C E D R I C[BACKDATED 17/10/17]
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Apollo Damona. In the grand scheme of things, the club probably wasn’t Cedric’s best idea. Given his proclivities, it nothing else, this was the business he should have handed over to Costello to run. Cedric should have stayed at the flagship—the far less raunchy Cocoa Bean. The business was newly renovated and there were plenty of things Cedric had to keep an eye on to try keep it all as above board as possible. If the cops came looking, it needed to pass the bill. They couldn’t see all of the illegal underneath the surface otherwise he would be done for. It was a delicate balance. This, he told himself, was why he had to stay. This had to be where he spent his time, when not at home. There was a piano, too. How could he not include a piano? Every now and again he ended up at said piano, tinkling out a tune even if there was music playing overhead. The music was never super abrasive, or intrusive; it had enough of a beat that the dancers could move to. Not only women, by the way, but men, too. Cedric would not have Castalia believe he had bought himself a strip club filled with women just to sate his needs. He would never touch an employee. Maybe that’s why Apollo worked best. Again, he’d ended up at the piano. It was on a raised platform but was also, somehow, inobtrusive. No one really paid him much mind as he sat there, focused on the keys in front of him and the blues tune he let loose beneath his fingertips.
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Ivette had been out with friends; it was a night of carefree attitude, a time to escape the clutches of her mother’s illness for a spell. It was something she needed, something that the girls knew she needed. Club by club, they danced the night away. That is until Jill wanted something a little... different. The strip club had been a good idea. Hot girls, hot guys - what could be better? In the back of her mind, she knew she had an answer. Pills, like the ones she knew Destiny had in her back pocket. Booze, that she could so easily order. She’d been clean for a year, just shy of the period in which her mother had fallen ill. Ivette had sobered up to take care of her, but while she had stopped the alcohol and pill popping... she’d traded it for something worse, something more dangerous if one wasn’t careful. The bite of a vampire. “I think someone needs to have a lap dance.” Sang Lucretia with a grin. Her blonde friend clutched her arm as soon as they walked through the door in awe of the club. “Damn, this place is hot.” The group took in the appearance of the club, it was tasteful and so well done. “And so is that man playing the keyboard.” Destiny chimed to her friends as Ivette was lead to the bar.
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Cedric had zoned out. He wasn't paying much mind to the club nor its occupants; he'd not seen how, as it neared midnight, the crowd had swelled. The roster was his responsibility and, on the nights he knew he was definitely going to be there he left the floor and barstaff a little lighter, knowing that he could step in if required. He was hyper sensitive to the noise around him; though half his attention was on the keys, the rest was keeping an ear out. First, he heard someone say 'keyboard'. Second, right after, he heard the ear-splitting wolf-whistle. It was Ben, at the bar. That was Cedric cue. Help was needed. The blues came to a halt and the suit-clad vampire stood, closed the lid of the piano and stepped from the platform. He expertly weaved his way through the crowd until he'd slipped behind the bar. "Thanks man," Ben said as he deftly curated and combined the ingredients needed for some cocktail or other; he offered Cedric the smallest of glances, and Cedric merely nodded. He undid the button of his jacket to get more comfortable, maybe more casual, as he turned to the set of ladies who'd just moved up the bar queue. "What can I get you?" he asked, accent indefinable, tone deep.
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He had an accent and a deep voice. Ivette felt her arm be squeezed in acknowledgement of the question as the girls grinned at the wolf whistle. She pulled down on her olive dress, allowing the tight cloth to loosen briefly around her hips as they looked at the bar. "Just a club soda for me, with lemon." She didn't mind being the designated driver, it always helped for her as she brushed her fingertips through her hair. The other women hummed quietly as they decided on, "Two glasses of scotch." Ivette could only shake her head. Neither of them would apparently be walking out of the stripclub. Lucretia removed her wallet from the bag on her arm, taking out the proper amount and sliding it, and a tip, towards the man. "I don't suppose you're on the menu?" To which Ivette went blood red as she said, "Luce! Behave!" And she flashed him a sheepish smile, "Sorry. She's been drinking. They both have."
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Cedric smirked as he went about collecting the drinks. He'd learned how to make a few cocktails but was glad when people asked for just the regular drinks. Scotch he could do., club soda too. Most often, women came onto him only when they saw him slip behind the bar; the other employees all wore black shirts, and either black pants or jeans. They all wore aprons tied around their waists. Cedric, however, was always wearing a suit and never an apron. When he got behind the counter to serve up drinks, they all knew he was someone important. They reckoned that a man who owned a club would be a man with money. They wouldn't be wrong. Most of the time, Cedric resisted. He played along then slipped away. But these women were young. They were nice to look at. They were a temptation, and those were getting harder and harder to resist. He didn't want to admit to it. He didn't want to talk to Castalia about it. He assumed he could handle it. And we all know what people say about assumptions. His cool gaze swept over the three women and settled on the one who flushed. The blood in her cheeks was... oh so deliciously enticing. Why hadn't he fed yet? That was always a mistake. "I prefer sober encounters to drunken ones," he said, gaze settled upon the club-soda-girl. It wasn't even strictly true. It was just a line. One that he shouldn't have delivered.
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"Don't we all?" She said as she watched her friends with a sigh. They hadn't done this in a while, though. They needed an escape. They worked and had lives with children, she had to take care of her mother. A few times a year wasn't a bad thing though, was it? "Even drunk though, as long as they can walk, we're fine." She said as she ran her tongue over her teeth and gave him a smile. "Sometimes sober is the best way to go about." That's what her sponser had always told her, anyway. It wasn't the best way of life. Sobriety wasn't as overrated, though, as she once thought. It helped her come back down from the high that the bite created, the way that euphoria rocked her over. In some instances, it was better than sex. Only once had it gone bad when a man had drank too much and left her in a public space. She'd forgotten his face, what he looked like. She'd woken up in a hospital bed with her brother looking down at her, frowning. 'You almost scared us, V.' He had said. "We'll go find a dancer!" The two girls said after they glanced between Ivette and the man in the suit. He was cute, and they knew how stressed she was. "Maybe you should stay here and talk to Mr. Keyboard Player." Destiny said, and Ivette frowned. "Pianist. Didn't you ever pay attention back in school?" To which Destiny rolled her eyes, a clear indication that no, she had not. Once they had their drinks, the two made a beeline for a dark haired man.
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The two were left alone and Cedric wasn't sure it was such a great idea. It would have been better if the two girls had dragged their friend off behind them. It was his own fault. Why had he allowed that single chink, that impression that he was open and willing? That he was free? But she was there, and she was correcting her friends and calling his precious piano a piano rather than a keyboard. They'd gone off to admire Cedric's wares, and she remained to admire Cedric. There was no rejection there. But what was the harm? He was only talking to her. She was on one side of the bar, he was on the other. "So. Are you the designated driver or do you just prefer to keep your wits?" he asked. It crossed his mind it might have been an insenitive question, but she looked young and healthy and nothing at all like an addict should. Though, not all addicts wore their addictions on their sleeves. He could attest to that.
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"I'm actually a year and a few months sober." She said, hardly shy about it as she turned her attention back from her friends and to the man standing on the opposite side of the bar. "It also helps, really, as they get themselves into a lot of trouble." A frown played across her lips as she considered it. By the end of the night, she was sure she'd have to peel Lucretia off of the ground and deliver her to her boyfriend. "Someone has to be the adult." There was a shake of her head, a chuckle.
Her best friends were troublemakers, but good women. "I'm sorry they don't know the difference between a keyboard and piano, I think anything more than ten keys is too difficult for her to comprehend." She admitted, looking over her shoulder as she watched them look towards the dancing man. He was attractive, not too much older than they were. "You're the owner of Apollo Damona, aren't you?" She asked, due to the way he was dressed.
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Cedric laughed. It was so out of place, but he laughed because he'd thought he was safe, and yet he'd said exactly the wrong things. "I apologise," he said, though she didn't seem at all phased about his question, nor did she hesitate to answer it. He followed her glance toward her friends and then back again, and shrugged his shoulders as she apologised on their behalf. He then nodded. Ben was busy tending bar and Cedric should have been helping. But he was talking to a customer. That was part of the job, right? He was keeping the sober driver entertained. "Cedric Costello," he said, offering his hand over the bar. It would be cold to the touch. But some people naturally ran cold, didn't they? He was surprised there weren't more people calling him out for being what he was. But he'd been lucky. No one ousted him as a vampire. He knew he must have been covering his tracks properly; but then, he'd not had as many tracks to cover, lately. He'd offered his name, in the hopes that she would give hers in return.
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"You don't need to apologize." She smiled, recognizing the laugh. "It's not something I'm ashamed of. It was a troubled part of my past, but I overcame it and here I am." Her hand lifted to rest against her throat as she mentioned overcoming her addiction, she knew it wasn't gone. It was still there, bubbling beneath the surface. It had only become a different design, a different constant desire. It was the pain that went with the pleasure, the way fangs sank into her throat and her brain just went white. Ivette moved her hand to take his giving it a firm shake. "Ivette McKinley." Her name wasn't anything special, it wasn't anything odd. It was just normal and she'd always been one who enjoyed it. His hand was icy and she lifted her gaze to look at his features. The vampires were often cold, she didn't think she'd ever touched any one of them warm. "It's nice to meet you, Cedric." She leaned forward unconsciously, folding her arms to rest them against the countertop. "Your club is beautiful. Kind of old fashioned."
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"Thank you," he said. Was that a reaction he detected, when she felt how cold he was? Did she suddenly warm to him a little more? He knew he shouldn't be doing this. He shouldn't be imagining his hand in place of hers as she touched her own throat. He could imagine his lips where her fingers rested; he could imagine her body beneath his. Wasn't it always the way? Wasn't it always what he tried not to imagine? He cleared his throat and glanced up at the club, the curve of the stairs as they led up to the rooms where the girls and boys sometimes took their paying toys. That was the allure, wasn't it? Word got around. This wasn't just a strip club. These weren't just dancers, in all their natural beauty. This was a bordello, and these girls and boys got their own bonus on top of their above-board pay. "It's newly renovated," he said. He should have continued to talk about the club. Should have, could have. Didn't. "How do you get your kicks these days, Ivette?" he asked, gaze weighted with a confidence behind the question that he should not have summoned. It was a risky question. It was a sensitive question. "It can't be easy, being a year and a few months sober and watching your friends have the time of their lives..."
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They called what she was a blood doll, didn't they? It was a question that she wondered as she moved her hand to collect her drink and take a sip. After she set it back down, the woman considered the times she had been bitten and the occasional times that she could remember it all. Vampires. It was such an amusing thought, that they were real threats in Harper Rock. That they walked around, that they died. That they came back. Was this man a vampire? She wondered it as she could still feel the lingering coolness of his hand. Sure, people were cold, but she didn't think it would stay that cold. Even if one was handling ice on a regular basis. "I remember it being called something else when I was younger." She said, the idea of it making her wonder if everything was the same. Did it have a double meaning? Was he just like the last owner? "It isn't easy, no. But I manage. I gave up alcohol and drugs for something with a better reaction." She didn't miss the glance of his towards the stairs. "I let men and women give me a bit of a rush and give me what I need as they take what they need to sustain themselves." Sometimes, it was sexual. There was a vampire who hadn't given up his name who did that. She knew blood thieves were in it for the power, but herself? It was all about the pleasure. "It's almost better than ecstasy."
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The answer that Cedric received was not the one he was expecting. It was almost illicit in nature, though it was not explicit. She could have been talking about anything, and Cedric couldn't be certain. He arched a brow and almost wanted to reach for a drink, though he couldn't exactly consume one. Old habits died hard. He couldn't help the way his eyes did their damnedest to rake over Ivette's curves. It was hard when the bar was in the way. And then he thought of Castalia, and visibly flinched. No, he told himself. He couldn't be thinking this. He couldn't be having this conversation. But he was intrigued. And it was just a conversation. Nothing more, nothing less. "Yes, I like to think it's classier now," he said, trying instead to look around the club, to instead think about all that he had changed in the place to make it better. It certainly was busier than it used to be. It used to be a dump, a slimy hole. Not it was a destination. "And you have me intrigued. What exactly is this drug that's better than ecstasy, almost? I might have to try to get my hands on some..."
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“Certainly is from what I remember in the past. The staff is better looking, surely.” She made a soft hum, the noise one that she made when she was often considering. “It’s not a drug per say, an act, really.” Was it even an act? A high? She’d never bothered going to get her blood tested for any toxin that may enter her bloodstream on the evenings that she fed. Perhaps it was the bite itself, something that increased dopamine levels. She knew there was a direct connection between it and users of certain drugs, of the ones she’d been so dependent on for a couple of years. “Some vampire,” She said, lowering her voice as she smiled at him, “Prefer a little more enjoyment to their meal when there’s consent. Isn’t that what we all want anyway, a little bit of peace and understanding? It’s not a bad thing.”
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A smile curved Cedric's lips. He was a vampire, and cold to the touch, but he felt the flush of heat, the desire, the need to feed. The promise of something more, and no. He couldn't do this, not here. But he was hungry. And he was sick of blood bags. He was sick of stale blood. Yes, he preferred blood infused with lust but... well, could he? He didn't have to go the whole way. He didn't have to... even go upstairs. They didn't have to go upstairs! They could go to one of the booths, mostly hidden away. She would get what she wanted, and he would get what he wanted. He would have her consent. He might even give her a little money for her trouble. "Consent certainly does make things easier," he said, straightening. Ben had things under control again. Cedric looked over his shoulder, to one of the booths by the bar; it was empty. It was dark. It was where he usually sat to get caught up on paperwork. It had a good view of the club but was still out of the way. "You know you can get paid for that kind of thing?" he said. He was still trying to talk himself out of it. But he'd made up his mind. So much so that when he talked, his teeth gleamed -- now sharp. Now visible.
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It was something that she and her friends did. Donate their time and their blood. The idea of payment had actually never crossed their minds. Ivette knew that there was a shortage of blood supplies at one point - she had to donate it for her mother because they’d had trouble finding a match. Was it because of vampires? She’d always assumed they liked it fresh. Some, she knew, fed on animals - after all, she’d witnessed one doing so and ended up becoming a meal. She’d remembered the man’s face though. Handsome and angelic, the terror on his features the next time that she’d seen him. It had been a long time, though. A year and a half, maybe? “I’ve never given it a thought. It’s usually a service - I get what I need, they get what they need.” Ivette recognized that glint, the sight of his fangs. She wasn’t afraid. Instead, she reached over to cover her hand with his and smirked. “Would you like to taste?”
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Cedric should have been more cautious. In the city's current state, there could be spies everywhere. There could be hunters infiltrating every club, pub, and bar. They could be questioning every person of importance, every boss, every employee, going about their business slowly and stealthily to weed out every blood sucker there was. They could be putting names on a list so that if the cure still existed, if it were weaponised, they could come and quickly, easily take out every target. And yet, he couldn't resist. Maybe he could have were it not for her hand on his. Her hand, so warm. Warmed by the promise of fresh blood. Fresh. It wasn't a crime. He was doing nothing wrong. It was everything right, actually. He cleared his throat, and nodded. "Yes. I would like a taste," he said and nodded toward the free booth. "And you should consider thinking of a price. Fresh blood isn't easy to come by these days. Good opinion of vampires is slipping. Finding willing donors is a rarity," he said. Or, so he assumed. He'd not honestly tried for a while.
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“It’s not as common as it used to be.” She admitted as she straightened up, letting go of his hand before she lifted her own to her neck. She brushed her hair aside, revealing it and readjusted the necklace she wore. It would sit lower against her skin, not in the way for him to feed. “Some of us quit after the secrecy went away. Others decided to fall quiet after the idiot brigade started trying to recruit.” She explained with a sigh, “Little old me, though? I don’t have time for that nonsense.” Ivette explained before she made her way to the booth. She slid in afterwards, choosing to slide in backwards so that he’d be able to see her proper curves. The hem of her skirt rose just enough to reveal more of her tanned skin before she settled. Her thighs bare as it sat higher than it had at the stool. “I’ll think of a price regarding the bite.” She smirked once he was closer, leaning into the cushions. Removing a hair tie from her wrist, she quickly tied the loose waves away so it wouldn’t be in the way.
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Cedric followed Ivette along the bar and slipped out the side just in time to follow her. He got a good view of her backside as well as her front. Just for blood, he repeated. Over and over in his mind, he summoned Castalia's body to mind, her face, her smile, her curves. It didn't work as well as it should. Now he was projecting. What would it be like to be able to do the things to her that he could do to someone else...? Did he really want to kill this girl? Could he? Yes. He could. She was a sheet of ice on a flat road and he hadn't seen her until he was on top of her, and now he was slipping, sliding, unable to stop. Something changed. A switch flipped and he was no longer just the nice looking bar owner. He was the hunter. The predator. And they would start in the booth but then they could move elsewhere, couldn't they? He slipped into the booth after Ivette and didn't even realise he'd done it until it was too late -- his fingers slipped over her exposed thigh, looming over her as his lips pressed to her neck. He was not awkward. He was not timid. He was not shy. He knew what he wanted, and he went for it.
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It was a nice club. She wasn’t lying or trying to get any further than she needed. Her friends had made the right call. Had either of them known that Cedric was a vampire? She doubted it. Even if one couldn’t throw a stone in the city without smacking one, it was only a coincidence. One that she didn’t mind, not with the sound of music playing. Of the excitement in her veins waiting for that hit, of her friends giggles towards the man dancing for them. The last time she’d been fed from had been a week before, she typically gave herself a few days to heal between. She knew it was supposed to be at least a week, but sometimes, such as this one, it was too tempting. As she felt his lips against her neck, Ivette let out a soft sigh. The anticipation that always followed that sensation as the coolness from his flesh tickled the area was something that got her. It was without fail every time, the want. The feel. It was always in that moment where she was hyper aware of the proximity of the other body against hers. Sometimes clothed, sometimes not. It never mattered to her, not in the end.
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There was no hesitation. Ivette didn't push Cedric away. She didn't ask him to stop, or to go slower. He still had Castalia in his mind; when he kissed Ivette's neck, he was kissing Castalia's. He'd never bitten Castalia, not with the intention to feed, however. No, that was her job. It was a mistake to remember that, too; it was a mistake to recall how it aroused him, to have her teeth in his flesh. His arm wrapped around Ivette's waist, his knee between her legs, forcing her skirt a little higher and his fingers along with it. They pressed into her flesh just as his teeth sunk into the tender skin of her neck; there was a pop as the sharp canines broke the vein, and a groan of absolute pleasure as hot, fresh blood spilled over his tongue. This was both right and wrong. This was securing blood in a consensual manner. No one was being harmed. No one was being slighted. But he could have taken from the wrist. He could have forced distance. Instead, he was already thinking about a private room and a bed and glorious, heavenly relief.
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She gave a noise of pleasure, her hands moving to his chest just as her mind began to fog over, as his teeth pierced her throat. Ivette felt her body beginning to grow heavy beneath the man, becoming pliable to his desires. She could feel a slight sting of pain that quickly faded to that euphoric rush. It was always similar to a buzz at first for her, where one could decide to keep going or quit drinking for the night. The fact she’d been an addict always made it hard to quit. She always wanted more, to feel more. The word slipped past her lips, her body reacting to his touch as she shivered and her eyes fell shut.
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It crossed Cedric's mind that he should have curtains installed around these booths. Would it look too stuffy? Or was it just so that he could satiate his desires? Stupid, of course, to do so after the fact; to think that he could take her, right here and right now in the middle of a busy club. There was a thrill in the thought. He could let her go, only to find her later. Away from the club. Maybe even the next night. Next week, when the effects of the sudden pregnancy were only mild, barely there. Put distance between this encounter and her death so that it could not be traced back to him. The woman sighed and swooned, and Cedric held her close so she would slip. His fingers inched higher until he found the lace of her underwear. No, this was wrong on more accounts than one. She was intoxicated by the venom in his bite. This was the high she sought. This was the drug that was better than ecstasy. Although she'd hinted that sex might be involved in these transactions, she'd not said, outright, that it was. He'd have to wait. He should have waited. He should have introduced foreplay. He should have bitten her afterwards. Now it was too late. Now, it would be a few hours before she was lucid enough for it to feel right. But that didn't stop him from holding her like he might hold a lover. It didn't stop him from imagining all the things he wanted to do to her. With her willing participation. For now, he took only her blood; he took no more advantage than that. It was sweet, and it was like eating a medium-rare steak at a five-star restaurant after only grilled cheese sandwiches for a whole ******* year.
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For all that could be said about her, Castalia was not an angry person at default. If anything, it was that she was one who enjoyed herself at leisure. She liked to read, to spend time with her partner, to dance and to sing. When she was human, she’d always been able to handle her emotions except for that one time of the month where she’d weep over cute commercials or when a boy would get the girl in a romance novel she’d found. As a vampire, well, her emotions were... conflicting. She felt things deeper than she liked. Love, lust, happiness were the ones she preferred. Sadness, depression, they were there but she could set them aside. The worst that she preferred to hide were anger and jealousy, even if they took a lot out of her. She used to be able to simply get angry and walk it off. Now, depending on how angry she was, she cried. It was all a hassle, and as she entered Apollo Damona after dealing with her lawyer, Thomas Owens, she only wanted one emotion to feel: Love. She went to the bar first, finding Ben and smiling at the man, greeting him in brief chitchat before asking. “Have you seen Cedric?” If he wasn’t at the piano, she knew she could likely find him in his office, but she knew one of them would know where to find him. But as she asked the question, she saw the slight flash of worry in his eyes. The man glanced over his shoulder, starting to say he was in a meeting before she followed his gaze. He didn’t have to tell her which booth he was in, she recognized the suit. The shoes. And she didn’t miss the bare legs sticking out, nor the pumps. She had half the mind to borrow a drink from one of the guests in the club. Instead, she moved over to the booth and folded her arms in front of her chest. It was the positioning of his hand that had her temper flaring, her voice coming out cold, “Should I just break her neck now? Or are you going to tell me about it later, darling?”
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Cedric was lost. It was a nightly struggle, to resist temptation, and every time he was tempted he was plagued by guilt. By the time he got home to Castalia it was like he'd run a marathon and won yet another battle in an ongoing war. Tonight was the night that he would lose; not that he had yet lost, but the odds weren't looking great. But with the hot, fresh blood sliding down his throat he wasn't thinking about what he was going to tell his other half. He wasn't thinking about whether he'd lie to her or whether he'd come clean. He wasn't thinking about anything but how he would dispose of this body later; he'd slipped into a previous mindset and the possibly consequences hadn't yet reared their ugly heads. He was lost in his imagination, and it wasn't a clean place in there. It was filled with naked women, naked men, a harem of sex and debauchery. When he heard Castalia's voice it was through a haze, but it was right beside him, beneath him, in his hold. He tried to understand what she was saying. Who was she talking about? Whose neck did she want to break? It took a good five seconds before Cedric came to his senses and opened his eyes; he couldn't see Castalia, but he could feel her behind him. Instantly, he let go of the human he held. He dropped his hand from her thigh as if it were a hot potato right out of the boiling water. The consequences had snuck up on him, and had sucker-punched him in the gut, leaving him breathless. He hated that he couldn't hide it. As a male, he couldn't hide what he had been thinking and nor did he even attempt to try. He just stood and hung his head, hoping the Ivette was at least coherent enough to pull herself up, to sit up. He at least tried his best to pull down the skirt of her dress before he turned to face his maker. What could he say? There was nothing to say. Everything felt like a lame excuse. "Don't," he finally managed. "It's not her fault. It's my neck you should break, not hers," he said.
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She needed to remember that it was his curse that was the culprit. Not the man himself, and not the girl in the booth. As she waited, Castalia wanted nothing more than to drag him off the girl. Even though she knew it was a possibility as they discussed, it didn’t mean it made it hurt even less. That it didn’t piss her off. Castalia had to remind herself that the taste of fresh blood was better than bagged. She couldn’t fault him, either. The girl was pretty, but instead of saying anything further for the time being, she clenched her jaw. It was an unconscious action when she bewitched her. The desire to make her fix herself was stronger than her awareness and as Cedric straightened up, she bared her fangs. At least he didn’t act like Nolan would have when she was angry, to grab at her. To try to console her. “Get up.” She growled at the young woman as she began to stir properly. Her desire to have her fix the dress helped, her hands moving to straighten out the green fabric. “And get away from him.” Ivette didn’t understand why she wanted to obey the angry woman that stood tense. She didn’t know why she suddenly felt the need to beg, but she kept her mouth shut as she put her hair back down. She smoothed out her dress and scooted to the far side of the booth, watching with wide eyes. “I haven’t ruled that out yet.” Her fingernails drummed against her bare arm. And as mad as she was, she hadn’t. Even if she was furious with him, she wouldn’t. She knew it. If anything, she’d just rip into his throat later. “******* hell, Cedric. In public. In the damn business that I didn’t like in the first place once I found out what it was.” Her attention, however, went from the man whom she loved to the girl. “And in public?” She then scowled. “I should probably...” Ivette started before Castalia cut her off with a dark glare.