Chapter 60: When Eyes Turned to Her
She hadn’t hurt herself. At least, not enough to bleed like this. Nor had she crushed some fish under her feet. Perhaps the riverbed beneath her stirred something murky? Ruelle’s thoughts flickered wildly, grasping at logic, but the deeper side of her mind told her it was something else.
Most of the other women began inching away. Not with panic, but with a quiet unease, skirts gathered in hands, eyes darting to the water as if it might touch them. A ripple of separation formed, and Ruelle stood at its centre.
The blood oozed a metallic scent into the air, primarily attracting the attention of the Halflings. They stepped closer to the bank, their predatory instincts flickering in their eyes.
A loud voice spoke through the hush.
“Well, well, well. How thoughtful—you’ve turned the river into your personal washbasin. Some of us were actually enjoying it,” Alanna remarked mockingly, confirming the suspicion.
The vampiress had returned from the hunt after falling flat on her face thanks to the horse that threw her on the ground. But people didn’t need to know that. She instead stood proudly, giving a disdainful look at the lowly human. “How unpleasant.”
The truth dawned on Ruelle. It was her time. One that marked the irreversible shift into womanhood.
And now, under the scrutiny of dozens of eyes, she wished nothing more than to disappear beneath the surface of the water and let the river swallow her whole. She couldn’t move. Her hands gripped the sides of her skirt, knuckles pale, heart pounding in her throat.
“How mortifying,” someone murmured with judgement. “She must be dim-witted not to keep track of her own time. Why step into the water at all?”
“Perhaps she wanted the attention,” stated a Halfling vampiress, who was more than pleased to drag Ruelle through dirt.
The men who had been stealing glances at Ruelle earlier, thinking about introducing themselves, now wore flushed faces of awkward embarrassment. Even Kevin, drenched and carefree moments ago, now appeared frozen—jaw slack, eyes wide.
Hailey noticed how everyone around them behaved. She was just about to step forward, to reach out to her friend, when a sharp splash of water cut through the silence.
Ruelle flinched but didn’t look. She didn’t want to risk seeing people leave the river as if she were spreading a contagious illness. For the briefest second, her eyes squeezed shut. Then came the sound of water shifting, lapping softly. A whisper of movement grew nearer until the shadow of a figure loomed above her.
Ezekiel, she thought. He must have returned. Perhaps to offer her a quiet escape, to spare her from the embarrassment. However, when she finally lifted her gaze, she realised it wasn’t him.
The man before her had raven-black hair and eyes the colour of aged wine, shadowed and unreadable, locking with hers that made her breath falter.
Lucian, her mind whispered his name.
Then, in one fluid motion, he stepped forward and draped the coat over her shoulders. The wool grazed her bare elbow, startling her with its warmth. It carried the scent of old smoke, wild pine, and the crispness of a mountain wind—clean, cool, and earthy.
Lucian’s voice broke through, low and clipped, “Can you walk?”
Unable to speak with her words lodged in her throat, she barely nodded.
Without another word, his black-gloved hand closed firmly over her arm, but not cruelly. He pulled her from the water, the cold cling of her soaked dress reminding her of what had happened.
Around them, a hush fell over the crowd. Whispers slithered through the onlookers. Their expressions were a mixture of shock and awe. Alanna’s jaw clenched. Her fingers curled at her sides, nails nearly pressing into her palm. Her lip lifted in a sneer, and her flared nostrils quivered with restrained outrage. Why was he rescuing her?! She was a lowly, worthless human. He didn’t have to involve himself with that kind!
Ruelle’s heart thudded erratically, each step sloshing with water that clung cold and heavy to her skin. She could feel Lucian’s presence beside her was silent and unyielding. His gloved hand still firm on her arm, anchoring her as the ground grew firmer beneath her feet.
Once they reached the bank, he didn’t release her arm. Instead, he led her towards his horse. Her legs felt unsteady right now, but she pressed into each step—fear, mortification, and something deep in her chest urging her to follow him.
She felt Lucian stop beside the animal, the scent of the saddle’s leather mingling with the chill in the air. His hand left her arm gently, but she still felt the imprint it left behind.
The horse let out a short breath and shifted its weight, hooves scuffing against the dirt. Its saddle creaked softly. She hesitated, her wet dress trailing behind her, until his shadow fell over her again. His gaze flicked to hers—brooding, unreadable, but undeniably attentive.
“Lucian!” Alanna’s voice echoed, unable to resist not voicing out her opinions. “You don’t need to lower yourself for a human like her. It is dirty blood.”
Ruelle stiffened, heat prickling beneath her skin at Alanna’s words.
Lucian’s dark gaze swung to Alanna, and his tone remained calm as he spoke, “Perhaps you should brush the mud from your skirt—after your fall—before lecturing others on cleanliness.”
Gasps and whispers rumbled around them. Was Lucian defending a Groundling?
Alanna pursed her lips before saying, “But she with that old—”
“As a senior at Sexton, I’d expect you to know it’s natural,” his voice dropped to an icy murmur. “Unless, of course, you’ve never experienced it. Or can’t.”
Hearing that, Alanna’s scorn drained leaving her cheeks bright scarlet. A few of the watching students stifled smiles. Some even chuckled softly under their breath.
Ruelle then saw Lucian offer her his gloved hand. Hesitantly she placed her hand in his. A tremor of fear and trust passed through her. He lifted her with ease and set her on the horse before swinging into his own saddle. Soon he nudged the horse forward, leading her away from there.
The moment they vanished from view, the forest buzzed back. One of them said, “I thought Lucian despised humans,” someone whispered, barely containing their confusion.
“Maybe he’s trying to raise his grade in Inter-Species Conduct,” a Halfling offered with a dry chuckle.
Hailey quickly made her way to Kevin, who looked more embarrassed than Ruelle as if he were the one who had bled in the river. His face was pale, mouth parted like he wanted to say something but couldn’t quite find the words.
“Kevin,” Hailey whispered, grabbing his sleeve, “we should head back.”
“Uh—okay,” Kevin muttered, still frozen, scratching the back of his neck like it might help him process what had just happened. Hailey rolled her eyes and tugged him along before thinking, men.
Gwendolyn, who had once hired Ruelle to work for her and who now stood next to Alanna remarked, “Well, I think Lucian prefers to help a human. Not you.”
“Don’t be absurd. Lucian was merely being noble,” Alanna said, her smile tightened like a thread about to snap. “Someone had to drag her out before she infected the rest of us.”
Far from the murmurs of the forest and the lingering eyes, the familiar silhouette of Sexton Academy emerged through the trees. The horse’s hooves clopped onto the gravel of the main grounds, slower now, more measured.
Lucian tugged the reins and brought the horse to a halt near one of the side entrances. He dismounted first, landing with the effortless grace that came naturally to him. Then, without a word, he turned to Ruelle. He extended his hand, and she accepted it, her fingers brushing against his gloved palm as he helped her down.
Though she had ridden the entire way pressed against his back, now, with the eyes of no one upon them, she couldn’t meet his gaze. She stared at the ground she stood on, watching droplets fall, which had a touch of pink about them.
Lucian followed her gaze.
“It isn’t the first time Sexton’s floors have seen blood,” Lucian stated, his voice low and matter-of-fact. “And it won’t be the last. I will have someone clean the floor,” he added.
Ruelle clutched the coat tighter around herself and gave the faintest nod.
Why had he helped her?
And why, of all people, did it have to be him?
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 166: Conditions Of The Treaty
- Chapter 165: A Mother’s Mistake
- Chapter 164: The Quiet Arrangement
- Chapter 163: Before the End
- Chapter 162: Fall Of The Youngest
- Chapter 161: Marked and Sold
- Chapter 160: A Collar for a Stray
- Chapter 159: The King’s Amusement
- Chapter 158: Claim Made at Midnight
- Chapter 157: The Mist Is Everywhere
- Chapter 156: Eyes Upon the Groundlings
- Chapter 155: Nothing Without Consequences
- Chapter 154: Chain Between Them
- Chapter 153: The Illusion of Control
- Chapter 152: Weight Of Absence
- Chapter 151: After Three Toes
- Chapter 150: The King’s Word
- Chapter 149: What Is Given Cannot Be Refused
- Chapter 148: The Summon
- Chapter 147: Caught!
- Chapter 146: Trap At The Fair
- Chapter 145: Fortune Teller’s Cards
- Chapter 144: An Ill Omen
- Chapter 143: Box That Passed Through Daughters
- Chapter 142: Heirloom of the Dead
- Chapter 141: Debts That Wait
- Chapter 140: We Meet Again
- Chapter 139: He knows
- Chapter 138: Forgetting To Behave
- Chapter 137: Lessons Before the Auction
- Chapter 136: Within reach
- Chapter 135: Term of Twenty
- Chapter 134: Crossing lines
- Chapter 133: A Moment Too Close
- Chapter 132: The Ride Back
- Chapter 131: When Pride Breaks
- Chapter 130: All of Them
- Chapter 129: A Warning to All
- Chapter 128: Price of Insolence
- Chapter 127: The Arrival
- Chapter 126: A Den of Wolves
- Chapter 125: Elite’s Invitation
- Chapter 124: The Prince’s Temper
- Chapter 123: What cannot be bought
- Chapter 122: The Veiled Subject
- Chapter 121: He Who Waits
- Chapter 120: Cost of a Ribbon
- Chapter 119: Sound of a Ticking Heart
- Chapter 118: Memories of winter
- Chapter 117: The Girl in the Snow
- Chapter 116: Under His Roof
- Chapter 115: Under Whose Protection
- Chapter 114: What I Touch, I Keep
- Chapter 113: An Innocent Misunderstanding
- Chapter 112: The Edge of Control
- Chapter 111: Static Before Lightning
- Chapter 110: The Rearrangement
- Chapter 109: Errands Before the Ball
- Chapter 108: The Smell of Soap
- Chapter 107: Seven Days Before the Ball
- Chapter 106: Charcoal and Rose
- Chapter 105: A Thing You Can Do for Me
- Chapter 104: There Is No ‘We’
- Chapter 103: Before the Apple Ripens
- Chapter 102: Logs That Burned All Night
- Chapter 101: Clipped Wings
- Chapter 100: Table of Fortunes
- Chapter 99: Hand that Held her
- Chapter 98: Half the Way to Sexton
- Chapter 97: A Case Without a Head
- Chapter 96: The Door That Closed
- Chapter 95: Ruelle’s realisation
- Chapter 94: The Favoured and the Obedient
- Chapter 93: Cost of Coming Home
- Chapter 92: What she leaves behind
- Chapter 91 91: Held too close
- Chapter 90 90: What is buried beneath
- Chapter 89: A door knocked too early
- Chapter 88: Be a smart cookie!
- Chapter 87: Decision sent to the King
- Chapter 86: Twenty days
- Chapter 85: A hand extended
- Chapter 84: Prince Edward's chaos
- Chapter 83: Where It Begins
- Chapter 82: In her corner
- Chapter 81: A Step Forward, and Back Again
- Chapter 80: Where mercy ends and begins
- Chapter 79: In search of safe company
- Chapter 78: Between them
- Chapter 77: Way to have clean hands
- Chapter 76: Debts in blood
- Chapter 75: The House and the Barn
- Chapter 74: Hunt that no one played fair
- Chapter 73: Five minutes of mercy
- Chapter 72: Before the hunt
- Chapter 71: A Seat Among Predators
- Chapter 70: Two Inches More
- Chapter 69: A Clasp Beneath the Toast
- Chapter 68: Other routes to the same goal
- Chapter 67: A strange companion
- Chapter 66: The Quill’s Price
- Chapter 65: Where the floor runs red
- Chapter 64: Sting of the flower
- Chapter 63: At the edge of the room
- Chapter 62: Mouthfuls and Missteps
- Chapter 61: A Vampire’s Mercy
- Chapter 60: When Eyes Turned to Her
- Chapter 59: Crimson Bloom
- Chapter 58: The Box and the Blow
- Chapter 57: When Porcelain Breaks
- Chapter 56: The Weight of Small Things
- Chapter 55: Not so gentle
- Chapter 54: A Pinprick of Fear
- Chapter 53: Thief among us
- Chapter 52: The Accusation
- Chapter 51: Climbing without threads
- Chapter 50: A Path Crossed Twice
- Chapter 49: When Chaos steps in
- Chapter 48: Masquerade Mishaps
- Chapter 47: Perfume, Pretence, and Peril
- Chapter 46: Scent of forgotten shadows
- Chapter 45: Closed windows
- Chapter 44: Clearance of assumption
- Chapter 43: The missing Groundling
- Chapter 42: Alone and abandoned
- Chapter 41: Suspicion on her
- Chapter 40: The mix to run and prey
- Chapter 39: Fractured glass of the past
- Chapter 38: Cold stares of my roommate
- Chapter 37: Queen removing the Bishop
- Chapter 36: The weekend
- Chapter 35: Plotting her humiliation
- Chapter 34: Is this a gift?
- Chapter 33: Under The Same Roof As Him
- Chapter 32: Wildfire at the tables
- Chapter 31: Collision of Worlds
- Chapter 30: It is official
- Chapter 29: Roommate Options
- Chapter 28: The One Person
- Chapter 27: Respect the scarf!
- Chapter 26: Hardwork lost
- Chapter 25: The caring brother-in-law
- Chapter 24: One failed subject
- Chapter 23: Chased by awkwardness
- Chapter 22: Following me
- Chapter 21: Riding with Elites
- Chapter 20: Tension in the room
- Chapter 19: Kiss the bride
- Chapter 18: Wedding at the church
- Chapter 17: Late evening note
- Chapter 16: You don’t know me
- Chapter 15: Manipulative intentions
- Chapter 14: What was left behind
- Chapter 13: Veils of Deceit
- Chapter 12: Scars of love
- Chapter 11: Fire in the mountain—Run!
- Chapter 10: Owned by it
- Chapter 9: A price to pay
- Chapter 8: Few meters away
- Chapter 7: Late to the first class
- Chapter 6: Misunderstanding blow up!
- Chapter 5: Social classes in Sexton
- Chapter 4: Invitation to attend the privileged
- Chapter 3: Conflict of interest
- Chapter 2: Stumbling into debt
- Chapter 1: Excerpt