It was only then that he saw the way the blood was smeared. The way it disappeared over the edge of the desk, and he had to walk around it to find her. Curled up, like she was an animal searching for a quiet, dark place to be alone to die. Cedric crouched down, his elbows on his knees as he gazed at her; as he tried to put himself in her shoes. Pregnant, with a monster in her stomach and death inevitable, her last sight of a man wielding a knife to slash her open. A man who seemed to have no sympathy for her plight. Probable, he had said. Had he even apologised? He couldn’t remember. It was all a blur. Did he feel guilty about it now? He should. He knew that he should. That was enough, wasn’t it?
From where he was crouched, however, he could see that she was not dead. She had all the appearance of someone dead, but that gash over her cut was pinching itself together. Maybe it wouldn’t heal completely, but it was starting to. And that was a sign; the blood was working. Probably better that it did so while she was asleep. He recalled his own turning, and the excruciating pain of it, while each organ shut down and he practically died.
But wasn’t Syn already mostly dead? What would it matter to her, just a little more pain? Whatever the case, whatever else she had to suffer, she was doing so while she was asleep. Which was better than when awake. Cedric sighed, and nodded, before he stood and made his way back around to the other side of the desk. He sat in the chair that was generally reserved for guests, his legs sprawled in front of him, his elbows on the armrests, his fingers massaging his temple. All of a sudden, he was exhausted. Exhausted, and a little thirsty. Overall, however, relieved. He had saved one. At least, in this entire debacle, he had managed to save at least one. Whether or not she would appreciate it was another question. Was he even ready for a childe? Could he teach her? Would he even be a good sire, or was he too heartless?
How long did he sit there, before he heard her stirring? Before she spoke and he opened her eyes to look at her with a curiously intense gaze?
”I am sure that it is dead,” he said, slowly, before he straightened himself and leaned forward on his knees, head canted to the side.
”And so are you, by traditional standards. You will notice that you now have no heartbeat…” he said, nodding toward Syn’s chest, challenging her to focus, to find out for herself. She was incredibly calm for a woman who had just had a monster pulled out of her. For a woman who had just died. Which was, Cedric concluded, rather disconcerting.