"Discarded: Claimed by the Apocalypse’s Mad Tyrant" Chapter 2

Chapter 2: White Sanctum, Bloody Hands

The first thing Serafina perceived was the absence of the apocalypse.

There was no biting, sulfurous wind. There was no smell of damp rot, of wet fur and decaying matter, or the metallic tang of dried blood that had been her constant companion for five years.

Instead, she inhaled something crisp, clinical, and terrifyingly expensive: ozone, sterilized air, and the faint, sweet trace of lilies that had no business existing in a world buried under six feet of radioactive snow.

Her eyes snapped open.

She wasn't on the frozen dirt. She was lying on a bed—a real bed—with sheets that felt like spun water against her skin. The room was a sanctuary of white. White walls, white floor, white light. It felt less like a bedroom and more like a cathedral dedicated to the god of hygiene.

Serafina’s body protested with a wave of white-hot agony. She sat up, hissing through her teeth as she caught sight of her own hands. They had been scrubbed raw. The callouses from her blade were still there, but the layers of grime, the permanent tint of grease and blood under her nails, were gone.

"You’re awake."

The voice was cool, precise, and devoid of warmth. Serafina twisted her neck, her muscles screaming in protest, to find him standing by a sleek, wall-mounted console.

Dante.

He wasn't wearing the heavy coat anymore. He stood in a high-collared, form-fitting tunic of some synthetic, light-absorbing fabric that made his skin look like carved marble.

He held a tray. His movements were fluid, almost reptilian in their precision. He didn't look at her immediately; he walked to the bedside table and set the tray down with a soundless grace.

"Where am I?" Serafina’s voice was a rusted hinge, dry and brittle.

"The Bastion," he replied, finally turning his gaze to her. Those eyes—that terrifying, molten gold—swept over her with the intensity of a laser.

"My private quarters. You are currently in the purification chamber."

"Purification," she spat, the word feeling like a curse. She tried to swing her legs off the bed, but the moment her feet touched the floor, her vision blurred.

Dante didn't move to help her, but he shifted his weight, his eyes darkening. "Don't. Your electrolytes are stabilized, but your muscular atrophy is extensive. You are a biological wreck, Serafina."

She froze at the sound of her name. It sounded like a threat coming from his lips.

"Why?" she demanded, grabbing the edge of the sheet.

"Why save me? If you wanted a pet, there are plenty of stray dogs in the Dead Zone."

Dante crossed the room in three strides. He stopped inches from her, so close she could feel the unnatural chill radiating from his skin. It wasn't the cold of the snow; it was the cold of a deep-sea trench, a bottomless, crushing pressure.

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He reached out, his hand hovering over her cheek, though he didn't quite make contact. He seemed to be fighting an internal war between the urge to touch her and a revulsion toward the ‘filth’ of her skin.

"Dogs are scavengers," he whispered, his thumb tracing the line of her jaw without actually touching her. "They survive by consuming the rot. You... you survived by resisting it. I have spent my entire existence surrounded by the decomposing remnants of humanity, Serafina. I have spent my life watching things decay. You are the first thing I have found in a decade that isn't actively falling apart."

"I’m human," she said, her voice trembling despite her best efforts.

"I rot just like everyone else."

"Not while I am here," he retorted sharply. His composure cracked, just for a fraction of a second, revealing a frantic, jagged hunger beneath the surface.

He grabbed a small, heated cloth from the tray. With a sudden, forceful movement, he pressed it against the side of her neck, scrubbing at a smudge of dirt she hadn't realized was still there.

It was aggressive, bordering on painful. Serafina grabbed his wrist, intending to throw him off, but his arm didn't budge. It felt like trying to shove a steel pillar.

"You are a canvas," he muttered, his focus entirely on the skin of her neck, rubbing it until it turned pink.

"The world has smeared you with its filth, its misery, its failures. You have been discarded by the very people you fought to protect. Do you understand how offensive that is? To treat something of your caliber like garbage?"

He stopped, breathing heavily. He looked at her then, really looked at her, and the intensity of it was suffocating. He seemed to be drinking in the sight of her, his pupils dilating until the gold of his irises was little more than a thin ring.

"In the Bastion," he continued, his voice dropping to a dangerous, intimate register, "nothing remains un-sanitized. You will be scrubbed of every remnant of the Varg Coalition. You will be scrubbed of every memory of the Dead Zone. I am going to peel away the layers of this world until I find the person you were before they broke you."

"And if I don't want to be found?" Serafina challenged, her heart hammering against her ribs.

Dante finally let go of her neck. He stood up, his face returning to that mask of glacial perfection. He picked up the tray, his gaze lingering on the hollow of her throat where his thumb had been.

"Want has nothing to do with it," he said softly.

He walked to the door, his steps silent. He paused, his hand hovering over the control panel on the wall.

"You will eat. You will rest. And tomorrow, we begin the process of making you worthy of your survival."

"Wait!" she shouted as the door began to slide shut.

"I’m not your project!"

"You are," he said, his final words slipping through the closing gap. "And I am a perfectionist."

The door slammed shut with a heavy, magnetic thud. Serafina lunged for it, throwing her weight against the smooth, seamless metal. She felt for a latch, a button, anything, but the wall was as featureless as a tomb. She shoved against the surface, her breath hitching, but it was locked.

She turned back to the room. The white light was too bright, too clinical. It began to pulse in time with her frantic heartbeat. She looked down at her hands—they were clean, pale, and trembling.

She was safe from the infected. She was safe from the blizzard. But as she leaned her forehead against the locked door, listening to the hollow silence of the Bastion, Serafina realized she had only traded a cage of iron and ice for a cage of glass and obsession.

Somewhere outside the door, the soft click-clack of rhythmic boots sounded against the pristine floor.

"Kael," Dante’s voice echoed, muffled but distinct. "Ensure the sensor array on Sector 4 is calibrated. She is not to be disturbed by anyone but me. If a single speck of dust enters that room, you will be held accountable."

Serafina stood in the center of the white room, her skin tingling where he had scrubbed it.

She was being polished, she was being framed, and she was being watched.

The door was locked. She was in his sanctuary.

And for the first time, Serafina Reed didn't know if she was being saved or slowly, methodically, erased.

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