of existence.
‘Very impressive mortal, follow me to my court!’ The strange
voice appeared again.
A portal appeared out of thin air and opened a pathway to a very
strange looking throne room. Entirely out of breath and very
scared out of the upcoming (and recent) events, he rushed inside
the portal.
‘What the hell is happening?’ He said to himself.
He found himself kneeling in a large room in front of a throne
as big as a mammoth. An orb of ‘light‘ was sitting on it and then
transformed into a man.
‘Greetings mortal,’ Vaonie said.
‘Who are you? Where am I?’ Alduin asked.
‘Welcome to Tyronah. I am Vaonie, lord of this realm. To
your left and right you will find different torture chambers, mil-
itary dormitories, training camps, towers and hoards of Deovhaiits. Demons, as you mortals call them.’
‘What-, the fuck,’ he murmured in confusion and fear.
‘Don’t you dare interrupt me!’ Vaonie’s eyes glowed fero-
ciously as their voice echoed across the room, ‘These five are my
children. Do you know their names?’
‘You... You are Vaonie? The banished god? I thought you
were just a legend... No, this cannot be... They told me you
are evil. We were not even allowed to utter your name when
studying about you... Why am I here? Let me go.’
He suddenly fell to the ground, unable to get up. An invisible
force was holding him down and choking him.
‘Stop testing my patience!’
‘Kill me then. Just do it. I’m not scared of you,’ he said,
breathing heavily and gasping for air.
‘I offer you a chance for a new life, you foolish mortal,’ they
weakened their grip on his body.
‘What do you mean? In exchange for what? There has to be
a catch, I just know it. You are known as a selfish god.’
‘For passing my test I can make you one of my own. Your
name will no longer be Alduin Faëli, but rather Alduin Lodus
Faëli, as you will serve as a successor to my fallen child. Look at
what you could become... An end to your pain....’
A big mirror appeared in front of him, showing him his new
body. His white hair seemed to grow a lot longer, his eyes were
shining in the color of blood. His ears seemed a bit pointier. He
appeared taller, more serious, refined and mature. His eyes had
a certain shadow to them that made his depressed glare way
more frightening.
‘You are now part Snow Elf part Araqhaiit, an immortal
god amongst men. I will give you access to the ever-burning
Ut-obliryne u Tyronah which cannot be put out by normal means.
The tattoo you have on the back of your left hand is called the
Yur u Vaonie and it holds sacred power. All of this can become
your reality if only you vow to obey me.’
He stared at Vaonie without the faintest idea on how to respond.
‘And yes, there is a catch. As an Araqhaiit your Olons are
all god-activated, which means that they can only be controlled
by fully divine beings. Since you would only be half divine any
movement your body would wish to make, may it be walking or
simply producing heartbeats, cannot happen by your own voli-
tion. Your brain would send its orders through me, as a proxy,
and only then to your muscles. I control your body, not you. And
if you ever dare to betray me you will face dire consequences.
That is all. You will now be transported back to the mortal realm to be trained by the Vaermiraiits.’
‘Wait, I didn’t say ye-,’ he tried to say but was already back
in the lair.
The clan leader suddenly saw him and his jaw dropped. Alduin
expected a shout or some sort of degrading remark, but instead
was facing hundreds of vampires, including the leader himself,
kneeling in front of him.
‘Welcome, Lodus! Welcome back to Vanthea!’ They all chanted
together.
‘Fucking hell. Since when do they pass this exam?! Am I to
follow his orders now? This little insect’s orders?! Fuck!’ The clan
leader thought to himself. ‘Vaonie has instructed us to train you,
but only after a feast! The training will be tough so you need to
rest. Come, come!’ He proclaimed.
Alduin stared at the crowd, bewildered.
‘What? Just a few days ago you tortured me and now you
kneel? After everything you’ve put me through you expect me to
play along with this stupid game?’ He said.
‘You simply must. My word is the word of Vaonie. Disobey-
ing me is disobeying them, and the day you do that would be
your last. Surely you understand that? Or are you that bloody
foolish?!’
Alduin froze in place, unable to respond.
‘Follow me to the feast,’ the leader commanded.
‘Why?’
‘Because you need to eat,’ he said and smirked.
‘Humans? No.’
‘You’ll come to find that normal food now utterly disgusts
you as your taste buds have been altered. Your body needs fresh
meat and blood, believe me.’
‘No.’
‘Now!’ The leader’s eyes glowed fiercely as he looked straight
into his eyes with a menacing glare.
Alduin was at a loss for words. He hunched forward in defeat
and obeyed, his eyes empty of emotion.
‘We must celebrate that we finally have a successor to Lodus!
After all these years of waiting!’ The leader shouted and started
running toward a big room with Alduin following him.
In the room he saw a few hundred vampires sitting on royal
chairs. Each one of them kneeled the moment he entered. Then,
they all started eating from a pile of corpses and drinking from
a big chalice filled with blood-looking liquid. It was probably
blood, right? They were all staring at him when he sat down. The
clan leader started eyeing him toward the ‘food’. Alduin was to
pick a corpse from the pile and consume human flesh for the
very first time in his life. He knew he had no choice so he picked
the oldest looking human he could find. He ate it with his eyes
closed, trying to escape from the realization that he had become
a monster. It tasted weird. Surprisingly juicy, strange but not
at all disgusting. He wanted to puke it out to feel mortal again
but it just didn’t happen.
‘What have you done to me?!’ He shouted desperately and
tried to sob but seemed physically unable to produce any tears.
‘Keep eating, you need your body to recover!’ The leader said
with a big smile that revealed his sharp fangs and laughed.
Alduin obeyed and kept eating, whimpering with each and every
bite.
‘What the fuck is wrong with you?! Puke it out! Why aren’t
you puking?! Why... Why couldn’t you just die like the rest of
them?!’ He thought.
From just a lowly slave of vampires he turned into a slave of the
strongest being he had ever heard about. Which was worse? He
had no clue.
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Author's note - I hope to get reviews and feedback. Thank you :)