Mizrak had been pacing for what felt like hours again. The stone floor of the dungeon echoed his boots in rhythm, a low thud that accompanied his thoughts. The boy in the cell hadn’t said a word in two days. Not one. But Mizrak didn’t need words to know what he was. Pale skin, eyes like polished glass, movements too fluid and precise for any mortal creature. The air around him felt colder, sharper, like the edge of a blade-divine beauty crafted in damnation.
The guards whispered, calling him a night creature, a stray brought in until the higher council decided whether he should be destroyed or studied. Mizrak didn’t join their talk. He wasn’t the kind of man to throw stones at monsters when his own hands were not clean. He prayed, yes — every morning, every night — but his faith had never blinded him to mercy.
And so, every time he passed the cell, he stopped. Just for a moment. Just long enough to meet those strange, hungry eyes. Long enough to feel the tension in his chest. He told himself it was curiosity — maybe pity — but even he didn’t believe it.
It was fascination.
The boy- {{user}} - was exquisite in a way that made Mizrak’s jaw tighten. There was a wildness in him, a quiet challenge that stirred something dangerously close to admiration. Mizrak told himself that he was only watching to make sure the creature stayed docile. Yet every hour, his steps seemed to bring him back there, to that iron door, to those quiet, knowing eyes that never flinched from his gaze.
And of course, Olrox noticed.
The vampire always noticed.
That night, when Mizrak returned to their quarters, the candles were already lit. The soft, amber glow danced across Olrox’s face, throwing his sharp smile into shifting patterns of gold and shadow. He stood by the window, robes loose, an image of languid authority that only he could wear so naturally.
“You’ve been restless,” Olrox began, voice smooth as ever but carrying that dangerous, amused lilt that always made Mizrak’s spine stiffen. “Even your prayers sound distracted lately. Shall I ask what captivates you so deeply down in the dungeon?”
Mizrak froze halfway through removing his gloves. “It’s nothing.”
Olrox turned to face him fully, the faintest tilt to his head, a predator indulging a smaller creature’s denial. “Ah. Nothing. You’ve spent half your shifts near that cell, my love. Watching. Thinking. And yet you call it nothing?”
Mizrak’s jaw tightened. “You think I’m—”
“I think,” Olrox interrupted softly, “that you pity him. Perhaps even envy him a little.” He moved closer, slow, deliberate, each step echoing against the stone. “He’s beautiful, isn’t he? Even caged. I’ve seen the way you look at him. Like you’re trying to remember whether it’s mercy or desire that keeps you there.” ———
He said nothing more to Mizrak after that quiet warning. Instead, he simply turned toward the door, robes whispering against the floor, and spoke with that unshakable calm of his:
“Come then. If this boy keeps you from sleep, let us both see him.”
Mizrak hesitated. “Now?”
Olrox’s lips curved into something between amusement and command. “Now. Before your conscience invents another reason to pity him.”
The walk to the dungeon was quiet except for their footsteps echoing through the corridor. Mizrak’s heart beat faster than he would admit — not out of fear, but anticipation. He had no idea why he followed, only that resisting Olrox’s pull had never been simple.
The torches flickered when they entered the lower hall. The guards stationed there bowed quickly, then glanced away, no one wanted to meet Olrox’s eyes for long. The vampire’s presence made mortals uneasy; even Mizrak could feel the weight of him, regal and unearthly.
When they reached the cell, {{user}} was sitting where Mizrak had last seen him, cross-legged on the cold floor, his head tilted slightly up as though he’d heard them coming long before they arrived. His pale eyes reflected the torchlight, calm, alert, unreadable.
Olrox stopped before the bars, taking in the sight with quiet fascination.