Chapter 300: The Fragments United
The vampire realm
The portal closed behind them.
Lucifer stepped into the throne room of the Vampire Realm with the crystal in one hand and the vial around his neck. The golden shards pulsed in rhythm, two pieces of the same soul reaching for each other across the space between his palms.
Damaris limped beside him, his wounds freshly bandaged, his golden eyes fixed on the fragments. Dera had stayed behind in New Earth. She needed time to recover from the possession, to rebuild her connection to the Authority without Adam’s ghost lurking in its corners.
The throne room was empty when they arrived.
Lucifer preferred it that way.
He walked to the center of the hall and placed the crystal on the floor. Then he opened the vial and tipped out the first fragment. It floated above the crystal, golden and eager, drawn to its missing half.
"The Crimson Grimoire," he said.
The shadows in the corner answered.
The book rose from its pedestal—old leather, black pages, a spine that seemed to breathe. It floated across the room and settled in Lucifer’s outstretched hand.
Damaris stepped closer.
"The ritual requires ancient knowledge. Progenitor knowledge."
Lucifer opened the grimoire. Pages turned on their own, stopping at a section he’d never seen before. The text was old—older than the vampire realm, older than the Progenitors themselves.
"The First Bloodline," Lucifer read aloud. "They who walked before the naming of things. They who understood that death is not an end, but a door."
Damaris nodded.
"The Collector kept Francisca’s soul in stasis. The fragments are stable. But reuniting them requires more than just putting the pieces together. It requires a sacrifice."
Lucifer looked up from the book.
"What kind of sacrifice?"
Damaris’s golden eyes held his.
"Something of equal value. The soul doesn’t give up its dead for free. You have to offer something it wants in return."
Lucifer’s jaw tightened.
"I’ll give anything."
"You say that now."
"I’ve said it for a century."
Damaris was quiet for a moment.
"The ritual doesn’t want blood. It doesn’t want power. It wants meaning. The weight of a memory. The shape of a loss."
Lucifer’s hand went to the vial around his neck—empty now, the first fragment already floating beside its counterpart.
"What memory?"
Damaris’s voice was soft.
"Your memory of her."
The words hung in the air.
Lucifer stared at his father.
"I’d forget her."
"Yes."
"Everything? Her face. Her voice. The way she—"
"Everything."
Lucifer’s shadows stirred around his feet. The fragments pulsed, oblivious to the conversation happening above them.
"I spent a century searching for her."
"I know."
"I rebuilt an empire. I killed Adam. I walked through the Threshold and the Shattered Coast and the Collector’s lair."
Damaris didn’t interrupt.
"And now you’re telling me I won’t remember any of it."
"I’m telling you that’s the price."
Lucifer looked at the fragments. Golden. Faint. Waiting.
"Send for Mob."
Damaris blinked.
"Mob?"
"He’s half-angel. His father is Michael. If anyone can help stabilize the ritual, it’s him."
Damaris nodded slowly.
"I’ll send word."
He turned and walked toward the doors.
Lucifer stood alone in the throne room, the Crimson Grimoire in one hand, the fragments floating before him.
He would forget her.
Every moment. Every smile. Every argument. Every quiet evening when she’d sat beside him and made him feel like something other than a monster.
The price was high.
But the alternative was worse.
---
Days later
The throne room filled slowly.
Ella arrived first, her boots echoing off the black stone. She didn’t speak. She just stood near the wall, arms crossed, watching.
Luna came next, her notepad tucked under her arm, her eyes red from crying. She didn’t apologize for the tears. No one asked her to.
Vina and Rey entered together, their shoulders touching. They took positions near the doors, guarding without being asked.
Dracula appeared from the shadows, his ancient face unreadable. Zane followed a moment later, his usual smirk absent.
Damaris returned with Mob at his side.
The half-angel had changed in the century since Lucifer had seen him last. His wings were fuller. His eyes were sharper. But his presence was the same—steady, calm, unmovable.
"You called," Mob said.
Lucifer nodded.
"I need you."
Mob looked at the fragments, then at Lucifer’s face.
"The ritual."
"Yes."
Mob stepped closer.
"My father told me about these. The First Bloodline rituals. They’re dangerous."
"I know."
"They require sacrifice."
"I know."
Mob studied him for a long moment.
"You’re going to forget her."
Lucifer’s voice was steady.
"Yes."
Mob didn’t argue. He just nodded.
"Then let’s begin."
---
Moments later
The fragments floated above the black stone floor, side by side, their golden light casting soft shadows on the walls.
Lucifer knelt before them.
The Crimson Grimoire lay open at his side, its pages glowing with ancient text. Damaris stood behind him, his hands raised, golden light gathering between his palms. Mob stood opposite, his wings spread, his eyes closed in concentration.
The others watched from the edges of the room.
Lucifer raised his hands.
The fragments responded.
They drifted closer to each other, drawn by a force older than gravity. The air between them shimmered. The temperature dropped.
"The sacrifice," Damaris said.
Lucifer closed his eyes.
He thought of Francisca.
Her laugh. The way she tilted her head when she was about to say something sharp. The way she looked at him like he was worth saving.
He held each memory in his mind, turning it over like a stone worn smooth by water.
Then he let go.
The fragments touched.
Light exploded outward—golden and warm and alive.
Lucifer felt something tear loose from his chest. Not his heart. Something deeper. Something that had her name written on it in letters he’d never be able to read again.
He gasped.
The light faded.
The fragments were gone.
In their place, a single golden shard floated—whole, complete, waiting.
And Lucifer couldn’t remember why it mattered.
A/N
It’s been a pleasure writing this so far.
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