The Vampire King's Pet-Chapter 311: A Promise
Vampires reacted instantly—some leaping back, others snarling in reflex—but the fire didn’t behave like ordinary flame.
It didn’t flicker.
It didn’t spread.
It hunted.
The green inferno tore through defenses as if they weren’t there at all, forcing vampires to scatter in blind desperation.
Panic erupted where moments before there had only been controlled fear. Cries rang out, sharp and unrestrained, echoing off stone and blood-soaked earth alike.
And then the fire reached Zyren.
Green flames wrapped around him, licking at his body, crawling up his legs, and coiling around his torso, swallowing him whole for a single suspended heartbeat.
Clearly, it was not fire of the usual kind.
Time seemed to stutter.
Then Zyren raised his hands.
The motion was slow.
Calm.
Almost bored.
As if this was beneath his attention.
The shadows responded.
They didn’t rush forward. They didn’t explode outward in some violent display. Instead, they moved—rolling across the ground and up the walls like a living tide, thick and heavy, alive with intent. Darkness pooled and rose, stretching upward to meet the fire head-on.
Where shadow touched flame, the green light dimmed.
Then vanished.
Not smoke.
Not embers.
Gone.
In seconds, the fire was erased.
Not suppressed.
Not redirected. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
Extinguished.
The shadows folded back into themselves, retreating as if nothing extraordinary had occurred at all. They sank into cracks in the stone, melted into corners, dissolved into the night itself.
Zyren stood exactly where he had been.
Untouched.
Unburned.
Unchanged.
Silence slammed down harder than before.
It was oppressive, crushing, as if the world itself was holding its breath.
The hunters froze mid-motion, disbelief rippling through their ranks like a physical wave. Some lowered their weapons without realizing they were doing it. Others stared down at their hands as if the magic they had wielded had betrayed them—turned against them.
The werewolves stopped screaming.
King Jared’s arms slowly fell to his sides.
The pride drained from his face, replaced by something far worse.
Understanding.
He stared at Zyren, his mouth parting slightly, breath catching as the truth settled fully and finally into his bones.
This wasn’t a fight.
It never had been.
His ancestor had faced Zyren’s bloodline as an equal. There had been balance then—struggle, resistance, loss on both sides. Blood had been spilled in both directions. Victory had never been guaranteed.
But this—
This was different.
Zyren wasn’t pushing himself.
He wasn’t desperate.
He wasn’t fighting to survive.
King Jared felt it then, deep and unavoidable, curling in his gut like a lead weight.
I’ve already lost.
Not because his plan had failed—but because it had never mattered.
His shoulders sagged slightly as defeat wrapped around him, heavy and absolute. Still, his gaze remained locked onto Zyren, as if looking away would make it even more real.
Zyren watched him as he stepped closer, one measured step at a time, boots crunching softly against the ground. He stopped directly in front of the king, close enough that Jared could feel the unnatural heat rolling off him.
"How would you like to die?" Zyren asked.
The words were calm. Almost conversational.
Every werewolf present bristled in instant fury. Hundreds of them tensed at once, claws itching, fangs bared, growls rumbling low in their chests—even though none of them could bring themselves to speak.
Jared was still their alpha.
Zyren was still in their realm.
Yet he stood there like a king passing judgment.
It infuriated them.
And terrified them.
No one dared to speak—not even Clara.
Her plan to kill Aira had gone catastrophically wrong, and now she wasn’t even sure Jared—her alpha—would survive this encounter. Zyren stood before him with a look that made it painfully clear he was still searching for reasons to kill.
"If you kill me," Jared said, forcing his spine straight, forcing his voice not to shake, "then you’ll have to go fight the Zygons alone!"
He lifted his chin, bravery painted onto his expression even as he hated how violently his heart thumped in his chest.
Zyren could attack.
Jared would try to defend.
And he would fail.
He could see it with horrifying clarity, as vivid as if it had already happened.
"...You’re funny," Zyren replied.
Silence settled thickly around them as he raised his hands—
And reached out.
The sound was wet.
Sharp.
Final.
Zyren tore Jared’s arm from his body as if he were ripping paper apart.
Blood sprayed.
Bone cracked.
The limb separated cleanly, hitting the ground with a heavy thud.
Jared didn’t even groan.
His teeth clenched so hard they threatened to shatter as he absorbed the pain, his body trembling but unyielding.
Zyren smiled.
He wiped the splashes of blood from his face with casual disdain, then tossed the severed arm aside, gesturing lazily for someone—anyone—to burn it.
It’s just an arm, Jared told himself, breathing hard. Given time, I can grow another.
The thought barely finished forming when Zyren reached into his coat and withdrew a small glass bottle filled with a thick black substance.
No one recognized it.
The liquid seemed to swallow the light around it, viscous and wrong.
Zyren’s smile widened.
"...Unlike you, Jared," he said softly, "if I wanted to kill you, I know just what to use."
Then he poured the black liquid directly into the bloody, mangled shoulder socket—right where flesh was already beginning to knit itself back together.
Jared screamed.
The sound ripped from him raw and uncontrollable as he collapsed to the ground, claws digging into the dirt. Pain unlike anything he had ever felt tore through his nerves, burning and freezing all at once.
Zyren sealed the bottle and slipped it back into his coat as if nothing noteworthy had happened.
He turned his head, scanning the crowd—until his gaze locked onto Aira.
He gestured for her to come closer.
Aira didn’t hesitate.
Fear refused to take root in her chest, even after watching him kill without mercy. Somehow, she knew—felt—that he wouldn’t kill her.
Maybe it was the way the red intensity of his gaze softened whenever it landed on her.
"Heal him," Zyren commanded.
Aira froze, shock rippling through her.
Heal him?
This was the man she had fully expected Zyren to kill.
Nowhere in her thoughts had she imagined Jared would be allowed to live.
Nothing can kill him, she thought wildly. He might as well take over the world.
Still, she dropped to her knees and began channeling her power into Jared, golden light spilling from her hands—
Only for it to stop.
The black substance resisted her magic, swallowing it whole.
Her power slid off uselessly.
It was horrifying.
She wasn’t the only one stunned.
Clara rushed to Jared’s side, panic breaking through her composure, while Jared stared at his ruined shoulder in disbelief.
Without hesitation, he pulled out his blade.
And cut away more of his own flesh.
He bit down on his pain as blood poured freely, teeth cracking under the strain. He gestured sharply for Aira to try again, trusting his regeneration now that the corrupted flesh was gone.
Nothing happened.
The wound continued to bleed.
Aira tried harder, pouring everything she had into the healing—
And the pain only worsened.
She stumbled back, breath shaking.
It’s the same, she realized suddenly. Just like Liora.
Like a ritual... something that affects the blood itself.
She looked up slowly.
Zyren was watching her.
Proud.
Satisfied.
"That arm will never heal," he announced loudly.
The words echoed.
Aira stared at him—but her thoughts were racing in an entirely different direction.
He’s not unkillable.
Whatever Zyren just used... it can kill him.
She wasn’t sure if Zyren himself had realized it—
Until he met her gaze.
A sly smile curved his lips, and her heart slammed against her ribs.
He knew.
He had always known.
It was a warning.
If you think you can kill me, his eyes seemed to say, you’re welcome to try.
But there was something else there too.
Something cold.
Ruthless.
Aira knew with terrifying certainty that Zyren wasn’t a man who offered second chances.
If they tried again and failed—
He would kill them all.
Her heart pounded harder as doubt crept in for the first time.
Would he kill me too?
"...Not you," Zyren whispered suddenly, right against her ear.
She gasped as he stepped closer.
"...Never you."
Her breath caught.
She wasn’t sure which frightened her more—the fact that he could somehow hear her thoughts, or the fact that she understood his intentions without him ever needing to explain them.
The bond between them wasn’t for show.
It was real.
And it was dangerous.
"I’ll kill you," she whispered.
Even she wasn’t sure she believed it.
Zyren nodded slowly, lowering his head until his breath was hot against her face.
"...You’re welcome to try."
Then he kissed her.
Right there.
Right then.
His red eyes stared into hers as his lips pressed against hers—not tender, not gentle—but certain drawing her body closer to his right there in front of everyone.
A promise.
Not a kiss.
A vow.







