Lessons from the 90s that children today need
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YOU ARE THE REASON
AnasAbdin
Peter Solarz

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hello vonnie

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if i look back, i am lost

JBB: An Artblog!
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sade Olutola
art blog(derogatory)

#extradirty

shark vs the universe
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com
Cosimo Galluzzi

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@amiteah
Lessons from the 90s that children today need
dino 💫 spell
a man who’s almost twice your size dropping himself on top of you in bed for cuddles like he’s the size of a kitten (he’s very heavy)
choi seungcheol ladies and gentlemen 😮💨
Seaside Sabbatical (M)
Summary: After an accountant in your firm is sent to prison, you are assigned to clean up the mess he left behind. Sorting out your clients’ disastrous business records proves beneficial when you meet the fisherman who teaches you the value of taking a break.
Pairing: Jin x Reader
Genre: Fluff, smut
Word Count: 11,152
Warnings: Fisherman!Jin, Accountant!Reader, sexual themes, oral sex, profanity, discussion of taxes, terrible fishing jokes, unnaturally high levels of wish-fulfillment
Series: Working Man Bangtan
A/N: This has enough wholesome fluff to give me a cavity, but it just felt right. Pardon the cheesiness, as there was no way to avoid it in this type of fic. Hope you enjoy!
Excerpt:
“So, you’re telling me all your business paperwork is on your boat?”
“Sure is, right in that crate over there.” He pointed his finger toward an open plastic crate in the corner of the room. It was large, dark gray with wear, and looked better suited to store fresh fish than business records. The side of the crate donned an old label that read, “Jerry’s Stuff,” and was filled to the brim with loose receipts and papers. Much to your alarm, it lacked any semblance of organization whatsoever; there was no way Jerry could have filed clean tax returns with that travesty of a storage container. It was, quite simply, an accountant’s worst nightmare.
Read now on AO3
Copyright © 2017-2019 by dark-muse-iris. All rights reserved.
[40] weeks until wonwoo is back ↳ lalali mv outfit #2
SWIM (Performance Video) | hyung line
[cr. soowoozoooo]
next frequency
BTS + SWIM (Performance Video)
vernon for allure korea (clean ver.)
I literally love all of you, but as a Tumblr veteran, Tumblr's main feature is the reblog feature. It is the beating heart of the dashboard and the foundation for a chronological timeline. The For You page here should not be your default setting.
You guys have got to start reblogging stuff you enjoy, especially, specifically gifs and fan art but also fics and fan theories or even hot takes if you're not afraid of a lil discourse. I'm tired of being the first or third reblog for a person's post and then seeing my blog's followers do nothing but hit like, while blogs sit there with no new posts in months or years!
Reblog more stuff please. Thank you, have a good day.
You're not even going to reblog this post are you
𝔟𝔦𝔱𝔢 ☾ 𝔣𝔬𝔲𝔯𝔱𝔢𝔢𝔫
PAIRING: Werewolf! f. Reader x Werewolf!Seungcheol x Werewolf!Jeonghan x Werewolf!Soonyoung x Werewolf!Seokmin x Werewolf!Vernon x Werewolf!Chan SUMMARY: When the Divine’s cult conquers your home, they don’t expect you to survive, let alone fight back. Captured but not broken, you and the unlikeliest of allies are ready to burn it all down. WC: 10,154 AU: Romantic Fantasy, Werewolves, Omegaverse Dynamics, Polyamourous GENRE: Smut, Heavy Angst, Fluff, Romance WARNINGS: Angst, mild pining, fight scene with graphic violence, on screen death (of side character), unwilling capture/shackling of unwilling characters, lots of mentions of guilt and unwillingly following orders, threats/intimidations made by male character, as always reader struggles with where she is currently at/being forced to do things, anxiety and tension, intense questioning scene by the Divine that includes physical symptoms of pain and invasive attempts at getting information, 'mind control' in a sense of reader and the Divine both using gifts to control others and manipulate them, depictions of blood and violence, kisses muah muah MEMBERS IN THIS CHAPTER: Seungcheol focus - other members at the end A/N: Apologies this is late, work has been very challenging. I hope you enjoy this chapter, especially since tonight is the Blood Moon. Thanks for reading. A/N 2: Thank you to @daechwitatamic who beta read this chapter!
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Mercy is not recorded among Her virtues - Scribbled in a journal of a Red Priestess
DAWN YAWNS THROUGH THE CLEARING. The pines stand watch around you, their needles whispering in the gentle breeze that carries the clean, fresh scent of the trees. Sunlight filters through the branches in golden shafts, painting the ground gold in splashes. The altar gleams when you roll over in your bedroll to look at it, the weathered faces of the Old Gods looking out over you.
Your body aches from the cold earth, muscles still stiff from yesterday's ride. Tears have dried on your cheeks, leaving salty tracks that pull tight as you blink against the light. Seungcheol's cloak is draped over you again, heavy and warm, his scent comforting. He must have placed it there while you slept, and though you try not to think much of it, it pulls at your heartstrings.
He's awake before you as usual, sitting a few feet away, knees drawn up with his back pressed against a pine trunk. He sharpens his dagger with slow, rhythmic strokes, hands expert on the whetstone. He looks weary, shadows under his eyes, but when he looks at you, there's a new softness there, the icy walls of him cracked just enough to let a little warmth out.
You sit up, folding his cloak as you stand and head over to him. You hand it back and he takes it without a word, fingers brushing yours briefly. The touch sends a spark through your skin, and you pull your hand back, tucking it into your own cloak.
"Thank you," you murmur.
He nods, sheathing the dagger. "We should head back soon."
You nod. He mentions nothing of the north path, nothing of searching for tracks. You're glad for it.
The horses graze nearby, tethered where Seungcheol left them. Grief still lingers, a dull ache in your chest that may never go away, but it's duller today. A little less, after spending time with the Old Gods and with Seungcheol. Most of all Seungcheol. You don't know how to thank him for what he's given you, but when he stands and looks at you, you know you don't have to. He knows. And that's enough.
You begin to pack and saddle your mare, movements methodical. He helps without asking, his fingers or arm brushing against yours occasionally. Where normally he would pull away, he doesn't now, touches lingering a second too long. The tension between you has eased, but he's a little skittish, like he's testing new ground.
Seeing Seungcheol nervous is new. His glances last longer now, though he averts his gaze when you catch them, as though he's unused to this openness, this new understanding that he's allowed to let you in. It's endearing, almost, reminding you a bit of a wolf pup learning to trust after too long alone.
You mount up and head west, Seungcheol leading. For once, the silence isn't strained. As you leave the clearing, you turn in your saddle to look at the Old Gods one last time. The hum from the earth is still with you, resonating. You feel your mouth twitch as you turn your back on them, thankful to have been in this place.
Hours pass as you and Seuncheol pick your way back. You keep your eye on the Bloodwood, wary of the red sap and the strange sounds that come from within. The attack in the red forest seems so long ago, the fears chased away by the comfort of your Gods.
Seungcheol slows his pace, letting you catch up to ride side by side. Occasionally, your knees knock together, but he doesn't seem to mind, one hand on the reins and one on his thigh, relaxed for the first time… well. It's the first time you've ever seen him relaxed.
"Will it be a problem that we didn't find the deserters?" You ask him, tentative.
He shrugs. "Lira doesn't need to know we didn't look very hard. It's on her head, not ours."
"Good."
His mouth twitches, an almost smile.
The day unfolds in an easy silence you're not used to. Seungcheol sometimes breaks the silence, pointing out a piece of the landscape or a bird. You don't ask him how he knows. The honesty from the evening before is new and raw, and you don't want to push him too far, too fast. For now, you let the admission of his past be enough.
You think about his words from the night before, the horror in his face as he told you that you reminded him of someone he once loved. That he couldn't save. You cannot imagine how difficult it must be for him, seeing a ghost show up in Valen the same day you were earning ghosts. He had tried to make you run that day, had tried to spare you.
You'd been stubborn, though. Still are.
Knowing that the Divine chose you as punishment for him reframes everything you know about Seungcheol. You hadn't thought him evil - just cruel. Cold. Disinterested in trusting you the way you had to trust him, unwilling to let you in despite everyone else finding a place for you in their heart.
You hadn't realized how much it meant to you, to know something about him. To understand why he had to keep you out, to really know what about you tortured him. And it makes you hate the Divine all the more, a thread of anger stitching through you as her list of crimes grows infinitely longer.
The sun arcs high, then dips westward, painting the hills bronze before fading to rose. The wind carries the smell of rain and snow from afar as your thoughts drift to returning back to the Bloodkeep. You loathe the idea of returning to the stale, damp air of the mountain, but you long for the scent of citrus and lavender, for the clove and sage and jasmine. You long for the people you trust, and for the warmth of a bed and bodies that know you.
Dusk nears as you reach the same crossroads you'd left the day before. Smoke curls from a fire, figures moving about. Seungcheol sighs before straightening in his saddle, giving you a single look before the tension returns to his shoulders and he rides ahead of you, the openness between you melting away, replaced by the Seungcheol you know.
As you near, you see Lira's group has returned first. Mingyu is tending the flames while Torren lounges around doing nothing. Your eyes flicker to the edge of the camp and your heart sinks when you see chained and shackled deserters, secured to a metal post like you had after your first escape attempt.
There are five of them - three betas and an omega clutching a child to her chest. Ragged clothes, hollow eyes, bound at the wrist, chains linking to the post in the ground. Bruises bloom on their faces, fresh from capture. Mingyu looks grim, avoiding everyone's gaze as Torren leers at your approach.
Seungcheol stops the horse and dismounts. You do the same, surprised when he helps you down. You say nothing, the moment passing between you as he assesses Lira, who stands with her hands on her hips.
"Found them south," she says flatly. "This is most of the missing party. The two alphas are now dead."
Misery crashes over you. You swallow, smell the fresh grief on their skin, scents soured by hate and fear and sorrow. You notice the beta has a fresh gash bleeding into her eye and you move before you can think, popping the top on your waterskin as you approach.
They flinch away from you but you hold your hands out, crouching slowly. "You need to wash the wound," you murmur, holding it out toward the woman. "I don't want it to get infected. I didn't mean to frighten you."
Torren snorts from afar. "Comforting them? Soft omega. They're traitors."
"They're citizens of the Divine," you shoot back. The beta woman tentatively takes the water from you. "They should be treated as such until she passes a ruling."
Lira snorts, not agreeing with you but also unwilling to disagree with the logic in your words. Torren says nothing, grumbling as the beta struggles to wash the wound on her head. You hold your hand out and she hesitates briefly before giving it back, letting you pour the cold water over her. She shivers and you wince, tearing away at a piece of your tunic to gently wipe the wound.
"Try to keep it clean," you murmur, stepping away. "Let me know if you feel feverish."
When you stand, Seungcheol is watching you, wary. His hand is on his dagger, eyes flickering between the captives and Torren like they might equally be a threat. You walk toward him, placing the water skin back in your saddle with a questioning gaze. He says nothing, just watching you with those dark eyes.
Tense silence falls over the camp. Mingyu refuses to look at you, sitting as far away from the captives as possible. You can smell the misery on him from here - he does little to hide it. You want to say something - anything, to comfort him. But you know nothing will help so you sit by the fire, chewing on bread as Seungcheol stands guardian behind you, a shadow.
Soren and Jihoon appear at twilight, both empty-handed. He eyes the captives before heading over to Mingyu, who seems to curve inward on himself. Jihoon places a palm on Mingyu's shoulder but says nothing, both of them sitting together as the last of the evening fades to night, the fire popping and hissing.
"We'll camp here," Lira says. "We return through the Bloodwood at dawn."
No one talks, save for Torren and Soren. He's his usual, loud self, and his sister simply smirks, eyes flicking to you and then to the captives. You ignore them in favor of nibbling on the dry meat Seungcheol gives you, your appetite soured. Seungcheol stays closer than usual, his eyes alert and spine stiff.
When you fall asleep finally, it's to the sound of wind and the warmth of his leg pressed against yours.
-
It's dawn when you wake to chaos.
You jolt awake to the sound of shouts and rattling chains. For a heartbeat, everything is confusion, shadows lunging in the low light of the fire gone out, bodies moving too fast, voices overlapping. You sit up, hand flying to your dagger, breath caught in your throat as the camp snaps into focus.
The deserters are gone.
Lira kicks Soren in the ribs hard and she yelps as Lira rages. The manacles lay empty, discarded on the cold earth, the locks picked. All five of them are gone, and Lira is raging. You realize Soren fell asleep on watch, letting them slip out of the camp and back into the Bloodwood. Hope seizes through you as Lira mounts, screaming at you all to get up and get on your horses.
"After them," she snarls. "Or I'll bring you all back as prisoners."
Mingyu is on his feet in an instant, cursing under his breath as he swings himself up onto his horse. Jihoon doesn't bother. You watch in surprise as he stands, frame rippling as he shifts into a sleek, white wolf. His pelt is beautiful, eyes liquid coal as he takes off, Mingyu's horse after him.
Seungcheol is beside you in an instant, hauling you up by the arm. "Stay close. We're going in. We'll let them go if we can."
There's no time to think. You vault onto your mare, the horse snorting in alarm as you wheel her around and spur her forward, thundering into the forest. Your heart is pounding, the sudden desperation of finding the deserters first to get them further away clinging to you like the sweat on the back of your neck.
Red leaves knot overhead, blotting out the sky. Thick, sweet rot fills your lungs. Vines snap against your cloak. Roots rise like skeletal fingers from the mud, threatening to send your horse crashing if you misstep.
Fear claws at your chest - not for you, but for them. The mother, the child, the other betas, easy prey to the creatures of the Bloodwood and with Lira's hunters on their trails. You want them to escape, to slip the Divine's noose and find whatever freedom waits beyond this red hell.
The hunting party fractures immediately. Seungcheol stays with you at first, his stallion matching your mare's stride, the two of you low in the saddle in the red light of the trees. You hear a shriek split the air, the same eerie resonance as the creatures that had attacked you the first night.
"Go," Seungcheol yells, splitting from you as he draws a blade.
You hesitate for half a heartbeat, instinct screaming to stay with him, but the desire to help the deserters drives you forward. Alone now, you urge your mare faster, following a wide trail of tracks. The forest closes tighter, vines snagging at you like grasping hands.
A child's scream pierces the gloom up ahead, high and terrified. You take a sharp right and barrel toward it, bursting through a curtain of ferns into a small hollow ringed by bleeding trees, the ground a mess of red mud and sap.
Torren is there, pulling the child's mother into the clearing by her hair as she screams. The boy hides near the gnarled roots of a tree, covering his ears as he screams. Torren twists the mother's arm, bone cracking, and she screams out. The boy panics, bolting toward them as he screams in anger, tiny fists pounding against the meat of Torren's thigh. The alpha knocks him away like a cat swatting a fly, sending him tumbling to the mud.
You dismount as Torren leers, knocking the mother down again. "Perhaps I should have a little fun with you huh? Been a long ride. Why not, right?"
"Get away from her," you snarl, hitting the ground with a wet thud. Your blade and dagger are in your hand as you surge forward, teeth bared. "I said get away."
It happens by accident. You feel the Call shiver through your voice, the command vibrating in the air. Torren goes rigid, face slack for a moment as he lets the omega go and takes several steps away from her. The omega crawls away from him, shielding her son as you stalk toward Torren who blinks, lifting his axe.
"You little bitch," he hisses. "You think you can command me? I should have slit your throat when I had the chance."
You don't waste breath on words. You lunge at him, sword slashing high in a wide arc, aiming to force him back while your dagger thrusts low. He blocks the sword with the flat of his ace, the clash ringing through the hollow. Your dagger finds its target, biting into the soft flesh of his side. Blood wells and he roars, swinging the ace in a brutal overhead chop.
You sidestep, the blade burying itself in the moss where you were standing a moment ago. You slash your sword across his thigh, opening a gash that makes him stagger. He snarls and backhands you with his free fist, glancing your jaw as stars explode behind your eyes. You roll with it, pressing the attack as he stumbles, swinging the axe wildly again.
Sword and dagger meet axe, the metal screeching against the axe's haft. The impact jars your bones as Torren spits blood at you. "Filthy bitch."
"Kneel."
He does suddenly, buckling under the weight of your command. You twist, breaking the lock and thrust up with your dagger, plunging into the middle of his stomach. He gasps, eyes widening in shock, grip loosening on his axe as he's silent for a moment.
Blood bubbles from his lips as you snarl, digging the blade further in. "Mongrel," you growl. "Know that it was by my hand that you've died."
You rip the blade free and he crumbles, gasping wetly in the mud. You kick him over savagely and he rolls, hands clutching his stomach where he tries to stop the bleeding. He sucks in breath, lungs rasping with a death rattle as the life bleeds out of him.
Breath heaving, you turn to the mother. She stares at you, wide-eyed, clutching her son. Tears streak her face, but there's something else there - awe. Fear.
"Run," you rasp. You yank the reins of your mare, pulling the horse toward them. "Can you ride?" She nods, trembling. "Ride and don't stop. Go north, then west. Do not stop."
The mother doesn't hesitate. She gathers her son into her arms and you help them mount the horse, the boy first then her behind him. She is shaking as she reins in the horse, looking at you a final time.
"Thank you," she whispers.
You stand panting as she spurs the mare and vanishes into the trees, hooves pounding. Behind you, Torren is dead in the mud. Your heart is pounding, your entire frame vibrating as your stomach roils, sick with adrenaline-tinged terror.
A horse bursts into the hollow and you spin, sword raised, a growl working its way up your throat. It's Seungcheol, sword drawn, eyes wild. His horse skids to a halt, nostrils flaring at the scent of blood. Seungcheol takes in the scene - Torren's body, the blood, the split lip, your lack of horse.
He's off the horse in an instant, boots hitting the ground hard. He doesn't give Torren a second glance, his gaze locked on you as his eyes rake over your face, your arms, your blood-streaked hands.
"Are you hurt?" He demands, voice stripped raw.
You shake your head. "No."
He crosses the distance in two strides, hands reading for you. He cups your face with a gentleness that opposes the violence in the hollow, turning your face side-to-side to look at you. His thumbs brush over your cheeks, smearing blood and sweat. He doesn't care. His eyes are dark, pupils blown and wild.
"You're shaking," he murmurs, pulling you closer to him.
"I killed him. He was hurting her. He was going to…" You swallow. Seungcheol's eyes flash. You don't have to finish your sentence. "I used the Call on him by accident. He had to die regardless."
Seungcheol drops his forehead to yours, eyes closing as he breathes you in for one long, shuddering breath. When he opens them again, they're more focused, the panic receding. "I should have killed him sooner."
"He shoved me during the fight the first night," you admit. "I didn't want to start a fight."
His jaw flexes and you smell the rage that rolls through him. "Doesn't matter now. You did good."
He exhales, ragged as all of the fight leaves him. He leans in and presses a kiss to your forehead, lingering. His mouth is warm against your skin, trembling a little. You feel the shudder in his shoulders as he breathes you in like you're air after he's been drowning. It leaves you light-headed and dizzy as he pulls back, looking down at you.
"This will be bad," he admits. "But follow my lead."
You nod, throat too tight for words. He leads you toward his stallion and past Torren's body in the bed, blending into the red moss. Seungcheol doesn't even look at it. He helps you remount on his horse then swings up behind you, one arm around your waist, the other on the reins. You lean back against his chest without thinking, exhausted and drained.
The camp is in shambles when you return. The three betas are re-llashed and broken against the metal post, bleeding and barely breathing. Lira paces while Mingyu stands with his arms crossed, face grim. Jihoon is still in wolf form, side covered in blood as he watches you approach on a solo horse.
Soren spots you and stands. "Where's my brother?"
Seungcheol dismounts, face hard. He helps you down, his hands careful with you. "Dead."
Soren's eyes go wide like she's been slapped. "What do you mean?"
"Do you know another definition for dead?"
Her eyes narrow to slits and her claws extend as they land on you. "You."
She lunges but Mingyu is on her, pulling her back as she screams. She rakes claws down his arm and he yelps but he remains steadfast, stronger than she is as he slams her down to the ground and pins her. Her screams are raw and rabid, but you're not sorry.
You'd do it again.
"He attacked me," you seethe, stepping toward her. Seungcheol blocks your path, hands on your hips but you lean around him, snarling, "I defended myself."
"Liar!"
Mingyu curses. "Your brother has been harassing her since we left the stables," he growls. "We all saw it."
"Lira," Seungcheol says calmly. "Get the members of your hunting party under control or I will."
Soren screams reach a fever pitch. "Traitors! You're all traitors!"
"Enough!" Lira's voice cracks like a wip and she grabs Soren by the collar, ripping her from Mingyu's arms to throw her forward. Soren's claws scrabble at the dirt but Lira presses her boot into Soren's back, crushing her to the ground. "It is your fault the prisoners got loose in the first place. You will be silent, or I will gag you and lash you to the post like the deserters. Do you understand?"
Soren's chest heaves, tears and fury twisting her face. She glares up at Lira, hatred burning in her eyes. She gives a final snarl and sags, letting Lira press her into the dirt.
Lira turns to you and Seungcheol, frustration carving deep lines in her face. "This is a disaster. The Divine will have her inquiry when we return. Full inquisition under the Word. Until then, you two-" She points to you and Seungchoel. "-Are under my watch. No more wandering off."
Seungcheol’s jaw tightens, but he nods once. “Understood.”
Lira exhales sharply, then hauls Soren to her feet. “You’re separated. You sleep over there-" she jerks her chin toward the far edge of camp, away from the fire. “You move, you speak out of turn, you so much as look like you're going to cause problems, and I’ll bind you myself. Move.”
Soren stumbles as Lira drags her away. She shoots one last venomous look over her shoulder before disappearing behind a large boulder, isolated.
The camp falls into uneasy silence. The three recaptured betas huddle together, chains clinking softly, eyes wide and watchful. Mingyu exhales, running a hand over his face. Jihoon shifts back to human form, blood streaking his side, and drops to sit by the fire, expression grim.
You recoil in shock, averting your eyes toward the sky. Jihoon seems unbothered by his nudity until Mingyu mutters at him to put pants on, which he sighs and does, going digging around his pack for a pair.
Seungcheol’s hand finds the small of your back, pushing you out of everyone's line of sight and behind his horse. "Don't leave my side," he murmurs. "Not an inch, understood?"
"Yeah." You sigh. "Yeah."
He touches your jaw briefly, fingers soft. "Have courage, Wildheart. It'll be alright."
You want to believe him, but in the wreckage of what you've just done, you don't know if you do.
-
The soft grey light of dawn seeps through the cloudy sky above. The camp is quiet except for the low crackle of last night's embers and the snorts from the horses. Your body feels leaden, every muscle protesting as you roll over. Your jaw throbs where Torren had landed a hit on you, and your fingers cramp a little from the cold seeping in through the ground.
Seungcheol is sitting next to you, close as he can. His sword rests unsheathed near him on the other side, a dagger across his knees. He's leaning against a boulder, eyes open and alert. Shadows carve out the hollows of his eyes, the exhaustion evident on his face.
You realize he hasn't slept. You sit up slowly, his cloak sliding off of you. You don't recall him giving it to you - must have been in the night, like usual. He glances down as you sit up, pinched expression softening just a fraction.
"You didn't sleep," you accuse gently.
"Couldn't. Not with what happened yesterday."
At the mention of yesterday, you glance toward the edge of the camp. Soren is out of sight, but Lira lingers, already standing. You note she's positioned between you and where you assume Soren is, a bulwark. Mingyu and Jihoon are up too, quietly saddling horses while the three recaptured betas huddle together, chains clinking softly as they shift. Your stomach turns and you shift uneasily, wanting to set them free.
"Don't," Seungcheol murmurs softly. You look at him, desperate. "I know. I know."
"What if I-"
"No. Especially not that."
Licking your lips, you nod. You understand why you can't use the Call. Not yet. Not for this. But as you stare at the betas, you see yourself tied to a tree, throwing your head forward to break someone's nose. Biting at Seungcheol as he forced water down your throat.
Rage flares through you. Not at Seungcheol, but at the Divine - always the Divine. Not for the first time, you imagine what killing her will feel like. You think of the silent pressure of your Old Gods against your back, the coolness of the earth as you pressed your face into the grass at their feet. Not forgotten, just waiting for the right time.
Now is not the right time.
Seungcheol stands and sheaths his weapons, offering you a hand. You take it and let him pull you to your feet, his touch warm. The camp breaks quickly as you start to saddle Seungcheol's horse. No one speaks of Torren's body left in the Bloodwood. No one speaks of those who escaped.
"We ride with no delays," Lira orders curtly. Soren finally comes into view, her gaze so venomous you feel your hackles rise, a ripple of anger slivering down your spine. Lira ignores Sorren, tying their horses together. "No bullshit. The Divine will sort out this mess."
Seungcheol’s stallion is saddled and ready. You think of your horse, hoping that the mother and child are safe and far away from this evil. Seungcheol offers you a hand and for once, you take it and let him haul you up into the saddle of his horse. He swings up a moment later, careful not to jostle you as he settles behind you. His arms bracket you as he gathers the reins, one hand on them to steer, the other resting lightly on your thigh. You lean into his chest without thinking, head against his collarbone. He doesn't tense. He just nudges the horse forward, hand squeezing your thigh briefly in acknowledgement.
Mingyu and Jihoon fall in on either side of you without a word. Mingyu on your left, Jihoon on the right. You raise your brows but they say nothing, falling into an easy rhythm like they've guarded Seungcheol before. For all you know, they have.
The ride back through the Bloodwood is quieter than the journey out. No sapfiends shriek from the canopy. No vines lash out. The red glow feels less oppressive now, more like a fading bruise than an open wound. The air is still thick with resin and rot, but the wind has shifted, carrying hints of pine and distant rain from the hills beyond.
Seungcheol is steady behind you, the smell of his bergamot calming. His chest is warm against your back, heartbeat steady against you. Every so often, his chin brushes the top of your head as the horse jostles over a root, the barest hint of his breath skimming you. You fight a shiver each time, swallowing down the heat of being so close to him now.
His exhaustion wears on him. You can feel the weight he strains behind you, trying to sit upright, trying not to crowd you. His grip loosens occasionally on the reins, hands trembling as the ride saps the rest of his strength.
You ride for hours this way, Mingyu and Jihoon your silent sentinels as Seungcheol fights exhaustion with gritted teeth. The red trees around you drip silently, the air tepid and sticky, full of the rotten sweet stench of resin. Seungcheol's chin dips occasionally against your shoulder before he catches himself, straightening.
You til your head back against his chest, just enough to catch his gaze. "Rest."
"I can't."
"You can. Lean on me." You touch his hands on the reins, wrapping your fingers around the leather. "I can lead us."
He exhales through his nose, a sound somewhere between amusement and stubborn refusal. “I’m fine.”
"You're not. You haven't slept properly in days and you certainly didn't sleep last night."
"I'm… not used to letting go."
"I know." His hands drop off the reins. "Nothing is going to happen if you rest, Seungcheol. Please."
"You're relentless."
"So I've been told."
He gives a faint huff of laughter against your neck. "Alright."
He shifts then, slowly, carefully. His forehead comes to rest against the back of your shoulder, cheek pressed to the curve of your cloak. His arms stay around you, but the tension bleeds out of them, weight settling more fully against your back. His breathing deepens almost immediately and you smile, feeling him let go as he relaxes, heavy against your back.
You keep one hand on the reins, leading his stallion through the crimson glow of the trees. Mingyu glances over once, catches your eye, and offers a small, knowing nod. Jihoon doesn’t look, but the corner of his mouth twitches as he stares straight ahead.
“He trusts you,” Mingyu says, nodding toward the man dozing against your back. His voice is quiet, trying not to wake Seungcheol. “Doesn’t trust many people like that.”
You swallow, throat tight. “I know.”
"He didn’t sleep last night. Sat up the whole time watching you."
The words land soft, but they ache. You think of Seungcheol’s shadow-rimmed eyes this morning. "He's stubborn like that."
“That’s one word for it.” He pauses, then adds, softer, “He’s different with you."
"Different how."
Mingyu shrugs a shoulder, staring forward. "Different softer."
You glance at Seungcheol’s sleeping face pressed to your shoulder. He's beautiful like this, the pained stress gone for a moment, even if it's brief. His long eyelashes are dark against his smooth skin, mouth a little slack, brow finally smoothed out. Something tender and fierce twists in your gut, thinking of the soft boy who loved a girl that he couldn't save.
"I think the softness has been stolen from him," you murmur.
Mingyu nods in agreement. Jihoon says nothing, but he nods at your words. You wonder what softness the Divine has stolen from him and Mingyu. Wonder who they were before the red and the blood and the cold and the hate. You think you would've liked them in Valen - been friends, even. But here, all you can really afford are tentative allies.
Lira calls a halt at the forest's edge after riding for hours. The wind is crisper here, cutting through the resin-sweet heat of the trees. You feel Seungcheol stir behind you as the stallion pauses, his breath hitching as awareness returns to him. His arms tighten briefly around your waist, an instinctual pull. They loosen a little as he straightens and lifts his head, groaning as he blinks.
"How long was I out?" His voice is deep and gravelly, making your stomach flutter.
"Long enough. You needed it."
He doesn’t argue. Just rests his forehead against the back of your head for a moment longer, breathing you in. "Thank you."
"Mhmm."
He shifts in the saddle, leaning to press a brief kiss to your temple before he slides down from the saddle, reaching up to help you after him. Your heart slams in your ribs and you're a little dizzy from a simple kiss on the head as he helps you down. His hands linger on your waist a moment longer than necessary when you dismount and you feel heat in your stomach bloom.
No one says anything if they notice. The group dismounts and tethers the horses in silence, shackling the betas to the middle of your riding party. Lira assigns watches with clipped efficiency - Mingyu, Jihoon, and herself. Not Sorren. Not you. Not Seungcheol. No one looks at Sorren who keeps away from the rest, her eyes red rimmed and her face weary with hatred.
Dinner is bread, cheese and dried meat warmed over the flames. No one says anything when you break off pieces of yours, offering it to the betas. Lira tenses, her eyes narrowing a fraction as you do. You ignore her, each one of the betas hesitating before tentatively accepting your offering. Seungcheol stands and quietly does the same, earning a whispered thanks.
After eating, you stick close to Jihoon and Mingyu, the four of you clustering together in a knot of solidarity. If it bothers Lira, she says nothing. She stares into the fire instead, face void of any emotion except acceptance - either that she's going to be held accountable of what's happened on this excursion, or that she's committed to ruining you. You're not sure which one.
Seungcheol sits close enough that his thigh presses against yours, arm draped casually behind your back. He doesn’t speak much, but his presence is a constant in a way it wasn't before the grove of the Old Gods, the ice between you melted and replaced with something firm but warm.
Mingyu passes around a waterskin. “We’re almost home. One more day.”
Jihoon nods, staring into the flames. “And then the inquiry.”
The words hang heavy. You have no idea how to get around the inquiry. No way to talk about it, either, with Lira and Sorren within listening distance. You share a look with Seungcheol and see he's just as troubled as you are. The Divine will no doubt use the Bloodsong on all of you, forcing out the truth - or forcing out what she wants to hear.
It makes your blood run cold, mind racing on what to do. Seungcheol must sense when your thoughts have gone, because he reaches a hand over and squeezes your thigh, leaving it there. He doesn't say anything, but the weight of his palm is calming.
You eat in silence after that, the fire popping softly, wind sighing through the grass.
"You need to sleep first tonight," you tell Seungcheol, glancing at him. He opens his mouth to argue but you press on. "You're exhausted. If you're tired tomorrow, you'll make mistakes. I need you perfect when we face the Divine. Sharp. Sleep first and then I'll sleep second and tomorrow on the ride."
He looks at you for a long moment, something soft and almost helpless in his eyes. Then he exhales, defeated. “You’re impossible.”
"Yes."
His mouth twitches, so close to a smile. You can feel the desire to push back, but he lies down without further protest, curling on his side facing you. You settle beside him, crossing your legs, balancing the dagger Vernon gave you on your knee. Seungcheol shifts closer until his head rests against your thigh, one arm draped across your legs like an anchor. You thread your fingers through his hair tentatively, giving him slow strokes. He lets out a long, shaky breath, a shiver rippling through him.
"Sleep," you murmur.
"Hard when you do that."
"Should I stop?"
He makes a sound in his throat. "No."
You smile and he melts into your touch. A week ago, you wouldn't have imagined him trusting you like this. The freezing mountain of Seungcheol seems to have softened under the shared truth between you, his honesty stripping away a heavy burden that had crushed him all this time.
Eventually, his breathing evens out. The fire dances across his face. You keep your hand in his hair, stroking occasionally, feeling the rise and fall of his breathing against your leg. Seeing him like this makes you miss the others, the smell of citrus and lavender, the deep laughter from Chan and the teasing lilt of Jeonghan's voice when he teases Vernon.
For now, you keep Seungcheol steady, your eyes on the world around you, wracking your brain for how to get through tomorrow.
-
Dawn is red. You wake slowly, the world coming back in crimson fragments, the sticky air clinging to your skin. Seungcheol is pressed close to you, his hand resting on your thigh. He's awake still, having swapped with you late into the night. His hand tightens a fraction as you stir, lingering for a second before he pats you, telling you it's time to get up.
You rise as the camp stirs around you. Mingyu feeds the horses, whispering to them with a soft grin on his face while Jihoon saddles them, face set in that same unreadable mask as always. Lira stands a few paces away, muttering quietly with Soren who is nodding.
The three betas huddle near the post, chains clinking softly as they shift, faces bruised and eyes hollow. There's a flicker in their eyes when they look at you now though, something you think is gratitude. You hate it - hate that you can't give them more. That you don't deserve gratitude unless you can do something about their circumstances.
Breakfast is sparse - bread and cheese only, chased by tepid water. No one speaks until everyone is saddled and ready to go, Lira pressing the group hard to ride until the keep, the betas tethered to her saddle, forced to walk.
You swing up onto Seungcheol's stallion and he mounts behind you, arms going around your waist. One hand stays wrapped around you, the other gathers the reins in his hands. Mingyu and Jihoon flank Seungcheol again, and Lira ignores it, leading the party through the Bloodwood silently.
"Sleep," Seungcheol murmurs, breath warm against your ear. "You need more rest."
You nod, leaning your head back against his shoulder. Seungcheol is firm behind you, his scent warm and intoxicating. You feel yourself relax, his lips brushing faintly across your hairline as you adjust. His heartbeat is steady, a rhythm that lulls you in and out of sleep as you ride.
No one interrupts your sleep. You drift in and out and the world narrows to just sensation: the warmth of Seungcheol’s body, the steady rock of the saddle, the faint scent of bergamot and pine that clings to him. His thumb traces small, absent circles against your side, soothing as you drift between asleep and awake.
Real light wakes you briefly as you exit the Bloodwood. The smell of sweet rot fades, replaced with the cool, clean air of pine. You breathe it in, lifting your head a little as you blink and drink in the green of the world around you, rocky terrain a welcome sight.
Clouds gather on the horizon, heavy and gray, promising a storm by nightfall. Your thoughts churn as you draw closer to the Bloodkeep, unable to sleep anymore. The Divine's inquisition looms ahead, anxiety coiling in your gut, a serpent twisting tighter with each mile you slither closer.
You don't know what to do. You feel the way things hang in balance, knowing that with a single misstep, everyone will pay the price. And you have misstepped. You don't regret letting the mother and her child go, but your mind snags on the thorns of panic as you try to work out a way around the truth.
Seungcheol senses it. "Breathe," he murmurs into your ear, voice low enough that only you hear. "Just answer her questions plainly and honestly without detail. That is the way through this."
You nod, but the fear lingers, cold and insidious. His logic makes sense. Answering without being over-detailed is going to be the best way through the Divine's questioning, but you're not sure it'll be enough. Not with the Bloodsong at her disposal.
The Bloodkeep rises on the horizon by midday, a jagged silhouette against the sky. Dread settles heavier with every mile, the mountain's shadow creeping over the plains like a living thing. The air thickens, the metallic tang returning, the wind dying to a stale hush. Seungcheol's horse snorts uneasily, ears flicking back as the ground hardens from grass to stone.
You enter through the lower gates, the city's chaos greeting you once more. The sheer press of humanity is unsettling after days in the open, the overwhelming smell of pheromones and skin and people overwhelming. You shift in the saddle, uncomfortable and anxious. Seungcheol presses the arm around your waist tighter, holding you to him.
Silence that feels like the headman's axe follows you. Your party rides back through the wet, dark tunnels, entering the stables without fanfare. If the stable attendants notice anything amiss, they say nothing, making quick work of helping Lira dismount and unsaddle horses. She walks briskly toward an alpha man - the stablemaster you think - and murmurs something to him. He nods and immediately exits the stables.
"Come," Lira barks at you all. "The Divine will receive us for an inquisition."
No one argues.
Torches line the way as you walk. The silence is tense, your heartbeat pounding in your ears. The air grows colder as you ascend, the damp chill seeping through your cloak, carrying the faint scent of old blood and incense. Lira leads, boots clicking sharply against the stone. Soren walks immediately behind her, tension rippling with anger, her hand wrapped around the chains that tether the betas.
You feel the mountain’s weight pressing down with every step. The corridors narrow slightly as you climb, the ceiling lowering until the torchlight flickers against the stone overhead, throwing your shadows upward. Your heart pounds harder with every turn. Anxiety coils tighter in your chest, sharp and relentless.
Familiar walls of rock and mountain greet you as you begin the climb to the Divine's sanctum. The mountain is busy this afternoon, but no one pays your group much attention. Your palms feel slick as you walk, stomach tightening as each step brings you closer to the Divine.
Seungcheol walks close enough that his arm brushes yours with every step. He hasn’t spoken since you left the stables, but his presence is steady. Mingyu and Jihoon keep pace without faltering, their silence a shield. You catch Mingyu’s eye once and he offers a small, tight nod. He looks grim and you know he's wary as well.
The corridor opens abruptly into a wide antechamber before the Sanctum doors. The space is vast, the vaulted ceiling lost in shadow, walls pulsing brighter here, crimson veins thick and close to the surface. Iron sconces burn with steady red flames, their light reflecting off the black marble floor.
Lira halts the group. “We wait,” she says, voice flat. “The Divine will receive us.”
The silence that follows is suffocating. Your heart hammers so hard you’re sure everyone can hear it, frantic and uneven like a bird battering against your ribs to escape. You wipe slick palms against your cloak and the beats shift, chains loud in the heavy silence.
Soren’s breathing is ragged, furious. Mingyu stands rigid, jaw tight. Jihoon’s eyes scan the room, calculating. Seungcheol’s hand finds yours briefly, hidden by the folds of your cloak, squeezing once before letting go.
For some reason, it feels like saying goodbye.
You move without thinking.
The Call rises in your chest like a storm, stronger than ever, fueled by pure terror and the need to protect what little you have left. You step forward, voice low but resonant, hearing your words split the air as you speak.
"Turn to me," you demand.
A ripple of tension goes through those in front of you. Seungcheol grabs for you but you step forward again. The look on Mingyu's face is pure terror as he looks at you. Jihoon's mask of indifference fractures as he, Lira, Soren and the betas turn to face you, shivering under your command.
"Wildheart-" Seungcheol tries but you shrug him off.
"Torren attacked me," you tell them. Their eyes glaze over, bodies stiffening. You ignore Seungcheol's hand on your arm. "He tried to kill me in the middle of camp. During the chaos, the omega and her child escaped. Nothing more. You saw nothing else. You know nothing else. And you will forget I commanded this."
The words pour out, driven by desperation. You feel the same powerful resonance ripple through you as you had the night in the hallway when the alphas attacked you after the fighting pit, the strain on your throat, the way something inside of you surges instinctually.
Your words reverberate in the air as you step back toward Seungcheol, heart pounding. His face is pale as he yanks you toward him, eyes wide.
"What have you done? If she-"
"She won't," you hiss. "I need to use it on you." He hesitates. "I need to tell you to lie. It's the only thing I can think of."
Seungcheol swallows thickly and nods. You hold his hand, squeezing to comfort him or comfort yourself, you're not sure.
"Lie to her," you command. "Tell her that Torren tried to kill me in the middle of camp and during the fight, the omega and her child escaped. Lie."
Seungcheol shivers. You watch the command slide over him the same way as it did all the times you practiced. He doesn't resist. He lets his eyes flutter as the compulsion takes hold, the air thrumming between you as he nods. You don't tell him to forget - you don't need him to.
Fear chokes you as you turn around. You have no idea if this will work. It's the worst gamble you've taken here inside of the mountain, but you have no other choice. The chance that the Divine's Bloodsong pierces through is real, but you're betting on her being weakened. On your practice paying off. On the adrenaline pumping through you so powerfully you think you might be sick.
The other's eyes clear and you watch them blink in confusion. None of them seem to remember a thing, turning to face the sanctum doors as they begin to groan open, priestesses in red flowing out to receive you.
Each step forward feels closer to doom. You file into the Sanctum, steps echoing. Today, it's empty of the basins of blood. You're thankful - you don't know how you would have done this with massive pools of the metallic liquid assaulting your senses alongside incense.
The Divine isn't lounging on her throne like a cat today. She watches you with a sharpness that cuts through your armor, heart fluttering. Her skin is pale as moonlit bone, but her eyes are burning today, sweeping over you. She smiles, slow and predatory, lips curving like a sickle moon as she rises.
"Ah, my hunters return," she purrs, voice smooth as silk but edged with razor wire. "With prizes… and problems. Come closer. Let us uncover the truth."
Your heart slams against your ribs, hard and erratic, a frantic drumbeat that echoes in your ears. Sweat slicks your palms, cold and clammy. You clench your fists to hide the tremble, nails biting into your palms. The air feels too thick to breathe, each inhale shallow and labored, lungs burning. Your vision tunnels slightly, the edges blurring, focusing on the Divine as she stands and drifts forward.
What if it fails?
The thought loops endlessly. The pack - Soonyoung's bruised smile, Vernon's steady hand, Seokmin's gentle lavender - flashes through your mind. They'll pay. They'll all pay. You think of the whip on Jeonghan's back, the sweat on his brow. The salt of Chan's skin as he beat those alphas to a pulp just to escape a little.
Your fear is visceral and alive, a cold sweat breaking across your brow, trickling down your spine like ice water. You shift your weight, boots scraping softly on the marble, the sound unnaturally loud in the tense silence.
Lira steps forward first, her boots echoing with sharp clicks. She stands tall, chin lifted, but you see the faint tremor in her hands, the way her jaw clenches. The Divine circles her as Lira bows, ducking her head.
"Tell me of the hunt," the Divine says, voice soft but commanding. You shiver, hearing the power in her words, the way they brush against you.
Lira recounts the mission with clinical efficiency. The tracks she found, the chase through the Bloodwood, the skirmish at camp when Torren attacked you. Your mouth nearly falls open as Lira recounts the story you planted, her voice never breaking.
"Tell me the story again in detail."
The Bloodsong surges behind her words, stronger now. The hum sets your teeth on edge as Lira shivers, sweat beading on the back of her neck. Her breath hitches, body trembling as the song pulls at her, tearing at her like claws through flesh. She gasps, hands clenching at her sides, nails digging into palms until blood wells.
But she tells the story again. Same words, same story. She doesn't miss a beat as the Divine digs, forcing her to do it again and again, looking for a crack, some sort of untruth.
The Divine hums when Lira finishes a fifth time, shaking and near boneless on the floor, dissatisfied but intrigued. "Very well. Next."
Mingyu steps up, broad shoulders squared, but you see the fear in his eyes. His hands flex at his side as he bows to one knee, head dipped in false reverence. The Divine asks him the same question, and Mingyu recounts his version. His perspective is different - he tells the Divine of Torren's aggression from the jump, how Seungcheol had to reprimand him.
The Divine circles Mingyu all the while, reaching out a hand to brush it through his hair fondly. The sight makes your stomach turn over, and you watch as the touch makes him smaller, somehow. Like he caves in on himself. But his words still stand when she asks him again and again, each question making him bow lower and lower until he's panting.
"Torren was aggressive," he grits out. "Had it out for her. She defended herself. The betas took advantage during the chaos. Soren was supposed to be watching them, Divine."
Jihoon breezes through her question. You're surprised. He bows, but he answers her questions efficiently and without effort, the only sign of discomfort the flex in his hand as she peppers him with questions. When she finishes, he rises smoothly and takes his place by Mingyu, linking his hands behind his back.
When it's Soren's turn, you watch with a held breath. She's miserable, teeth gnashing as she stalks forward and bows deeply in front of the Divine. The Divine stands in front of Soren, looking down at her with a cocked head.
"Be honest, Soren," the Divine purrs. "Was it your fault that the runaways escaped?"
Soren writhes. "Yes, Divine."
"Tell me, are you the reason your brother is dead?"
The question is cruel and precise, made to sever down into the core of Soren. She trembles and you hear a sob wrack through her, echoed against the marble floor. "Yes, Divine."
"Tell me."
"He attacked her," Soren sobs. "He attacked her and I turned away from the prisoners. She killed him. She killed him and they got away because of me. It's my fault, Divine."
"Again," the Divine demands, leaning forward, eyes gleaming.
Soren grieves, her sobbing ugly and loud and hiccuping. She chokes out the words again, sobbing, but no deviation. The story holds. She doesn't stand when the Divine finishes. She remains on the ground, a mess of tears and agony. You almost feel bad for her - almost - as the Divine nudges her with a boot to move her out of the way.
The betas are last. The priestesses haul them forward one by one, unchaining them just enough to kneel. Their voices are soft as they recount the same story. The Divine seems less inclined to question them. It isn't until she dismisses them and they begin to cry that you realize it's because she wants nothing to do with them. Only death waits.
You step forward, sucking in a sharp breath. Seungcheol tugs the sleeve of your elbow sharply, keeping you close to him. You look at him, eyes round and glassy and he shakes his head. Where he once might have looked firm and cold, today he looks sad. Sorry. Now that you can see through the mask, you realize how much it pains him to hold you back.
The Divine’s gaze pins you like a spear. This time, Seungcheol nudges you forward a little. Your heart stops. Time slows. The room spins. You're the only one who hasn't been compelled, the only one who could possibly be a weak link. You have no idea if you can resist her on your own instinct and power alone, but you have to try.
You kneel. Your mouth is dry as you do and you stare straight forward, looking at her throne. The throne where she assigned you to Seungcheol, knowing you looked like someone she took from him. Her throne where she watched as Jeonghan was whipped. Her throne where she watched as the people you knew were whipped and killed.
Nailed hands drag through your hair. You nearly flinch at the touch - not in fear, but repulsion. You think of how many times she must have run her nails through Soonyoung's hair, over his skin. How many times she marked him up, scratched through both the physical and mental surface of him.
Rage.
It blooms so hot that it's nearly blinding as you stare ahead, unseeing and full of anger.
"Tell me exactly what happened," she demands.
Pain explodes in your head. It's white-hot and blinding, like needs driven into the center of every thought and memory. It isn't at all like the Call - this is something worse. Something invasive and arresting, trying to take hold of you. It is a psychic force more than anything, and you feel like her claws rend through you, forcing you to her will.
The song tears at you, probing every corner, seeking the lie, the crack. You taste blood and realize you've bitten through your tongue, trying to resist the urge to spill out what really happened, to tell her what you've done.
"Torren attacked me," you grit out. You think of Seungcheol's advice, to tell her the truth in pieces. "I defended myself, Divine."
"Why did he attack you?"
"He was angry with me, Divine."
"Why you?"
The room spins and you feel yourself thrash against her hold, sweat gathering at the back of your neck and middle of your chest.
"He didn't like that I was an omega," you snarl. "Didn't think I was worth more than fucking. He made several sexual passes at me until my alpha stepped in, Divine."
"Your alpha?"
"Seungcheol, Divine."
Silence follows your response for a second. You can feel Seungcheol's gaze heavy on you then. The Divine watches you too, a new interest as she hums thoughtfully.
"Did Seungcheol kill Torren out of jealousy?"
"No. I killed him, Divine."
"Are you lying to me?"
You swallow. "No, Divine."
"Did you let the others go on purpose?"
Your vision blurs at the edges, ears ringing, nausea surging so violently you nearly retch. You bite the inside of your cheek until you taste blood, forcing yourself to stay upright.
"No, Divine."
"Interesting." The Bloodsong fades slowly, leaving your head ringing, body shaking, knees weak with relief. "Very... consistent. One more, then. Your alpha, as you so incorrectly put it."
On unsteady knees, you stand. Seungcheol is stiff when you turn to him. You notice the twitch of his hand near his sword when he steps forward. His scent spikes, sharp and sour as the two of you exchange places. His hand reaches out briefly, a single brush of fingers before he stands in front of the Divine.
The Divine studies him like a specimen pinned beneath glass. “Tell me,” she says, voice soft and almost kind, “of Torren’s death in detail.”
Seungcheol’s body goes rigid. A muscle jumps in his jaw and his hands clench into fists at his sides. Blood trickles from his nose, slow at first, then faster, dark and thick, dripping onto the marble in soft, rhythmic drops that make you squirm.
“Torren attacked her,” he grits out, voice strained, rough with pain. “She defended herself.”
The Divine leans forward, eyes gleaming. “I said in detail.”
He falls forward a little, one palm pressed flat to the ground. His breathing comes in short, agonized bursts, body shaking violently, sweat and blood mixing on his face, dripping onto the stone in dark pools. A low, guttural groan escapes him, raw and broken, but the words hold.
Seungcheol recounts the same story in perfect detail, shivering through the power of the Bloodsong. You watch, holding your breath, trying not to whine as you watch him struggle.
The Divine watches, unblinking as she questions him until he's mumbling his responses. The Divine’s frustration is visible now, a subtle tightening around her mouth, a flicker of irritation in her eyes.
The Bloodsong fades, leaving Seungcheol heaving and bloody. But he doesn’t waver. The story holds. No crack. No deviation. The Divine studies him for a long moment, then waves a hand, dismissive.
“Dismissed,” she says. “Except for Lira and Sorren.”
Relief crashes through you - violent, dizzying, nauseating. Your knees nearly give out as Seungcheol surges to his feet, staggering slightly. He stumbles back toward you, blood still dripping from his nose. He doesn't seem to notice. His eyes are locked on you, wild and terrified.
The rest of you turn to leave, Lira and Soren visibly trembling. Mingyu and Jihoon say nothing as you enter the hall, the Sanctum doors closing behind you. Mingyu simply lifts his hand, he and Jihoon stumbling off on their own as you and Seungcheol start the uneven trip back to your quarters.
The corridors feel narrower now. The air is thick with the lingering scent of incense and iron, clinging to your clothes, your hair, your skin. Seungcheol walks beside you, close enough that his arm brushes yours with every step. He catches your wrist, fingers wrapping around it to tug you closer as you walk, like he’s afraid you'll vanish if he doesn't keep you tethered to him.
His face is still pale, blood crusted at the corner of his nose and smeared across his chin from the Bloodsong, but his eyes are steady now, locked on the path ahead. He stays that way until he's pushing open the door that leads to the pack quarters - not home, exactly, but you have no other word for it.
The familiar scents hit you like a wave, warm and alive. The moment you step inside, the others are there.
Soonyoung is the first to reach you, barreling forward despite the lingering stiffness in his ribs, arms wrapping around you so tightly you can barely breathe. You nearly sob as he grabs you, pressing his face into your neck as he breathes you in, shivering.
“You’re back,” he breathes against your hair, voice cracking. “You’re actually back.”
Vernon is next, pulling you into his chest the moment Soonyoung lets go. His sage scent wraps around you, steady and soothing as his hand cups the back of your head. He examines your face, frowning at what he sees there. He still leans forward, kissing you gently enough that you melt into him.
"You look terrible," Seokmin murmurs, caging you in from behind and pressing you into Vernon's chest. His mouth drops to your neck, lips pressing delicate kisses to your scent gland. Your eyes roll back and he hums. "I'm glad you're back."
Seungcheol stands a step behind, letting Jeonghan and Chan swarm you. Jeonghan's jasmine is overwhelming as he whines, pressing his face into your neck as much as he can while Chan peppers your jaw and temple in kisses, tongue darting out to catch you.
They're all overwhelming, the closeness of them enough to make you scent-drunk, the room spinning by the time Seungcheol finally moves forward, coming toward you. Jeonghan looks up, surprised, but you watch as he grins and his pupils dilate, stepping back and taking Chan with him to give Seungcheol room.
You turn, startled at the intensity of his stare. He doesn't say anything. He just reaches for you and pulls you toward him, hands coming up to cup your cheeks, thumbs brushing over tears and dirt and grime.
“You’re fucking crazy,” he whispers, voice low and rough.
Then he's kissing you. It's not gentle or tentative - it's desperate and hungry, like he's been starving for this since the moment he saw you in Valen's courtyard surrounded by flames. His mouth crashes against yours, one hand sliding to the back of your neck, fingers threading into your hair to hold you exactly where he wants you. He tastes like blood and bergamot - he tastes alive.
You kiss him back just as hard, hands fisting in the sleeves of his shirt, rising on your toes to press closer and deeper. The world narrows to the heat of his mouth on yours, his heartbeat thundering against your chest, the faint tremor in his hands as he kisses you.
When he finally pulls back, it's just enough to rest his forehead against yours, breathing ragged.
“Don’t ever do that again,” he says, voice wrecked. “Don’t ever scare me like that again. That was so stupid.”
"No promises," you whisper, voice shaking.
He kisses you again - slower this time. It's softer, but still just as hungry, the swipe of his tongue against yours making you boneless. He doesn't care. He holds you up, his grip firm and steady, before he pulls away, staring at you with eyes like twin moons.
The pack watches in stunned silence. And then Soonyoung breaks it, whistling low and grinning.
"Well, took you long enough," he teases.
A laugh escapes you, breathless and a little embarrassed as you lean into Seungcheol's chest, hiding your face. Vernon snorts, arms crossed, but there’s a small, genuine smile tugging at his mouth.
"I'm thrilled as any to see them kissing," Seokmin announces. "But the two of you are covered in blood and bruises and Gods knows what else. Infirmary. Now."
Seungcheol kisses you again, soft and brief, before nudging you toward Seokmin, who watches fondly. "Don't keep him waiting. And tell him what you did. Someone else needs to be just as angry as I am."
Seokmin waits for you, letting you thread your fingers with his as the three of you walk down the hall, the others trailing behind, too eager to leave you alone just yet.
Home. Sort of.
The glimpses of outside is sooo refreshing even with the creepy bloodwoods. Though this makes going back to the keep all that more claustrophobic. Wildheart is insane for that move she pulled before the inquiry holy shit. I can’t believe that worked! If I was seungcheol, I would kiss her on the mouth too for that working!!! We’re seeing such a softer side now to cheolie on so excited for them to navigate their relationship! A great chapter as always!!
S.COUPS — JUNGLE NEW_ in Incheon 250914
typical 218 shenanigans
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Countdown to 218 bros day: nana bnb moments
Amontillado (y.jh)
PAIRING: Vampire!Jeonghan x human!Reader SUMMARY: Disappearing from your fiancé should have been easy. Instead, you stumble into Jeonghan’s empire of blood and alcohol - and he becomes the only thing standing between you and death. TOTAL FIC WC: 19,138 AU: 1920s Era, Supernatural, Mild Horror GENRE: Strangers to Lovers, Mild Angst, Smut, Romance RATING: 18+ Minors are strictly prohibited from engaging in and reading this content. It contains explicit content and any minors discovered reading or engaging with this work will be blocked immediately. WARNINGS: References to the mob, past physical abuse (not in great detail) and a lot of sexism/using a wife as a placeholder and pretty thing to look at, depictions of blood and gore (vampires feeding), depictions of anxiety and fear, reader doing a lot of thinking about her past life and how much she hated/feared her former fiance, mild power dynamics but not explicitly used or mention (Jeonghan is a powerful vampire and reader is vulnerable so I feel like mentioning this), illegal activities like bootlegging alcohol and blood, ambiguous vampire lore, mentions/references to murder, single fight scene where a vampire is decapitated but not in great detail, romance is a little fast-paced/seems a little too quick but we ride, sexual tension/flirting, Wonwoo tries to eat reader a total of One Time, Soonyoung is a feral baby and loses control a little but he's doing his best, explicit language, explicit sexual content including unprotected sex, oral (f. receiving), praise, use of 'good girl', vaginal fingering... I think that's everything! A/N: This is my second piece for the Puttin’ on the Ritz collab by @studiosvt and I could not be more excited to bring you 1920s vampire Jeonghan! Honestly this story turned out entirely different than when I first set out to write it. My original intention was to make it darker and similar to the Cask of Amontillado by Edgar Allen Poe but what I actually ended up with is sweetie vampire Jeonghan giving reader a ton of agency and making the world her oyster!!!! AN 2: This is not beta read so I'm sorry - there will definitely be mistakes! I did proof read/spelling and grammar check but I often miss a lot!
MAIN M. LIST | ASK | PUTTIN’ ON THE RITZ COLLAB
YOU LEAVE WITHOUT PACKING A THING.
The house is still asleep when you slide the window open and slide out, the winter air biting at your hands. Your fingers feel raw as you climb out the window onto the fire escape, the metal stinging to the touch. Your breath fogs despite the fact you're barely breathing, too afraid to make a sound.
With frozen fingers, you push the window shut, heart hammering as it squeezes. You freeze, squeezing your eyes shut. The cold nips at you, wind pulling at your clothes that aren't thick enough for winter and scraping against the back of your neck.
Sucking in a breath, you force yourself to shut the window the rest of the way. Turning, you creep further onto the fire escape, desperate not to make a sound. In the distance, New York is awake. She never sleeps, but she's loud tonight, the sound of sirens carried on the wind, the roar of a Model T somewhere a few blocks over.
The fire escape is blessedly quiet as you navigate down, too cold, too alert, too nervous. You nearly miss the last step on the way down, stumbling onto the frozen street. As soon as you're on level ground you're moving as fast as you can, pulling the thin jacket around you as you go.
Your fiance always said you'd never make it three blocks without him knowing.
You make it eight.
The train yard is loud, though you can barely hear it over your chattering teeth. You're so cold you can barely think, driven only by fear. You become a passenger to the fear, letting it drive you through a tangle of metal train cars and clanking metal, the night sky twinkling above you as you find a freight train, near ready to leave.
You don't think. You swing up into a car, uncaring where it's going or what's inside. You don't care. Anywhere is better than here, and any direction that's away from your rotten fiance and his violent hands is good enough for you.
Heavy wooden barrels fill the train car. They're unmarked but rotund, hammered bands of steel keeping the frame intact. You weave between them, looking for a nook dark enough for you to hide - warm enough to not freeze to death. For a brief moment, you think that might not be so bad. Better than dying at the hands of your fiance or his family. Better than letting him put marks on you were you can't see them, better than-
Voices startle you. From a distance, you hear the rolling slam of train car doors and metal locks sliding into place. You panic, diving for the corner of the train car behind two barrels, tucking yourself into the shadows. It isn't warm, but you can no longer feel the icy teeth of the wind scraping across your skin, threatening to bite.
Tucking your hands between your thighs, you hold your breath. Male voices approach the car and you listen as they jump in and walk around briefly, taking stock. You can't see them, but you make yourself smaller. You've always been good at that, and it works now. They don't see you tucked in the corner, jumping back out before rolling the door shut with a clang that makes you flinch.
You don't breathe until the train starts moving, the sound of the whistle and the lurch forward startling you. You shiver violently, relaxing a fraction as you lean back into the cold metal of the wall, pressing your hands between your thighs to keep them warm. It only works a little, but it's the best you can do, eyes fluttering as you breathe in the smell of wood and something dark and rich.
The train rocks back and forth, the sound of the clicking tracks and liquid sloshing in the barrel. You feel yourself relax for the first time in weeks - shoulders sagging, breathing leveling out. There's no way for Vin to catch up to you now, and it makes you smile tiredly, a sliver of pride leaking through your exhaustion.
Your fiance always said you'd never make it three blocks without him knowing.
You've now made it eight and some change, train chugging to somewhere far off away from him and those who would force you to marry him for the sake of power and a name.
-
The train coming to an abrupt halt startles you awake. You groan, neck stiff, muscles locked and cold. Everything hurts from sleeping in the cramped corner of the train car, bones popping as you sit up straight, alert to the sudden halt. You don't know how long you've been asleep, but it's still dark in the train and you feel exhausted.
Curling in the shadow, you wait for the sound of voices, the opening of doors. Your intention is to get off in whatever city you've landed in and start a new life. Pick up a job waitressing, maybe. Or at one of those exclusive places they sell bootleg alcohol and don't ask questions. Anything to get you a little bit of cash and get you somewhere warm.
You smile, thinking about this new life. You imagine yourself in a smoky lounge, tucking cash in your pocket after giving strangers smiles and-
The screaming rips your illusion in half.
You sit up straight, hand flying over your mouth to suppress the startled sound that slips through. A man screams somewhere in the distance, the sound wounded and terrified. It's cut off abruptly, the silence so heavy that your ears start to ring, goosebumps rising on your skin from more than the cold.
The silence doesn't last. Another scream pierces the night, this one closer, raw and guttural like an animal being torn apart. You press yourself deeper into the shadows behind the barrels, knees drawn up to your chest, heart slamming against your ribs so hard it hurts. The cold has seeped into your bones, making every shiver feel worse. You bite down on your lip to keep from whimpering, tasting the metallic tang of blood where your teeth break the skin.
Footsteps approach, slow and deliberate, crunching on the gravel outside the train car. Your breath hitches, fogging the air in front of you. The door to the car rattles, metal groaning as it's shoved open with a force that makes the whole car shudder. You squeeze your eyes shut, willing yourself invisible. The footsteps enter now, soft but unmistakable, padding across the wooden floor between the barrels.
There's a pause. You don't dare breathe, hoping they can't see you. You hear a soft inhale and then the scuff of feet.
"Well, well," a voice says, velvet soft. "You are most certainly not the Amontillado I was looking for."
Your eyes snap open, and there he is, standing just beyond the barrels, silhouetted against the faint moonlight spilling through the open door. He's beautiful in a way that doesn't make sense to your brain, short circuiting. Medium length dark hair falls around his face in waves, framing sharp features that look ethereal enough to be in a painting. His eyes are dark, flashing silver briefly as he crosses through a shaft of moonlight toward you, his gait impossibly smooth.
He tilts his head, studying you, and another scream rips through the distance. You flinch, cowering in your corner, stomach churning. You hear a man begging, screaming no - a wet gurgle cuts him off.
The man in front of you doesn't flinch. He doesn't even glance toward the noise, just continues studying you, something close to amusement on his face. Then he sighs, looking up at the dark ceiling of the train car.
"You," he says, sounding tired as he looks back down at you. "Are a most unfortunate stowaway. What in the world are you doing here, little mouse?"
You stare at him, frozen. Your mind races as the screaming picks back up again, fainter this time but no less horrifying. You stare at this man and realize he expects an answer, his brows raised, watching you and waiting.
Licking your lips, you murmur, "I just…" You think about what to say but you don't know what. So you're honest. "I just didn't want him to hurt me anymore."
The words hang in the frozen air between you. You don't elaborate, don't say anything else. You stare at him, the fear mounting, your fingers numb either from the terror or the cold, you're not sure.
He stares at you then sighs, seeming to make a decision. He comes toward you and you press further into the wall as he moves the barrels out of his way with no problem. You blanche - the barrels must weigh far more than he can lift, but you watch as he picks them up with no effort.
"Don't scream," he murmurs as he reaches you, crouching down. As he does, you catch the faintest whiff of him - sweet, like jasmine. He shrugs his coat off, offering it to you. "You are a very unlucky woman, but I'm feeling empathetic tonight. Put this on before you freeze to death."
With a shaking hand, you reach for the jacket. He becomes unnaturally still as you take it, his pupils dilating slightly in the dark. You look away, his eyes unnerving and predator-large in the dim of the train.
His jacket is thick and woolen, the smell of jasmine intensifying. You pull it around you, warmth making you melt a little. It cures the worst of your shiver and you clutch at it instinctively, clinging to the lifeline.
"Listen to me." His voice is barely above a whisper and you look back up at him. "I'm not going to hurt you. I need you to stay close. Don't look at anything or anyone. Let me guide you. Can you do that?" You nod and his mouth twitches. "Good girl. Let's stand, yeah?"
His hands wrap around your arms and he pulls you to your feet. Your legs wobbled, cramped from the cold and the cramped position. He steadies you with ease, his touch surprisingly gentle. You let out a shaky breath and he makes a sound - something almost fond - and brushes the hair from your forehead.
"Stay close," he reminds you, fingers lingering on your forehead. "I'm Jeonghan, by the way." You give him your name, breath fogging around the shape of it. "Pretty. Tasteful. Like Amontillado."
Jeonghan slides an arm around your waist, pressing you close to his side. His body is solid and warmer than it should be in the freezing night. You don't pull away, too stunned and too terrified to do more than follow as he leads you toward the open door of the train car.
It becomes immediately clear why he told you not to look at anything.
Outside the train car is a slaughterhouse. You freeze in the doorway but he tsks and jumps to the ground, turning to pick you up by the hips and swiftly puts you down. You suck in a sharp air at how easily he does it, movements quick and effortless.
Bodies are everywhere. Train workers lie scattered across the yard, their limbs twisted at unnatural angles, throats torn open, blood pooling in the dark. The metallic scent hits you, thick and coppery and your stomach turns over. You duck into his arm as he hushes you gently, hiding your face.
"Come on," he murmurs, arm tightening. "We have to walk, Amontillado."
You can't help but look, stomach lurching. There are figures - people - bent over the fallen men of the train yard, their mouths pressed to necks and wrists. The scene confuses you, bloody faces pressed into the flesh of the fallen, blood running down chins and necks as their throats gulp-
Drinking. They're drinking. Blood. They're drinking blood. They're drinking blood like vampires.
The word slams into you, impossible and yet you don't know how else to describe what you're seeing. You've read Dracula before, but what you see here is worse, the ravenous hunger displayed in red carnage too real, too vivid to process.
Another scream makes you startle. You see a worker pinned under two of the creatures, his legs kicking futilely as they rip into him. Blood sprays and you clap a hand over your mouth to stifle your gasp.
Jeonghan doesn't react. He leads you through the carnage, his steps sure and unhurried. Casual. Like he does this all the time.
One of the vampires turns toward you, a burly man with wild eyes and blood matting his beard. He straightens when he sees you, his eyes flashing unnatural silver as he steps into the moonlight, grinning, mouth a gash of red and teeth.
"Ah-ah," Jeonghan warns, his words hissed. "Mine. Please finish and load the casks in the middle car. They're what we were looking for."
The vampire dips his head slightly. "Understood, boss."
Jeonghan keeps you moving , guiding you past the worst of the bodies, stepping carefully over pooling blood that steams in the cold. The yard is vast, tracks stretching into darkness like black rivers, and the vampires are finishing their work - dragging corpses into neat piles, licking crimson from their fingers, wiping mouths on sleeves. The silence is heavier now, the screams gone, replaced by the occasional wet smack of lips or the crunch of bone under boots.
Your teeth chatter despite the jacket, and he notices, pulling you even closer so your side is flush against his. His body radiates heat in a way that feels wrong for the season, wrong for anything human, but you lean into it anyway, desperate for anything that isn't the biting wind or the copper reek of blood.
"Why did he call you boss?" You murmur, eyeing the car he leads you toward. It is eerily empty in the train yard. You realize they have - the vampires - have killed everyone else. "Are you a gangster or something?"
"Hardly."
Despite the violence, it relieves you. You hadn't run from the mafia into another. Though you think this might be worse.
"I'm in charge of a rather complex operation," Jeonghan tells you, opening the car door. You let him usher you inside, the interior cool. "One of which, you have just stumbled upon."
You swallow. "Why save me, then?"
He glances down, that faint smile returning, though it doesn't reach his eyes. "Empathy, as I said. And perhaps curiosity. A little mouse who ran from one wolf only to stumble into a den of them. I think it would be a shame to let all that effort go to waste, Amontillado."
"Why do you keep calling me that?"
"Amontillado is complex. Fresh. Lingering." He grins. "And it's my favorite."
Your fiance always said you'd never make it three blocks without him knowing.
You make it to Long Island, the moonlight shining through the car window as a vampire slides into the cab of the car next to you, looking down at you with a glint in his eye that you can't tell if it's curiosity or hunger. Or both.
-
The Hamptons are like nothing you've ever seen. Not that you've seen much outside of your tiny life in Manhattan. Snow dusts the ground in patches, glittering under the moonlight like sugar scattered over the extravagant lawns. Grand houses line the sides of the roads, their stone walls covered with overgrown ivy.
Winter is quiet in the Hamptons. You wonder what it looks like during the summer, full of life and light and parties that only exist in myth to you. It's beautiful in a lonely way, the empty fields stretching toward a dark horizon broken only by the occasional barn or silo. No crowds, no push of bodies on sidewalks, no blare of horn.
Most importantly, no Vin.
While the Hamptons isn't as far as you wanted to get from him, you think it's far enough. For now. You glance at the vampire next to you and think that Vin wouldn't be able to get to you here anyway. Not with the strange creature sitting next to you, his eyes flashing silver occasionally when the moon catches them just right.
Jeonghan feels you looking at him. He flicks his eyes to you, tilting his head as he drinks you in. Once again you're put off by the way his eyes dilate, pupils larger than they should be. They're beautiful in an unnerving way, a tingle starting at the base of your spine under his stare.
"First time out of the city?" He asks, voice quiet.
You nod, not trusting your voice yet. The car turns onto a smoother drive, the road narrowing as it curves toward the coast. Lights flicker ahead, gas lamps lining a long driveway. An estate emerges from the night, massive and made of all stone. The windows glint warmly against the dark, towers rising at the corners covered in winding ivory.
Your breath catches. It looks more like a palace than a house, a fantasy capture on pressed magazines and where people whispered about bootleggers and oil barons throwing parties until dawn in the summer. The car pulls up to the grand entrance, gravel crunching under tires, and the driver kills the engine.
Jeonghan exits first, offering a hand to help you out. You take it, stepping out on legs that feel like jelly. The air smells like salt and pine, sharp and cleaner than anything you've ever breathed in. You take a few gulps of air, the cool burning your lungs. He makes a sound like he's amused before he tugs you forward toward the steps that lead up to the mansion.
It's even more imposing up close, the double doors carved of heavy oak. You hesitate a little at the carved gargoyles, a strange piece of architecture in a place like this. Jeonghan brisks past them, opening the door with a gentle push, like the house answers to him.
"Welcome," he teases, ushering you inside.
Warmth hits you immediately, such a relief that you can't help but make a small noise in the back of your throat. The air carries a faint scent of wood polish and cigar smoke, warm and inviting. The grand foyer is made up of marble floors veined in gold, a staircase sweeping up toward the shadowed upper levels. Paintings line the walls, dark depictions of stormy seas and dark florals. A grandfather clock ticks in the corner, the pendulum swinging slow and steady like your pulse.
You stand there, dripping melted snow onto the pristine floor, feeling small and out of place in your thin clothes and borrowed jacket. The amount of wealth in front of you is something you've never seen before. Your family had money - not you - and your fiance had money too, but not like this. Not the old money that keeps these houses heated even when they're empty in winter, and full of life in the summer.
"What now?" You ask, voice small in such a vast space.
Jeonghan turns to you, dark eyes searching. "Unless you have somewhere else to go, I'd presume you're stuck here."
Stuck. The word twists inside of you. You'd been stuck in Manhattan, too. Until you finally ran, knowing it was better to die of the cold than it was to die at the hands of a violent man who wanted only your family's name and money. Not you. Never you.
"Stuck." You repeat the word, voice hollow. "I've been stuck my entire life."
"The world out there isn't kind to strays. Especially the kind like you, who have seen something they shouldn't have. My kind don't leave witnesses."
Nervousness coils tight in your chest, your hands fidgeting with the jacket's hem. "But you said you wouldn't hurt me."
"I won't." There is an unspoken yet that lingers between you. But he softens anyway, sympathy - either fake or real you can't tell - crosses his face. "I give you my word. But being with me does have consequences. There are rules and dangers, others who won't hesitate like I did. You have to trust me, and I have to trust you."
Trust. The word tastes bitter, after Vin's lies and the crack of his hand. You look at the closed door behind you, knowing that outside lies nothing but the cool winter of the Hamptons, empty until summer. Here though, it's warm. Here, there is a roof. A creature that could kill you, but perhaps would stand between you and Vin - and Vin's family.
"You're free to leave, if you wish," he murmurs. "You will be safe from whatever cruelty you've run from, if you're lucky. If you stay though, you will find a different sort of cruelty here. Never to you, but you will see things you're not used to."
You look up at him. "But you won't hurt me?"
"I won't hurt you."
It shouldn't be enough. But in a world like yours, filled with mob bosses and men who rule the city and every block of your home, you think that the promise of not hurting you is good enough. It's the only one you've ever received.
"It's enough," you whisper.
He hums. "I wonder what is so bad that you'd choose me over what you're running from, Amontillado."
"The mob."
"Indeed?" You nod. "You are unlucky. Come. You need rest."
He offers his arm, and after a beat, you take it. He leads you up the staircase, steps creaking faintly under your weight but silent under his. The banister is smooth mahogany, carved with intricate vines that twist like veins. You're suddenly reminded of blood, of the people in the train yard, the sounds.
Your stomach flips. There's no turning back now. So you let him lead you up, tired and sore and still a little cold.
The upper hallway stretches long and dim, gas lamps flickering in sconces, casting shadows that dance on wallpaper patterned with subtle florals. Doors line the walls, heavy wood with brass handles, every detail intentional and rich with an artistry that is beyond you.
Jeonghan pauses at a door near the end, turning the handle with a soft click. The room beyond is a dream. A four-poster bed dominates the center of the room, draped in velvet curtains the color of midnight. A fireplace sits cold, but Jeonghan drifts toward it, immediately setting himself to the task of lighting it. You follow him, eager for warmth.
Windows overlook the dark grounds, heavy curtains - to block out the dawn, you realize - covering the glass. A vanity sits in the corner, mirror framed in twisting gold filigree. A wardrobe looms opposite, closed tight.
Flames lick to life. You hold out your hands, thankful for the heat as Jeonghan rises in one fluid motion. He looks like the devil, the orange light from the fire turning his face from angel to demon. Despite the heat, you shiver, staring at him as he cocks his head, looking at you like he doesn't know what to do with you.
"This room is yours," he says. He gestures toward a door. "There's a bath through that door. I can send for a tailor for clothes in the morning. You look dreadful and unless humans have rapidly adapted in a way I'm unfamiliar with, you're going to freeze dressed like that."
"I…" You hesitate. "You don't have to do that."
"I don't have to, you're right." He walks toward the door, steps silent. "Like I said, I was feeling empathetic, Amontillado. And perhaps I'm loath to see such a pretty thing snuffed out after fighting so hard to keep burning."
His words make your stomach flutter. You watch him go, unsure how to thank him. Unsure if you should thank him. Unsure if this is all a mistake and if he's going to kill you and drain you when you let your guard down, a liar to the end, just like Vin.
Jeonghan pauses at the door and levels you with a look that feels like he can sense your fear again. "Sleep. We'll talk more tomorrow night."
Tomorrow night.
Because you won't see him during the day. You swallow thickly, nodding. "Thank you, Jeonghan."
"Lock the door if it makes you feel safer. Though nothing here will harm you without my say."
Then he's gone, the door closing softly behind him, leaving you alone. You stand there, heart pounding, the jacket still wrapped around you smelling like jasmine. The fire pops, and you move finally, shedding the coat and sinking onto the bed's edge.
For the first time all night, you lay down on a bed, sinking in. It's softer than anything you've ever known, and you wonder what it would be like to live like this, surrounded by softness. By richness.
Sleep drags at you, and just as you begin to fall asleep, it occurs to you that perhaps you've just traded one cage for another.
-
You wake with a start, sucking in a warm breath of air as you sit upright. The room spins, unfamiliar and confusing as the last dregs of your nightmare start to melt away, flashes of images sticking to you: Vin's snarling face, your mother's iron cold hand on your wrist, blood pooling in your mouth, cheek stinging as your father yells.
The room is dim, fire refused to glowing coals that cast a faint orange glow across the velvet curtains. Your heart begins to slow as you remember where you are. You're not in that tenement apartment with thin walls and shouting neighbors, with Vin's heavy footsteps and angry shouting.
You draw your knees to your chest, wrapping your arms around them. The memories of last night settle around you like sediment in water: the fire escape's icy bite, the train yard with pools of blood, Jeonghan's voice cutting through the wet sound of flesh parting and blood spilling.
Shaking it off, you get up and pad to the curtains, peeking between them. Late afternoon slips through the velvet, pale gold light turning the snow outside sugary. The grounds of the estate stretch wide and white, oaks stripped bare from the winter, icicles hanging like crystals from their branches. A frozen fountain sits sentinel in the drive, a detail you'd missed the night before.
Beyond the estate, you see the Atlantic. It rolls grey and restless, the horizon swallowed by clouds. No people. No movement except the wind. It seems that this lonely house is smack in the middle of the extravagance of the Hamptons, but the winter has chased everyone else away.
Everyone else except the man who'd brought you here last night.
Turning away from the window, you look at the door to the bedroom. You'd taken his advice and locked it last night to feel better, still small and a little afraid in this strange house. Now, you wonder if it's safe to explore. Jeonghan had said he would see you the next night and he hadn't forbad you from exploring during the daylight hours.
Curiosity overrides the lingering tremor in your hands. You need to move, to map out this place in your mind, to find exits in the event you need them again, to prove to yourself that you're not trapped.
The hallway outside is hushed, gas sconces turned low, their flames steady behind etched glass. Doors line both sides, dark wood gleaming, brass handles cold under your fingertips as you test one. It's locked so you don't push further, drifting toward the staircase. The bannister is smooth under your palm, dingers trailing along the carved vines, half expecting them to twitch and come to life in this strange place.
Downstairs, the foyer is empty, afternoon light slanting in through the tall windows, dust motes floating in the air. The grandfather clock ticks slowly in the corner, the only sound to accompany you as you turn left toward an archway that leads to a parlor. Velvet settees in burgundy and marble-topped tables fill the room. Empty crystal decanters glinter in the sunlight, tossing rainbow prisms around the room.
A beautiful grand piano sits in the corner. You drift toward it, noting that there's no dust, despite the lid being closed. The sheet music is yellowed at the edges - Mozart, you realize. Your lips twitched, tapping the top as you wonder if it's Jeonghan who plays.
You pass from the parlor, drifting room to room. Each one unfolds, richer and more marvelous than the last. There's a dining hall with a table stretched long enough for banquets, a conservatory with walls of fogged glass and full of ferns and orchids that are sleeping under the frosty panes, a billiard room with scarred felt and perfectly racked cues.
Paintings watch your exploration from every wall. The gilded frames are filled with stern men in high collars and ladies with keen eyes. You shiver as you pass them, wandering until you find a set of ancient double doors cracked open, the smell of paper and wax luring you in.
You step inside, the warm lamplight spilling over you. Your breath catches - it's a library. It's massive inside, shelves climbing three stories high with ladders on brass rails. Leather spines in every color line the shelves, some with gold lettering, some in lettering you can't read at all. It smells like paper and ink, drawing you in.
It's dark inside as you drift toward a shelf, your fingers tracing titles. Poe. Shelley. Things in Latin and French you don't know how to read. You smirk when you see Stoker, pulling the tome from the shelf and drifting toward the lamplight as you finger through the thin pages.
You settle on a rug on the floor, closest to the single floor lamp that's on. Even with the lamp, it's a challenge to read, the darkness of the library pressing in as you squint at the opening lines of the story - though now real, perhaps - interested in what truths you might find.
A needle-thin awareness prickles at the back of your neck. You look up, turning over your shoulder, heart skipping as a chill settles in. You see nothing at first, eyes struggling to adjust in the dim light. You nearly write it off as paranoia from the subject material in your lap when you see it, the outline of a shadow near the stacks, just at the wavering edge of lamplight.
Panic locks you in place. There's a man standing in total shadow, tall and broad-shoulder. You can barely make out his face, but you see him cock his head, the lamplight reflecting off glasses. Your heart begins to race when you see the unnatural silver flash of his eyes - vampire.
He drifts forward and yet he hardly seems to move at all. One second he's in total darkness, the next he's in the orange glow, eyes fixed on you with an intensity that makes your instincts scream predator. His lips part, revealing the barest flash of fang, and a low growl vibrates from his chest - quiet and gentle, but it vibrates through you, terror unlike anything you've ever known thrumming through you.
"Wonwoo."
Jeonghan's voice slices through the tension like a blade. You flinch, looking at where Jeonghan has appeared in the doorway. He's in a white shirt that's open at the collar, sleeves rolled to his elbows. He steps forward and appears between you and the vampire - Wonwoo - in the blink of an eye, impossibly fast.
"We have a guest," Jeonghan says. "I apologize - I haven't had a moment to tell you and I didn't think our little Amontillado would go wandering." Jeonghan glances at you, eyes glittering. "She's braver than I thought she is. Let's leave her be, please."
Wonwoo's jaw tightens, a muscle ticking. His gaze flicks from Jeonghan to you, hunger warring with something colder - resentment, maybe. He exhales through his nose then turns, vanishing into the shadow again. You blink. One moment he's there, the next he's gone, a phantom among the stacks.
Jeonghan drifts toward you and crouches, sighing. "Breathe. You're safe."
It isn't until he says something that you realize you're shaking. You swallow and nod, snapping the book shut in your lap.
"I didn't mean to tresspass. I was just looking."
"I know. It's alright. You did nothing wrong."
You look up at him and he gives you a lazy smile before leaning forward to pluck the book out of your lap. He huffs when he sees it, holding it up, cover toward you, as he arches a brow in question. You flush, looking at your hands in your lap.
"Thought I could learn a thing or two."
"Stoker doesn't get much right," Jeonghan chuckles. He offers you a hand and you take it, letting him pull you up. His touch is warm and steady, thumb brushing over your knuckles briefly before he releases you. "I should have warned you not to wander at first. You're not a prisoner here, you are certainly free to treat the house as your own. But a gentle reminder that this house has teeth."
"How many teeth, then? Besides you."
"Three. Wonwoo, who you just met. He's particular about territory and he doesn't like people in his library without warning, so please ask for permission next time. Junhui you don't have to worry about, he is incredibly kind and is fond of humanity. Soonyoung…" Jeonghan pauses, expression darkening. "Soonyoung struggles. He is a gentle soul, but blood calls to him louder than the rest of us. Stay away from the east wing unless you're with me, yes?"
You nod. "No east wing. Understood."
Jeonghan studies you a moment longer, then offers his arm. "Let me show you properly. No more surprises."
You slip your hand through the crook of his elbow, fabric of his shirt soft against your palm. Your heart races and you wonder if he can tell, the twitch of his mouth something between smug and genuine. You let Jeonghan lead you back through all of the rooms you toured yourself, but now with his soft voice pointing out things you never noticed before.
In the parlor, he sits at the piano, lifting the cover. You grin, drifting toward him as his hair falls forward in his eyes while his fingers run over the keys. It's not the sheet music in front of him, but it's something darker and more melodic, the sound swirling around you.
Your eyes fixate on his hands, watching the way he plays. They're delicate and fluid, moving over each key intimately, like stroking a lover. It makes you flush as you listen to him until he finishes, the last note dying in the warm air.
"It's beautiful," you murmur.
He glances up, dark eyes wide. "The piece or the player?"
Heat creeps up your neck. You look away, but not before catching the spark in his gaze, something warm and teasing. It tugs at your heartstrings. You don't know what to do with warm and teasing, so used to Vin's vitriol and cool dismissal.
Jeonghan picks the tour back up, leading you down into the wet cold of the cellars. You shiver, following him down the stone steps. Lanterns glitter to life as he passes, the soft yellow glow throwing light and shadows.
At the bottom, you step into a room with vaulted ceiling overhead and crates lining the walls, each labeled with something innocuous. He drifts toward one, prying the top with that same inhuman strength he'd used the night before to reveal dark bottles inside.
Your breath catches at the sight. There are dozens of bottles of amber liquor and dark crimson, vicious in the low light.
"Bootlegging is popular among us," he says, voice low. "It's made it easier for us to run blood. We run both blood and liquor across the East Coast - New York, Boston, Phildelphia." He taps a bottle of red. "The real cargo is the blood. It makes it easier for us to live in the open when we have a supply."
"The train last night - was it carrying both?"
"It was." He drifts closer, eyes darkening. "So imagine my surprise to find you among my well-paid for Amontillado, hmm?"
"Do all your… endeavors go that way?"
He sharpens. "No. Those men last night were trying to steal from me."
"Oh."
Jeonghan closes the crate and leads you back up the stairs. His hand brushes against the small of your back when you stumble, leading you carefully out of the dark and back to the top. Your skin tingles despite the separation of fabric, and when he steps away, you realize you wish he wouldn't.
"Tell me about you," he says, crossing his arms behind his back as you stroll toward the conservatory. "Not the escape. But before. Why you were running."
You chew your lip, suddenly embarrassed to recount your life to him. How to tell him that you could have had an okay life if you were good at being seen, not heard, if you could just say the right thing at the right time. If you could just accept Vin's apologies and flowers that always followed harsh words and a smack.
"My family business was…" You start, looking for words.
"The mob." You nod. "So you said."
"My family wasn't very high up but the son of a powerful man thought I was pretty. My father paid for his seat at the table and promised me to him." You look at your hands, hating the way your voice constricts. "Like I was property."
"You're not property." You glance up at him. His eyes are dark, something you can't read in them. "And I need you to know when I say mine - it is different among my kind. It is only true in protection, not ownership. I told you you were not a prisoner here. I meant it."
"Thank you, Jeonghan."
Jeonghan’s gaze lingers on you a moment longer, something unreadable flickering behind those dark eyes. Then he offers the smallest nod. "Come, there's still more to see."
He guides you through the rest of the ground floor with the same patient cadence he’s used all evening, never rushing or crowding you. You pass a smoking room lined with leather-bound books of poetry and shelves of crystal decanters, a conservatory annex where orchids sleep under frost-laced glass, a solarium whose leaded windows overlook the frozen sea beyond.
Every room feels both lived-in and impossibly untouched, as though the house has been waiting decades for someone living to walk its halls again. Jeonghan moves through it all with casual ownership, fingers occasionally brushing a carved chair rail or trailing along the edge of a marble mantle. You notice how he never quite touches anything for long, as though the textures of the human world are both familiar and faintly foreign to him now.
You wonder what it must be like to be a vampire. You don't know much about them beyond the violence of the trainyard and the pages of Bram Stoker's Dracula. You have no idea how much of Stoker's recount of them is myth or fact, but Jeonghan seems human enough, once you look past his stillness and the silent way he moves. He smiles earnestly, eyes crinkling. He has secret smiles when he seems to remember something.
Still. There is a hint of melancholy about him, a touch of sadness that you can't really understand as he shows you the pieces of his home like he's introducing you to relatives he hasn't seen in a long while.
Eventually the tour curves back toward the center of the house. He pauses at an arched doorway you hadn’t noticed earlier, half-hidden behind a heavy velvet curtain. Warm light spills from the other side, carrying the faint scent of coffee and something buttery.
“The kitchen,” he announces, drawing the curtain aside. “I thought you might be hungry.”
You hesitate on the threshold. The kitchen is far larger than anything you've ever stepped foot in. Copper pots hang from iron racks overhead, gleaming softly under pendant lights. A long island of black marble runs down the center, flanked by high stools. Windows line one wall, snow drifting being frosted glass.
Jeonghan glances back at you. “You’re allowed in here, Amontillado. In fact-" He pats the countertop beside him. "Up you go."
You blink. “On the counter?”
“Yes. It’s the best seat in the house when I’m cooking.”
There’s a playful lilt to his voice that makes your stomach do an uncertain flip. You climb up carefully, the marble cold through the borrowed clothes. Jeonghan doesn’t comment on your bare legs or the way you tug the hem down self-consciously - he simply starts pulling out materials for breakfast.
You watch as he gathers eggs, butter, a small wheel of cheese in wrapped paper, a bundle of chives. He unwraps a loaf of bread that looks as though it was delivered today, the crust still dark and crisp. He sets a cast-iron skillet on the burner and lights the gas with a quick twist of the knob, every move efficient and practiced.
“I don’t usually keep food in the house,” he says conversationally. "When it's just me and the others, the pantry is mostly empty. When we have large parties, I simply cater. But after last night, I had several things delivered at dawn. Figured you needed more than survival instinct to live on."
You let out a surprised laugh. “You ordered food? For me?”
“Unless you’d prefer I let you starve. Which would be terribly inconvenient, considering I’ve already decided I like having you around.”
Heat crawls up your throat. Instead of acknowledging his comment, you say, "I didn't imagine vampires cooked."
“We don’t need to eat.” He cracks eggs into a bowl with one hand, the motion practiced, elegant in its refinement. "But some of us remember how. I enjoy it. The rhythm of it. The way heat changes things. The small alchemy of salt and time. I used to like feeding people."
The admission is quiet, almost offhand, but it lands somewhere deep in your chest. You watch the way his forearms flex beneath rolled sleeves, the careful way he folds chopped chives into the eggs. There’s something intimate about witnessing it. He's entirely different from the man who led you through blood and gore just the night prior.
Jeonghan slides the omelet onto a plate and adds two thick slices of break slicked with butter into the pan, toasting them briefly before removing them and adding them to the plate. He turns to face you, setting the plate next to you with a small flourish, followed by freshly squeezed orange juice.
"Eat," he says softly, leaning one hip against the counter as he crosses his arms. "I know it's technically evening, but breakfast should be enjoyed at any time."
You pick up the fork. The first bite is impossibly good and you make a small, involuntary sound of pleasure and he grins. "Good?"
"Better than good. I haven't eaten anything since… I left."
His expression softens. He reaches over and tucks a loose strand of hair behind your ear. You freeze briefly, but if he's put out by your reaction, he doesn't show it. He simply watches you, those dark eyes uncanny and incredibly open. And kind.
It sends a shiver down your spine. You don't know the last time someone looked at you with kindness, and yet the creature in front of you has made you feel more cared for in the last twelve hours than most of your family have your entire life.
"If you want more, I'll make more."
You smile, soft and small. "You said you like feeding people."
"I do."
"Why?"
He considers the question, gaze drifting toward the window where snow has begun to fall again in slow, fat flakes. “Because once I was human. And once I was hungry in ways that had nothing to do with blood. I remember what it felt like to be taken care of. To matter enough that someone would stand at a stove and make something warm for you. I suppose I'm selfish and I like the reminder."
It reminds you of what he said last night: I was feeling empathetic.
You think it might be more than that, that perhaps that under the sharp, playful exterior of the vampire is something that longs for kindness in an overly cruel world. You don't say so, but Jeonghan's actions speak louder than the casual cruelty you saw last night.
Jeonghan watches you finish the last bite of toast, the way your tongue darts out to catch a stray crumb from your lower lip. He doesn’t speak right away. Instead he reaches past you to collect the empty plate, his sleeve brushing your bare forearm.
He sets the plate in the deep porcelain sink, runs water over it for a moment, then turns the tap off and dries his hands on a linen towel. When he faces you again, he seems inquisitive. He leans against the counter, arms crossed as his eyes drink you in. You feel a little exposed under that heavy gaze, fidgeting as he assesses something.
“I’ve been thinking,” he says. “About last night. About the train. About how easily you could have died in half a dozen different ways before I ever found you behind those barrels.”
"I know. My fiance said I wouldn't make it three blocks without him."
"Is that so?"
You nod. "But I made it all the way here."
“So you did.” One corner of his mouth lifts, not quite a smile. “Alive. Warm. Resilient as I've ever seen in a human.” His gaze drops briefly to your mouth, then returns to your eyes. “It occurred to me that I might have use for someone like you.”
Your heart stutters. "Use?"
"My business requires a certain kind of performance. We move products through human channels. Speakeasies and backroom deals, deliveries that need to look legitimate to anyone wearing a badge or asking questions. The humans we employ are useful, but they're not one of us. They don't know what we are. They know that we're something, but it's a risk for us."
You straighten, realizing where this was going. You wipe the crumbs from your fingers, nervous but interested. You've never had a job before, and you don't dare to hope that Jeonghan is giving you one now, but you listen eagerly.
"You've already proven your worth to me," he continues. "You ran from a man who would have killed you for less than what you saw last night, and you didn't scream once. Didn't run away in the night. I need someone I can trust with the daylight side of things. Someone who can walk into a club at noon to check inventory and smile at the suppliers or charm the cops. I'd like that someone to be you, if you're up for it."
You blink, stunned. No one has ever asked you to do anything that mattered. Not like this. Your father wanted you silent and ornamental. Vin wanted you to be compliant and decorative. Even your mother’s rare moments of attention came with instructions on how to sit, how to speak, how to disappear into the background of powerful men’s lives.
What Jeonhan is offering you is the opposite. He's not offering marriage or to be a decoration. He's asking if you want a role. A purpose. Agency to do something on his behalf. He must see the realization cross your face because his expression softens, just a fraction.
“There’s no obligation,” he adds quickly. “If you say no, nothing changes. You stay here as long as you want. You read in the library. You eat whatever ridiculous quantity of food I have delivered."
"And if I say yes?"
"I’ll teach you. Everything. How the liquor routes work. Which speakeasies are ours and which ones we tolerate. How to spot a fed before he opens his mouth. How to move money without anyone noticing the blood on it.”
"Really?"
He smiles. "Yes. And I’ll keep you safe while you learn. No one will touch you. Not Vin. Not his people. Not mine.”
Your pulse is loud in your ears. Were this Vin asking, you'd feel like it was a trap. Some sort of trick question to get you to give him a reason to hurt you. But Jeonghan stares at you earnestly, no threat hanging above your head, no punishment for saying no.
A choice.
It's a choice, which you have little experience with. Jeonghan gives it to you freely, leaving it up to you whether you want to learn something new, to have a job - an important one, one that requires trust. Respect. The very thought of getting to be important to someone - of getting to help - makes your heart race.
A few hours ago, you were ready to risk freezing on a train to go somewhere far away. You'd had no plan other than to pick up whatever job you could, to scrap something together from nothing. You'd been desperate and ready to risk your life to get away from Vin and your family, willing to do anything.
"I've never…" You pause, taking a breath. "No one has ever asked me to help with anything important before."
"I don't want you to be quiet or invisible." He takes a step toward you, then hesitates. He seems to want to move closer, but he thinks better of it, leaning against the counter again. "A woman willing to do what you did last night deserves a chance at being something, Amontillado. I want to give you the chance to be sharp. To be seen."
You think of your father’s study, the way he’d talk business over cigars while you were sent to the parlor to embroider or pour tea. You think of Vin’s apartment, the way he’d lay out your days like a schedule. How he'd tell you when to smile, when to look away, when to pretend the bruises were accidents. You think of every time you were told your worth was in your face, your name, your ability to be handed from one man to another like a signed contract.
Jeonghan's gaze rests on you. You look at him - this creature who could kill you with a flick of his wrist - and feel heat in his gaze. Vin looked at you like something to be shown off. Jeonghan looks at you like you might be the missing piece in his carefully constructed world. Someone who could walk into rooms where people lie and cheat and kill, and walk out with information, with leverage, with power.
You've never had power before. The allure of it is hypnotic, a pull to something you've only dreamed about having. You know that helping him means stepping deeper into this world, that last night's trainyard of blood and violence will become commonplace. If you say yes, you’re choosing to stand closer to the monsters. You’re choosing to become complicit. Useful. Necessary.
But you'd be protected in a way you'd never had before, and important enough to make your own decisions. Defend yourself, even. Maybe.
The option to say no is there too. To live a life hidden here, under Jeonghan's care. But you want more than safety. You want purpose and you want to know what it feels like to be the one making choices instead of having them made for you, even if the choices are dangerous.
You lift your chin, leveling your gaze with his. "I would like that."
His pupils flare, black swallowing the silver flash for a heartbeat. Then he exhales softly, almost laughing as the tension thrumming through him eases. You realize he thought you were going to say no, and you delight in having surprised him.
“Tomorrow night, then,” he says. “After dark. I’ll take you to our flagship in Manhattan. You’ll meet the staff, see how the front room operates, learn the signals we use when something’s wrong. You’ll wear something that makes you look untouchable.” His gaze travels down the length of you, lingering on bare legs, then back to your face. “I’ll have clothes sent up. Something black. Something sleek. Something that says you're protected.”
The possessive edge to the words should frighten you. It doesn’t. Not when he says it like a vow instead of a chain. Not when you’ve just chosen to walk into his world with your eyes open.
Jeonghan grins and steps forward, offering you a hand to help you down from the counter. You slide your palm into his and he helps you down, but doesn't let go of your hand right away. His thumb strokes over your knuckles once, slow and deliberate.
"Rest," he murmurs. "Read. Bathe. Eat again if you're hungry, ask for me to make you a meal. Whatever you want. Explore, so long as you stay away from the east wing, yes? You remember?"
"Yes. That's where Soonyoung is."
He releases your hand but stays close. “And Amontillado?” You look up at him. “When we step outside these walls tomorrow night, you walk like you belong there. Because you will."
With a small grin, he leaves you there, drifting from the kitchen and through the curtain, a silent wraith. You sit there a moment longer, replaying the decision in your head. Fear and exhilaration twist together until you can’t separate them. You’ve just agreed to work for a vampire. To lie to people. To handle money that’s been laundered through blood. To step into rooms where danger is as ordinary as the sky is blue.
But for the first time in your life, the choice was yours. Three blocks and some change away - further than Vin said you'd ever get - you feel lighter than you have in years.
-
Dracula sits in your lap as you curl into the deepest armchair you can find in the salon downstairs. Your legs are tucked beneath you, the fire in the grate burning down to embers. It's quiet, night turning late as you flip through the pages of your book, engrossed with the way the letters in the novel unfold, feeding you pieces of information that you're sure aren't fact, but rather embellished mysticism.
The door to the salon opens and you look up to see Jeonghan step inside. The sleeves of his white shirt are rolled to the elbows, his hair slightly mused. He pauses in the doorway, eyes finding you immediately.
"Good," he grins. "This is a good place to do it."
You close the book slowly. "Do what?"
He doesn’t answer right away. Instead he turns back toward the hall and makes a small gesture with his hand. Two men in dark suits enter behind him, each carrying leather cases and several garment bags folded carefully over their arms. Another man follows them, noticeably taller than Jeonghan with a lean, elongated frame.
His face is arresting, with sharp cheekbones and dark hair that frames dark, cat-like eyes. He's handsome, drifting gracefully into the room to perch on the settee, elegant as ever, dark eyes looking at you with interest.
Jeonghan closes the door behind him, drifting to lean on the bookshelf closest to you. The two men begin popping open their suitcases, revealing measuring tape, samples of fabric, and more. Your interest piques as you glance at Jeonghan, who smirks.
"Measurements," he tells you. "Can't keep wearing borrowed things forever, Amontillado."
You set the book aside and stand, the ill-fitting trousers and shirts a little baggy in some places and tight in others. Jeonghan watches you, his eyes missing nothing, gaze lingering a little. There's nothing overt in the way he looks at you, but you feel something in his gaze anyway, your face warming as you turn toward the tailors, heart pounding.
The man on the settee lifts his hands in a small wave when your eyes settle on him, curious. "Junhui," he says. "Jeonghan said he'd appreciate my opinion. I like clothes." He tilts his head, studying you. "It's nice to meet you."
"You too," you murmur, turning as the lead tailor steps forward.
"We will begin with measurements, Miss." He gestures to the open space between settees where the younger of the two men - his apprentice, you think - sets a small step. "Please stand on this small platform."
You hesitate only a second before stepping onto the makeshift platform. Jeonghan doesn’t sit. He leans one shoulder against the bookshelf nearest you, arms folded, watching with that same unhurried focus. Junhui shifts closer, perching on the edge of the settee so he can see both you and the tailors clearly.
The tailors begin to take your measurements, encircling tape around your bust, your waist, your arms. Junhui and Jeonghan watch in silence. Junhui's gaze is clinical and precise, while Jeonghan's makes the side of your face heat. You swallow past a knot in your throat, turning this way and that as the tailors work efficiently.
"She has a bit of a delicate build," Junhui notes. "Perhaps we can play that up without making her look fragile. Let's go with high necklaces but cut to show the line of her throat. Nothing that says look at me but rather says you should be looking."
Jeonghan makes a small sound, his fingers tightening briefly against his biceps. His eyes don't leave you for a second.
Junhui gestures to his own body for reference along the waist. "Create cinches here for her. Can I see the fabric? I'd like dark options - emerald, sapphire, burgundy. Nothing pastel. She isn't a debutante, though she is untouchable."
He glances at Jeonghan on the last word, smirking. Jeonghan doesn’t react outwardly, but there's a subtle shift in his posture, his gaze darkening just enough that his eyes flash that unusual predator silver when he tilts his head. He’s still leaning against the shelf, still casual, but there’s a tension in him now, coiled and quiet. Like he’s imagining you in every garment they’re describing. Like he’s already seeing the way the fabric will lie against your skin, the way it will shift when you turn, the way it will look under speakeasy lights when you’re standing beside him.
The thought sends heat crawling up your neck. You look away, focusing on the measuring tape as the apprentice moves to your inseam. The apprentice kneels, fingers delicate on the inside of your thigh, and Jeonghan makes a sound. Everyone goes rigid, your eyes flicking to his.
"Careful with your hands," he murmurs. "That's all."
When your eyes meet his again, he doesn’t look away. There’s no smirk, no teasing lift of his brow. Just that steady, intimate stare. You hold his gaze for longer than you mean to. Something shifts in the air between you that you don't understand, but you feel goosebumps spread down your arms as the tailors finish their measurements.
"We have what we need," the lead tailor says, bowing his head toward Jeonghan. "The first pieces will be ready by tomorrow evening."
Junhui stands, stretching like a cat. “You’re going to look devastating. Come find me in the north wing if you're ever looking to play cards."
You manage a small smile. “Thank you for your help."
He winks, then glances at Jeonghan. “I’ll leave you to it. See you tomorrow night.”
Junhui slips out, followed by the tailors, who murmur polite goodbyes and promise delivery. The door closes behind them with a soft click. Jeonghan pushes off the bookshelf and crosses to you in three silent steps. He stops just a step away, close enough that you smell the jasmine and faint cedar of his shirt.
"You can go back to reading. Dracula, was it?" You flush and he grins. "It's okay. Tell me what you think when you're finished."
You nod, throat tight. "Thank you, by the way. For the clothes but… also everything."
“You’re welcome, Amontillado.”
He doesn’t touch you. He doesn’t need to. The air between you hums as he dips his head, eyes lingering for only a moment before he drifts out of the room, soundless as ever. When the door clicks shut behind him, you drop into the chair again, heart pounding, head reeling.
-
Winter dusk settles over the Hamptons. You stand in your room - because it is your room now - turning in the full length mirror as you examine one of the dresses the tailor dropped off for you just an hour ago. It's a black dress made of crepe de chine, clinging to you like a second skin. The neckline is high like Junhui recommended, but frames the hollow of your throat, a subtle invitation of vulnerability in a room full of vampires that you think is meant to lure them in.
Your fingers tremble slightly as you smooth the fabric over your hips. This isn't the threadbare cotton dresses of your old life, nor the gaudy silks Vin paraded you in at mob dinners. This feels like armor, sleek and sensual, designed to make you move through the world with purpose. Untouchable, but not invisible. There is a difference in the two, and knowing that leaves a new hum resonating in you as the grandfather clock downstairs chimes.
Taking a deep breath, you remove a coat from the wardrobe, also newly delivered. It's heavy, and furlined, the collar thick to keep the wind off of you. You throw it over your arm and head downstairs, hurrying to not leave Jeonghan and Wonwoo waiting. Jeonghan had instructed you to meet them in the foyer at seven sharp, and you don't want to disappoint him from the start.
At the base of the stairs, Jeonghan leans against the banister, one hand in his pocket, the other idly tracing the vines carved into the wood. His suit is midnight wool, cut sharp and flawless, a white shirt open at the collar to reveal the pale column of his throat. Wonwoo stands just behind him, his black suit more severe, his hands clasped behind his back like a sentinel.
Jeonghan glances up as you approach, lips parting slightly. For a heartbeat, he is utterly still, a predator frozen in the act of spotting prey. His gaze sharpens and then softens immediately, like he's controlling an instinctual hunger as his gaze travels the length of you.
Heat blooms under your skin everywhere Jeonghan's eyes linger. You've seen desire before - Vine's was crude and greedy, a claim staked with bruises. This is different, a sort of awe that makes your heart beat faster as you reach him. Jeonghan's pupils dilate, and you feel a ripple of something go through him, a palpable change.
"Amontialldo," he murmurs. "You look utterly devastating."
"Thank you."
Wonwoo clears his throat politely, drawing your attention. His expression is stiff, jaw tight beneath his glasses, but there's no hostility, just a guarded politeness. "Sorry for the other night."
"It's alright. I won't intrude again."
His mouth twitches. "The library is open to you. Perhaps just… knock."
Outside, the car is waiting. Jeonghan offers you his arm and you take it, the wool of his sleeve warm against your bare fingers. His touch is light, but the proximity is intoxicating - the faint jasmine scent of him, the solid warmth. Wonwoo falls behind you as Jeonghan pauses at the front to help you shrug on your coat before leading you outside into the cold night, snow crunching under your boots.
The car idles for you, and the same driver from the other night opens the door. You slide in across the leather seat, Jeonghan's hand helps you before he follows, settling beside you. Wonwoo takes the other side, bracketing you between them.
Sitting between two vampires is odd. Wonwoo is stiff, leaning into the door. You think it's to offer you a little comfort, which you're grateful for. Jeonghan's presence is the opposite. His knee knocks into yours occasionally as the car drives through the frozen Hamptons, sometimes lingering. You glance at him to find him watching you already, tension thrumming through him like a plucked string. He doesn't speak, but his gaze flicks to your mouth briefly before he turns to watch the world pass by out the window.
You wonder if he feels it too, a single magnetic thread between you. You shake off the thought. If there's any desire there, you think it might be the instinctual one to bite you, the one that he clearly makes an effort to retrain as he watches the world pass by. Wonwoo stares straight ahead, stiff as a statue, but you catch the subtle flare of his nostrils, as though scenting the shift in the air.
It must be difficult for them, you realize. You're pressed between them, your blood probably a temptation. You try to make yourself smaller, shrinking in on yourself to make it easier on them, to-
"Don't do that," Jeonghan murmurs. You glance at him, eyes wide. "We're perfectly comfortable. Aren't we, Wonwoo?"
"Quite."
You nod, relaxing a little as Jeonghan's mouth quirks before he looks out the window.
The drive to Manhattan stretches long and silent at first. Bare trees claw at the starless sky, their branches like shadows against the night. The car's heater hums, warming the cabin until it's nearly stifling. It isn't until the city is blooming on the horizon, a spill of lights against the oil slick of night that Jeonghan breaks the silence.
"The first place we're visiting tonight is simply called The Red." His voice is soft, barely above a murmur. "It's our flagship, essentially. It fronts as a high-end jazz club, but the real business is below. Liquor for the humans, blood for us. Tonight you'll meet the staff and learn the signals. It's just about learning. No tests."
"Stay close," Wonwoo adds curtly. "The Red is our highest concentration of vampire customers. You won't be able to tell them apart from humans for the most part."
You nod. "I will."
The car weaves through the traffic as it plunges into the city's heart. Manhattan is alive and roaring, streets gleaming wetly from melty snow, reflecting the lights from neon advertisements for Coca-Cola and the newest Broadway show. Pedestrians huddle in fur coats, breath fogging the air, small areas lit by alleyway warming fires and the flash of police lights.
Your car arrives at a nondescript brick building in Greenwich Village, its facade unassuming and a single sign that denotes the building as a laundry service. Jeonghan helps you out of the car, the winter air biting as he leads you up the steps behind Wonwoo. Wonwoo raps three times on the door and waits until it opens.
"Evening, boss," a burly man greets.
Wonwoo claps the man on the shoulder and steps in, you and Jeonghan after him. The store is a dry cleaners. There are racks and racks of clothes in wrapped plastic and garment bags, a small counter ready to take orders with a till. A hallway leads back toward additional storage closets and offices, but it's otherwise entirely normal.
You glance at Jeonghan who grins, and nudges you to follow Wonwoo down the hallway, his fingers lingering at the small of your back. Wonwoo opens a door that leads to an office with a wardrobe, to which he then opens to reveal a false door and a set of stairs. You startle as he walks down the steps, vanishing into the dark.
"Careful," Jeonghan murmurs, breath against your ear as he guides you. "Don't miss a step."
As you go down, music swalls. The air grows heavier, scented with rose perfume, whiskey, and something metallic. The speakeasy unfolds before you like a living dream, all low ceilings and gas lamps that cast golden pools of light amid velvet shadows, illuminating booths upholstered in red leather. Couples lean close, lips brushing ears amidst laughter, the air heavy with cigar smoke.
Tables scatter the floor, covered in white linen stained with rings of spilled drinks, crystal ashtrays overflowing with cigarette butts. The bar dominates one wall with bottles of amber and crimson liquids glinting behind it like jewels in the dim light. Bartenders in crisp white shirts move with practiced grace, pouring from unmarked decanters, their eyes sharp, missing nothing.
Someone offers to take your coat and you let them. You're unsure where to look, the entire speakeasy a kaleidoscope of sound and color - flappers in beaded fringe dresses that shimmer under the lights, en in pinstripe suits and fedoras cluster in groups, cigars clamped between teeth.
Jeonghan steers you through the throng, his presence a shield as he leads you to a large, empty booth in the corner. "This is ours. Always."
You slide in first, the leather cool and yielding against your thighs through the dress, sticking slightly to your skin in the humid warmth. Jeonghan follows, his thigh pressing against yours as he settles with his arms stretched either way across the back of the seat, not touching you, but close. Wonwoo takes the outer edge, his stiff posture a contrast to Jeonghan's relaxed elegance, eyes darting around.
A waitress approaches immediately. She's pretty, a young woman with pretty emerald earrings and a tight dress. "Gentleman and…" Her eyes flick to you, surprised. "New face?"
"She's with us," Jeonghan says over the noisy din. "You'll adjust to her. The usual for Wonwoo and I." Jeonghan looks at you. "What are you having?"
"Old fashion," you answer haltingly, looking from Jeonghan to the waitress. You've never had one, but you'd watched your father drink them, always wanting to try. "Rye, not bourbon. Extra bitters, if you have them."
Vin never let you order, always deciding for you like you were a child. Here, Jeonghan's lips curve in genuine pleasure, his fingers grazing your shoulder in approval. The waitress nods before slinking off, melting into the crowd.
"That's Ella," he tells you. "Very sweet, sharp. Probably the most loyal person we have, for a human. She knows we're something but not what. She handles the front bar, spots trouble before it brews."
Wonwoo shifts. "The signals are key here. See the bartender over there?" You lean, looking at the tall man behind the bar. He's broad shouldered and taller than anyone else in the bar, his hair slicked back and shining under the light as he flashes a smile at someone. "That's Mingyu. Note the pocket square in his jacket. What color is it?"
"Green."
"Good. Ella acts as a spotter. She'll tell Mingyu code words and the colors of his pocket square changes to alert the workers. Red means problem - feds or a rival, really anything that means one of us needs to address it to assess whether we need to clear out. Blue means someone is asking too many questions. Green is good. Yellow means shipment of liquor has arrived, orange means blood. You only need to handle yellow."
You nod, absorbing it, questions forming. "How do you hide the specialties?"
Jeonghan's eyes sparkle with that delight again, leaning closer so his shoulder presses yours. "Clever question. The liquor comes in marked as laundry detergent. Blood crates will be marked as ammonia."
Before you can respond, Ella returns with drinks. Two of the glasses are wine with a hint of something metallic - blood. The other is your old fashioned, the orange peel making the air tangy. You thank her and take the drink, sipping. It's strong enough to make your eyes water, scrunching up your face as it burns all the way down.
As Ella leaves, another man walks over, slender and elegant as a knife. "This is Minghao," Jeonghan says, gesturing to the man who bows his head a little. He's one of the most beautiful people you've ever seen, dark eyes shadowed in the dim bar. "He's our manager, but he can only work the night shift." You nod, understanding - vampire. "I'd like him to show you some things so you can handle the day shift."
"Really?"
He grins. "I meant what I said. Go, learn some things. I'll be watching." His eyes flicker to Minghao. "Take care of her, please."
His hand squeezes your knee under the table. It makes your heart lurch and you grin as Minghao steps to the side for you to slide out of the booth. You follow him to a small office behind the bar. It's cramped and lit by a single desk lamp, walls lined with shelves of leather-bound books.
Looking at Minghao, you know there's no way you would have been able to mistake him as a vampire after seeing Jeonghan and the others. His movements are too fluid, steps too silent. There's an eeriness about him in the dark that wars with his hypnotic beauty, voice soft as he introduces himself.
Minghao pulls a ledger out of a desk, pages filled with coded entries, dates and quantities with cryptic notes squeezed into margins. He taps to a line and glances at you as you allow yourself a single step closer, trying not to get into his personal space.
"See here," he says, tracing a line. "This is where we track inventory and payments including payoffs to cops and others. This book being accurate is paramount. What do you notice on this section of the page here at the bottom?"
You lean, licking your lips nervously. The faint citrus bite from your orange twist is still there as you look at the bottom of the page in question, trying to make sense of it. The numbers are easy, though you don't know what the items are - not yet. You can do math though.
You point to a line. "Here. This delivery is for ten items, but the payout equals that of twelve." You drag your finger up the pay. "Here is the same product at ten items for the right price. It should match but it doesn't."
"Meaning?"
"Whoever managed the delivery either overpaid on accident, or skimmed money off the top and disguised it as a price increase."
Minghao grins. "Smart. Yeah, caught someone saying there was a tax increase but Jeonghan talked to our supplier and confirmed there wasn't." He snaps the book shut and replaces it the drawer. "You're good at math?"
"I try. Never did anything with it, but I used to watch my fiance count money." Minghao raises his brows. "Ex," you tack on. "I'm not with him anymore."
You can tell he has questions, but he doesn't ask them. He simply nods and passes you a piece of paper. You unfold it to see it's a key for all of the product in the book, a code for each line item and what type of alcohol it is.
"You'll need to learn all our suppliers and who to trust," he says, leading you out of the office and into the hall. "If you start shadowing me, I can walk you through it. How good is your memory?"
"I'm not sure."
"Was Ella wearing jewelry?"
That makes you pull up short, thinking back to the waitress. "Yes. Emerald earrings."
His mouth quirks. "Good. You remember random details."
Minghao leads you back through the haze, turning to you. "We'll start you on daylight deliveries in about two weeks. Shadow me a few nights first. Learn the faces and the codes." He nods toward the booth as he heads to the bars. "Go on. Boss is waiting. Tomorrow, we start in full."
Giving a grateful smile, you slip back toward Jeonghan, sliding into the booth next to him. His thigh brushes yours as you settle and he gives you a little grin. Wonwoo acknowledges you for only a second before he goes back to scanning the crowd, watching closely.
"Well?" Jeonghan murmurs, breath fanning against your ear as he tilts toward you a little. "How'd it go?"
"Good, I think. He was pleased I remembered what kind of earrings Ella had on. He wants me to shadow him before I start daylight shifts."
"Emeralds. Matches her eyes when the light hits right." He tilts his head, dark hair falling forward as his cool fingers brush your shoulder briefly. "Good. Minghao wouldn't waste time with you if he thought you were unfit. I assure you."
The evening unspools like a glitterying thread around you. Jeonghan's murmur is a constant in your ear, pointing out the subtle tells of the patrons with a casual grace. You listen to each word and when you're brave enough, point out the things you see, the shifts in the room. The way a woman looks at her husband fearfully, the way another wears gloves too long to hide what you suspect are bruises.
Jeonghan's eyes darken when he realizes what type of observations you make. His jaw ticks and his gaze lingers on the male partners you point out, men who aren't regulars exactly, but frequent his bar enough that Jeonghan knows of them.
He knows of everyone. He seems to have some sort of knowledge about every person in the bar, even if it's their first time. You're unsure if it's a vampire thing, or if he can just overhear the dozens of conversations happening under the shield of jazz music and noise.
As your gaze sweeps across the bar, your eyes land on Mingyu. He's shaking a brass shaker, arms flexing. When he lowers his arms, you note the red square in his pocket and you stiffen.
"There's a red square in Mingyu's pocket," you breathe.
Jeonghan nods, humming as his finger idly traces the rim of his glass. He nods toward a man in a corner both to a wiry fellow in a rumpled suit, fingers tapping a staccato on his table. "Fed. Ella already let Mingyu know, which is why the red. Wonwoo will take care of it momentarily. No mess."
Wonwoo shifts minutely, his knee a solid barrier against yours on the other side, a silent counterweight to Jeonghan's fluid warmth. He doesn't speak much, but when a group of rowdy patrons edges too close to your booth, his eyes flash silver, and the air thickens just enough to send them stumbling back.
"You're probably wondering how to tell the vampires from the humans," Jeonghan notes.
You nod as Wonwoo slides out of the booth, drifting toward the man in the corner. You watch him change dramatically, shifting from stoic and cold to warm and friendly, shaking the man's hand.
"Minghao feels obvious," you note. "Once I knew that vampires existed, I mean. He's beautiful in a way that feels… wrong."
"Mhmm. It happens that way sometimes. Anything else?"
"Your eyes. They flash silver in some light."
"Good. Predators eyes. Without that, though? Can you pick the vampires out?"
Turning your eyes to the crowd, you try. But the crowd blurs together under the warm gaslight. Flappers laugh with their heads thrown back, men in pinstripes lean close over drinks, a couple sways on the small dance floor. Everyone moves, breathes, blinks. No one stands out as obviously other.
"I… can't," you admit, cheeks warming. "They all look the same."
"Good. That's the point."
"It is?"
He nods. "The differences are subtle. Deliberate. We spend centuries learning to mimic. But once you know what to look for, you can't unsee it." His finger traces an invisible line along the back of the booth, pointing without moving. "The woman in the silver dress at the bar - look how still her shoulders are, even when she laughs. Vampires lack natural movement and we sometimes struggle to replicate the fullness of life."
He nods toward a man in a charcoal suit near the piano. "Him. Breathing is shallower. Almost performative. We only do it when we remember we should."
Before you can ask more, movement catches your eye. The wiry man in the rumpled suit walks with Wonwoo, who is gesturing wildly with a smile on his face as they walk toward the back of the bar. Minghao is near the door, a blend of silver eyes and shadow as Wonwoo leads the man - the fed - down the hallway. Minghao shuts the door behind them and stands in front of it under the guise of smoking a cigar.
Minutes stretch. The music swells, then dips. Then Wonwoo reappears at the edge of the crowd - not back through the door at all. You raise your brows, watching as he walks to the booth smoothly and retakes his seat. He's still the same measured calm, but there's a flush to his necks and cheeks that wasn't there before.
Jeonghan leans in again, voice velvet-soft. "See that? The flush. Fresh from feeding. It's the only time we look truly warm. The blood brings the illusion of life back to the surface."
You nod, swallowing thickly. "Got it."
"That's how you'll know, eventually. When one of us has just fed. The color doesn't last long, but it'll be a warning for you. Freshly fed vampires are stronger, though a little less alert from the blood lust. Vampires who haven't fed are more unpredictable and sharper."
You nod, filing the detail away like a key. Wonwoo settles back into place without comment, though his posture seems fractionally looser, the tension in his jaw eased. He meets your eyes for half a second before returning his attention to the room. You think of him that night in the library, the way he had drifted forward, ready to end you there.
It unsettles you a little.
The night wears on. Jeonghan continues his quiet lessons, pointing out alliances and rivalries, naming the vampires among the humans with a tilt of his chin. Wonwoo interjects once or twice, voice clipped but polite. By the time the gas lamps dim and the crowd begins to thin, Jeonghan signals Minghao with a subtle raise of his glass to shut down.
Together, the three of you slide into the car. The drive back to the Hamptons is quiet, the city's roar fading to the hush of empty roads, snowflakes scattering like ash against the windows. You lean into Jeonghan's side without thinking, exhaustion pulling at your bones, his arm a loose curve around your shoulders. Wonwoo stares out at the dark, silent as ever, but you catch the faint softening of his jaw when you stifle a yawn.
It's cold when you get out, pre-dawn light tinting the sky. Jeonghan walks you up the wide front steps, his hand still wrapped loosely around yours. Wonwoo lingers a beat longer in the car before sliding out, coat collar turned up against the wind. He gives Jeonghan a single, unreadable look, then nods once at you with the barest twitch of a smile on his face. He drifts off, fading into the shadows of the home, leaving you with Jeonghan.
Jeonghan leads you up the stairs, the grandfather clock in the foyer ticking with each step. At the top of the stairwell, you pause. He hesitates, turning to face you. He doesn't rush or ask what's wrong. He simply waits, dark eyes patient.
"Thank you, Jeonghan."
He raises his brows. "What for?"
"For tonight. For giving me something more than just a place to hide. For giving me a choice. It's nice."
Jeonghan studies you for a long moment. You can barely make out his eyes in this light, but they're dark, pupils large, predator black. He lifts a shoulder, a barely-there shrug. "It isn't much."
"It's everything to me."
Something shifts behind his expression, soft and unguarded that he doesn’t bother to hide. His mouth curves, not the usual teasing tilt, but a slow, genuine grin that reaches his eyes and makes them crinkle at the corners. He reaches for you, gently tugging you by the hand until he's kissing your knuckles gently.
"You deserve more, Amontillado. But I will give you what I can." Your heart stutters as he tugs you down the hall gently. "Dawn is coming. Sleep, you deserve it."
You nod, throat too full to speak again. He releases your hand reluctantly, stepping back just enough to give you space to slip into your room. He winks at you before you shut the door with a soft click. You lean against it for a moment, still wearing the black dress, still carrying the faint scent of whiskey smoke and jasmine on your skin, heart pounding.
Outside, the first pale spill of dawn floods the yard, and for the first time in years, sleep finds you easily.
-
The weeks slip by like snow melting under the first weak spring sun. You settle into a rhythm at the Red, shadowing Minghao turning into running the books yourself most afternoons. It's mostly checking crates against manifest, spotting the occasional discrepancy before it can grow into a problem, and letting Minghao know.
You’ve learned the suppliers’ names, their tells, the way certain delivery boys linger too long at the back door when they think no one’s watching. You’ve learned which cops take envelopes without looking inside and which ones need a smile and a quiet word first. You’ve even started recognizing the regulars who come in during the day pretending to pick up dry cleaning, and you’ve gotten good at keeping your face neutral when you catch the faint metallic glint in their eyes.
Jeonghan is constant. Not in a way that feels suffocating like it had with Vin, but in the way the cold tide of the Hamptons is constant, always there, pulling gently, retreating just enough to let you breathe. He appears most evenings when you're finishing up, leaning in the doorway with his arms crossed, watching you with a smirk that you've come to think is something equal to fondness.
He always teases, light and playful banter, velvet words that make your stomach flip. But never pushes or crowds, never lingers too long. It's maddening the way he looms near you but not as close as you'd like him to, frustrating when he murmurs clever girl, Amontillado, before drifting away again.
It's always the same with him. The touches last long enough to spark heat under your skin, then vanish. Jeonghan keeps an entirely respectable distance. You tell yourself it's nothing - he's charming that way, like the moon. Distant. Beautiful. Constant.
You chalk it up to instant. To blood. Not to you. It only makes you like him more - more than you should, even. More than is safe. You keep that bit tucked away like a secret coin, something you only let yourself turn over in the dark when the house is quiet and you can't sleep, wanting to stay up and talk to him but knowing your schedule is flipped.
You belong in the sun, he'd told you. Only problem was that you wanted the moon.
Today the office smells of old paper, ink, and the faint citrus of the orange you peeled earlier. The bar is empty, lights off save for the desk lamp. Minghao shuffles in, readying for the nightshift. He ruffles your hair affectionately as he kicks snow off of his boots and hangs his coat on the back of a chair.
"How was today?" He asks.
"Fine. There's an entire load of red that Mingyu said smelled weird, though."
"Hm, I'll check it out. You're good up here?"
"Mhmm."
You keep working, the scratch of your pen the only sound until the buzzer on the desk rings. It's from the door upstairs. You frown, setting the ledger aside to let yourself out of the office and walk upstairs to the laundry front. A man is standing at the front desk and your frown increases. Minghao typically locks the front door when he comes in, especially if Tony isn't working the front to let people in.
"Hi," you greet, something your skirt down. "Can I be of any assistance?"
The man turns to you. His hands are in the pockets of his charcoal overcoat. He's tall and lean, his dark hair swept back, suit immaculate. Your gaze sweeps across his shoulders - they're too square, too pushed back. His head is cocked at an odd angle, and as you count his breath, you note that he breathes too slowly. Practiced.
There's a flush to the man's cheeks and as he peers at you, his pupils dilate. Vampire. You know the signs now. A vampire who has fed recently. You put yourself behind the desk, a deliberate choice to separate the two of you as he watches you. His nostrils flare and you watch as a shiver goes through him.
"I was told this was the place to get detergent."
Code. He wants blood - more of it. Your smile is pinched. "I'm afraid we're closed for book keeping. If you come back during our open hours-"
"I just need a little."
"You'll need to come back when we're open, sir."
He doesn’t answer. Just takes one slow step forward. Then another. The floorboards don’t creak. Your hand slides toward the small electronic alarm under the counter, but before your fingers can press it, he moves.
He's blinding fast, vaulting over the counter in a single fluid motion. You don't scream - you've learned better than that - but you do grab the heavy brass statue from the shelf behind you and swing it at him. It catches him across the temple with a sickening crack. He staggers, surprised, but he doesn't go down, hand snapping out as claws rake down your arm.
Pain blooms white hot, blood welling fast. You stumble away from him and slam into the wall. He lungs again, fangs clashing and you kick out hard, screaming this time. Your foot connects with his knee, making him stumble. He still comes at you though, hissing, eyes silver and furious.
A blur crashes through the doorway from downstairs. You barely register the vampire that drags your attacker backwards. You make out blonde hair and a white shirt as the newcomer hauls your attack to his feet and drives him into the wall hard enough to crack plaster and send an explosion of dust forward.
They hit the ground in a tangle of limbs and snarls, an arch of blood splitting the air as you hear a wet rip. The blonde tears and tears and tears, the sound wet and violent until your assailant stops moving. You look upward, realizing as the blonde rises that the vampire's head is no longer attacked.
Your savior is heaving, standing and backing away from you rapidly. Blood covers his face and the front of his shirt, bright red, his eyes flashing molten silver in the low light. His pupils are blown so wide there's almost no iris left. He's trembling violently, every muscle coiled tight.
You press yourself flat against the wall, blood dripping steadily from your arm onto the floorboards. The copper scent fills the small space, thick and cloying. His eyes drop down to your arm. A ripple goes through him and he presses himself against the far wall, sliding toward the shop door.
"Don't move," he murmurs, voice low. "Please don't move." His hands flex. "Minghao!" His shout is raw, terrified. "Minghao!"
He takes a single, jerky step back, then another, putting distance between you even as his body visibly fights to close it. His nostrils flare again, pupils dilating impossibly wider at the scent of your blood.
“I’m sorry,” he rasps, voice cracking. "I was carrying something in for Minghao and heard the commotion and came upstairs. I'm not supposed to come upstairs when you're here. I'm not good with people. Not yet. I'm sorry-" He cuts off, shivering as he squeezes his eyes shut. "Minghao, please!"
You realize, with a cold jolt, who he is. Soonyoung. The east wing. The gentle soul who struggles. The one whose blood calls louder than the rest. He’s trying so hard not to look at you, trying not to breathe. His entire body is vibrating with restraint, the shivers violent.
Footsteps pound up the stairs, and in a moment, Minghao is there. "Soonyoung, don't."
A low, animal sound rips from Soonyoung's throat. His control snaps like a taut wire and he launches toward you. Minghao is on him, catching Soonyoung around the waist and hauling him backward as he screams for Mingyu.
Mingyu appears in the doorway a second later, broad shoulders filling the frame. He doesn't hesitate, grabbing Soonyoung's arms to help Minghao haul him backward down the stairs. Soonyoung thrashes, snarling rattling up the hall as they get him to the bottom where you hear his voice break into desperate apologies that fade as a door slams shut somewhere.
Silence.
You’re still against the wall, breath ragged, arm burning. Blood has soaked your sleeve to the elbow, dripping in slow, steady drops on the floor. You slide down until you’re sitting, knees drawn up, pressing your good hand over the worst of the gashes. The pressure hurts, but it slows the bleeding. You focus on breathing. Ignoring the dead vampire, you tear a strip of cloth from the bottom of your skirt with shaking handles and wrap it tight around your forearm.
A few minutes later, the door to the front slams open. You freeze, looking up fearfully, but it's Jeonghan who rounds the counter. He freezes for half a heartbeat when he sees you, then he's across the room in a blink, crouching in front of you. His hands over, not quite touching, his eyes dark and storming.
"Amontialldo," he says softly. "Please look at me." You do. His pupils are normal, no silver. "Are you hurt anywhere else?"
You shake your head. “Just the arm. Deep scratches. I fought back. Hit him with the ledger. Kicked him. It slowed him down a little."
"You did good."
He reaches for your arm, carefully and slowly. He peels back your makeshift bandage just enough to see the damage. His expression doesn't change, but his fingers tighten fractionally.
“These will need stitches,” he says quietly. “And cleaning. Come on.”
Jeonghan helps you stand, one arm around your waist. You lean into him, legs unsteady. He lets you, guiding you toward one of the back offices that only serve the purpose of making the front look legit. He opens one of them and sits you down at a desk, fumbling around until he finds a first aid kid. It's old, but there's gauze and antiseptic.
His hands are cool and steady as he works, crouching as he cleans the blood from your arm. You watch him. He doesn't shy away from the blood or lean in too close, his movements entirely methodical. Careful. You wonder what kind of control it takes for him to do this, to touch the blood and not take.
You think of Soonyoung.
"Soonyoung was here." Jeonghan looks up sharply, hands pausing. "He helped. I guess he heard the noise and he came upstairs. He… apologized too. said he wishes he was better with people."
"He's been trying for years. For some of us, the blood never quiets. Not really. He stays in the east wing because it's enough for him. Coming up here today to help you was a risk for him. Not a small one."
"If me living at the house is too much-"
"It's not. It helps him practice control. He's good at a distance. It's when exposed to blood that he… struggles."
Jeonghan finishes the bandage, taping it securely. Then he stays crouched in front of you, hands resting lightly on your knees. You meet his gaze. For once there’s no desire there. No teasing, no playing. Just him, steady and present.
"You're allowed to be afraid," he says after a moment. "You're not going to get demoted for it."
"Thank you," you whisper.
He smiles and it warms you. "Always, Amontillado. How about we get you home, hmm?"
Jeonghan doesn’t let go of you the entire walk to the car. His arm stays firm around your waist, supporting most of your weight. The driver is already waiting, engine idling. Jeonghan helps you into the back seat, careful of your arm, then slides in beside you. The door closes with a soft, final thud. The car pulls away from the curb, tires crunching over slush, and Manhattan begins to recede behind tinted windows.
You lean your head against the seat, eyes half-closed. The pain in your arm has dulled to a deep, throbbing ache under the makeshift bandage, but every bump in the road sends fresh sparks up your nerves. Jeonghan doesn’t speak. He just keeps his hand on your knee, thumb tracing slow, absent circles over the fabric of your skirt.
The drive to the Hamptons stretches long and quiet. Snow has begun falling again, fat flakes catching in the headlights. You watch them drift past, letting the rhythm of the road lull the worst of the adrenaline crash. Jeonghan’s presence beside you is steady heat against the winter chill seeping through the glass. When you shiver once, he shrugs out of his coat without a word and drapes it over your shoulders. It smells like jasmine and cedar - smells like him.
By the time the estate gates swing open, the sky is totally black. . Jeonghan helps you out of the car, arm around you again, and guides you up the wide front steps. The foyer is warm, lit low by gas sconces, the grandfather clock ticking its slow, familiar heartbeat. He leads you up the staircase, past your usual room, to one at the end he's never shown you before.
His room. You know it immediately by the smell of jasmine and cedar.
It’s darker than yours, walls paneled in deep walnut, heavy velvet curtains drawn against the windows. A fire is already burning low in the grate, casting long orange tongues across the floor. The bed is massive, draped in charcoal linens, but he doesn’t take you there. Instead he guides you to a low leather armchair beside the hearth and eases you down.
“Stay,” he murmurs, voice rougher than usual.
He disappears into the adjoining bath and returns with a medical kit that's larger and far more comprehensive than the one upstairs at the Red. He kneels in front of you again, but this time he's closer, the heat of him intoxicating.
He unwraps his work from earlier, careful not to tug. The fabric peels away with a wet sound that makes your stomach turn. The gashes are ugly and jagged now that you look. His jaw clenches so hard his teeth click together, and you look up at him. It isn't hunger that you see. It's rage, pure and black in his eyes, so violent you freeze.
Without speaking, he threads a curved needle with suture silk. You watch his hands, steady and elegant. He distracts you from the pain in your arm until he murmurs, "This will hurt."
"I know."
The first stitch pulls a sharp gasp from you. The needle bites, the thread pulling through an eerie feeling. You focus on breathing while he works, watching him with a fluttering heart. By the time he ties off the last knot and snips the thread, sweat beads on your forehead and your good hand is squeezing the arm rest.
Jeonghan sits back on his heels, studying his work. Fresh gauze, taped securely. He exhales through his nose, long and slow. When he looks up at you, his eyes are still that same unfathomable black, so full of rage that it pins you to the spot.
"If Soonyoung hadn't killed him, I would." Jeonghan's voice is so soft you almost don't hear him. "I know you getting hurt is sometimes an inevitability, but seeing it enrages me. More than I thought possible. I wasn't.. I didn't know I would be this angry."
You swallow. The fire pops behind him, throwing shadows across his face. He's beautiful. You're reminded of the first night you'd met him, his face half shadowed in the dark of the night. You'd thought he looked like an avenging angel then, beautiful but terrifying. He does now too, only this time, you're not afraid of him.
Not in the slightest.
“When I found you in that train car,” continues, voice like velvet, "curled between those barrels, half-frozen and heart hammering so loud I could nearly taste it… I saw myself. A small, stubborn thing that refused to die. That would claw and scrape and run until there was nowhere left to run. I liked that. Still do. More than I ought to, probably. More than what is wise."
He leans forward slightly, elbows on his knees, close enough that you can see the faint silver rim around his irises - not hunger, but something deeper. Something raw.
“The idea of anyone putting hands on you makes me see red. Especially him. Especially Vin." He swallows. “I’ve spent decades learning control. Decades pretending nothing touches me. And then you climb out of a window in the middle of winter and stumble into my world, and suddenly everything I thought I’d buried feels so close to the surface, Amontialldo. Closer than ever before. And I love it. Love that I feel again."
Your heart is loud in your ears. You study him, the sharp line of his jaw, the way his hair falls forward to shadow his eyes, the careful way he holds himself even now, like he’s afraid one wrong move will shatter something fragile between you.
All these weeks you’ve told yourself his touches were casual, his smiles habitual, his gaze only instinct. You’ve watched the silver flash in his eyes and labeled it hunger for blood, not for you. You’ve kept your own feelings folded small and secret, afraid that naming them would be a mistake.
You think of the first night in the cold metal train car, the jasmine scent hanging on his coat, the way he'd called you Amontillado like it was a private joke. The realization isn’t sudden. It’s slow, like ink spreading through water. You’ve been falling for him in pieces, like listening to him play piano right before you inevitably go to bed, like the way he likes to cook meals because it makes him think of being human. Of being alive.
“I like that you feel that way,” you admit, voice small. “I like that I matter to you. No one has ever cared before."
Jeonghan stills. The firelight catches in his eyes, turning them molten. For a long moment neither of you moves. Then, he reaches up slowly, giving you every chance to pull away. You don't, and he cups your cheek, his thumb brushing the corner of your mouth. When you don't pull away still, he leans in.
The kiss is careful at first, almost tentative. His lips are cool, soft, tasting faintly of copper and winter air. You exhale against his mouth, surprised by how gentle he is, how restrained. Then you tilt your head, just a fraction, and something in him gives.
He deepens the kiss, slow and hungry in a way that has nothing to do with blood. His hand slides to the nape of your neck, fingers threading into your hair, holding you like if he lets go, you'll slip from his fingers. You reach for him with your good hand, fingers curling into the front of his shirt, feeling the steady, unnecessary beat of a heart that serves as nothing more than to pump blood that isn't his through his body.
When he pulls back, it’s only far enough to rest his forehead against yours. His breath is cool against your lips. "I've wanted to do that for weeks. Since you started looking at me like I might be salvation instead of the damnation I have often felt like."
You laugh. "I still think you're both."
"Probably." His mouth twitches. "Are you alright? I don't want to push."
"I want you to."
A slow smile curves his mouth. It isn't the teasing that you're used to, but instead something softer. His eyes darken, the silver rim flaring briefly before he reins it in, that eternal hunger subdued for now. He leans in to brush his lips against your forehead, then your temple, trailing kisses down your jaw, tongue darting out to taste you. It feels so good, a shiver crawling up your spine.
"Good," he whispers, breath tickling your ear. "Because I've been patient for weeks, Amontillado. I've been watching you bloom in my world and it's been divine torture not having you."
You let out a quiet laugh, the sound breathy and a little shaky from the adrenaline still simmering in your veins. "Torture? For a vampire? I thought you were all about eternal suffering."
"I'm not Wonwoo."
He stands slowly, offering his hand to help you up. You take it, letting him guide you toward the bed. The room feels warmer now, the fire's glow casting long shadows that dance across the walls. He eases you down onto the edge of the mattress, then kneels again, this time between your knees. His hands rest on your thighs, thumbs rubbing soothing circles through your skirt. He looks up at you, eyes round, questioning.
"Go ahead," you breathe.
You lift your hips slightly as he slides the fabric up, exposing your legs inch by inch. The cool air hits your skin, contrasting with the heat building under your skin like a furnace. He drags his mouth across your knees, your thighs, pushing the fabric as he goes. When he reaches your panties, he hooks his fingers under the waistband, glancing up for confirmation. You nod, and he slides them down slowly, discarding them gently.
Your breath hitches as he parts your thighs wider, settling between them. He leans in to press a kiss to your inner thigh, then another higher up. His lips are cool, but the sensation ignites fire wherever they touch.
Carefully, he eases you to lay back on the bed. You're careful about your injured arm, letting it lay out to the side as the other twists in the sheets while his fingers come up to trace your folds, wet and warm. He finds your clit, circling it slowly as he watches your face, lips parted.
"Like that?" He asks when you make a little sound.
"God, yes."
The pressure is light at first, building gradually as he learns your rhythm. He dips lower, one finger sliding inside you with ease, the cool intrusion making you arch. He's so gentle, curling it just right to brush that spot that sends sparks behind your eyes.
It feels maddenly good, your lids fluttering as you writhe under the feeling. He pumps his finger slowly, fixing his mouth on your inner thigh, sucking your skin gently. You feel the scrape of his fangs, the heat of his mouth, the press of his fingers against your front wall and it makes you fall apart.
"Good girl," he praises as your hips cant toward his hand. "Take what you need."
Jeonghan adds a second finger, stretching you slowly. It feels good, your head pressing into the mattress as you arch into him. Your skirt bunches around your waist, shirt sticking to your sweaty skin as he works you, mouthing at the inside of your knee, whispering against your skin.
"Good girl," he whispers, letting out a little moan.
He pumps his fingers in and out at a languid pace, thumb still circling your clit, building the tension. You feel the tightening in your gut, toes curling, eyes squeezing shut as bursts of color pop behind your eyelids. You shiver again, muscles twitching.
"Jeonghan, I'm-"
"Let go. I've got you. Come for me, Amontillado."
His fingers curl deeper, and you shatter, clenching around him hard as you come. He doesn't stop, drawing it out until you're trembling, oversensitive and breathless.When you come down, he withdraws slowly, pressing a kiss to your thigh before he crawls up to hover over you, bracing on his elbows.
"Hi," he breathes.
"Hi.
He grins, dipping to kiss you deeply, hands active as he peels you out of your skirt, your top, your bra. He's so delicate with you, handling you like something precious, treasured. Not rough and impersonal like Vin - never like Vin.
Jeonghan leans up to peel his shirt off, his body sculpted and narrow. He deserves to be painted, captured in some half-shadowed light on canvas. An angel. A demon. You run your good hand over his chest and he shivers, capturing your hand in his to bring it up to his mouth, kissing the pads of your fingers.
"You're beautiful," you murmur.
"Not as much as you.
He lowers himself to kiss you again, trailing them from your lips down your neck, across your collarbone, to your breasts. His mouth closes over one nipple, sucking gently while his hand teases the other. It makes you arch, his name dripping from your mouth.
Jeonghan kisses lower, down your stomach, until he's settled between your thighs once more. His eyes meet yours as he leans in, tongue flicking out to trace your folds. The wet slide of his tongue parting you makes you moan, the sound broken and fractured. He grins and does it again, pupils blown out, never leaving yours.
He takes his time, lapping slowly, savoring every reaction. When he focuses on your clit, sucking gently, you thread your fingers into his hair, holding him close. He hums, pleased at the feeling of your fingers tightening, nails scraping against his sensitive scalp. His tongue circles your puffy clit until you're climbing again, hips coming off the bed.
It makes him growl a little. He doubles down, sucking harder, mouth greedy and reverent, the sound of his mouth unholy against you. You come undone a second time, crying out sharply as he pins your thighs open, licking you through it with broad, lazy strokes of his tongue until you're spent.
Climbing back up, he kisses you softly, sharing the taste of you. His hands roam your body, soothing, worshipping. He sheds the rest of his clothes, and you take in the sight of him, hard and swollen and leaking. You reach for him but he shakes his head, lowering himself until he's nose to nose with you, eye lashes fluttering against yours.
"You sure?" He asks.
A choice. Again. Always a choice - your choice.
"Please," you murmur, pulling him closer.
Jeonghan nods, rolling his hips to slide his cock through your messy folds, both of you breathing hard. He slides a hand between you, pressing on the head of his cock until it presses against your entrance. You let out a strangled sound and he grins, sliding into you slow and torturous. He groans, burying his face in your neck.
"Fuck," he rasps. "Feels so good. Smell so good." His tongue darts out to lick at your pulse and you roll your head to the side, giving him access. "Not tonight. Maybe one day."
Jeonghan starts to move then, slow and deep, each thrust punching the air from your lungs. You can barely breath, the feeling of him sliding home so good that you scratch at his lower back with your good hand, pressing him closer, breaths shaky.
"That's it," he pants. "You take me so well. So beautiful like this." His hand slips between you, fingers finding your clit again, rubbing in time with his thrusts. One more for me. Let me feel you come around me."
His thrusts deepen, slow and grinding, hitting that spot relentlessly. He's pressed close to you, chest sliding against chest, your legs wrapping around his hips. It drives you mad, having him this close to you. His mouth catches yours, a tangle of tongue and teeth as he works you to another high, the slide of your tongues broken only by desperate sounds.
Jeonghan nods when he hears your sounds, spurred on. He rolls his hips in a slow, deliberate glide that drags the length of his cock through your cunt, your walls fluttering around him. His mouth finds yours again, messy and desperate, tongues tangling in time with the slow roll of his hips. You taste salt and yourself and something faintly metallic.
He shifts his angle just enough that the head of his cock drags perfectly over that spot inside you with every pass. Your back arches off the mattress, a broken cry muffled against his lips. He drinks it down, swallowing every sound you make.
“Feel that?” he whispers when he pulls back just enough to speak. “Right there. That’s where you need me, isn’t it?” He punctuates the question with another deep, grinding thrust that makes stars burst behind your eyelids.
When you come again, it's with Jeonghan's name on your tongue. He drinks it down, mouth pressed to yourself, breathing in time. He follows moments later, thrusting deep one last time and stilling, a low groan escaping as he spills inside you. He stays there for a moment, your chests pressed together, your heart pounding.
Jeonghan shifts carefully, easing out of you gently. He doesn’t pull away far - only enough to reach for the discarded blanket at the foot of the bed and draw it up over both of you. The heavy wool settles, trapping the shared warmth of your skin together.
He gathers you against him without a word, turning so you’re tucked into the curve of his chest, your bandaged arm resting carefully across his waist. His chin settles atop your head, one hand splaying wide over the small of your back while the other threads lazily through your hair. The motion is slow, meditative, each pass of his fingers grounding you.
For a long moment neither of you speaks. Outside, the snow continues to fall in thick, silent sheets, hissing against the window as it melts. You trace idle patterns on his chest with your fingertips, following the faint ridge of a scar.
"How'd you get this?" You ask.
"Before I was turned," he murmurs. "Turning heals the body, but it also freezes you. I like it, though. Makes me feel more alive."
You press your lips to the scar in silent acknowledgment. “I like it."
He stills for a heartbeat, then tilts your chin up so he can look at you properly. In the dim light his eyes are dark velvet. “I’ve lived a very long time,” he says quietly. “Seen empires rise and fall, watched people I cared for age and die while I stayed the same. I thought I’d forgotten how to want anything beyond survival and control. Thank you for reminding me what it's like to want something."
You grin. "I made it a lot farther than three blocks, didn't I?"
"You did," he sighs. "My brave little Amontillado."
[58] weeks until hoshi is back ↳ 24H @ 2020 SBS Gayo Daejeon


