![]() ![]() Questions soon arise, such as what happens to Bloodmaids when their tenure is ended? Do the nobles only hunger for blood, or is there more they wish to take from their servants? ![]() Cecile, the most favored of the Countess, feels threatened by a potential usurper and it soon becomes clear that camaraderie is in short supply within the House. ![]() The Countess is a mysterious woman, presiding over hedonistic revelry, and Marion is soon lost in rivalry amidst the Bloodmaids. Marion arrives at the House of Hunger, the most powerful of Prane’s aristocracy, and is received by its mistress, Lisavet Bathory. In this gothic metropolis, it is not simply enough the wealthy live off the money and labor of the poor. Bloodmaids are a privileged position in Prane the most pampered of servants who need only bleed for their masters to enjoy. Salvation arrives in the form of an advertisement for a Bloodmaid to the House of Hunger. Marion Shaw has been raised in the slums of Prane, a victim of poverty with few prospects, kept under the thumb of her tyrant brother Raul. ![]()
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