The Contractual Fiancée
Chapter Six
The Blood That Opened the Door
Dr. Graves stepped through the Living Veil as though he had been invited.
That was the first thing Olivia noticed.
Not his pale eyes.
Not the gold sunburst artifact gripped in his gloved hand.
Not even Rowan’s family ring resting in his palm like a stolen confession.
No.
It was the way the veil accepted him.
The shimmering curtain between worlds did not burn him. It did not resist him. It did not recoil from his presence. It parted for him with a soft, silver sigh, folding around the shoulders of his long black coat like a loyal servant welcoming its master home.
That terrified Olivia more than the blast of golden light that had nearly taken her head off.
Rowan stood in front of her, one arm thrown back to keep her behind him, his body tense and ready. He looked like every rescue story she had ever read—steady under pressure, controlled under threat, brave in the most infuriating way possible.
But Olivia had seen his eyes when Graves lifted the ring.
Shock.
Recognition.
Guilt.
Not enough to convict him.
Enough to wound her.
“Ask him,” Dr. Graves said again, his voice soft as velvet laid over broken glass. “Ask your fiancé why his blood opened the Archive for me.”
The word fiancé twisted in the cold mountain air.
Fake.
Contractual.
Temporary.
A legal costume stitched together by a dead man’s will and a Trust that had told them only enough truth to trap them.
Olivia stepped out from behind Rowan.
Rowan’s arm tightened. “Stay behind me.”
She looked at him, and for the first time since they had met, her voice did not shake with anger.
It shook with hurt.
“Why does he have your ring?”
Rowan did not answer quickly enough.
That was answer enough to make something inside Olivia crack.
Graves smiled.
The forest had gone unnaturally still around them. The pines did not sway. The birds did not call. Even Lake Tahoe below seemed to have fallen silent, its blue surface hidden beyond the ridge but somehow present, listening.
The journal hovered beside Olivia, pages open, ink still wet across the prophecy.
ONE GUARDIAN WILL BETRAY THE OTHER.
The words seemed larger now.
Darker.
Hungry.
Rowan’s jaw flexed. “That ring belonged to my grandfather.”
Graves lifted it between two fingers. “How sentimental.”
Rowan’s gaze never left the ring. “Where did you get it?”
“Oh, Rowan.” Graves sighed as if disappointed in a slow student. “Still asking the wrong questions. The better question is not where I found it. The better question is why it worked.”
Olivia’s heart pounded so hard she felt it in her throat.
“Worked how?” she asked.
Graves turned his pale attention to her, and Olivia instantly regretted speaking. There was intelligence in his face, yes—but worse than that, there was fascination. He looked at her the way a collector might look at a rare object he had no intention of leaving in one piece.
“The Archive is not a library, Miss Jackson,” he said. “Not merely. It is a locked memory. A living record. A chamber of preserved truths hidden beneath centuries of lies, conquest, greed, and convenient history.”
Olivia swallowed. “I know what the Archive is.”
“No,” he said gently. “You know what the Trust wanted you to know.”
Rowan shifted slightly, ready to move.
Graves noticed.
The artifact in his hand pulsed once with gold light.
Rowan stopped.
A thin smile crossed Graves’s mouth. “Good. You remember pain.”
Olivia looked at Rowan sharply. “What does that mean?”
Rowan’s eyes remained on Graves. “It means he’s trying to distract us.”
“No,” Graves said. “I am trying to educate her. Something you and your secretive family apparently failed to do.”
“My family has nothing to do with this.”
Graves laughed softly. “Every lie sounds smaller when spoken by a DeVille.”
The air tightened.
Olivia felt the old journal tremble beside her.
The pages began to flutter.
Rowan lowered his voice. “Olivia, listen carefully. When I say run, you run downhill. Do not look back.”
She stared at the back of his head. “You must be confusing me with a woman who takes orders.”
“This is not the time.”
“This is exactly the time.”
Graves tilted his head, amused. “She has spirit. The Jackson line always did.”
Olivia’s eyes narrowed. “What do you know about my family?”
“More than they told you.”
“You do not know me.”
“No,” Graves said. “But I know what you carry.”
The journal snapped shut in midair.
Then slowly, it turned toward Graves like a living thing looking at an enemy.
For the first time, his expression changed.
Only slightly.
A flicker of hunger.
“There it is,” he whispered. “The Restorer’s Codex.”
Olivia looked at the journal. “That is not what it’s called.”
“It has had many names.” Graves stepped closer. “The Califia Ledger. The Memory Book. The Witness Text. The Restorer’s Codex. Your ancestors were entrusted with it because they had a gift for preserving what others tried to erase.”
Olivia’s chest tightened.
Her whole life, she had loved old paper.
Old letters.
Old journals.
Old stories that smelled faintly of dust and lavender, cedar boxes and forgotten rooms. She had believed restoration was patience, skill, reverence. She had believed she was drawn to fragile pages because someone had to care enough to save them.
Now Graves was speaking as if that love had been placed inside her long before she was born.
“The Jackson line restores,” he said. “The DeVille line opens.”
Olivia turned slowly to Rowan.
He closed his eyes for one brief second.
There it was again.
Guilt.
“Rowan,” she whispered.
He looked at her then, and beneath the danger, beneath the training, beneath the heroic composure she had been trying so hard not to admire, she saw something raw.
“I didn’t know,” he said.
Graves chuckled. “Not entirely.”
Rowan’s voice hardened. “Shut up.”
“Oh, but she deserves the truth, does she not? Isn’t that what guardians are supposed to protect?”
Olivia looked from Rowan to Graves. “What does the DeVille line open?”
Graves lifted the ring.
The black stone set into it caught the light and flashed—not black at all, Olivia realized, but deep blue, like Tahoe at midnight.
“Doors,” Graves said. “Veils. Vaults. Blood-sealed chambers. Places built by people wise enough to know that truth must be protected from those who would turn it into power.”
The Living Veil behind him rippled.
For a moment, Olivia saw the chamber again—shelves of journals, blue candles, gold artifacts, stone walls carved with symbols. Then the image shifted. She saw water. A vast underground pool reflecting a ceiling of stars.
And in that reflection—
A woman’s crown.
Queen Califia.
Olivia sucked in a breath.
Graves saw her reaction and smiled.
“Yes,” he said. “She is closer than they told you.”
Rowan moved fast.
One second he was still.
The next he was lunging at Graves.
Olivia barely saw him cross the distance. Rowan drove his shoulder into Graves and slammed him backward toward the veil. The artifact flashed. Gold light burst between them. Rowan grunted, but did not let go.
“Olivia!” he shouted. “The journal!”
She did not know what he meant.
Then the journal opened violently, pages spinning until symbols lifted off the paper like sparks.
A circle of script appeared in the air.
Not English.
Not Spanish.
Not any language Olivia recognized.
Yet somehow she understood one word.
Seal.
The Living Veil shuddered.
Graves twisted under Rowan’s grip and struck him with the sunburst artifact. A crack of light exploded against Rowan’s chest. He flew backward and hit the ground hard.
“Rowan!”
Olivia ran to him.
He was already trying to rise, one hand pressed to his ribs, face tight with pain.
“I said the journal,” he ground out.
“I don’t know how!”
“Yes, you do.”
“No, I absolutely do not!”
The journal hovered in front of Olivia, pages glowing now, words forming and reforming too quickly to read.
The veil widened behind Graves.
Cold air poured through it.
Not mountain cold.
Ancient cold.
The kind that belonged under stone, under water, under time.
Graves brushed dirt from his sleeve as if Rowan had merely inconvenienced him. “The Trust made the same mistake everyone makes with love stories.”
Olivia’s hands curled into fists. “This is not a love story.”
“No?” Graves looked between her and Rowan. “Then why did the veil wake when you touched the same page?”
Olivia went still.
Rowan’s face changed.
Graves smiled wider.
“There it is. The part they did not tell you. The Archive does not open for contracts. It opens for recognition. For bloodlines aligned. For two unwilling hearts standing at the edge of truth and lying to everyone but the magic.”
Olivia felt heat rise to her face despite the cold.
“That is ridiculous,” she said.
“Is it?” Graves asked. “Then deny it.”
She opened her mouth.
Nothing came out.
Rowan looked at her.
For one dangerous second, the world narrowed.
The forest vanished.
Graves vanished.
The artifact, the prophecy, the Trust, the fake engagement, all of it blurred into the space between them.
Olivia remembered Rowan catching her when the vision shattered.
His hand over hers on the trail.
His body covering hers when the tree exploded.
The way he had said still fake.
Then mostly.
Her heart betrayed her with one hard, reckless beat.
The journal flared pink-gold.
Graves’s smile vanished.
“Interesting,” he murmured.
The ground beneath them trembled.
Deep below the mountain, something answered.
A sound rolled upward through stone and root.
Not thunder.
A door.
Opening.
Rowan struggled to his feet. “Olivia, whatever you’re doing, stop.”
“I’m not doing anything!”
The journal spun toward the ridge.
A beam of light shot from its pages into the Living Veil.
The veil sealed halfway, then strained open again as Graves lifted the sunburst artifact. His face tightened with effort.
“Enough,” he snapped.
The artifact blazed.
Gold light wrapped around the journal and yanked it toward him.
Olivia felt it like a hook in her chest.
“No!”
She grabbed the journal with both hands.
Pain shot through her palms.
The pages burned cold.
Graves pulled harder.
The journal stretched between them in midair, caught in an invisible battle. Olivia dug her boots into the ground. Rowan staggered toward her, wrapped one arm around her waist, and grabbed the book with his free hand.
The moment his hand touched hers, everything exploded into light.
Olivia was no longer on the ridge.
She was standing in water up to her ankles.
Lake Tahoe spread around her beneath a night sky full of impossible stars.
Rowan stood beside her, breathing hard, his fingers still locked around hers.
Before them, the lake reflected a woman neither of them could see standing above it.
Queen Califia’s voice filled the darkness.
One restores. One opens. Neither commands. Both must choose.
Olivia looked down.
In the lake’s reflection, she saw herself wearing a crown of ink-black flowers.
Beside her reflection stood Rowan, a ring of blue fire burning around his hand.
Then the water darkened.
Another reflection appeared behind them.
Dr. Graves.
Only he was not alone.
Behind him stood someone in a hooded cloak bearing the Trust’s silver insignia.
Olivia’s breath stopped.
The queen’s voice lowered.
Beware the hand that sends you. Beware the blood that answers. Beware the kiss that wakes the second door.
The vision shattered.
Olivia slammed back into her body with a gasp.
She and Rowan were on the ground.
The journal lay between them, smoking faintly but intact.
The Living Veil was gone.
Dr. Graves was gone.
So was the ring.
For a moment, neither of them moved.
Only the forest remained—silent, scarred, and suddenly full of ordinary sunlight.
Olivia pushed herself up on shaking arms.
Her palms were marked.
Not burned.
Marked.
A faint gold symbol curved across each hand like delicate ink beneath the skin.
She turned them over, horrified.
Rowan saw and went still.
“What?” she demanded. “What is it?”
He did not answer.
She grabbed his wrist and turned his hand over.
The same mark glowed on his palm.
Matching.
Binding.
Olivia jerked away. “No.”
Rowan’s face was pale. “Olivia—”
“No. Do not say my name like that.”
“We need to get back to the cabin.”
“We need answers.”
“We need both.”
The journal opened on the ground.
A new page appeared.
Not old paper.
New.
White.
Waiting.
Then words wrote themselves in a dark, elegant hand.
THE SECOND DOOR HAS HEARD YOU.
IT WILL OPEN ONLY WHEN THE FALSE ENGAGEMENT BECOMES A TRUE VOW.
Olivia stared at the sentence.
Then she laughed once, sharply, because the alternative was screaming.
“No,” she said. “Absolutely not. I refuse. I reject. I unsubscribe.”
Rowan looked as if the ground had shifted beneath him. “The Archive thinks we have to make the engagement real.”
“The Archive can think again.”
The page darkened.
More words appeared.
BY MOONRISE, ONE OF YOU MUST SPEAK THE VOW.
BY MIDNIGHT, ONE OF YOU WILL BLEED FOR THE LIE.
A cold wind swept through the trees.
Far below, from the direction of the cabin, a bell began to ring.
Olivia turned sharply.
“There is no bell at the cabin,” she said.
Rowan was already moving.
They ran.
Down the trail, past granite and pine, past the shattered tree, past the place where the veil had opened. Olivia’s lungs burned. The journal thudded against her side in the bag. The marks on her palms pulsed with every step.
The bell kept ringing.
Slow.
Deep.
Impossible.
When they reached the clearing above the cabin, Olivia stopped so suddenly Rowan nearly collided with her.
The cabin door stood wide open.
Black smoke curled from inside.
And nailed to the front porch was a strip of parchment marked with the Trust’s silver seal.
Rowan moved toward it first.
Olivia followed, heart hammering.
He pulled the parchment free.
His face hardened as he read.
“What does it say?” Olivia asked.
Rowan handed it to her.
The message was written in fresh red ink.
THE TRUST HAS WITHDRAWN ITS PROTECTION.
OLIVIA JACKSON IS TO BE DELIVERED TO DR. GRAVES BEFORE MIDNIGHT.
ROWAN DEVILLE HAS ALREADY AGREED.
Olivia looked up slowly.
Rowan stood frozen on the porch, smoke curling around him, the mark on his palm glowing like an accusation.
Behind them, inside the cabin, someone whispered from the dark:
“Run, Olivia. He sold you before you ever met him.”
End of Chapter Six
Cliff-hanger: The Trust’s sealed message claims Rowan agreed to surrender Olivia to Dr. Graves before midnight—and a hidden voice inside the cabin warns her that Rowan sold her before they ever met.
Next Chapter:
Chapter Seven: The Bride Mark

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