Filed to story: Two Vampire Brides (Vera & Lucien) Book PDF Free
His voice, when he spoke, was low but firm. Foreign, almost regal in cadence.
“Princess Vera,” he said, and the title sent shockwaves through my entire being. “We’ve been searching for you for decades.”
“Princess?” I echoed, barely breathing the word. “You’re mistaken. I’m just… I’m nobody.”
“Nobody?” One of the other vampires, a woman with silver hair and ancient eyes, laughed softly. “My lady, you are the daughter of the Vampire King. The last of the pure bloodline.”
“That’s impossible,” I whispered. “I’m human. I was raised by humans.”
“You were hidden by humans,” the leader corrected. “Protected from those who would use your power for their own gain. But the time for hiding is over.”
“My power?” I shook my head, still kneeling in the dirt. “I don’t have any power. I couldn’t even keep my own mate.”
“Couldn’t you?” The silver-haired woman moved closer, her movements predatory yet respectful. “Tell me, Princess, when Lord Shadowmere drank from you, what did he taste?”
The memory came flooding back unbidden. The way Lucien’s eyes had widened in shock when he’d tasted my blood during our confrontation. The way he’d staggered backward, whispering that it tasted like royalty.
“I don’t understand,” I said, but my voice was growing weaker.
“Your blood calls to every vampire within a hundred miles,” the leader explained. “It sings with power older than any house, any family line. You are the heir to the throne that has stood empty for centuries.”
“Your father is waiting, Princess. Let’s go home.”
VERA’S POV
The palace doors opened with a low groan of ancient hinges, revealing a long hall bathed in crimson light and lined with vampires in black and silver armor. I stepped onto polished obsidian that gleamed like liquid night, my boots echoing in the vast silence.
I saw a man, tall, broad and regal, waiting at the end. His hair was the color of deep iron and a crown of woven silver and rubies resting atop his head. His presence hit like thunder and silence all at once. And when his eyes met mine, stormy gray and impossibly familiar, I couldn’t move.
Not out of fear.
But recognition.
“Come,” he said, his voice low but commanding, carrying the weight of centuries.
I didn’t remember deciding to walk. My legs just carried me, drawn by something in my chest I couldn’t name. When I stood before him, he studied me, not like a king sizing up a stranger, but like a father trying to memorize his daughter’s face after years apart.
“I dreamed of this day,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “Even when they told me you were better off hidden. Even when I doubted whether the prophecy was worth the price.”
“Are you-” My throat tightened. “Are you really my father?”
He exhaled like he’d been holding his breath for decades. “Yes, Vera. I am King Aldric. And you are my daughter. My only heir.”
I didn’t fall apart. Not right then. Instead, I stood still, locked in a moment that didn’t feel real.
“Why was I sent away?” I asked, my voice barely more than a whisper.
“The prophecy,” he said, stepping down from the dais. “When you were born, the seers saw a future that terrified the Council. A girl of royal blood who would not just unite the fractured vampire houses, but rule them. Not beside a king, but as one.”
“That’s… a lot,” I managed.
He smiled faintly, and I caught a glimpse of fangs. “It terrified them enough to make your life disappear. But I couldn’t bring myself to kill the vision. So I hid you with humans. Swore to find you when the time was right.”
“And now it is?”
“Now you’ve survived betrayal,” he said, moving closer. “Walked away from a bond that wasn’t worthy of you. And your power is waking.”
I didn’t know what to say. So I said nothing. I just leaned into the touch I didn’t realize I’d longed for.
After a pause, he cleared his throat. “Tonight, we will begin your return. You’ll be introduced to the court at the gathering. Guests are arriving now, newly mated pairs, pack leaders, allies. I want them to see you.”
I blinked. “Tonight?”
“You belong here,” he said, voice leaving no room for doubt. “They’ll see that.”
I nodded, slow and unsure. “All right.”
He turned to a maid waiting nearby. “Take the Princess to the east wing. Prepare her for court. Bathe her, dress her, see that she is presented in full regalia.”
“Yes, Your Majesty,” the woman said with a bow. She turned to me and offered a gentle smile. “This way, Princess.”
I followed, heart hammering.
The chamber they led me to made my old quarters at Shadowmere look like a servant’s closet.
The room was massive, walls of dark stone carved with elegant reliefs of vampires in various poses of power and grace. Soft rugs underfoot, a fireplace so large I could have stood inside it. Velvet drapes spilled over high-arched windows. Crystal decanters filled with what looked like blood glimmered from a carved sideboard. A bed, canopy-draped and layered in silks, stood like a throne of its own.
“This is mine?” I breathed.
“For as long as you remain within the palace,” the maid said, smiling. “And after tonight, forever.”
Two other women stepped forward, bows at the ready. They were efficient, kind, and utterly unfazed by my stunned silence. A warm bath waited, steam rising from an ivory tub carved with bat sigils.
“We must hurry,” one of them said. “The court is already gathering for the challenge.”
I let them peel away my worn travel clothes. I let them guide me into the water.
At first, I felt exposed. But then, I began to feel clean.
They scrubbed away the grime of the forest, the scent of rejection, the weight of exile. They worked in silence, washing my hair with oils that smelled of jasmine and iron.
One of them whispered a song-low and ancient. A lullaby I didn’t know but somehow recognized in my bones.
When I stepped from the water, they wrapped me in furs and led me to a velvet seat. A mirror stood before me, tall and silver-rimmed.
They brushed my hair, braided tiny strands back from my face, letting the rest fall in soft waves. They painted my lips a deep red, darkened my lashes, traced a symbol across my forehead, a crescent moon ringed with delicate flourishes.
They brought the dress last.
Black as midnight, fitted at the waist, flowing at the hem. Embroidered with silver thread in the shape of ravens flying beneath blood moons, it clung to me like memory.
As they adjusted the fabric and pinned the last jewel at my collar, one of the maids whispered, “Close your eyes, Princess.”
I obeyed, unsure why, but trusting.
“Now open them,” she said.
I did.
And the girl in the mirror was not the broken mate who had fled through the trees. She was taller somehow, and sharper. A creature carved from winter, moonlight, and legacy.
My throat tightened.
“Is this me?” I whispered. “Is this really me?”
The youngest maid smiled, stepping back with a nod. “Yes, Princess. It’s you.”
And that was when it hit me.
This wasn’t a dream. This wasn’t a trick after all. I was the daughter of the Vampire King.
Tears welled in my eyes before I could stop them, spilling down my cheeks in silent rivers, and I didn’t try to wipe them away.
I let them flow.
LUCIEN’S POV
The grand obsidian corridor leading to the Vampire Court stretched ahead like a path to judgment. Guards stood sentinel on either side, unmoving, unblinking, cloaked in the silver-and-crimson colors of the royal house. The palace of Sanguinara was a monolith carved into a mountain’s heart, regal and ancient. Everything about it screamed power. Legacy. Judgment.
My vampire nature stirred restlessly, like a caged predator sensing danger.
“Relax,” Celene said, her smile sharp as a blade. “You look like you’re about to be executed.”
I glanced at her. She was radiant in crimson silk and a polished gold bodice that hugged her torso like armor. Her flame-red hair was coiled high, wrapped in jeweled pins from the Blackthorne treasury. She had definitely dressed to impress.
“I’m not the one under inspection,” I muttered.
She laughed softly, the sound like breaking crystal. “No, you’re the one offering tribute.”
A guard pounded the butt of his spear against the floor, then pushed the doors open with a groaning thunder that swept through the halls like prophecy.
We stepped into a hall built to humble gods.
Vaulted ceilings stretched into shadows above. An aisle of blood-red carpet unfurled ahead of us, flanked by nobles and lords from nearly every major vampire house. They lined the chamber in tight, silent rows, eyes glittering with interest and judgment.
At the far end of the room sat the throne. Carved of dark stone, crowned with silver ravens, and draped in shadow.