Chapter 386: A begging god
Elena laughed, the sound both beautiful and chilling. "Oh, Damien. Did you really think you were the only one with grand plans? That your 'enlightenment' was the pinnacle of ambition?" She shook her head, mock pity in her eyes. "You always did think too small."
"There is no one else who understands what I'm trying to achieve," Damien growled, his voice rising. "No one else with the vision, the ability to reshape the world as it should be. You need me, Elena. Whatever game you're playing, whatever power you think you've found – it's nothing compared to what we could accomplish together."
Elena's smile widened, a predator sensing weakness. "Is that so? Tell me, Damien, in all your centuries of existence, have you ever met a god?"
Damien scoffed, but uncertainty crept into his eyes. "Gods? There are no gods, Elena. Only power, and those strong enough to wield it."
"Oh, how wrong you are," Elena purred, circling him once more. Her movements were fluid, graceful, but there was a new edge to them – a barely contained energy that crackled in the air around her. "I've met one, you see. Touched divinity itself. And let me tell you, darling, it makes your petty ambitions look like a child's sandcastle before the tide."
Damien's face paled, a mix of disbelief and growing fear etching itself into his features. "You're lying. This is some sort of trick, some ploy to—"
"To what?" Elena cut him off, her voice sharp as a blade. "To humble the great Damien Durello? Please. You've done that all on your own." She leaned in close, her breath cool against his ear. "The truth, my dear, is far more terrifying than any lie I could concoct."
She straightened, smoothing imaginary wrinkles from her dress. When she spoke again, her voice was conversational, almost light. "You see, while you were busy playing at being king, I was seeking real power. And I found it, Damien. Found it in the whispers between worlds, in the shadows that move when no one's watching."
Damien's mind raced, trying to process her words, to find some angle, some way to regain control of the situation. "Even if what you're saying is true," he began, his voice steady despite the turmoil within, "you can't possibly think you can control such power. It will consume you, Elena. Destroy everything in its path."
Elena's laugh was like shattering glass. "Control? Oh, Damien. You still don't understand. I don't seek to control this power. I serve it.
Willingly, joyfully." Her eyes gleamed with a fervor that bordered on madness. "And in return, I've been granted glimpses of what's to come. The world remade, not in your image, but in his."
"Whose?" Damien demanded, a note of desperation creeping into his voice. "Who is this 'god' you speak of?"
Elena's smile was enigmatic, secretive. "All in due time, darling. For now, know this: the game has changed. The pieces are moving, and you?" She gestured at his wheelchair, at his weakened state. "You're no longer a player. You're a pawn, at best."
Damien's hand shot out, grasping Elena's wrist with surprising strength. "You're making a mistake, Elena. Whatever this is, whatever you think you've found – it's not worth throwing away everything we've built. Everything we could still achieve."
For a moment, something flickered in Elena's eyes – a hint of their old connection, perhaps, or a shadow of doubt. But it was gone as quickly as it appeared, replaced by cold determination.
"Oh, Damien," she said, her voice almost gentle as she extricated her wrist from his grip. "You still don't see it, do you? What we built was a house of cards, pretty but ultimately fragile. What I'm part of now? It's the foundation of a new world."
She moved away from him, towards the door. "You should leave, Damien. Go back to your weakened house, your fading powers. Cling to whatever scraps of influence you have left." She paused, her hand on the doorknob, and looked back at him. "Because when the tide comes – and it will come, sooner than you think – you'll want to be as far from the shore as possible."
Damien's voice stopped her as she began to open the door. "This isn't over, Elena. Whatever game you're playing, whatever power you think you've aligned yourself with – I will find a way to stop it. To stop you, if necessary."
Elena's smile was almost sad as she regarded him one last time. "Oh, my dear Damien. Always so confident, even in the face of your own obsolescence. But you're right about one thing – this isn't over. It's only just beginning."
With that, she opened the door, letting the sounds and scents of the brothel beyond spill into the room. "Goodbye, Damien. Do try to die with dignity, won't you? It's the least you can do, given your current state."
As Elena's hand touched the doorknob, Damien's voice rang out, strained and uncharacteristically desperate.
"Wait," he called, his pride warring visibly with his curiosity and ambition. "Please, Elena. Tell me the name of this... divinity you encountered. I need to know."
Elena turned back, a slow, triumphant smile spreading across her face. She chuckled, the sound rich with dark amusement. "Oh, Damien. You would be surprised. The history books know him as a myth, the first of his kind... of our kind." She paused for dramatic effect, savoring the moment.
"The vampire god, Duncan Salvador."
The effect on Damien was immediate and profound. His eyes widened, shock etched across his features. "Salvador," he breathed, the name heavy with significance. "But that's... that's impossible. He's a legend, a story told to fledglings."
Elena's smile widened, enjoying his discomfort. "Is he now? And yet, here we are."
Damien's mind raced, trying to reconcile this revelation with everything he thought he knew. Salvador was indeed in the history books, though rarely spoken of. But how... why... had Elena come across him? It had to be a lie, didn't it?
And yet, the confidence radiating from Elena was unheard of. This wasn't the same vampire who had hidden in the shadows of her sister and her family name two years ago. Her aura, her very presence, spoke of a power beyond what he had known her to possess.
A plan began to form in Damien's mind. He needed to see this god for himself. If it was a lie, he'd find another way to make Elena pay for her betrayal, along with everyone else who had crossed him. And if it was true... well, he'd keep those thoughts to himself for now.
Damien's defiant expression faltered, replaced by a carefully crafted mask of humility. When he spoke again, his voice was low, urgent, with an undercurrent of carefully controlled pride.
"Elena," he began, his eyes locked on hers. "I... I was wrong to dismiss you. If what you say is true, if Salvador truly walks among us..." He paused, swallowing hard. "I need to see him. To understand.
Please, take me to him."
Elena regarded him silently for a long moment, her eyes searching his face. "And why should I do that, Damien? Why should I grant you an audience with a god?"
Damien leaned forward in his wheelchair, his voice intense. "Because you know me, Elena. You know what I'm capable of, both as an ally and as an enemy. If Salvador is real, if he's as powerful as you say, then he'll want someone like me on his side. And if not..." He spread his hands. "Well, then you'll have the satisfaction of watching me grovel before a lie."
A slow smile spread across Elena's face, a mixture of amusement and calculation. "Oh, Damien. Always looking for an angle, aren't you? Very well. I'll speak to Salvador. But remember this: if he agrees to see you, you come on his terms.
No schemes, no plots. You'll be in the presence of a god, and you'll act accordingly."
Damien nodded, relief and anticipation warring on his face. "Understood. Thank you, Elena."
As Elena turned to leave once more, Damien called out one last time. "Elena? What... what is he like?"
Elena paused at the door, her hand on the knob. When she spoke, her voice was filled with a reverence Damien had never heard from her before. "He is... beyond description, Damien. Power incarnate. The alpha and omega of our kind.
Prepare yourself, for nothing in your long existence has readied you for what you're about to experience."
With that, she was gone, leaving Damien alone with his thoughts, his plans, and the growing realization that the world he thought he understood was about to change irrevocably.