funniest convo ever with a guy who said 2 me "nobody uses journalism degrees" and i said "my mom has a bachelors in journalism" and he smiled like knowingly and said "yeah, but what does she do?" and i said "she runs a newspaper and publishes romance novels on the side." and he literally said "oh" and nothing else. like he ended the whole conversation there.
i've just been informed he has a trombone degree. like the study of playing trombone. which is all well and good, i genuinely think we should all have the opportunity to chase our academic bliss but i do think the trombone studies guy should hesitate to judge the economic value of other people's degrees no
i love the tags on this post because thereâs other music/instrument majors implying niche field-specific drama like âof course it was a trombone player đâ and then thereâs trombone majors like âthis was NOT me for the recordâ
I'll craw home to her: ăRemmick, sinners x reader ă
Remmick x femreader
Summary: You only wanted music lessons. What you got was ending up in the lap of a vampire, asking for your voice like itâs the last sound heâll ever hear. Turns out, your blood brings more than high notesâit brings him back from the dead.
Now heâs alive.
But for how long?
You felt the tremor in your fingertips long before the weight settled into your hands. Every movement had become heavy, as though the bones beneath your skin ached to be still. The strings protested each time they stirred, a muted cry beneath your touch. With a soft groan, you pulled your hands away from the instrument and rolled your wrists, hoping to shake out the pain that clung to your joints like iron.
Hours had passed. So many that you hadn't noticed when the moonlight began to bathe the room in its pale glow. Shadows lengthened, stretching into strange forms, as if they meant to hide what daylight had no fear of revealing. But instead of unease, a quiet warmth spread through your chest, gentle as balm on a raw wound. You had grown used to the nightâmore than used to it. It felt like your soul had found rest in its quiet embrace, the kind of rest you hadnât known you needed. And with that came the certainty: you no longer feared the monsters that came with dusk⊠because you had become one of them.
A breath shivered in your chest but never reached your lips, smothered by the weight of something watching you. You let your hands fall to your sides.
He was watching. Studying you. That pulsing curiosity in his eyes, like a flame just barely contained. His eyelids drooped lazily, as though it cost him something to hold them open. The trace of a smile rested on his lipsânot quite there, but near enough to cast a shadow. His body looked utterly at peace, fully sated.
Something inside you stirred, restless. As if it wanted out. You took a deep breath to ease the pressure rising in your throat, trying to push down the storm that always swelled in his presence. When you opened your mouth to exhale, the sound came out as a soft gaspâand you saw how it landed on his face. His eyebrows lifted, surprised. He shouldâve expected that reaction by now. Your body always responded to him the same way.
He moved slowly. Dragging each step, delaying what your body seemed to crave. You could tell he savored your impatience, every twitch of your nerves lighting him up like the final note of a song. He looked down at you with quiet amusement, then gently took the instrument from your hands, now turning his attention to it.
âWhat were yâtryinâ to do?â he asked, adjusting the strap over his shoulders with casual ease. His voice wrapped around the words like smokeâthick, warm.
He passed his fingers across the strings. The sound that came was soft, rich, aching. You forgot to breathe as you watched his fingertipsâhow effortless it looked. You werenât sure if the tension rising came from the melody or from your own body, tightening under the weight of that simple motion. You wanted to squirm when you saw the care with which he touched those threadsâthreads that somehow still felt connected to you.
âI was tryingâŠâ The words caught on your tongue. His expressionâbrows furrowed in concentration, eyes fixed on his handsâscattered your thoughts. You cleared your throat, hoping to collect them. ââŠTrying to do what you showed me.â
He nodded, slow, still chasing something in his mind, still coaxing the strings.
Then he sat down in front of you. You heard your heart poundingâand so did he. He tilted his head, as if listening to the rhythm. A half-smile pulled at his lips, and he set the instrument aside. The gesture that followed needed no explanation. Your legs moved before you gave them permission.
You stepped toward him, your movements hesitant, until your toes nearly brushed his knees. He opened the space between his legs for you. You lowered yourself into it, leaning back against his chest. A shiver ran down your spine as his cold body met yours. Then came the sudden weight of the instrument on your lap again, placed there without warning.
His arms wrapped around you, like an embrace made of frost. Instinctively, you held the object youâd been struggling with all afternoon, still hunting for whatever secret kept it from obeying you. Then his handsârough, frozenâsettled over yours. The tension in the air tightened, like a string pulled to its breaking point.
You longed to touch him. Not to learn. To feel.
And he knew it.
Instead of guiding you, he simply held your hands for a moment. Stroking gently. Calming the tremor born of want. The storm inside you rose higher. You leaned back into his chestâcold, lifeless. Let your head rest on his shoulder, your brow nearly brushing his chin. Closed your eyes. Drew in his scent, that wild thing that woke your soul and made it hum for the right note.
Then, he began to move your hands.
A melody rose between youâsad, raw, fragile. His breath, icy, grazed your temple. It shook. Faltered.
âYouâre forcinâ it too much,â he whispered, low and broken. âThinkinâ too hard.â
You kept playing, guided by his touch. But your mind drifted when you felt his chin lower to rest against your skin. The cold didnât matter anymore. You were used to it now. You bit your lip, fighting the urge to beg him to drink from you.
Youâd learned something strange in these nights with him: when he fed, his body warmed. And sometimesâjust sometimesâthere was something like a heartbeat, faint but present, pulsing inside his chest. You were addicted to it. To that spark of life, that shared moment when the music wasn't the only thing passing between you.
You opened your eyes when he spoke again.
âDidnât use instruments back thenâŠâ He stopped breathing, like he always did when the past crept too closeâlike admitting he was here with you meant he couldnât share the shadows he came from. âWe just⊠listened to the music inside our own bones. Wild. Raw. Like the earth under bare feet.â
Youâd learned something else, too.
In another life, Remmick had been like you. Music had been his gift, his bridge to his people. But that had died with his body, and his soul had stayed behind, stuck in this world of silence and shadows. You couldnât imagine that kind of lonelinessâcut off from the voice that once called his kin back home.
You thought he sighed through his nose. A learned gesture, maybe. He didnât need to breathe, after all.
Then, he pulled you tighter.
"You donât need any of this."
He pulled away from your touch, slipping the instrument gently from your lap. But his fingers found you again. One ghosted over your hip, the other pressed lightly near your sternum, feeling the beat of your heart. You tensed, but you didnât pull back.
"No," he said, and his voice was softer now, almost reverent. "You've a gift inside you, lass... like others have blood in their veins."
His hand traveled slowly up your chest, coming to rest at your throat. You knew what he was going to askâhe always made that gesture when he needed it. Listening wasnât enough for him. He needed to feel the music inside you, vibrating through your bones.
"Try," he breathed, and the word wrapped around you like fog on a winter morning. "No instruments. Just you."
But there was an instrument. You. Thatâs what you became when he touched you right, when he held you a certain way.
You opened your mouth to begin, but he was everywhereâhis scent, his body, even the echo of his voice. It felt like opening your lips would let your soul escape, would send it searching for a place to live inside him, so starved it was for his presence. His eyes fluttered closed when a timid note hummed in your chest, as though your voice had woken something ancient in him, something half-forgotten.
Now he was the one trembling. You felt his forehead press gently between your shoulder blades, like he needed grounding.
"Again," he whispered.
And you did. Because every note drew him closer, because you reveled in the strange, exquisite power you held over this creature who fell to his knees for a handful of songs. You didnât know if the moan that broke the silence came from you or from himâbut it didnât matter. Bliss hit you the moment your souls touched. That was your gift: to summon his spirit back from wherever the dead wait, to let him live again for a moment.
"Thatâs it," you heard him hiss. "Thatâs all that matters. No more strings, no more wood. None of them can match what you carry inside, lass."
The storm inside you was rising, spiraling, craving releaseâcraving him. For a heartbeat, you felt your bodies align in a single note, bathed in moonlight.
You felt him move behind you, his hand still cradling your throat. Then his mouth brushed your jaw, soft and deliberate, like he was thinking about kissing you.
"Your voiceâŠ" he said slowly, as if dredging the words from somewhere painful. "...it reminds me of summer breeze. That warm air fillinâ your lungs, carryinâ salt from the sea. I can almost taste it."
His voice turned low, rough, almost raw. You felt his fingers flex at your hip.
"Can nearly smell the first spring rain. Hear waves hittinâ the rocks. Feelinâ the grass reachinâ up for the sun. That kinda warmth⊠thatâs what you sound like."
You swallowed hard. The melody on your lips stuttered to silence.
"Donât stop," he murmured.
His lips slid toward the tender skin of your neck. He lingered there, barely touching, as if torn between hunger and reverence.
You tilted your head, granting him access, and the scrape of his fangs against your exposed pulse made you sigh.
"This is the curse, girl," he whispered. "You sing, and my soul claws its way back from the grave. Just hearinâ you breathe⊠makes me remember I was once a man."
Without moving his lips from your neck, he pulled you tighter to himâas if close wasnât close enough. The hand that had rested, restrained, at your hip now wandered forward, slow and deliberate. Fingertips mapped your abdomen, tracing sacred paths, needing proof that you were aliveâso that he could be, too.
And then⊠he drank.
Not like before. Not the desperate, savage feeding of a monster starved.
This time it was slow. Reverent. Devotional.
His lips, once cold, warmed against your skin with each drop he took, like your blood lit a fire in him. You felt the heat spreading through himâhis hands no longer trembling, but burning. His fingers curled with urgency, pulling you closer, closer, until there was no space left between you.
His breathâonce the chill of the graveâturned warm at your collarbone.
And then you felt it.
Not your heartbeat.
His.
Slow. Deep. A drumbeat echoing from somewhere far and forbidden. Like something long-dead was stirring inside his chest. Like your blood was not just nourishing his body, but dragging his soul back to life.
His body wasnât stone anymore. It was flesh. Tense. Wanting.
Your back arched instinctively as he shifted beneath your hands. He groaned softly against your throatâa low, almost grateful sound. His tongue licked the edge of the wound with an unexpected tenderness, and then he spokeâhis voice a breath against your skin.
âDamn you,â he murmured, every word soaked in something older than time. âYou taste like warmth. Like breath. Like fuckinâ sunlight.â
His fingers clutched your waist, trembling now with something other than hunger.
Where once there had been stillness, now there was life. Heat. Motion. His thighs tensed beneath yours. His arms molded around you, every muscle pulling you in. His hips rose gently, insistently, as if desire itself were part of his rebirth. He didnât just crave your blood now.
He craved you.
The warmth you offered. The life you returned.
And the worst partâor maybe the bestâwas that you loved it. It made you feel powerful. Divine. Needed. Like with every drop he took, you were shaping him back into something real. Giving him form. Giving him soul.
âEvery drop of you pulls me back, girl,â he growled. âYouâre in me now. Not just your bloodâyou. Youâre makinâ me feel⊠alive. And it shouldnât feel this good.â
But it did.
For both of you.
Because bringing him backâfeeling him wake in your arms, feeling his skin grow hot beneath your fingers, watching breath rise again in lungs that had no right to breatheâwas addictive. It was beautiful. It was yours.
And you wanted it all.
He pulled back just enough to whisper, lost in a sea of thoughts, his mouth still wet against the skin heâd just broken.
You trembled. One hand reached up, tangled in his hair, guiding him back to your throat, pleading silently for him to continue. To give you both life again with a bite. He groaned, sinking back into the hollow between your neck and shoulder.
"I could live in your throat forever," he breathed, and the softness of it struck you like a wave. "Feedinâ on the sound alone."
âRemmick.â
You breathe his name again, softer this timeâlike a secret slipping from between your lips. A whisper not meant for this world, but for something older. He hears it anyway.
His hands roam, reverent and unhurried, gliding from your waist to the curve of your thighs. Calloused fingers drift over the fabric like heâs tasting you with his palms, committing you to memoryâinch by inch. Thereâs no urgency in him, only awe. As if each part of you is a sacred hymn, and heâs learning the verses by touch.
âKeep saying my name like that,â he murmurs into the hollow of your throat, voice low and trembling.
âLet me hear how your voice sounds when itâs only mine.â
You shift, slow and intentionalâpressing yourself down into his lap, not to tease, but to offer. To feel. A rhythm builds, quiet and hungry, drawn from some deep, aching place neither of you have named. Your hands stay at his neck, not for balance, but to feel the breath that shouldnât be thereâhis chest rising, falling, living beneath your palms.
And his hands... lord, his hands. They slide beneath your dress, dragging the fabric up your thighs like heâs unveiling an altar, not a body. His breath brushes your skinâwarm. Alive. The sound he makes when your skin trembles under his touch is not a groan of desire, but of wonder.
âIs it me makinâ you tremble?â he asks, voice rough-edged, like heâs afraid of the answer.
You try to speak. âI wantââ
But the words fall apart the moment his fingers skim the edge of you, barely touching, a ghost of a caress.
He looks up at you then, and you see it allâwant, worship, devotion.
âSay it,â he whispers. âLet me give it to you. Let me be what you need. Pleaseâ
âYou,â you breathe. âI want all of you.â
His breath leaves him in a sharp exhale through his nose, like heâs been holding it for centuries. And then he movesâlifting you in his lap, straddling his thighs, your bodies pressed so close you forget where one ends and the other begins. You feel him, hard and pulsing beneath his clothes, and when you grind down with a gasp, he breaks.
His mouth returns to your neckânot to bite this time. No, this time he kisses you, open-mouthed and desperate, tasting the place where your blood still sings beneath the skin. Where his mark still lingers.
One arm wraps around your waist, pulling you closer, anchoring himself in your warmth like a drowning man clutching the shore. His other handâstill shakingâfinds the space between your thighs, seeking, never demanding. He asks for you without a word.
And when you press down again, needing him, his moan is wounded. Grateful.
âYou gave me breath,â he chokes out. âNow give me sound. Let me hear every piece of life still burninâ inside you.â
You gasp when his fingers slide the fabric aside, exposing you to the cool airâand to him. And when he finally pushes into you, slow and deep, the only sound that escapes is his name, broken on your lips.
He curses under his breathânot in pride, but in disbelief. In reverence.
âYou feel...â He doesnât finish. He canât.
He holds you like youâre the last tether to the world, his forehead pressed to your collarbone. His thumb finds your clit, circling in time with the rhythm of your breath, your heartbeat, your pulse.
You tilt his head up, fingers curling beneath his jaw. His eyes meet yoursâand they are wide, overwhelmed, human. His cheeks flush with blood. His lips are pink again. Your blood. He looks alive, but not because he fed.
Because you let him.
âSay it again,â you whisper. âTell me what I am to you.â
He swallows, and itâs like a prayer. âYouâre breath. Youâre earth. Youâre the sound that makes my bones remember they once belonged to flesh.â
His voice is wrecked. âAnd Iâll give you anything, if youâll keep me.â
Something fractures in you.
You move without thinking, chasing the rhythm he offers. His hands tighten, his body trembling. And with every ragged gasp, every moan against your skin, you feel itâhimâbeing stitched into place inside you. You arch, not for control, but because you need more. Â Every thrust, every kiss, every murmurâdraws you closer to the edge.
And then he says, softly, like a vow:
âYou sound like home.â
Your body tightens, the pleasure surging through you like fire in your veins. You break with itâvoice cracking open as you come, your body convulsing, your cry shattering the silence like a psalm.
He gasps.
Stillness.
Thenâhe shudders, once, so deep it rocks you both.
Like your climax dragged him back from death.
Like your voice tore through the veil and brought him home.
He clings to you, arms trembling, chest rising and fallingânot a mimicry. Not an echo.
But breath. Real breath.
He stays there, his face buried in your neck, as if afraid to let go of the moment.
Then, hoarse and smiling faintly. âI was right.â
You blink down at him, breathless.
âDidnât need an instrument after all,â he says, meeting your gaze, a flicker of mischief in his eyes. âThough if you still want lessons⊠Iâll teach you. If they all end like this.â
You laughâquiet and stunnedâas you brush damp hair from his forehead.
But then you feel it.
The warmth you gave him⊠pulling back. Retreating, slow as a tide returning to the sea. His skin cools beneath your touch, no longer flushed with blood. But still soft. Still real.
He feels it too. You see it in the way his lashes flutter. In the way his chest stills.
No fear.
No regret.
âDidnât think itâd last,â he murmurs, hand resting gently at your side. âNever does.â
He looks up at you, reverent. âBut gods, lass⊠for a moment, you made me feel like I had a heart again.â
You swallow hard, your throat tight with something you canât name.
You donât speak. You just hold him.
And this time, he leans in not for warmth, but for closeness. For the memory of what you gave him. The echo of your voice still resonating somewhere in the hollow of his chest.
Content warning: vampire transformation (non-consensual), blood, emotional manipulation, obsession, toxic romance, grief, PTSD, trauma aftermath, sexual tension, implied sex, body horror, hunting/killing, possessiveness, violence (not glorified), slow descent into monsterhood
A/n: this was a request from @0angel-tears0 , and i truly poured my heart into bringing it to life. i tried to weave in every detail that was asked for, and i hope it resonates with you the way it did with me while writing. thank you for the inspirationâi really hope you enjoy it. And thank you for the support^^
He was on his knees.
Not like a man prayinâ, but like one begginâ the grave to let him stay buried.
âJust tell me what to do, and Iâll do it,â Remmick rasped, voice low and cracked, like gravel dragged through honey. His hands hovered near mine, never quite touchinâ. âYou want me gone, Iâll disappear. You want me dead, well⊠you know better than most, darlinâ. That ainât never been easy.â
The rain hit the ground like it was tryinâ to drown out the past.
I stood there, silent. Watchinâ the same man who once turned my blood to fire now tremble like he ainât felt warmth in centuries. His eyes flickered red. Still beautiful. Still dangerous. Still mineâonce.
And then the memory came back sharp as bone:
His mouth at my throat.
My scream shatterinâ the quiet.
The taste of betrayal on my tongue before I ever knew what betrayal truly was.
The night he turned me.
The night I stopped beinâ his salvation and became his punishment.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
Remmick's Pov
The smoke from the bakerâs chimney curled lazy into the grey morninâ, twistinâ up toward a sky that hadnât yet made up its mind. Pale, dull, hanginâ low like grief. I shifted the crate on my shoulder, feelinâ the dig of wood through damp wool. My boots were slick with yesterdayâs rain, slippinâ now and then on the cobbles that shone like a drunkardâs teethâwet and crooked.
I passed the butcher, same as always. He gave me a nod stiff as his apron. Behind him, the meat swung on hooks, pink and heavy, lookinâ like saints in some holy place Iâd never set foot in. I hated that shop. Too many flies. Too many mouths left open, waitinâ for a prayer thatâd never come.
The crate werenât muchâfew bottles of oil, sacks of dried lavender, and somethinâ sealed in wax I didnât bother askinâ after. I just hauled it. Dropped it off with the woman behind the counter who didnât look me in the eye, and left. No lingerinâ. Places that smelled like sickness and sorrow werenât ones I liked to haunt long.
Iâd lived in this village long enough that most folks stopped whisperinâ. Didnât mean they trusted me. Just meant I was another fixtureâlike a broken fence or an old gate that still held up in a storm. I worked. Didnât drink myself blind. Didnât steal. Kept to myself. That was enough for them.
But it werenât enough for me.
Some days I wondered if I was real at all. Or just a shadow they let move through the fog.
I took the back path out, cuttinâ âround the edge of the market square. Didnât care for crowds. The noise. The eyes.
Thatâs when I saw her.
Not all at once. Just a flicker firstâsomethinâ movinâ slow near the trees where the path opened wide. A figure bent low, rearranginâ a basket. Her movements were deliberate, like the world could wait its turn. Like she had all the time God ever gave.
Her dress was simple, but it carried different. Lighter. Like she came from somewhere the sun hit softer. And herâ
Christ.
I donât know the word for what she was.
Not just beautiful. No.
Marked.
Like the earth itself had touched her, pressed a thumbprint right into her soul, and said: this one.
I shouldâve kept walkinâ. I didnât.
She straightened, basket shiftinâ easy on her hip like it belonged there. The light caught her skin, and it werenât fair, how it looked. Her eyes passed over me onceâjust a blinkâbut they didnât flinch. Didnât linger.
Thatâs what did it.
She didnât look at me like I was strange. Or cursed. Or nothinâ. She looked past me. Like sheâd seen worse. Lived through more. Like she carried the memory of fire behind her ribs and still breathed easy through the smoke.
And me?
I forgot the path. Forgot the ache in my shoulder and the filth on my hands. Forgot the hinge I was meant to fix, the roof that needed patchinâ. Forgot the name I answered to.
She turned.
Walked into the crowd and was gone.
And my chestâquiet near a decadeâstirred like somethinâ old had woken up in it.
Somethinâ dangerous.
Somethinâ like hunger.
Or recognition.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The next time I saw her, it was raininâ.
Not the sort that passed in a hush and vanished clean. No, this was the old kind. The kind that settled in your bones and made the village feel more graveyard than home. Clouds hung low, heavy as guilt. The air smelled like peat, smoke, and wet wool.
I hadnât planned on cuttinâ through the square. Meant to head straight to the chapelâFather Callahanâd cracked a hinge clean off the sacristy door again, and Iâd promised to fix it. Hammer tucked under my coat, hands still black with soot from cleaninâ out the bakerâs flue that morninâ. My back ached. My boots were soaked.
And thenâ
I saw her.
She stood quiet as a shadow in front of the apothecary, tucked beneath the narrow eave that dripped steady at her feet. Her dress was simple, the color of river clay, clinginâ to her like the rain knew better than to touch her skin. A basket sat on the crook of her arm, filled with wild garlic and herbs, and her other hand held a cloth to her lipsâlike she was keepinâ something back.
A cough. Or a secret.
I oughta have kept walkinâ.
But I didnât.
I stood there like a daft fool in the muck, starinâ at her like the rain could wash the sense back into me.
She looked up.
And this time, she saw me.
Really saw me.
Her eyesâdark as peat, clear as glassâlocked with mine. She didnât flinch. Didnât look away. Didnât carry the same weight in her stare that most folks did when they looked my way. There was no pity. No suspicion.
Just stillness.
She wore it like armor.
Like maybe the storm belonged to her.
âYou alright there?â I called, my voice louder than I meant over the hiss of rain.
Her gaze dipped for a breath, then came back. She lowered the cloth. âFar as I can be, considerinâ,â she said. Her voice was even, lower than I remembered. The words came proper enough, but the sound of her was not local. Something about it curled at the edges. Like sheâd learned the language well but carried a different song in her throat.
âYouâre not from here,â I said. The words left me before I could think to swallow âem.
Her lips twitched, not quite smilinâ. âNeither are you.â
She werenât wrong.
Folk around here called me the outsider. Came in after my brother passed, and I stayedâfixinâ broken fences, sharpeninâ shears, patchinâ roofs after windstorms. I kept to myself. Said little. Answered less. Most folks left me be. Grief has a way of makinâ ghosts of the livinâ.
But sheâshe was no ghost.
She was too solid. Too certain.
âYou deal in herbs?â I asked, noddinâ toward her basket.
She glanced down, then back. âSome for trade. Some for me. Depends whoâs askinâ.â
âFolk here donât always take kindly to unfamiliar hands mixinâ medicine.â
âThey donât take kindly to much at all,â she said. Her tone didnât shift. Didnât get sharp or soft. âBut Iâm not here to please them.â
My mouth twitched. Couldâve been a smile. Couldâve been a warning.
âThey call me Remmick,â I offered, though I donât know why. She hadnât asked.
She nodded slow, like she was tuckinâ the name somewhere safe. âIâve heard of you. Fix things, donât you?â
I gave a short nod. âTry to.â
She tilted her head, studyinâ me like I was a nail half-driven. âCan you fix what ainât made of wood or iron?â
I blinked. âSuppose that depends on how broke it is.â
That made her pause. Her eyes lingered, like she was weighinâ my words on a scale only she could read.
âGood answer,â she murmured, and stepped out into the rain.
She moved like duskâquiet, certain, untouched by the cold. Her shoes sank into the mud, her hair clung to her nape, and still she didnât flinch. Didnât falter. Didnât look back.
Didnât need to.
I stood there a long while after sheâd gone, hammer still clutched in my hand, like Iâd forgotten what I was doinâ.
Something about her wouldnât let go.
It wasnât just her face, though it was a face worth rememberinâ.
It was the way she made the world feel like it wasnât mine anymore.
Like sheâd stepped out of some place older than time.
And my soulâfool that it isâreached for her like it already knew the fall was cominâ.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The next time I saw her, I was carryinâ a sack of empty flour tins and cussinâ at the wind. The path out toward the edge of town had turned near to muck from the weekâs worth of rain, and the soles of my boots were caked thick with it. Iâd been sent by old Mr. Fallon to fetch a bundle of dried thyme and wild caraway for his breadâclaimed the flavor wouldnât be worth spit without it. Gave me a half-torn scrap with the address written in crooked scrawl and waved me off like I didnât have ten other things to fix today.
I followed the directions, takinâ the narrow road past the blacksmithâs, past the place where the woods leaned too close to the path, until the town itself felt far behind me. When I reached the cottage, it was tucked back in a thicket of elder trees, vines curlinâ up its stone sides like time was tryinâ to reclaim it.
Didnât seem like the sort of place anybody lived.
But there was smoke risinâ from the chimney, soft and pale.
I knocked on the door. Didnât expect her to answer.
But she did.
The door creaked open slow, and there she stood. Same earth-toned dress, sleeves rolled up this time, fingers stained green from somethinâ sheâd been grinding. Her hair was wrapped back, loose pieces stickinâ to her temple from sweat.
I blinked. She didnât.
âYou here for the bakerâs herbs?â she asked, before I could speak.
âAye,â I said, a little too quick. âDidnât know it was you who put âem together.â
She gave a small shrug, half-turning back into the house. âI make do with what I can. Come on in. Itâs dry, at least.â
I hesitated on the threshold.
Then stepped inside.
The cottage smelled like cedar smoke and mint, sharp with somethinâ bitter beneath itâwormwood, maybe, or sorrow. Shelves lined the walls, filled with glass jars and cloth bundles, herbs hanginâ to dry like prayer strings. Light came in soft through the foggy windows, catchinâ on the motes floatinâ in the air.
I watched her move through the space like she belonged to it. Like the walls were built to her shape.
âYou live alone out here?â I asked, settinâ the tin sack down by the door.
She nodded without lookinâ back. âFolk donât visit much. Suits me fine.â
âBit far from everything, donât you think?â
Her hands didnât stop as she tied a bundle of dried leaves with twine. âDistance keeps peace. Or at least quiet.â
I hummed low. âSeems lonely.â
She paused, just a moment. âLonelyâs better than beinâ caged.â
I didnât have an answer for that.
She turned then, handinâ me the bundle wrapped in cloth. âHere. Tell Fallon I added wild rosemary. Heâll complain, but heâll use it anyway.â
I took the bundle, our fingers brushinâ again. Brief, but not unremarkable.
âThank you,â I said. âFor this.â
She nodded. Her eyes lingered on mine longer than they shouldâve.
âYou always this polite, or just when youâre in someoneâs home?â
I let a ghost of a smile tug at my mouth. âOnly when Iâm talkinâ to someone who donât scare easy.â
She raised an eyebrow, a corner of her lip curlinâ. âGood. I donât trust men who only speak sweet to the meek.â
There was a silence thenâan easy one, somehow, but it sat heavy with things unspoken.
âYou never gave me your name,â I said, shifting the weight of the herbs in my hands.
She looked down, then back up. âThatâs âcause I havenât decided if youâve earned it.â
And damn me, but I liked the sound of that.
âWell,â I said, stepping back toward the door, âif you ever reckon I have, Iâll be around. Usually fixinâ things folkâve broken.â
She tilted her head, arms crossed now. âMaybe Iâll break somethinâ just to see if youâll come.â
The door creaked shut behind me before I could think of somethinâ clever to say.
Outside, the air smelled like wet leaves and woodsmoke. I walked back down the muddy path with her words echoing in my chestâsoft as silk, sharp as flint.
And somewhere in the quiet between my heartbeats, I realized Iâd be lookinâ for reasons to come back.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The morning stretched soft and gold over the village, sun filterinâ through a sky still patched with the pale hush of dawn. Itâd rained heavy the night before, and now the earth smelled like moss and old stone, like every breath belonged to something older than me.
I took the same path I always did, worn into the hills by habit and need. A leather satchel slung cross my shoulder, tools knockinâ gentle against one another with each step. The hammer I used for roofs, the little brush I used for oilinâ hingesâall packed like I was some saint come to bless broken things.
Only I wasnât goinâ to the chapel today.
The note had come from the baker, scribbled mess of ink sayinâ one of the herb women needed her ceilinâ patched. Didnât give a name, just said âthe dark-eyed one what donât smile easy.â I knew then.
Didnât tell myself that out loud, but my chest said it plain.
Her.
The woman who spoke like secrets. Moved like the rain followed her for warmth. Iâd seen her twice now, and still she sat behind my eyes like a prayer I couldnât finish.
Her cottage sat just beyond the low bend of the road, tucked behind a line of cypress trees with their roots grippinâ the wet soil like they feared beinâ torn up. Ivy climbed the corners of the stone, and a little row of jars lined the windowsillâdried flowers, maybe. Bits of lavender. Or bones.
I knocked soft. Once. Twice. No answer. I knocked again, louder this time, the wood thuddinâ beneath my fist.
âCominâ,â came her voice, muffled but steady.
The door creaked open and there she was, standinâ barefoot on the wood floor with sleeves pushed up to her elbows. Her dress was a muted brown, plain as river mud, but it clung to her like sheâd shaped it herself from dusk and silence.
âYouâre the one with the leak,â I said, tryinâ to keep my voice level, casual. âI was sent from the bakery to patch it up proper.â
Her eyes flicked down to my satchel, then back to me. âFigured someone would show. Just didnât think itâd be you.â
I raised a brow. âThat a complaint?â
She didnât smile, but her lips twitched at the corners. âNot yet.â
She stepped aside, lettinâ me in with a tilt of her head. The air inside her cottage was warmâherby, thick with dried thyme and somethinâ sweeter beneath it, like burnt sugar.
âCeilinâs in the back room,â she said. âIt leaks when the rain hits from the east.â
I followed her down the narrow hall, tools shiftinâ with each step. The floor creaked beneath our weight, and the walls held the quiet hum of a lived-in placeâone made by hand, not bought with coin.
As I entered the room, I looked up at the corner where the water had left its markâdark ring bloominâ like rot in the ceiling. I set my satchel down near the edge of a low table and rolled up my sleeves.
âYou donât strike me as the sort who sends for help,â I said, climbinâ onto the little stool below the leak. âLet alone a village man.â
âIâm not,â she replied, movinâ to the table and startinâ to sort herbs into small bundles. âBut Iâm also not the sort who lets water make a home where it donât belong.â
âThat so?â I grinned. âMaybe you oughta carve that on a stone outside. Might keep trouble at bay.â
Her hands stilled a moment on the stems before resumminâ. âTrouble always finds its way back. Whether you carve warnings or not.â
There was somethinâ in her toneâlike she knew the feel of troubleâs hands around her throat and had stopped beinâ afraid of it.
I scraped at the softened wood, lettinâ silence settle between us, comfortable as an old coat.
I was halfway through tightening the last hinge when she spoke again.
âYou always this quiet when you work?â she asked, voice soft, but not shy. There was somethinâ in itâlike a cat stretchinâ in a sunbeam. Casual. Watchinâ.
I glanced down from the stool Iâd set beneath her ceiling, my sleeve wet with old rainwater and plaster dust stickinâ to my arms.
âOnly when the jobâs worth concentratinâ on,â I muttered, brows knit, screwinâ the final nail in. âAnd when the roof donât behave.â
She made a small soundâalmost a laugh. âShould I apologize on its behalf?â
âIf it gives me a bit oâ peace, then aye.â
She leaned her shoulder to the doorframe, arms folded, basket still on the table behind her. The light from the window framed her in piecesâforehead, cheekbone, collarbone. Dust floated between us, and outside, the wind shifted the branches in her little garden.
âYouâre better at this than the last fella they sent,â she said after a while. âDidnât even last long enough to hammer twice before he said the house gave him a bad feelinâ.â
âMost things give folk a bad feelinâ when they ainât lookinâ hard enough,â I answered, setting the hammer down and wiping my hands on my trousers. âOr when theyâre daft.â
âAnd what about you?â she asked, that same not-smile flirtinâ at the corners of her mouth. âYou get any feelinâ from this place?â
I turned, finally facing her proper. âAye,â I said. âThat youâre hidinâ somethinâ.â
Her expression didnât change, but her gaze sharpened.
âI mean,â I added, before she could speak, âthat you donât talk much, yet youâve got books stacked on herbs that donât grow this side of the sea. Things bundled in your basket most folks wouldnât know to pick. You knew Iâd come back for the ceiling before I even told you I would.â
She tilted her head, lips pressing together. âI listen. I pay attention,â she said simply. âPeople show who they are even when they donât mean to.â
âAnd what have I shown, then?â I asked, stepping down from the stool, slow.
She hesitated only a breath. âThat youâre more than you say,â she said. âAnd you carry your grief like itâs welded to your spine.â
I stopped cold. And for once, I didnât have somethinâ clever to say. Just stood there, feelinâ the weight of her words settle where they landedâdeep.
She walked past me then, to the table, and pulled a small dark glass jar from the corner beside a bound book. Set it in my hands.
âFor the cold,â she said. âRainâll catch up with you sooner than you think, and you smell like someone who wonât rest long enough to sweat it out.â
I looked down at the jar, then up at her again.
âYou trust me not to drop dead drinkinâ this?â I asked, eyebrow cocked.
âIf I wanted you dead,â she said plainly, âIâdâve let the ceiling fall.â
That made me laugh, a dry sound I hadnât heard in my own throat in some time.
âFair ânough.â
She moved toward the door to open it for me, but I didnât walk out just yet. Still holdinâ the jar, I looked back at her, searching her face like the name might rise from her skin if I stared long enough.
âYou gonna tell me your name, or do I keep callinâ you Moonflower in my head?â I asked, the smirk creepinâ up despite myself.
She blinked at that. âMoonflower?â
âYou only bloom at night. Got a scent that lingers. And I reckon youâll poison a man if he ainât careful.â
That made her pause. Then, a smileâreal this time, curved and quiet.
âDonât know if I oughta be flattered or offended.â
âBoth, maybe.â
She nodded, opening the door wider. âSee you next time, then⊠handyman.â
âRemmick,â I reminded her, steppinâ out into the daylight again.
âI know,â she said, leaning on the frame. âStill deciding if you deserve to be called by it.â
And then she shut the door.
But the air behind me stayed full of her voice. Of rain. And herbs. And somethinâ that hadnât yet been named.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The woods had a hush to âem that dayâlike even the birds were holdinâ their tongues to listen. Not a drop of rain on the ground, but the air was thick with damp, like the earthâd been cryinâ in secret. I werenât lookinâ for her. Not exactly. But I took the long path from town anyhow, boots slippinâ over moss and roots, hands deep in my coat like I didnât care where I was headed.
Truth was, I hadnât seen her in three days. And it felt like somethinâ gnawinâ at the hollow in my ribs.
I told myself she was off gatherinâ or restinâ, that folk like her didnât owe nothinâ to folk like me. But the stillness where she ought toâve beenâit sat too long in the pit of my chest.
Then I saw her. Perched on a fallen log off the trail, elbow on her knee, chin in her palm. Her basket laid beside her, near empty, just a few stringy greens hanginâ on like stubborn ghosts. The wind played gentle at her scarf, and she looked like sheâd been carved outta stillness. A woman built from pause and ache.
âThought the treesâd gone and swallowed you,â I said, easinâ around the bend with a crooked smile tryinâ to pass as casual.
Her gaze met mine. Slow. Sure. âThey tried,â she said. âBut I told âem I still had things to finish.â
A laugh threatened my throat. I let it sit behind my teeth.
âWas beginninâ to think I imagined you,â I said, shiftinâ my weight through the soft earth. âLike somethinâ dreamt up on a fevered night.â
She looked me over like she could tell I meant it. âYou dream often, Remmick?â
âOnly when Iâve got somethinâ heavy on the soul.â
She didnât answer that. Just scooted over and tapped the space beside her.
So I sat.
We let the silence settle between us for a time, let it stretch long and deep. She played with a blade of grass, foldinâ it in half, then again, âtil it split. I watched the way her fingers moved, careful but worn.
âI been thinkinâ,â she said after a while, voice quiet but steady. âHow a place can be full of people and still feel empty.â
My eyes shifted to her, to the way her jaw set like sheâd swallowed too many truths. âThis place do that to you?â
She shrugged. Not quite yes, not quite no. Then after a beat, âMy home wasnât kind either. But it was mine. Then it werenât.â
I didnât say nothinâ. Just let her speak.
âThere was a war. Not one with drums and soldiers, but somethinâ quieter. Slower. Took everything soft and left the bones.â
Her fingers stilled. Her face didnât change, but I saw the weight behind her eyes.
âI ran,â she said. âKept runninâ. Learned to talk like I belonged. Learned to walk like I wasnât watchinâ every step.â
âYou shouldnâtâve had to,â I muttered, voice rough. âNo one should.â
She looked at me then, like she werenât expectinâ that.
âFolk back home say runninâ makes you weak,â she said. âBut itâs what saved me.â
I nodded slow. âI ran, too. When my brother died, I packed what little I had and left. Not just the grief, but⊠the hunger. Crops were failinâ. Bellies were empty. We were ghosts by winter.â
She blinked, brows drawinâ together.
âIrelandâs a beautiful place, but sheâs cruel when she wants to be. The year before I left, there was rot in the potatoesâblack and wet, like somethinâ cursed the fields. Folks buried more kin than crops that year.â
I swallowed.
âI couldnât stay and starve with the bones of my family.â
She watched me. Didnât speak. Just watched.
âSo I came here,â I went on, voice low. âThought maybe fixinâ things might fix me, too.â
She tilted her head. âHas it?â
I looked down at my hands. Calloused. Dirty. Then I looked at her.
âIâm still cracked,â I said. âBut I donât feel so hollow when youâre nearby.â
Her lips parted, just a little. Eyes softeninâ, like she didnât know what to do with that.
âYou always say things like that?â
âOnly when I mean âem.â
The breeze stirred again. Her scarf lifted and fell.
âYou donât know what Iâve done,â she said, voice low. âWhat Iâve seen. Iâm not made of mercy, Remmick. Iâve got sharp edges.â
âI ainât afraid of a cut,â I said, leaninâ forward. âNot if it means gettinâ close to somethinâ real.â
She reached into her basket then, pullinâ out a folded cloth with a little vial insideâamber-glass, stoppered with care.
âMore, For the rain,â she said. âTo keep the cold outta your bones.â
I took it from her gently, thumb brushing hers. âYou always takinâ care of me.â
She smiled, barely. âYou look like someone who donât know how to ask for help.â
âAnd you look like someone whoâs tired of watchinâ folk suffer.â
She stood, dustinâ off her skirts.
âWalk me home?â she asked.
I stood too, tucking the vial safe in my coat. âAye. Wouldnât have it any other way.â
And I meant it. From the ache behind my ribs to the silence between her wordsâI meant every damn word.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
Days passed as I began to see her more and more. Every time was like a dream I didnât want to endâjust like today.
The clearing sat just beyond the old stone wall, tucked where the trees thinned and the wild things dared bloom without asking permission. The sun poured itself across the earth like warm cream, catchinâ on petals and blades of grass, paintinâ everything gold.
She was already there when I arrivedâkneelinâ low, sleeves rolled up past her elbows, fingers brushinâ through stalks of green like she were coaxinâ secrets from the dirt. Some of the flowers were in full bloom, heads high like they knew they were worth praisinâ. Others drooped, wilted from the heat or time. Still, she moved between them with care, never avoidinâ the ones thatâd gone soft at the edges.
âYouâre late,â she said without lookinâ at me, voice light but pointed.
I knelt beside her, restinâ my tools down with a soft thump. âWas mendinâ a crooked stair, not flirtinâ with the bakerâs daughter if thatâs what youâre thinkinâ.â
She smirked. âDidnât say you were.â
âAye, but you thought it.â
She shook her head, then held up a stem with tiny white buds. âChamomile. You pick it now, when the sunâs at its highest. Any later, and it starts losinâ its strength.â
I took it from her, turninâ the stem between my fingers. âLooks like nothinâ special.â
She raised a brow. âAnd yet it calms nerves, soothes bellies, and can ease nightmares.â
My lips curled. âMaybe I oughta be stuffinâ my pillow with it.â
âWouldnât hurt.â
The way she said it made me glance sideways at herâhow the sun lit up her cheekbones, how the wind caught loose strands of hair and played with âem like a lover. She looked too alive to belong to the quiet.
âWhich oneâs next?â I asked, clearinâ my throat.
She reached out, pluckinâ a stem from the base of a nearby cluster. âYarrow. Good for wounds.â
âThat for folk like me who get in fights with doors and lose?â
She gave me a sidelong look. âItâs for those who carry hurts they donât speak on.â
I didnât answer. Not right away.
We moved in silence for a while, fingers grazinâ blooms, knees in the soft earth. I watched her more than I watched the plants, truth be told. There was a rhythm to her. A kind of stillness that werenât born from silence but from knowledge. Like she knew exactly where she stood and why the world moved around her.
âWhy dâyou teach me this?â I asked finally.
She shrugged. âBecause most folk pluck whatâs pretty and leave whatâs useful.â
âAnd you think Iâm worth teachinâ?â
She looked at me then. Really looked. âI think you listen when I speak,â she said. âThatâs rare enough.â
My chest pulled tight at that. Not from surprise. From feelinâ seen.
âI like hearinâ you talk,â I said, softer than I meant. âEven when you donât say much.â
She didnât smile, but she didnât look away either. âWhat else do you like?â
âYour hands,â I said before thinkinâ. âHow sure they are. How you never flinch when you touch things other folk avoid.â
Her gaze flicked down to the herbs between us. âAnd what if I touch somethinâ dangerous?â
âThen I reckon itâd be lucky to be held by you.â
The wind stirred again, rustlinâ the trees, bendinâ the tall grass in waves. A butterfly danced between us and didnât land.
She exhaled slow, like maybe sheâd been holdinâ her breath. âYouâre a strange man, Remmick.â
âAye,â I said, smilinâ. âBut Iâm learninâ from the best.â
We sat there till the sun dipped just low enough to cast long shadows. The air thickened with the smell of lavender and crushed thyme. She handed me one last sprigâsomething bitter, sharp to the nose.
âFor the headaches you pretend not to have,â she said.
I tucked it behind my ear like a fool.
She laughed, the sound as soft as the breeze through yarrow leaves.
And I thoughtâif this were all I ever had of her, itâd be enough.
But some part of me already knew Iâd want more.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The sun was dippinâ low, spillinâ orange light across the field like it was tryinâ to make somethinâ holy outta the ordinary. Weâd wandered farther than usual â past the woods, down near where the blackberry bushes crept wild along the stone fences. Grass brushed at our ankles, and the air smelled like dust, crushed fruit, and late summer.
Sheâd been humminâ under her breath again. I never knew the tune, but it stuck in my head all the same.
âCareful now,â she said, glancinâ back at me with that half-grin. âThese bramblesâll catch your trousers and your pride in one go.â
I muttered somethinâ about her beinâ the real menace, not the bushes, which made her laugh â that soft, real kind that made my chest feel too small.
We settled on a slope where the hill dipped shallow. She sat cross-legged without a care, skirt flared, one hand restinâ against a warm rock. I sat beside her, knees bent, boots digginâ into the earth. Not too close. Not too far.âYou always find the best places,â I said, watchinâ the horizon melt.She shrugged like it werenât nothinâ. âPlaces donât gotta be grand to be good. Just quiet. Just safe.â
I glanced at her, and for a second, she looked made of the light itself â all gold and shadow, like she belonged to a world I hadnât earned yet.
âHow come you never told me your name?â I asked, leaninâ back on my elbows. âMight start thinkinâ you ainât got one.â
She chuckled, pickinâ a stem of clover and twistinâ it between her fingers. âMaybe I was waitinâ. Maybe I needed to know if youâd ruin it.â
I arched a brow. âRuin it how?â
âSome folk take your name like itâs a possession,â she said, serious now. âSay it too often. Say it wrong. Say it like they own it.â
I nodded slow. âAnd you think Iâd do that?â
She looked at me then â really looked â and whatever she saw there mustâve settled somethinâ.
âNo,â she said soft. âI donât think you would.â
The breeze picked up. She reached into her basket, pulled out a small bundle wrapped in cloth. Bread and somethinâ sharp-smellinâ, maybe a bit of goat cheese.
âPayment,â she said, handinâ me the bread. âFor carryinâ all my baskets last week like a proper mule.â
I grinned. âBest damn mule you ever met.â
âYou might be right.â She took a bite of her own bread, chewinâ slow, like she had all the time in the world.
Silence sat easy between us, stitched together by cicadas and the rustle of the grass.
Then she said it, casual as the weather.
âMy nameâs Y/N.â
I turned to her, blinkinâ. âY/N,â I repeated, like it was a word I already knew but hadnât tasted proper yet.
âDonât wear it out,â she warned, smirkinâ over her bite of cheese.
âI wouldnât dare,â I said, and meant it.
We watched the last of the sun sink behind the ridge, the sky bruisinâ with twilight.
âY/N,â I murmured again, like a prayer I hadnât realized Iâd needed.
She didnât look at me this time. But I saw the way her smile turned soft at the edges.
And that was enough.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The sun sat high, spillinâ gold all across the yard like itâd been poured straight from Godâs own pitcher. Cicadas were humminâ, lazy and loud, and the stump tree in front of her little place offered just enough shade to make sittinâ there feel like somethinâ sacred.
She was bent over a wide wooden bowl in her lap, sleeves rolled to her elbows, grindinâ the herbs weâd gathered just the day before. Her wrists moved smooth, slowâlike she was coaxinâ the medicine out with patience instead of pressure. The scent of rosemary and dry lavender clung to the air. I sat nearby on the grass, a small pile of weeds beside me Iâd promised to pull up while she worked, though Iâd barely made a dent.
Didnât matter much.
I wasnât here to work.
I was here to watch her.
To listen to her hum low under her breath, not a tune I knew, but soft enough to settle the ache thatâd been coiled in my chest since the last time sheâd gone quiet on me.
She reached for another bundle of dried stalks, tucking a loose strand of hair behind her ear with the back of her wrist.
âYou done planninâ on helpinâ or you just gonna keep starinâ?â she asked, not lookinâ up.
âBoth, maybe,â I said, leaninâ back on my elbows with a grin. âCanât blame a man for admirinâ the view.â
She snorted, but her lips twitched. âIf youâre tryinâ to be smooth, youâre slippinâ, Remmick.â
âMe? Slippinâ?â I let my accent thicken, feigninâ offense. âIâll have you know I was voted most charming back home. âCourse, that was by a goat and my granda.â
That earned me a laugh. Not loud, but enough to stir the birds in the tree overhead.
I watched her as she went back to work, the sun catchinâ on her skin and her voice humminâ again. My hand found a stray flower near my boot, tugging it from the grass. Yellow, scraggly thing. Not as pretty as the ones she kept hung dry above her stove, but it reminded me of her in some crooked wayâsturdy and soft at the same time.
âYou ever think about stayinâ?â I asked, real quiet. âIn one place, I mean. Lettinâ somethinâ root you instead of always runninâ?â
She paused, mortar stillinâ in her hand. âYou mean lettinâ people in?â
âI mean lettinâ one in,â I said, twirlinâ the flower between my fingers. âJust one.â
She turned her head toward me, squintinâ a little like the light was in her eyes and not the words. âThat what youâve been gettinâ at this whole time?â
I didnât answer. Just tucked the flower behind my ear with mock grace.
âWhat dâyou think?â
She looked at me for a long time. Then smiled. Not wide. Not coy. Just somethinâ soft and real, like the kind of smile you give someone you ainât afraid of no more.
âI think you talk too much,â she said, goinâ back to grindinâ. âBut I like it.â
I didnât need more than that.
Didnât need her to say the thing out loud.
Not yet.
The breeze picked up, stirrinâ the dust, the herbs, the ache in my chest that didnât feel quite so heavy no more.
I pulled the flower from its place on behind ear and putting it neatly on hers and she smiles shyly.
And beneath that old stump tree, under the watchful hush of midday, I let myself believeâjust a littleâthat maybe I werenât the only one feelinâ it.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The smell of sugar and sun-warmed fruit clung to the cottage like a promise. Late afternoon spilled through the kitchen window in golden sheets, catching in the little dust motes that danced above the wooden counter. The bowl between us was nearly fullâfat blueberries sheâd hand-picked that morning, now tossed in flour and cinnamon, waiting for their crusted cradle.
I stood elbow-deep in dough, arms dusted white, sweat at my brow and not just from the heat.
âCareful,â she said, reaching across me. Her hand brushed mine. âYouâre foldinâ it too hard. Gotta coax it, not fight it.â
I glanced up.
Sunlight hit the side of her face, turned her lashes gold. She was smiling softâbarely thereâbut it pulled somethinâ straight outta my ribs.
âAye,â I muttered. âDidnât know you trained with the Queenâs pastry cooks.â
She snorted. âDidnât need to. Just had a gran whoâd bite your fingers if you got heavy-handed with her dough.â
âSounds like a wise woman.â
âShe was mean as vinegar and twice as sharp.â
I tried again, slower now, and she nodded her approval. The next few minutes passed with quiet hums and giggles. I couldnât help but sneak glancesâat the curve of her neck, the smudge of flour on her cheek, the way her fingers moved like she were tellinâ a story only she knew.
Then I caught her lookinâ at me.
We both froze.
Neither of us said nothinâ, but somethinâ heavy and warm unfurled between us, soft as steam off a pie fresh from the oven.
She turned first, busyinâ herself with the tin. I took the chance to toss a pinch of flour at her back.
It hit her scarf.
She whirled. âOh, you didnâtâ!â
I grinned. âDidnât what?â
She grabbed a handful and threw it square at my chest. The puff exploded, dustinâ my shirt and the air between us. I lunged with a laugh, and she shrieked, giggling as she dodged around the table.
We wrestled, gently. My hands found her waist, hers pressed against my chest, and when she stumbled, I caught her.
Held her.
Our breath caught in the same place.
âYouâve got⊠flour,â I murmured, brushing her cheek.
âSo do you,â she whispered, staring up at me.
I donât remember leaninâ in. Just that my lips found hers like theyâd been waitinâ their whole life.
She kissed me back slowâlike she werenât sure she should, but couldnât help herself.
Then it changed.
Got deeper. Hungrier.
She tugged my shirt, I backed her into the counter. My hands ran over her hips, then up, tanglinâ in her hair as she moaned into my mouth.
âY/NâŠâ I whispered against her jaw.
She didnât answer. Just pulled me toward the bedroom like it was a decision already made.
The room was dim and warm, the last of the sun stretchinâ long through the window. She peeled her top away first, the thin cotton fallinâ to the floor. I watched her chest rise, eyes dark with want but soft, too.
I pulled my shirt over my head, dropped it, then stepped close.
âSure âbout this?â I asked, voice low.
She nodded. âBeen sure.â
Thatâs all I needed.
I kissed her again, slower this time, carryinâ her back until her knees hit the bed. We sank down together.
Our clothes came off like pages turned, deliberate and slow. My hands traced every inch of her, commitinâ it to memory like scripture. She gasped when I kissed her collarbone, whimpered when I moved down, when my mouth found the place that made her hips jerk and thighs tremble.
âRemmick,â she breathed, fingers in my hair, head tipped back.
I couldâve died in that moment and called it heaven.
When I slid inside her, she clung to me like sheâd fall apart otherwise.
We moved together like weâd been doinâ it forever. Like we were born for it. Her nails scraped down my back, my mouth found her throat. I whispered her name like a hymn, like a confession.
She cried out when she cameâlegs locked around me, eyes wet, lips parted.
I followed close behind, buryinâ my face in her neck with a groan, her name spillinâ from my mouth like a prayer Iâd never learned to say right.
After, we didnât speak.
Just laid tangled in each other, the sound of our breath and the warm hush of evening wrappinâ around us.
I pressed a kiss to her shoulder.
She didnât flinch.
Didnât pull away.
And I swearâright thenâI couldâve stayed there forever.
But foreverâs a long time.
And fate, as Iâve learned, donât ever keep still.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The first whisper came from the well.
A woman claiminâ her husbandâd died after takinâ a tincture from Y/N. Said it were meant to calm his fever, but he didnât see the next morninâ. She left out the weeks of coughinâ blood, the yellow tint in his eyes, the black along his gums. She left out the death already settinâ up house in his chest. No, she only spoke of the bottle. And the woman who brewed it. The quiet one, with dark hands and darker eyes, and a garden full oâ herbs no one dared name.
By midday, more tales grew teeth.
A child gone pale after tastinâ sweetroot sheâd sold. A cow miscarryinâ out near the woods. An old man mutterinâ in his sleep that heâd seen a shadow slip past his windowâand his joints ainât been right since.
That eveninâ, someone carved a jagged symbol into the bark of the tree outside her home.
The kind meant to ward off evil.
Or invite it.
I heard the talk at the forge. At the tavern. At the bloody bakerâs shop, while I were settinâ a hinge right on their back door.
âShe donât age,â one man whispered.
âShe donât bleed,â said another.
âHeard her kiss tastes like rusted iron,â a third muttered, voice thick with ale and foolishness.
âSheâs a witch.â
âSheâs the reason the sickness wonât lift.â
I laid the hammer down slow. Let the nails clatter onto the bench one by one. Didnât say a word. Just slipped out the back, fists clenched so tight I damn near split my own skin.
By the time I made it to her cottage, dusk had painted the sky grey and mean. I found her in the back garden, tendinâ her herbs like nothinâ was crumblinâ âround her.
âEveninâ,â she said when I stepped through the gate. Her voice soft, same as always, but her shoulders were stiff.
âYou been into town lately?â I asked.
âTwo mornings past,â she said, still kneelinâ. âWhy?â
I moved closer, my jaw grindinâ. âFolk are talkinâ. Sayinâ youâre the reason that manâs dead.â
She stood slow, wiped her hands on her apron. âHe was already dyinâ. The brew was to ease his passinâ. I ainât the one who filled his lungs with rot.â
âI know that. But they donât. And theyâre lookinâ for someone to blame.â
âThey always are.â
I swallowed hard, shakinâ my head. âThey carved a mark outside your gate.â
She turned to me fully then. âLet âem.â
âTheyâre callinâ you a witch.â
âAnd what do you call me?â
My throat tightened. âI call you brave. Foolish, maybe. But brave.â
She held my gaze. âIâve run before, Remmick. Iâll do it again if I must.â
âDonât,â I said, louder than I meant to. âDonât run.â
She looked back to the herbs. âI wonât beg to keep a life I built with my own hands.â
âYou wonât have to.â My voice dipped low. âBut promise meâno more goinâ into town alone.â
She hesitated. âAlright.â
But I knew, right then, she were already thinkinâ of leavinâ.
Three days passed.
She didnât listen.
Said she needed sugar. Cinnamon bark. Said sheâd be quick.
A boy came runninâ to my door before midday, breathless. âSheâs been hurt,â he gasped. âThey said she cursed their land. Threw stones. She bled.â
I didnât ask. Just ran.
When I reached her home, she was packinâ. A bandage round her brow, blood staininâ the edge of it. Her hands moved fast, throwinâ jars and vials into her satchel.
âYou went alone?â I barked, storminâ into the room.
âI didnât thinkââ
âNo,â I snapped, âyou didnât.â
She didnât stop movinâ.
âYou planninâ on runninâ, then?â
âWhat choice do I have?â she hissed. âYou said it yourselfâtheyâll burn the source.â
My chest hurt. âDonât go.â
She paused. Just for a moment.
Then kept packinâ. âYou canât save me from all this.â
âI can try.â
That night, I left.
Didnât tell her where I was goinâ. Only knew one place left to turn.
Deep in the hills, past the boglands and the stone-faced ruins. A place folk didnât speak of unless drink loosened their tongues. Said there was a woman there, old as death, who could grant powerâif you paid the price.
And I paid it.
Gave up my last ounce oâ peace for it.
âGive me what I need to protect her,â I said, kneelinâ in the dirt.
The voice that answered sounded like it had no mouth, no shape.
Youâll have it. But youâll never be what you were.
I woke with fire behind my eyes.
With hunger in my chest.
And power under my skin.
I ran back.
Too late.
Blood painted the porch. A poisoned arrow stickinâ out her side. Her breath shallow. Barely holdinâ on.
âY/N,â I choked, fallinâ beside her. âNo, no, noâstay with me, darlinâ, please.â
âThey came,â she rasped. âSaid I brought plagueâŠâ
âWeâll leave. Iâll carry you. Iâll get you outââ
She smiled. Weak. âYouâve got to live, Remmick.â
âI ainât livinâ without you.â
She tried to lift her hand. Failed.
And I broke.
âIâm sorry,â I whispered, tears runninâ. âForgive me.â
I sank my teeth into her throat.
She gasped.
Horrified.
âYou didnâtâŠâ she whimpered as blood began spraying a bit from the wound. âYou didnât askâŠâ
âI couldnât lose you, Moonflower.â
The torches were cominâ. Voices behind the trees.
But I held her tighter than Iâd ever held anythinâ as she stopped breathing.
And I cursed myself with every breath.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
Y/Nâs Pov
I woke with my mouth dry and the taste of iron sittinâ heavy on my tongue.
The ceiling above me werenât my own. It sloped too sharp, boards too clean, the scent of smoke and earth clinginâ to the beams like old ghosts. The air was stillâtoo stillâlike the house itself was holdinâ its breath.
I sat up slow. My limbs moved strangeâlighter, too light, like my body forgot how much it used to weigh. My skin felt tight over my bones, raw at the seams, like somethinâ inside me had been stretched too far and stitched back wrong.
The blanket slid off my shoulders.
I was wearinâ someone elseâs dress.
Not mine. Not torn. Not bloodstained.
But thatâs what I remembered last.
Blood. The color of it flashinâ under the moonlight. The ache of it tearinâ through my ribs. The sound of Remmickâs voice, tremblinâ as he cradled me like I was already gone. And thenâ
My throat closed.
I remembered his mouth on my neck.
His whisper. His kiss.
The bite.
And suddenly it hitâlike a storm cominâ in sideways.
The pain. The fire. The way my body twisted from the inside out, like my soul didnât wanna be here no more but the rest of me refused to let go. My hands clutched the mattress. Breath cominâ fast, sharp.
He turned me.
He turned me without askinâ.
I swung my legs off the side of the bed, bare feet hittinâ cool wood. The room around me was dim but familiar in a way that made my stomach knot. It was his. It had to be. One of the places he usedâclean, hidden, a house that didnât remember its own name.
A chair was pulled close to the bed. A half-burnt candle melted into the table beside it.
Heâd been watchinâ me.
Waitinâ for me to wake.
And yet he was gone now.
Good.
I didnât want him to see me like thisâsplit open from the inside, grief sittinâ heavy in my chest like a second heart.
I rose, legs unsteady beneath me, and caught sight of my reflection in the small mirror above the wash basin.
I froze.
My eyesâblack at the center, rimmed in red like coals just startinâ to burn. My skin a bit discolored as early frost, no warmth left to hold. My lips, faintly stained.
I touched them.
They still felt like mine.
But they werenât.
A sound left me. Not a sob. Not quite.
Somethinâ between a growl and a cryâlike grief wearinâ new teeth.
I shouldâve been dead.
Thatâs what I chose. Thatâs what I meant.
I told him to run.
I told him to live.
And instead, he tethered me to this lifeâthis curseâwith his own teeth.
My hand found the edge of the basin and gripped it tight.
The wood cracked under my fingers.
I let go, heart poundinâ louder than thought.
This wasnât love.
This was control.
A man holdinâ too tight to what he couldnât bear to lose.
Heâd rather unmake me than grieve me.
And yetâbeneath the rage, beneath the betrayalâsomethinâ else stirred.
Somethinâ I hated more than him in that moment.
I didnât feel dead.
I felt strong.
Feral.
Awake.
Every sound in the woods outside was clearer. The creak of the beams. The wind slippinâ under the door. I could smell the ash in the hearth and the echo of blood that once lived in these floorboards.
And that scared me more than anything.
Because I knew what came next.
The hunger.
The ache.
The war Iâd have to fight inside myself, every minute, every hour.
All because he couldnât let me go.
I stepped away from the mirror.
The next time I saw Remmick, I wasnât sure if I was gonna kiss himâŠ
or kill him.
So I ran.
Not for the first time.
But this time, I crossed oceans.
The Atlantic didnât welcome me. It didnât whisper comfort. It roaredâsalt-raw and cruel, like it knew what I was carryinâ. Not just the hunger. Not just the curse. But the truth: I wasnât runninâ from a man.
I was runninâ from the memory of one.
I didnât look back when Europe disappeared behind fog. Too many ghosts in the soil. Too many names I couldnât say anymore. Too many faces Iâd borrowed and buried.
I took the long way to nowhere.
Lived beneath borrowed roofs and behind shuttered windows. Spain. France. Portugal. I spoke like them, walked like them, bent like them. But my voice never quite fit right. My skin whispered stories the villagers didnât know how to read. And when they couldnât read you, they made you into somethinâ to fear.
So I disappeared again.
City to countryside. From the coast to quiet farms. I slept in cellars. Fed in alleyways. Hid my teeth like a shame. Covered my eyes when they burned too bright. But no matter where I went, I couldnât bury what heâd done to me. What Iâd become.
Vampire. Woman. Stranger.
Sin.
Then came America.
I heard tales of it in the mouths of men too poor to own boots but rich enough to dream. A place where no one knew your name unless you gave it. Where you could vanish on purpose. So I boarded a ship under another name and crossed a second ocean.
They didnât see me.
Didnât ask what land I came from.
Only that I kept quiet. Paid in coin. Kept to my corner.
And I did.
I stepped off that boat like a shadow lookinâ for a body.
Years blurred. The states changed names and faces. I moved where the fear was low and the sun easier to dodge. Pennsylvania. Georgia. Louisiana. Tennessee.
But nothinâ felt like mine.
Not until Mississippi.
The Delta didnât ask questions. It didnât blink twice at a woman whose hands knew how to soothe fever, or whose voice carried like river water over stone. It didnât care where I came fromâjust that I came with honesty and stayed with my head down.
And Lord, the pain here⊠it sang.
You could hear it in the soil. In the fields. In the bones of folk who worked the land like they were tryinâ to forgive it for all it had taken. The joy didnât come easy hereâbut it came. It bled through laughter, through music, through bodies swayinâ in defiance of grief.
Here, sorrow didnât hide from joy.
They danced together.
And for someone like me, that meant maybe I could belong.
I found a room behind a narrow house with warped floorboards and a window I never opened. Miss Adele, who owned it, looked me over long and low before passinâ me the key.
âYou ainât from here,â she said.
âNo, maâam.â
She nodded. âBut you wear the heat like itâs home. Just donât bring no trouble through my door.â
I didnât make promises. But I paid in full.
I stayed quiet. Covered my skin when the sun rose. Fed when I had toâclean, discreet, never twice in the same place. I helped when I could. Tinctures, poultices, teas. I kept to myself. Most folk didnât know my story.
Didnât know I once had a man.
Didnât know he turned me with a kiss and a curse and then begged me to thank him for it.
Didnât know I used to love him.
I didnât even know if he was still alive.
I hadnât seen Remmick in over a century. Hadnât heard whispers of him. Sometimes, when the wind shifted just right, I swore I could smell the cold of his coat, the copper of his breath. But that was just memory. Just the mind playinâ cruel.
He couldâve turned to dust for all I knew.
I prayed he had.
Still, I never let myself settle too deep.
The room I rented had no roots.
The name I gave was borrowed.
But the juke joint?
That felt like a church.
When Annie smiled at me and Stack nodded toward the dance floor, when the music rolled through me like a hymn with no preacherâI felt human again. I let my body move. I let myself forget. Just for a night. Just for a song.
And when it was over, I stepped back into shadow like I never left it.
They didnât know what I was.
Not yet.
But I knew what they were.
Wounded. Brave. Alive.
Mississippi didnât need my past. It didnât ask for blood oaths or confession. It let me be.
And for the first time in over a hundred years, that was enough.
But peace?
Peace donât last for things like me.
Because the past got claws.
And I knew, deep downâ
if he was still out there, heâd find me.
What I didnât know⊠was that he already had.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The air smelled of fried grease, wet moss, and wood smokeâthe kind of southern night that clung to your skin like sweat and memory. Iâd just left Miss Lilaâs porch, her boy burninâ up with fever again, and her nerves worn thin as dishwater. Iâd left her with a small jar of bark-root and clove oil, told her to steep it slow and keep a cool cloth on his head. She didnât ask what was in it. Folks rarely did when they was desperate.
The street stretched quiet before me, the dirt packed down by bare feet and Sunday wagons. My boots scuffed low as I walked, the hem of my skirt brushing the edge of dust and dew. The stars hung low tonight, strung like pinholes across a sky too tired to hold itself up.
I passed shuttered windows and sleeping dogs. Passed rusted signs and flickering lamps, the ones that leaned crooked like they were listeninâ. I clutched my shawl tighter, the chill sneakier in the springâeveninâs cool breath slidinâ down the back of my neck.
And then I saw itâthe juke joint. It sat tucked behind a bend in the road like a secret meant to be found. Light spilled out through the cracks in the wood like it couldnât bear to be kept in. Music pulsed low from insideâbluesy and slow, like sorrow had found its rhythm.
Cornbread stood out front like always, arms crossed, leaninâ on the doorframe with that half-grin like he owned the night.
He spotted me before I hit the steps. âWell now,â he said, voice smooth like creek water. âEveninâ, Miss Y/N. Came to bless us with your presence?â
I gave a quiet chuckle, noddinâ. âOnly if Iâm welcome.â
He laughed soft, pushinâ the door open. âGirl, you family by now. Donât need to be askinâ no more.â
âStill,â I said, steppinâ closer. âMama always said itâs good manners to ask âfore walkinâ into a space that ainât yours.â
âAinât nobody gonna question your manners,â he muttered, wavinâ me through. âNow get in âfore the music runs out.â
Inside was a rush of warmthâsmoke, sweat, the sweet bite of corn liquor, and somethinâ else⊠somethinâ close to joy. The music crawled under your skin âtil your hips remembered how to sway without askinâ. Voices buzzed like bees in summer heat, laughter rollinâ like dice across the room.
I eased onto the barstool I always tookâthird from the left, right where the fan overhead spun lazyâand let my bag fall soft at my boots. Didnât order nothinâ. I never did.
Annie caught sight of me behind the bar, swayinâ easy as ever with a tray of empty glasses tucked on her hip.
âYou bring what I asked for?â she asked, duckinâ behind the counter.
I reached into my satchel and handed her the cotton-wrapped bundle. âSteep it slow. Sip, donât gulp. Should ease you through the worst of it.â
She winked. âLaw, I owe you my life.â
âNah,â I said, settlinâ onto the stool near the end of the bar. âJust owe me a plate of cornbread next time you cookinâ.â
That got a laugh out of her, quick and sweet, before she vanished into the back.
I turned back toward the floor, just as Maryâs voice cut through the buzz of conversation like a blade through hushpuppies.
âYâall hear âbout the farmer boy gone missinâ?â she said, leaninâ into the group crowded âround the far end of the bar. Smoke was there, elbow propped, brows knit low. Two more men sat hunched closeâquiet, listening.
âWasnât just him,â one said. âOld Mabel from the creek road said her nephew ainât been seen in two days. Said his boots still sittinâ on the porch like he vanished mid-step.â
Smoke grunted. âI say itâs a man gone mad. Roaminâ through the woods, takinâ what he pleases. Weâve seen worse.â
One of the others leaned in, voice hushed. âThe natives been whisperinâ it ainât a man.â
That brought stillness. Even the music in the back room seemed to hush a beat.
âWhat they say?â Mary asked, brows raised.
âThey say somethinâ old woke up,â the man said, voice nearly swallowed by the crackle of heat and distance. âSomethinâ that walks like a man, but ainât. They leave herbs and ash circles at the edge of the trees againâlike back in the old days.â
Mary scoffed, but it sounded unsure. âOld tales. Spirits donât need bodies to raise hell.â
âThey said this oneâs lookinâ for somethinâ,â he continued, eyes flickinâ toward the windows like the night itself might be listeninâ. âOr someone. Been walkinâ the land with hunger in its bones and a face nobody can seem to remember after seeinâ it.â
I sat quiet, still as dusk.
âCould just be some drifter,â Smoke said. âFolks get riled when trouble comes and ainât got no face to pin it on.â
âThen why the sudden vanishings?â Mary pressed. âWhy now?â
âMaybe it ainât sudden,â I said before I could stop myself, my voice low and calm. âMaybe itâs just the first time weâre payinâ attention.â
Four heads turned my way.
Mary squinted. âYou heard somethinâ too?â
I shook my head slow. âJust a feelinâ. The kind that settles in your back teeth when the wind shifts wrong.â
They didnât say nothinâ to that. Not directly. But Smoke nodded once, solemn, like heâd felt it too.
The conversation drifted back to softer thingsâmusic, cards, the preacherâs crooked fenceâbut I sat still. That ache behind my ribs hadnât let up since the moon turned last. The way the air felt heavy even when it wasnât humid. The way dogs stopped barkinâ at shadows like they knew they couldnât win.
It werenât just madness.
And it sure as hell werenât random.
I could feel it deep.
Like breath on the back of my neck.
Something was here.
Something was cominâ.
And this time, I didnât know if Iâd be able to outrun it.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
Remmickâs Pov
It started with the absence.
Not the kind thatâs loudâgrief flung sharp across the soul. No. This one crept in slow, like rot behind the walls. Quiet. Patient. The kind of missing that donât scream. It whispers.
I walked to an empty room. No blood on the floor, no broken window, no fight to mark the leaving. Just cold air where her warmth used to linger. Her scent still clung to the linens. The floor creaked where she last stood.
I called her name.
Once.
Twice.
A third timeâbarely a whisper. Like maybe sheâd come back if I said it soft.
But she didnât.
And God help me, I searched.
I turned over every rock in that cursed country. Asked after a woman with a strange voice and steady hands. A healer. A ghost. I heard stories that mightâve been herâalways just a breath behind. A girl boardinâ a carriage to Marseille. A woman leavinâ a parcel at a chapel in Lisbon. A stranger with dark eyes and no surname passinâ through Antwerp.
I missed her by hours. Days. Once, by a damned blink.
The trail always went cold. But I kept followinâ. Because somethinâ in meâsomethinâ older than this cursed bodyâknew she was still out there.
I stopped feedinâ off folk unless I had to. Couldnât stomach it. Not with her voice echoing in my head, the way she looked at me that nightâbetrayal writ clear on every bone in her face.
I never meant to hurt her.
I only meant to save her.
But what I gave her werenât salvation. It was a cage.
A century passed me like smoke through fingers. I lost track of time, faces, cities. Learned to blend into the edges. Changed my name more than once. The world changed, and I watched it like a man outside a window he couldnât break through.
Then word came.
A dockhand in Barcelona. Drunk off his ass. Said heâd seen a woman walkinâ off a freighter bound for the States. Said she didnât belong to nobodyâs country. Said she looked like a shadow stitched to the sea.
That was all I needed.
I took the next ship out. Didnât care where it landedâso long as it took me west. Toward her.
The ocean ainât merciful.
The waves came like judgment. Ripped through the hull on the second week. Screams. Salt. Fire where it shouldnât be. They said none survived.
They were wrong.
I clung to the wreckage âtil the sky cracked open with morning. Drifted on broken boards and rage. Burned here and there by the time I reached landâainât proud of that. But grief makes monsters outta men, and I already was halfway there.
I moved through towns like a ghost with teeth. New York. Georgia. Tennessee. Small towns and big cities, never settlinâ. I listened to whispers in back alleys and watched for her in every market, every dusk-lit chapel, every face turned away from the sun.
Nothing. For years.
But I could feel her.
She was here.
Like the heat before a storm. Like a name you ainât heard in decades but still makes your gut twist.
It led me to Mississippi.
The Delta pressed down heavy on the chest, thick with memory and blood. And thatâs when I knewâshe was close. Her scent was buried in the clay. In the river. In the music that throbbed outta them joints deep in the trees.
I watched from the shadows first. Didnât trust myself not to shatter somethinâ if I saw her too soon.
She danced now. She smiled. But I could see the armor in her eyes. She never looked back when she left a room. Never stepped through a door without pausinâ. Still runninâ. Even after all this time.
And me?
Iâd come too far.
Burned too much.
So I waited. Watched.
And when the moment was right, Iâd step out of the darkâŠ
âŠand sheâd never be able to leave me again.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
There was somethinâ stirrinâ in the wind lately. Not loud, not sharpâjust enough to make the back of my neck prickle, enough to keep my eyes glancinâ twice at shadows I used to pass without a care. Folks round here would say itâs just the season changinâ. The cotton bloominâ slow. The river swellinâ with too much rain. But I knew better.
I knew what it felt like when the past came knockinâ.
It started with a weight I couldnât name. Not sorrow, not fear. Just⊠a tightness in the air. Like the calm right before a storm that donât care how long you prayed.
I was sweepinâ the porch when it hit strongest. Sun had already gone down behind the trees, but the sky still held that warm blue gold, thick and low, like honey drippinâ off the edge of the world. The breeze carried the scent of pine, of distant smoke and a sweetness I couldnât quite place. My broom slowed. My breath did too.
I didnât see nobody. Didnât hear a damn thing.
But I knew. Somethinâ was watchinâ.
I didnât flinch. Just kept sweepinâ, let the wind pull at the hem of my skirt and carried myself like I hadnât just felt old ghosts shift under my ribs.
Come nightfall, I made my way to the juke. Same as always. Parcel of dried herb tucked in my satchel for Grace. A wrapped cloth of rosehip and sassafras root for Annie. Folks counted on me for that, and I didnât mind. Gave me a reason to keep movinâ. Gave me an excuse to slip past the ache.
Cornbread tipped his chin at me when I reached the door. âYou late, sugar.â
I grinned easy, lifting the edge of my shawl. âDidnât know there was a curfew.â
He stepped aside with a smirk. âAinât one. But if you keep showinâ up this late, Iâm gonâ start worryinâ. Comâ in.â
âNow you sound like Adele,â I teased, brushinâ past him.
Inside, the world came alive. Warm wood floors thrumminâ underfoot. Smoke curlinâ from rolled cigars. Sweat glisteninâ on cheeks mid-laugh. A fiddle cried through the room like itâd been born from somebodyâs bones, and I breathed deep. I needed that sound.
I didnât dance. Not tonight. Just eased myself onto the stool at the far corner and let my satchel rest on the floor. The room buzzed around me, voices rollinâ like riverwater.
Then I felt it again.
That chill. That soft press of a stare at my back. Not unkind. But heavy.
I didnât turn. Didnât let it show on my face. But somethinâ old shifted inside me. Somethinâ Iâd buried centuries deep.
Not here, I thought. Not now.
I caught Annie passinâ and handed her the pouch. She squeezed my arm with a thank-you, unaware of how tight my chest had gone.
âYou feelinâ alright?â she asked.
âJust tired,â I lied, soft. âBeen a long week.â
She nodded and moved on, bless her.
But my eyes didnât move from the corner of the room, where the light barely touched.
Nothinâ was there.
But I felt him.
Or maybe I was just tired.
Maybe.
I left earlier than usual, sayinâ my goodbyes with a smile that didnât quite touch the bone. The walk back was quietâtoo quiet for a town this close to midnight. I kept to the edge of the trees, let the dark wrap around me like a veil.
At my door, I paused. Looked over my shoulder.
Still nothinâ.
Still that weight.
Inside, I lit one lamp and sat down slow on the edge of the bed, unwrappinâ my scarf. My hands were shakinâ, just a little.
Thereâs a certain kind of fear that donât come with panic. Donât scream in your ears or rush your breath.
It settles.
Like a coat. Like a second skin.
And I knew that fear.
I knew it like I knew the taste of ash on my tongue. Like I knew the look in his eyes the night he chose for me what I would never have chosen for myself.
I leaned back, arms crossinâ my chest.
If it was him, he wouldnât show yet.
Not âtil he was ready.
Not âtil I couldnât run again.
So I did the only thing I could do.
I waited.
And in the silence, my soul whispered one word.
Remmick.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The grass whispered under my steps as I walked. Basket on my arm. Sun barely peekinâ through the trees. Iâd meant only to gather herbs âfore the day grew too hotârosemary, some goldenrod, a few stubborn mint sprigs for Annieâs cough. But the air felt⊠wrong.
Not wrong like danger.
Wrong like memory.
Like grief wearinâ another manâs skin.
The woods around me were stillâtoo still. The birds had hushed. Even the wind held its breath. And I knew. Same way you know a snakeâs behind you without seeinâ it. Same way your spirit clenches when the past is near.
I stopped by the creekbed, crouched low like I was studyinâ the mint. But my breathâd already gone shallow. I didnât need to see him to feel him. The air had thickened, the way it always did before a summer storm. Thick like honey gone too long. Like hunger waitinâ in a dark room.
âI know itâs you,â I said, not even botherinâ to turn. My voice didnât shake. Not even once. âAinât no use hidinâ in the shade. You was never no shadow.â
No answer.
Not yet.
But I felt him in the stillness. In the hush between my heartbeats.
âCome on out, Remmick.â
His name cracked the air open like thunder.
And thenâbranches shifted.
I turned slow.
He was leaninâ against a tree like heâd been grown there. Pale, still, boots clean despite the mud. Hair tousled like sleep or war. Those eyesâred as dusk and just as dangerous. But his faceâŠ
His face looked like grief tryinâ to wear calm like a disguise.
âYou always did know how to find me,â he said, voice low and silk-slick, but it cracked under the weight of memory.
âI didnât find you,â I snapped. âYou been followinâ me.â
He smiledâsad and sharp. âReckon I have.â
The basket slipped from my hand, landinâ soft in the dirt. My jaw clenched.
âYou survived.â
âAye,â he said, never lookinâ away. âDidnât think I would. But Iâve always been hard to kill.â
I laughed, bitter. âToo stubborn for death, too stupid to know when to quit.â
He took a step. Measured. Careful.
âI looked for you,â he said, breath catchinâ.
âAnd when you found me,â I cut in, âyou hid.â
He flinched. âI wasnât ready. You left, Y/N. After everythinâââ
âYou turned me!â I snapped, voice shakinâ. âYou took my choice and dressed it up like mercy.â
âI saved you.â
âYou cursed me.â
Silence. Heavy and wet like the air.
âI woke up hungry, Remmick,â I whispered. âStarvinâ. Scared. Watchinâ my own hands do things I couldnât stop. You werenât there.â
âI didnât know what it would do to you,â he said. âBut I couldnât bury you. Not you.â
I took a step back. My heart was thunderinâ in my ears.
âYou shouldâve let me die.â
His eyes shone thenânot from the red glow, but from somethinâ older. Somethinâ breakinâ.
âI couldnât,â he breathed. âIâd already lost everythinâ. My brother. My home. And then youââ He stopped, jaw tight. âIâd have nothinâ left if you died.â
I stared at him, tears burninâ the backs of my eyes. âSo instead you dragged me into this hell and called it love?â
âI loved you.â
âI loved you too,â I said. âAnd thatâs what makes it worse.â
His hands twitched at his sides like he wanted to reach out, but didnât dare.
âYou think I ainât felt you watchinâ me these last few weeks?â I said, steady now. âThink I didnât know the air changed when you came near?â
âI didnât know how to face you,â he admitted, voice ragged. âNot after what I did. Not after you ran.â
âI had to,â I said. âYou made me a monster. I couldnât look at you without hearinâ the scream I let out when I woke up.â
We stood there, tangled in the ache of a hundred years.
Then he said quiet, âI didnât want to own you. I just wanted to belong to someone again.â
I closed my eyes. And Lord, that was the worst part.
Because some part of me still did ache for him. Still remembered the feel of his hand in mine when we were both still human. Still remembered that look he gave me like I hung the moon crooked just to keep him wonderinâ.
But ache ainât the same as love.
âYou got no right,â I whispered. âNot to this town. Not to me.â
His jaw flexed.
âThen whyâd you call my name?â
âBecause I felt you,â I said. âAnd Iâd rather look the devil in the eye than let him haunt me from the trees.â
He smiled then, soft and bitter.
âI ainât the devil.â
âNo,â I said. âBut you sure learned how to dance like him.â
He stared at me a long time.
And I knew, right then, this wasnât over.
Not by a long shot.
But Iâd bought myself a moment.
And in a life like mine, a moment might just be the thing that saves you.
âGo,â I said, voice barely above a whisper. âBefore I decide to hate you more than I already do.â
He took a breath. Then turned.
Walked back into the woods without a word.
But I knew that werenât the last of him.
Because men like Remmick?
They donât come to say goodbye.
They come to take back what they think belongs to them.
And this is the point when patience isnât known to him.
vâââââàŒșâ°àŒ»âââââv
The joint was humminâ.
Music slid through the floor like syrup, thick with bass and heat. Somebodyâs uncle was hollerinâ over a blues tune on the piano, Annie behind the bar crackinâ jokes while slippinâ flasks under the table. Sweat glistened on the back of my neck, curls stickinâ to my skin, and laughter rolled up from the dance floor like smoke. I was leaninâ into a conversation with Josephine at the bar, her eyes wide as she told me about a man she caught slippinâ out her window barefoot just before his wife came knockinâ.
I chuckled low, brows raised. âAnd you didnât slap him upside the head first?â
She rolled her eyes. âI had better things to do than waste my strength on a fool.â
âAmen to that,â I said, liftinâ my glass, though I hadnât drunk a drop.
Then I felt it.
A cold ripple slid down the length of my spineâso sudden, it stole the breath right out my lungs. It werenât fear, not quite. But the kind of dread that came from knowinâ something was wrong before your eyes could prove it.
I didnât see the door.
But I saw Stack.
He was on his feet, jaw tight, walkinâ past me with that slow kind of purpose. Smoke followed close behind, his eyes narrowinâ toward the open entrance. Cornbread had gone quiet at the door, and that alone was enough to knot my gut.
Josephine kept talkinâ, but her voice faded into nothinâ.
My body moved on its own.
I stood, heart poundinâ like a war drum behind my ribs. The music didnât stop, but everything inside me did. I walked past the tables, past the girls, through the perfume and pipe smoke and scent of sweat and spilt whiskey.
And thenâ
His voice.
Smooth. Mockinâ. Sugar over glass.
âEveninâ,â Remmick drawled, like heâd been invited to church supper and meant to charm the whole congregation. âLovely place yâall got here. Full of⊠soul.â
My blood turned to ice.
He was speakinâ to Cornbread, who stood stiff as a gatepost, eyes narrowinâ as the air seemed to stretch thin between âem.
âThink you might be lost,â Cornbread said slowly, not movinâ from his post. âThereâs places in town for your kind. This ainât one.â
âOh, but Iâm right where I need to be,â Remmick smiled, sharp and hollow. âHeard tale of music, drink, and dancinâ. Figured Iâd see it for myself. Canât a man enjoy the night?â
His eyes flicked past Cornbreadâlandinâ square on me.
Like heâd planned it. Like heâd waited for the silence in my soul to find the crack just wide enough to step through.
âY/N,â he said.
My stomach dropped.
Stack stepped in front of me. âYou know this man?â
âI do,â I said. My voice came out steady, but my hands curled into fists at my sides. âI know him.â
âNameâs Remmick,â he said, glancinâ at the twins with a false-smile that didnât reach his eyes. âOld friends with the lady. We go back.â
âToo far,â I muttered.
He took a step forward, and Stack shifted, blockinâ him.
âEasy now,â Remmick said, hands liftinâ. âIâm just here to talk. That all right with you, darlinâ?â
His tone curled around that word like it meant everything and nothinâ at all. The same way it used to when he wanted me quiet. Wanted me pliant.
âNo,â I snapped. âYou ainât supposed to be here.â
Cornbreadâs hand twitched toward the bat leaninâ beside the door.
Remmick chuckled. âDidnât know you needed permission to visit old flames. Thought we were past pretendinâ, Y/N.â
My jaw clenched. I stepped in front of Stack and Smoke, meetinâ Remmickâs eyes dead on.
âYouâre pushinâ it,â I said low, âand you know it.â
He tilted his head. âIâm just tryinâ to make amends. Catch up. Maybe remind you of what weââ
âShut up,â I snapped. âNot here.â
He didnât shut up.
Instead, he smirked and said, âWhat? Afraid somebody might recognize what you really are?â
That was it.
I moved fast. My hand gripped his arm hard, dragginâ him back from the door âfore anyone else could hear. His boots scraped the dirt as I yanked him past the porch, into the woods just beyond the edge of the firelight.
We didnât stop âtil the juke faded behind us, til the only sound was the hiss of the crickets and the rasp of my breath.
Then I let go.
He stumbled back, laughinâ low.
âYou always were the fiery sort,â he muttered. âMouth full of ash and thunder.â
My eyes flared, shiftinâ to that color I only saw when my blood ran too hot. âAre you outta your damn mind, cominâ up in there like that?â
He shrugged. âDidnât figure youâd come callinâ again. Had to make the introduction myself.â
âYou couldâve blown everything,â I hissed. âYou wanna waltz in there flashinâ teeth and riddles, but these people donât forget what monsters look like once they get wind of it. You forgot that part?â
His face twisted, somethinâ cruel and wounded all at once. âYou forgot I ainât been welcome in any place for centuries. You found a home. I found shadows. You danced while I starved.â
I stepped close, close enough to see the red flicker in his eyes again.
âYou donât get to turn this on me,â I said, voice droppinâ into a tremble of fury. âYou made me this way. You left me this way. And now you think you can show up with your coy words and puppy eyes and take what ainât yours anymore?â
He leaned in, voice barely breathinâ.
âYou were always mine, darlinâ. Long âfore the blood ever touched your lips.â
I slapped him.
The sound cracked like a pistol in the hush.
He didnât flinch.
Didnât raise his voice.
But that smileâthe slow, dangerous one he wore like armorâslipped off his face like a mask too heavy to hold.
I was breathinâ hard. Fists clenched. Rain gatherinâ on my skin like it had permission. Like even the sky had been waitinâ for us to come undone.
âYou donât get to say that,â I seethed, chest heavinâ. âYou donât ever get to say that to me.â
Remmick stayed where he stoodâstill, calm. Too calm. Like the eye of a storm that knew the ruin already circlinâ it.
âI reckon I just did,â he said low, almost kind. âAnd I meant it.â
My jaw shook. âYou think this is love? You think this is some twisted soul-bind you can drag behind you like a dog on a chain?â
His brow ticked, barely. âNo chain ever held you, Y/N. You cut every one yourself.â
I took a step toward him, finger pointed like it might draw blood.
âYou turned me without askinâ. You let me wake up alone. You watched me starve. And now you show up actinâ like I owe you somethinâ?â
He didnât move. Just tilted his head, watchinâ me unravel.
âI didnât say you owed me. I came to see if there was anythinâ left.â
âThere wasnât!â I shouted, voice crackinâ. âThere ainât! Not after what you did.â
He exhaled slow through his nose, like heâd been expectinâ this. Like heâd already played it out a thousand ways in the hollows of his mind.
âYou always did throw fire when your heart got loud.â
âYou got no right to talk about my heart,â I hissed. âNot after the way you crushed it and called it savinâ me.â
He stepped closerâjust one step. Careful. Calm.
âYou think I ainât spent the last hundred years crawlinâ through the world lookinâ for pieces of you? You think I didnât see the wreck I left behind? I know what I did.â
âThen why are you here?â My voice trembled. âWhy now?â
He looked at me like I was still the only song he remembered the words to.
âBecause even now,â he said, soft and razor-sharp, âyouâre still the only thing that makes me feel like I didnât die all the way.â
The rain started thenâslow at first, then heavy. Soakinâ my dress. Mattinâ my hair to my face. But I didnât move. Didnât wipe the water from my eyes.
Because it wasnât just rain.
It was rage.
It was heartbreak.
It was every scream I swallowed the night he turned me.
âYou ruined me,â I said. âAnd now you want me to weep for you?â
âNo.â He blinked once. Steady. âI want nothinâ from you you donât give me freely.â
âYouâre a liar.â
âI was,â he said. âBut I ainât lyinâ now.â
I laughed, bitter and sharp. âSo what? You want redemption?â
He shook his head. âThat ainât a road I get to walk.â
The silence that followed was thick. Biblical.
And then, slowâtoo slowâRemmick sank to his knees.
Not like a man prayinâ.
But like one begginâ the grave to let him stay buried.
âJust tell me what to do, and Iâll do it,â he said, voice quiet and cracked around the edges. âYou want me gone, Iâll disappear. You want me dead, well⊠you know better than most, darlinâ. That ainât never been easy.â
Rain slammed the earth in waves now, like it meant to bury every word between us.
I didnât speak.
Didnât move.
Just watched him kneel in the mud, pale hands open, head bowed like even he knew he didnât deserve forgiveness.
His eyes flickered red in the stormlight.
Still beautiful.
Still dangerous.
Still mineâonce.
And then the memory returnedâ
His mouth on my throat.
My scream breakinâ the sky.
The taste of betrayal before I even knew the word for it.
The night he turned me.
The night I stopped beinâ his salvationâŠ
âŠand became his punishment.
He didnât move.
Didnât rise.
Just stayed there on his knees in the wet earth, eyes on me like I was a hymn heâd long forgotten how to pray, but still couldnât stop humminâ.
âYou donât get to play the martyr,â I said, rain slidinâ down the slope of my jaw, voice low and level. âYou donât get to break somethinâ and call it love.â
His jaw worked, but he stayed quiet. Good. He was learninâ.
I stepped closer, slow enough for the mud to cling to my boots like memory.
âYou think thisââ I gestured at his posture, at the rain, the ache between usâ âmakes you smaller than me? It donât. You still got teeth. Still got hunger. But now you got somethinâ else too.â
I let the silence hang for a breath.
Then another.
âMy hand ainât on your throat, Remmick. I ainât pulled no blade. But you still follow, donât you?â
His eyes flickered, faint red beneath the dark.
âYou follow âcause you canât help it,â I said, takinâ one more step. âNot âcause I told you to. But because Iâm the ghost you ainât never been able to bury.â
His mouth partedâlike maybe heâd speak, maybe heâd beg againâbut I beat him to it.
âYou been searchinâ all these years thinkinâ I was the piece you lost.â My voice dipped lower, soft as a curse. âBut maybe I was the punishment you earned.â
He flinched.
Just barely.
But I saw it.
Felt it.
âYou ainât on your knees âcause of guilt,â I said. âYouâre down there âcause you know deep in your bonesâI still got a leash on your soul.â
He looked up at me then.
Really looked.
And for the first time since he crawled back into my world, he didnât reach.
Didnât speak.
Didnât beg.
He just watched.
Like he knew I was right.
Like he knew that no matter how far Iâd run or how cruel Iâd grownâŠ
âŠIâd always be the one holdinâ the reins.
I turned without another word, walked back through the trees, each step heavy with the truth we couldnât outrun.
And though I didnât hear him riseâ
I knew he would.
I knew heâd follow.
Because men like Remmick?
They donât vanish.
They linger.
They haunt.
They wait for the softest crack in your armor, then slip back in like they never left.
But this time, heâd have to wait.
This time, I wasnât runninâ.
And I wasnât lettinâ him in, either.
Let him kneel in the mud.
Let him feel what itâs like to want somethinâ that wonât break for him no more.