smash… What the hell was the question?
taylor price

blake kathryn
One Nice Bug Per Day

titsay
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Today's Document
DEAR READER

#extradirty

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Mike Driver
todays bird

JBB: An Artblog!
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
styofa doing anything

Kiana Khansmith
ojovivo

tannertan36
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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@oiminho
smash… What the hell was the question?
Bang Chan: The Girl Who Didn't Cry Wolf (Part Seven)
Characters: Bang Chan x fem reader
Genre/warnings: werewolf au, fantasy, enemies-to-lovers-ish??, slowburn, werewolf/alpha!chan, (werewolf)hunter!reader, minor angst, fluff at the end, hurt/comfort-ish, alcohol consumption (reader gets kiiiinda drunk), trauma dumping, mentions of death, idk i probably missed some things [dialogue in bold is meant to be korean]
Word count: 3,951
Summary: You've learned to do whatever you can to protect yourself after an incident almost a decade ago had your father and brother dragging you to a new country to start all over even though they blamed you for what happened. After finding yourself stuck in a house of werewolves, you're forced to come to terms with your feelings over what happened back home when the alpha imprints on you and his pack claims they're keeping you prisoner. You know exactly how this will end if you give in, and yet you can't seem to get yourself to leave the sweet and charming werewolf who's willing to do anything to make you comfortable. You're just hoping that maybe there'll be a good end this time.
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a/n: hiiiiii friends!!! i know it's been a VERY long time since this was updated, or since i've even been active. life has been a bit difficult and busy to say the least. BUT i had the privilege to see skz at their new york stop of their tour and i VOWED that i would make some time to pick my writing back up no matter what. so here we are. im still going thru a few things (the biggest thing being my cc info getting stolen while in ny haaaaa 🙃) so idk how frequently i can update but i will do my best. anyway for those who sent asks saying they still check in on me and still reread my old stuff, i literally love you sooooo much i send you a very consensual and platonic kith on the forehead <3
▪──── ⚔ ────▪
The next morning, you woke up to a sharp pain in your side. You gasped, jolting up only to hiss in pain. Strong hands quickly pinned your shoulders down, and you looked up to see Jeongin looking down at you with an awkward smile, “Sorry.”
“Please try not to move,” Hyunjin instructed from beside him, coming over to help hold you down now that you were awake.
Your instinct was to fight back from being pinned down, so you did, wanting to sit up to avoid the pain that would be caused to your side. A third pair of hands stalled your movements as Chan moved into view, concern creasing his features, “_____, stay still please. It’ll hurt more if you move.”
“Why am I pinned down?!” you demanded.
“We just want to look at the wound, _____.” Changbin explained where he was already reaching to peel the bloodied bandage away.
“Well why did you have to touch it?” you groaned, your head flopping down on the pillow like a child throwing a tantrum. “You woke me up and it hurt! If this is how it’s gonna be whenever I’m asleep, I–”
A large hand covered your mouth, and you already knew it was Chan’s before you even checked. You gave him a glare but he just stared at Changbin.
“Is it bad?” he wondered.
“It’s definitely...not...good,” he said, sucking in a breath between his teeth as he looked at your newly opened wound. “It might need draining tonight, but hopefully we’ll come up with something that puts her in less pain.”
You tried to say something but Chan kept your mouth covered. You bit his hand but he only smirked, making you roll your eyes.
“Nice try, sweetheart,” he teased.
“Can you stop being weird please?” Hyunjin asked in disgust. “There’s a child here.”
“I’m not even a child!” Jeongin frowned. “Sorry, not all of us have been stuck at the same age for 30 years, old man.”
“Can all of you stop for a second?” Changbin sighed. “I swear, Chan, she brings out the child in you. More so than usual.”
Then he glanced briefly at Jeongin, “And I take offense to that.”
“Just let me fix the wound, Binnie,” Chan offered, removing his hand from your mouth. The first thing you did with the freedom was stick your tongue out at him. “You go do whatever it is you need to get done.”
He sighed but stood and handed the ointment to Chan, “Don’t bicker with her.”
“That’s not my decision.”
“Right, it’s the real alpha’s,” Jeongin laughed, earning a pinched cheek from the alpha himself, but his laughing persisted as he left the room.
As the three wolves left, Chan rolled you to lay on your side before kneeling down beside the bed. He opened the tin and swiped some white cream onto his first two fingers, “Did you sleep okay?”
You nodded, “Yeah.”
“Did you…dream at all?” he pressed, but his eyes were focused on your side. You wouldn’t have ever suspected something was up.
“A little bit.”
“Did you know you talk in your sleep?”
Your eyebrows furrowed. What did you dream about again? You knew you dreamed but you couldn’t remember what it was. But it must’ve been something amusing or important if Chan was bringing it up.
“What did I say?” you asked.
“‘No, Finley’,” he recalled in a murmur, eyes still trained on rubbing ointments into your wound.
Your cheeks felt hot. You knew why, too – or you at least suspected why – but you weren’t going to say anything to Chan.
“Y-yeah, Finn… He was my best friend back home,” you explained in a mumble.
Chan’s eyebrows knitted together curiously, “He didn’t come with you? I think most people fled from the Americas. Honestly, I was shocked you stayed up until a decade ago. There was that big war that drove everyone away.”
“Well, my dad fought in the war so we stayed. My mom didn’t want to leave him behind. Things were pretty bad for a while, but they got a little better when the war ended. It was slow, though.”
“So…what about Finley?”
Hearing him ask so bluntly even though his tone was casual made something click. Your eyes narrowed as you looked at him, “Are you jealous, Christopher?”
His golden eyes widened as he paused, looking into your eyes for the first time.
“Me? No,” he said, but you could tell by his tone he was lying. “Just curious. You’ve never mentioned a Finley until you were…telling him no last night.”
“Don’t be weird,” you scolded him. “Finn was just a friend.”
“But you’re still thinking about him, apparently,” he continued, going back to his work. “Saying his name in your sleep.”
You let out a sigh and rolled your eyes, “You’re just digging yourself a deeper hole, Chris.”
“Yeah? And why’s that?”
“Finn's dead now,” you stated plainly; numbly.
Again, Chan froze. His eyes, wide and apologetic, went to you, “O-oh… Shit, _____, I’m sorry, I was just messing around, I didn’t–”
You chuckled, “You’re fine. I just wanted you to feel like an ass for a second.”
He made a face at you before he went back to tending to your side, “You’re a sassy little thing, you know that?”
You just shrugged, “I’ve been told.”
-
“We’re back!” Felix announced, walking in along with Jeongin and Minho.
You were sitting on the couch in the living room with Changbin, Jisung, and Hyunjin while the three wolves were playing poker and betting their various snacks they kept hidden in their rooms. You just watched even though Changbin offered to deal you in, figuring you had nothing to offer since Chan had confiscated every weapon you had – and that was all you had when you had shown up.
As the group of wolves that had come back from the market walked into the living room, Felix raised a brow at the three wolves in their heated argument over if Changbin was cheating or not. Then he looked at you, and you just sighed softly and shook your head.
“They’ve been doing this since you left, and I don’t even really know what it’s about other than stealing or something,” you stated, making him laugh.
“Hey,” Chan entered the room, eyeing the bags that the wolves were carrying, “did you happen to find anything to help _____?”
“Yup,” Jeongin giggled before tossing a glass bottle full of honey-colored liquid to him.
Chan caught the bottle easily, turning it over and reading the label, “Whiskey?”
“Alcohol can numb anything,” was all Minho gave him for an explanation.
“If you’re gonna be mad, be mad at him,” Jeongin stated, jabbing his thumb toward the older wolf who merely shrugged and looked away from the alpha, walking into the kitchen with the rest of the bags.
“I can handle the pain–”
“You think we want you to be in pain if you have to be?” Felix asked him. “We wanted something to save you both the pain.”
“It really was Minho’s idea,” Jeongin mentioned, Felix nodding along.
Chan didn’t show any emotion, just looked down at the bottle.
Then Felix looked at you with a chuckle, “How well do you handle your alcohol?”
You shrugged. It had been a while since you’d gone to any taverns for a drink, but you used to be more of a midweight, “It’ll take a few shots.”
“We can’t get her drunk!” Seungmin exclaimed as he entered the room. You assumed he was either in the kitchen or in his room and had overheard the conversation. “She’s already attacked at least two of us while sober!”
“Seungmin…” Chan’s tone was a warning as he stared at the younger wolf, “don’t start. If you’re here to fight, go back to wherever you came from.”
“If Channie can forgive you for attacking his mate, don’t you think you can forgive his mate for attacking you?” Jisung asked mindlessly from where he was sitting on the floor. Only when nobody said anything did he look up and realize he didn’t read the room well enough. That obviously wasn’t the only animosity the three of you had. “...Sorry…”
You spoke up, looking back over Hyunjin’s shoulder to check his cards. “Frankly, I couldn’t care less if Seungmin forgives me or even likes me. Actually, if I cared any less than I do currently, I’d be dead.”
“_____–”
You looked at Chan when he said your name but cut him off, “I’m not saying it to be an asshole, I’m saying it so everyone knows. I don’t care about anything he or Minho has to say to me; they’re the only ones ‘keeping me hostage’ so they’re the only two I don’t trust in the slightest.”
While your last comment did make Chan and the rest of the pack kind of happy that you verbally admitted to having some sort of trust with them, Chan still didn’t want you saying anything even remotely rude to Seungmin or Minho. He knew it would only cause more fighting, and he wanted to avoid it.
“Look, Seungmin,” Chan began, rubbing his hands over his face before looking at the taller wolf, “we’re not doing it until tonight when you’ll probably be asleep. You won’t have to deal with her.”
“Well, I’m staying up to witness this,” Jisung giggled, putting a card down before picking up a new one.
Jeongin nodded in agreement. “This, I gotta see.”
“Plus, free drinks,” Changbin shrugged.
Chan groaned, rolling his eyes at the younger wolf. “They’re not for you! Whiskey is for _____ only.”
“Ah, c’mon, Channie,” you grinned, using the nickname you’d noticed the pack always used with him, “don’t you wanna have a little bit of fun? Being drunk alone is the most boring thing in the world.”
“I’m going to have to babysit you,” he stated playfully, walking over to stand behind the couch by where your head was. “I just know you’ll be a handful.”
“Ooh, what kind of drunk are you, _____?” Felix wondered with wide, curious golden eyes.
You hummed as you thought it over, trying to remember how you were whenever you went out to the tavern, “I think it depends on who I’m with and the atmosphere.”
“So she’ll be an angry drunk.” Seungmin spat. “Lovely.”
-
Whiskey clutched in your hand, you stared at Jisung with doe-like eyes as he patched up your newly-drained wound and helped you sit upright. Felix couldn’t help but laugh at your drunken state, while Hyunjin, Changbin, and Jeongin seemed to be having a race to see who could get the drunkest the fastest with the little alcohol that they were allowed.
“This is for _____!” Jisung whined when Jeongin tried to make off with the bottle.
So now, there you were: drunk off your ass. You didn’t even take shots, you just chugged straight from the bottle. Chan chuckled at first at how eager you were to down the liquid that burned your throat and made your stomach feel warm, but when you were sufficiently drunk and kept at it, then he began to get concerned.
But since you were still starting to cry and scream at the pain, Changbin put the bottle to your lips to silence you, like you were a newborn and he was giving you a bottle. Now, it was just a sharp pinch that made you wince and cry out with “ow” whenever you moved wrong. For the most part, it was a lot more bearable than the first time.
“_____, do you feel okay?” Felix wondered once you were sitting up.
“Uhhh-huh!” you nodded happily.
All of the wolves in the room – which was everyone except Minho and Seungmin – stared at you while you looked around at all of them. You definitely just seemed...different. You weren’t hostile or sarcastic; you were easy-going and smiling at all of them, and it was clear you were very different when you were drunk. At least, different from the you they knew.
Then again, you said it had to do with who you were with, so someone must’ve made you feel chipper despite just having a knife cut through you.
Chan placed a hand on your head, smoothing your hair back. “Do you want to go to sleep now, _____?”
You looked up at the alpha, and a wide smile spread across your face, “Channie!”
That made all of the wolves break out into laughter.
“She sounds like us,” Hyunjin giggled.
He was surprised at how excited you seemed, and was trying to contain his giggles as he asked, “Yes?”
“Can we do something fun?” you asked before putting the bottle to your lips.
Chan quickly grabbed it and carefully took it from you with both hands, “Ah, I think you’ve had enough for tonight.”
“I just wanna have some fun with my mate, is that too much to ask?” you pouted.
Chan laughed, his cheeks warming when you called him your mate, as he handed the bottle off to Felix for safe keeping, “When it involves you getting drunker than you already are, yes.”
Chan easily lifted you off of the desk, cradling you in his arms, “I’m gonna stay with her for a little bit in my room. I’ll try to keep her quiet.”
“I’ll…make an attempt to keep them quiet,” Jisung said unsurely, looking around at his three brothers who were joking and laughing, basically ignoring anything the alpha had said.
“Don’t worry,” Minho sighed as he walked into the room, “I’ve got the kids. Have a good night.”
The wolves chimed in with their goodnights after hearing Minho, so you waved to them and rested comfortably in Chan’s arms as he walked you back to his bedroom. You looked up at him the whole walk down the hall, studying every feature of his perfect face. You wondered how you got so lucky having such a good looking mate. You also wondered if Chan knew just how good looking he was, because if he didn’t, you wanted to tell him.
So you did.
“I like looking at you,” you blurted as soon as he shut the door to his bedroom.
Chan let out a laugh that vibrated his chest – you knew because you felt it against your arm and shoulder, “What?”
“You’re just so...pretty,” you repeated, reaching up to poke his cheek, right where his dimple was. “Hasn’t anyone told you you’re pretty, Christopher? Actually, no, not pretty. Maybe… I dunno, they don’t come up with a word good enough to describe you.”
He was still giggling as his cheeks and the tips of his ears turned red, “Who’s 'they'?”
“The people who make the words,” you said as he set you down on the bed.
“Right, of course. The council of word-makers. How silly of me,” he continued to giggle, playfully rolling his eyes. “Y’know, you’re rambling a lot. I think it’s time you sleep, _____.”
“No, I’m busy,” you huffed, sitting up against the headboard and curling your knees to your chest.
“No, you have to listen,” he told you softly but still firmly, going over to the door. “I’m going to turn the lights off and leave, and you’re going to go to sleep.”
“Noooo!” you whined, reaching out for him like a baby. It was loud and something he didn’t expect, so it startled him a bit. “You should stay with me!”
Another smile began to form on his face as he cocked his head to one side, “Are you sure you want that?”
“I always do!” you admitted, although drunk you didn’t know she shouldn’t be telling him that. “I always want you to stay. But I’m not supposed to want you to stay. Y’know?”
“Yeah, yeah, of course. We’re enemies,” he chuckled and nodded as he walked over to the bed after shutting off the lights. He climbed in beside you and promised, “We can still be enemies but hang out together. Don’t worry.”
You immediately scooted closer to him and took his arm, putting it around the back of your neck and over your shoulder before laying your head on his shoulder. He immediately melted into you, letting his thumb rub against the skin of your arm as he smiled to himself and closed his eyes.
“That’s how it was with Finn,” you admitted, not really paying much attention to your words because of how drunk you were.
All filters, cautions, and inhibitions were gone now. You were willing to tell Chan anything – you wanted to tell him everything. You were ready to blab all of your secrets and put all of your cards out on the table.
Hell, you were fully prepared to admit that maybe you loved him but only kept yourself from that because maybe a few teeny tiny inhibitions still lingered -- the sane part of your brain that warned you there were still some boundaries.
Chan’s eyes opened, his eyebrows furrowed, but he continued to rub your arm with the warm pad of his thumb, so you didn’t know anything was wrong, “What do you mean?”
“He was a werewolf, too,” you told him, and that was when Chan froze – including his movements. But you were still too out of it to realize. “The only difference was I didn’t know until he shifted. He kept it from me. And…I think I was...his…mate…”
Chan wasn’t sure what to do with this information, but he didn’t want to make you feel like you did anything wrong by telling him, so he tried to stay natural. But damn, you were already a werewolf’s mate? He honestly never would’ve guessed judging from how you acted. He never thought you would’ve been a lot more open to werewolves. Not that you were really un-open to him, but you certainly were holding back a lot.
But if you were a mate, why were you training to become a hunter? Unless…
That was why you weren’t really a hunter.
After a beat of silence, his short-circuiting brain came up with, “Y-you…think? What made you unsure?”
You let out a deep sigh and explained, “I…loved Finn. But I always did. I never felt any different. I never felt that feeling I did like when I first saw you. Y’know, how it just…hits you. But…the feelings are the same…”
You started to feel a lump in your throat, and your eyes were watering a little. Maybe it was the alcohol making you emotional, thinking about your feelings toward Finley being the same as the ones you felt toward Chan. Or maybe it was just because you were finally saying it out loud.
Basically admitting that you love Chan, but still feeling guilty because you felt like you were moving on from Finley.
Chan also caught what you said. ‘I loved Finn. … The feelings are the same’. Did you love him? He didn’t want to hear you say it to him drunk, but he was still flabbergasted and didn’t know what to do. He felt like he was getting so much information from you all at once and couldn’t process one thing without being bombarded with another. The poor guy was malfunctioning right beside you and you had no idea.
“_____,” he managed to speak up, clearing his throat, “you don’t have to talk about it right now. Maybe tomorrow, okay?”
“I won’t have the courage to tell you tomorrow,” you sniffled. “Everything is hard to admit. It makes it more real…”
“I know,” he sighed, holding you a little tighter and going back to rubbing your shoulder. “But confronting and accepting your feelings will be better for you. We’ll figure everything out together, yeah? I promise.”
“‘Kay,” you sighed, too and just let yourself rest against his shoulder, feeling the warmth of his body radiate off of him.
There was a comfortable silence for a few moments, and Chan started to wonder if you were falling asleep. He wasn’t sure how long he was supposed to stay. Yes, you said you liked his company, but you were drunk. He couldn’t take your word when you weren’t sober. He knew a lot of people said a drunk man's words are a sober man's thoughts, but he wasn't going to count that as you giving him any sort of consent for anything.
“Can you teach me more Korean?” you suddenly asked him.
He let out a quiet chuckle, “Where did that come from?”
“Changbin made a comment before. I didn’t understand much but I recognized ‘Korean lessons’ or something, and I assumed it was about me,” you explained.
His eyebrows raised and he nodded approvingly at the little bit of Korean you said, “Not bad. What do you know how to say?”
“I can say hello, goodbye, thank you, introduce myself, and a lot of haggling phrases.”
He let out a loud laugh, “You haggle?”
You sucked in a breath, imitating the way the other people at the market spoke, “No, no, no, that price is too low. This is quality deer meat and sells for much, much higher than that fuck-ass price you’re offering. What are you, stupid?”
You went back to your normal talking voice while Chan burst into a fit of laughter, holding his stomach with his free arm and kicking his legs, “Followed by, like, a bunch of swear words and insults. I’m really good at calling people ‘fucking dickheads’.”
You were pretty sure you could hear loud laughter from down the hallway, but that might’ve just been the rest of the pack sharing the rest of the alcohol.
“Okay,” Chan breathed, still letting out little giggles as he wiped tears from his eyes and cleared his throat to try and calm himself down again, “okay. Yeah. Alright. Well, you clearly know all the fun stuff, so… Wait, okay, I’ve got a good one.”
You sat up straighter and turned to look at Chan, “Lay it on me!”
He sweetly sang a short phrase to you with a smile, and you repeated it back to him in the same tone, making him giggle some more. You noticed Chan was very much a giggler.
“What did I say?” you asked.
“Goodnight!” he grinned with a loud laugh. “Remember, it’s bedtime?”
Your eyebrows fell and you gave him the most unamused look you’d probably ever made in your life. All of the alcohol in your system was giving you a second wind that covered up any of the exhaustion you got from being sliced open, so you were less than thrilled about sleeping.
“No,” you stated plainly.
“It’s late, you’re drunk,” he listed as he began to lift the covers to tuck you in, “and you’ll heal better with as much rest as possible.”
You found yourself obeying him anyway, moving to lay down as you let Chan cover you with the blanket, “Are you sleeping in here?”
“...Do you want me to?”
“Duh.”
“Duh,” he imitated you, making a face as he moved to lay down beside you. “Go to bed.”
You rolled over to face him and closed your eyes, “Night.”
“G’night, _____. Sweet dreams,” he smiled down at you fondly.
After a few seconds went by and you didn’t feel him get any closer to you or drape his arm over you like you thought he would, you scooted closer to him, nuzzling into his chest. He just chuckled before lightly putting an arm around you, but you could feel the happy rumble deep in his chest.
Chan was pretty sure that was the quickest you’d ever fallen asleep since being at the house.
「𝚒𝚗𝚏𝚎𝚛𝚗𝚘」 · masterlist
SYNOPSIS ➥ Clueless about what "manhood" entails, Hyunjin is supposed to get married to his childhood best friend a month after he turns eighteen, and his mother resorts to arranging a "makeshift wife" to train him for it.
This work of fiction is intended for 18+ audiences only.
※ Hyunjin x Reader (f) — Arranged "Trainer" AU, SKZerton: Period Drama/Alternative History, Romance, Forced Proximity, Age Gap, Slowburn, Steamy
※ Commissioned by @straywrds
※ Reader discretion advised — Heavy religious elements, period-typical stereotypes and shallow views, explicit sexual content, strong language.
CONTENT · 「43.3k」 · Prologue: Gates of Hell · Day 1: Respect · Day 3: Respect · Day 8: Sharing · Day 12: Communication · Day 15: Sharing · Day 20: Communication · Day 23: Passion · Day 24: Passion: Pt. 1 ⋮ Pt. 2 ⋮ Pt. 3 ⋮ Pt. 4 ⋮ Pt. 5 · Day 25: Passion: Pt. 1 ⋮ Pt. 2 · Day 27: Love · Day 29: Love · Last Day: Devotion
「© 2021-2025, cb97percent · No translations, rewrites, or reposts permitted」
LEE KNOW — dominATE toronto (©enchantedx1025)
Sans Masterlist
childhood best friend!seonghwa
start : January 1st 2022 KST / December 31st 2021 (author time)
status : COMPLETE
updates : daily, 12.30 am KST
introduction pt. i | pt. ii
ch. i | ch. ii | ch. iii | ch. iv | ch. v | ch. vi | ch. vii | ch. viii | ch. ix | ch. x | ch. xi | ch. xii | ch. xiii | ch. xiv | ch. xv | ch. xvi | ch. xvii | ch. xviii | ch. xix | ch. xx | ch. xxi | ch. xxii | ch. xxiii | ch. xxiv | ch. xxv | ch. xxvi | ch. xxvii | ch. xxviii | ch. xxix | ch. xxx | ch. xxxi | ch. xxxii | ch. xxxiii | ch. xxxiv | ch. xxxv | ch. xxxvi | ch. xxxvii | ch. xxxviii | ch. xxxix | ch. xl | ch. xli | ch. xlii | ch. xliii | ch. xliv | ch. xlv | ch. xlvi | ch. xlvii | ch. xlviii | ch. xlix | ch. l |ch. li | ch. lii | ch. liii | ch. liv | ch. lv | ch. lvi | ch. lvii | ch. lviii | ch. lix | ch. lx | ch. lxi | ch. lxii | ch. lxiii | ch. lxiv | ch. lxv | ch. lxvi | ch. lxvii | ch. lxviii | ch. lxix | ch. lxx | ch. lxxi | ch. lxxii | ch. lxxiii | ch. lxxiv | ch. lxxv | ch. lxxvi | ch. lxxvii | ch. lxxviii | ch. lxxix | ch. lxxx | ch. lxxxi | ch. lxxxii | ch. lxxxiii | ch. lxxxiv | ch. lxxxv | ch. lxxxvi | ch. lxxxvii |
bonus . . . woo ? gi ? yun ? yeo ?
main masterlist
Unknown Number
Idol! Chan x Stay! Reader
Tags: strangers to something more, voice kink, phone sex, anonymous sexting, slow reveal, idol!Chan is lurking, dirty talk, mystery man AU, smut 18+, blindfolds, unprotected sex, thigh riding, dom chan, praise kink, oral (f receiving) fingering
Word count: 5.4k
Summary: It starts with a text. A no-name number. A bold stranger in the dark. He saw your comment in a chaotic Stay group chat—“those fingers could ruin my life”—and now he won’t leave you alone. But maybe you don’t want him to. Because his texts are flirty, filthy, and just the right kind of fucked up. Because his voice notes make your thighs press together. Because he talks like he already knows what you sound like when you come. And the worst part? His voice sounds dangerously familiar.
This work contains mature themes, MINORS DO NOT INTERACT!!!
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
The first text came at 12:43 AM.
Unknown Number:
hey. you awake?
You didn’t recognize it. No name. No contact photo. Just numbers. But something about the timing—and the boldness—had your curiosity flaring.
You hesitated, thumb hovering. Then answered.
You:
who’s this?
Unknown Number:
just a bored stranger. saw your number in that stay gc. figured you wouldn’t mind the company.
You blinked. That group had been pure chaos, a flood of usernames and selfies and people throwing their numbers around like confetti. You almost forgot you’d joined it in the first place.
You:
wow. bold of you to admit you’re creeping in there like that lol
also… which one were you? i don’t remember you posting anything
A pause.
Then—
Unknown Number:
i didn’t
i like watching more than talking
especially when the girls are that pretty
Your stomach dipped.
Flirty. Shameless. You should’ve blocked him.
Instead, your lips curled.
You:
so what—you just stalked and picked the first girl who looked like she’d be down to text a stranger?
Unknown Number:
no. i picked the one who made that comment about chan’s hands during that encore stage.
you said, “those fingers could ruin my life” and i haven’t stopped thinking about it since.
You froze.
Your heart stuttered. You remembered typing that. The GC had been flying, no way to know who’d even seen it. And now it was echoing back at you from some faceless man in the dark.
You:
you’re a menace.
admit it. you get off on lurking. Chan would be horrified.
Another pause.
Unknown Number:
maybe, but i think he’d understand
You:
oh yeah? why’s that?
Unknown Number:
because if i were him, i’d want to know exactly who says that kind of stuff about me.
especially if she meant it.
Your breath caught.
You:
…and do you?
mean it?
Unknown Number:
every word.
but you tell me—should i be worried you’re the type to flirt with strangers this easily?
You smirked at your screen, heartbeat kicking faster.
You:
maybe i just have a thing for mystery
or maybe i like the idea that some stranger out there is thinking about me when he should be sleeping
Unknown Number:
you should stop saying things like that
You:
why?
Unknown Number:
because now i’m wondering how you sound when you’re out of breath
You stared at the message a beat too long. It’s not even what he said—it’s the way he said it. Like he already knew he could be the one to pull that sound out of you.
You:
that’s a bold thing to say to someone you’ve never met. you don’t even know what i look like
Unknown Number:
don’t need to.
i like your brain first.
your mouth second.
the rest is just a bonus.
Your breath stuttered in your chest. Who was this guy?
You:
you talk like you’ve done this before
seducing strangers through a screen
Unknown Number:
i don’t.
just bored. and maybe a little curious.
You:
curious about what?
Unknown Number:
what kind of girl sends texts like that about chan’s fingers
and whether she texts even filthier things when she’s comfortable
You bit your lip, grinning.
You:
maybe you’ll find out if you don’t scare me off first
Unknown Number:
oh baby, if you scare easy… you wouldn’t have replied to me at all
The way he called you baby shouldn’t have made your stomach flip like it did. It wasn’t even a real person. You didn’t know who was on the other end. And yet—you couldn’t stop.
⸻
Day 3
Unknown Number:
still thinking about the way you said “ruin my life”
i wonder how far you’d really let someone take that
You:
depends on who it is
Unknown Number:
so if it were chan? you’d let him?
You:
you ask a lot of questions for someone hiding behind a fake number
Unknown Number:
maybe i’m just trying to find the perfect way to ruin you myself
Day 6
The texting hadn’t stopped.
It was not constant—but it was regular. Little things. Late-night provocations. Random check-ins. Sometimes he was sweet. Sometimes unhinged. But always flirtatious. Always suggestive. And always reading you too well.
Unknown Number:
you at work?
You:
yeah, bored af… why?
Unknown Number:
just picturing you trying to act normal after everything you said last night
like a good girl pretending she didn’t admit she wanted to be choked
Your fingers paused mid-typing.
You:
you’re twisted
i like it
Unknown Number:
i know you do
you’re just as fucked up as me and i haven’t even told you the worst parts yet
A few seconds of his typing bubble coming and going, before the next text dropped.
Unknown Number:
what’s the dirtiest thing you’ve ever imagined about him?
No warning. No easing into it. Just dropped into your messages like a match on gasoline.
You stared at the screen, thumb hovering. You could’ve played coy. Could’ve brushed it off. But it was late, your inhibitions were low, and this was him—your anonymous stranger, your chaos comfort. The one person who let you say anything without judgement.
So, you gave him the truth.
You:
i think about riding his thigh way too much, like full on grinding in his studio, late at night.
headphones on, shirt off, music playing like nothing’s wrong, but i’m coming on his leg while he pretends to mix tracks
There was silence after that. No typing bubble. Nothing.
For a minute, you wondered if you’d finally gone too far. Made it too real. But then your screen lit up again—except this time, not with a message.
A voice note.
You stared at it.
The little waveform pulsed quietly, like it was waiting. And before you could think twice, you pressed play.
It started with a low breath. Like someone trying to keep their cool and failing.
Then—
“Fuck… you’re gonna kill me.”
The voice was deep. Gravel and heat and something so raw it skated straight down your spine. Familiar. Not too familiar—but something about it made your skin prickle.
“I shouldn’t be imagining it, but now I am,” the voice continued. Rough. Lazy. Wrecked. “You bouncing on my thigh, making those soft little noises you don’t even know you make…”
A pause.
Then a quiet, throaty chuckle.
“…and you expect me to sit still and pretend nothing’s happening? Baby, if you ever climbed on me like that, you wouldn’t be leaving the studio for hours.”
The recording cut off with the sound of a sharp inhale, like he was about to say more—but stopped himself.
Your heart pounded.
It wasn’t just the filth. Wasn’t just the way he said baby like he already owned your body. It was the tone. Something in it that teased the edges of recognition, like a song you couldn’t quite place. Not a perfect match—but a ghost of one. You frowned, replayed the voice in your mind, again and again.
And failed to ignore the stupid, impossible thought that whispered— No. It couldn’t be.
Could it?
You:
that voice
have we met before?
The message stayed unread for a few minutes.
And then—
Unknown Number:
not yet
—
You shouldn’t have replayed the voice note.
But you did.
Over and over. Lying in bed with your knees pulled to your chest, phone pressed to your ear like it held answers. And maybe it did—just not the kind that made sense. Because that voice did something to you. Tugged on a thread you didn’t know was loose.
Low. Deep. That exact kind of rough that spilled into your dreams when you thought about Chan whispering filth behind your ear.
Except… this wasn’t a fantasy anymore.
You’d said his name in front of a stranger. Described yourself melting on Chan’s thigh. And he hadn’t flinched. Hadn’t pulled away.
He’d responded like he’d wanted it. Like he was the one holding your hips down.
And God—that voice.
You tapped open a random behind-the-scenes video. Just to compare. Just to check.
Your breath hitched.
No. No way. Not possible. You were being insane.
Still… your chest felt too tight.
You:
i’m spiraling, don’t mind me
just casually obsessing over that voice note. you sound so familiar it’s driving me crazy
No reply. For hours.
But what you didn’t know—what you couldn’t know—was that while you were busy unraveling, so was he.
Because you’d told him your name once. Offhanded. Way back on Day Two, when he called you baby girl in a text and you laughed, saying—
“you don’t even know me, my guy. it’s [Y/N], by the way.”
And that was all it took.
He went looking. Lurking. He searched through the GC again, found your profile. Clicked your socials.
And then he saw you.
Saw the face behind the dirty little texts. The smile that curled when you teased. The thighs you said you wanted to ride his with. The lips. The eyes. The one bikini pic you posted with zero shame and a caption that said “it’s too hot out” like you didn’t just set his whole body on fire.
He stared at your selfies so long he forgot to breathe.
And when he finally responded— It wasn’t with a text.
It was another voice note.
You saw the waveform and your stomach flipped.
Pressed play.
“Just saw your page.”
His voice came out lower this time. Slower. Like smoke and honey and trouble.
“You’re real pretty, y’know that?”
A pause. You could almost feel him grinning.
“Exactly my type. That mouth of yours would look even better wrapped around my fingers.”
You choked on air.
“If I had you in front of me right now, baby… I’d ruin you. You’d be soaked just from hearing the way I breathe your name.”
Your pulse skipped.
“Should I say it? Should I moan it for you next time?”
Click. It ended there.
You stared at your screen like it had slapped you. Your thighs pressed together on instinct, heat crawling up your neck. He knew now. He’d seen you. And suddenly, it wasn’t just a game anymore.
It felt like a trap.
And you were walking right into it.
You:
what else did you see?
Unknown Number:
enough to want more
every. single. night.
You didn’t respond right away.
You needed time to breathe, time to cool down—except, you didn’t. Not really.
You were already wet before the voice note ended.
Already playing it back in your head like it was your favorite late-night playlist. That voice, so low and thick in your ears. That cocky little pause before he asked if he should moan your name.
You almost said yes.
Almost begged for it.
But instead, you smiled—schemed.
You weren’t stupid. He’d seen your socials. He was definitely stalking now. You had no doubt he’d clocked your Chan obsession.
So you decided to play a little.
Test the limits.
You:
i keep wondering what you’d sound like really moaning my name
like… if i had my mouth on you
would you curse? or say something soft in… korean maybe?
Three dots. Then nothing.
A beat.
Then the voice note came in. You didn’t even hesitate this time.
Click.
“…you’d hear both,” he rasped, already sounding out of breath. “I’d be praising you in English and cursing in Korean. You’d earn every damn syllable.”
Your mouth went dry.
“But you’d have to beg for it,” he added. “On your knees. All needy, telling me exactly what you want. Exactly how deep.”
Click.
Your core throbbed.
Still—you had a goal tonight. And it wasn’t just soaking your panties.
So you pushed further.
You:
you’re so good at dirty talk
you sure you’re not some secret idol who’s had media training or something?
you kinda sound like you know how to use a mic
You smiled as you sent it. Waited.
Unknown Number:
haha! you’re cute
That’s it? No voice note this time. You narrowed your eyes, smirking.
You:
i’m serious though, i listened to one of chan’s old vlives today
he’s got a sexy ass voice, kinda deep like yours when you talk slow. you two could be twins
You watched the “read” receipt pop up instantly.
No response.
You:
wait…you’re not him, right?
imagine
Nothing.
Your phone stayed silent for almost ten whole minutes.
And then it buzzed again—another voice note.
You could already feel the grin spreading across your face as you hit play.
“I’m not him,” the voice crooned, low and slow like warm silk. “But if I was… you think I’d let you get away with saying shit like that without consequences?”
You bit your lip hard. The recording continued.
“You’d be bent over that couch before you finished the sentence, baby. Face down. Ass up. I’d remind you exactly what my voice sounds like when you’re full of me.”
Click.
You didn’t realize your thighs had clenched together until your muscles ached.
And still—you weren’t done.
You:
you’re really good at this
whoever you are
maybe too good, maybe i should be scared
Unknown Number:
then stop teasing or i’ll make you say my name while you come
Your pulse jumped.
And for the first time all night… you wondered if maybe, just maybe, you already had.
⸻
Your legs were already trembling.
You’d been edging yourself for the past ten minutes—hand under the sheets, replaying that voice note like it was a playlist you couldn’t live without. Every time he said baby in that ruined growl, your fingers slipped lower. Every time he whispered what he’d do to you, your breath hitched.
And then you got brave.
Your thumb hovered over the record icon. You didn’t think. You just pressed.
You let the silence hang for a second—just your breathing, soft and needy. You let him feel how real it was.
Then you whispered, voice hushed, drenched in heat:
“Wanna know how I sound when I imagine Chan fucking me?”
Another pause. Then a soft, teasing whimper. Just enough to make his imagination snap.
“I moan his name like it’s the only word I know,” you purred. “I picture him grabbing my throat, whispering dirty things in that deep voice and accent, and I can’t help it. I’m already dripping.”
You let your breath hitch again. Just once. Just enough.
“I imagine him pushing me up against the wall in his studio, whispering ‘good girl’ against my mouth, and I lose it. I come just from his voice.”
Click.
You stared at the screen, heartbeat in your throat. No regrets.
He didn’t answer immediately.
But when he did—oh, God.
It was instant.
Unknown Number:
baby.
Another voice note dropped in seconds later.
You didn’t even brace yourself this time. You wanted to hear him break.
Click.
“You really wanna play that game?” His voice was pure gravel now, thick with restraint. You could hear the tension, the crack in it.
“Do you have any idea what you just did to me?”
You bit your lip.
“I’m not gonna last if you keep saying shit like that. Fuck—you’re dangerous.”
Another pause. A breath. Something almost like a growl.
“You wanna take this further?”
Your breath caught.
“Take a chance on me. Meet me. Let me ruin you for real.”
You blinked, heart hammering now for a different reason.
Then the final blow—
“I’ll tell you my name in person,” he said, voice dropping to a whisper. “But you’ll be screaming it by the end of the night anyway.”
Click.
You stared at your phone, stunned. Soaked. Shaking.
Unknown Number:
yes or no
one word baby, and i’ll tell you where to find me
You didn’t text back. You couldn’t. Your hands were shaking too hard to type. So you hit the call button.
Just like that.
Your thumb hovered for half a second before it connected. And then it rang. Once. Twice.
He picked up.
“Fuck,” he breathed—just that.
And it hit you low.
His voice—real, not filtered through a voice note. It filled your ear like silk-wrapped sin, deep and slick and raw.
“You really called me,” he said, almost laughing under his breath, like he couldn’t believe it either. “God, you sound—”
“Wrecked,” you rasped. “I sound completely wrecked.”
His inhale was sharp. You could barely get words out.
“I can’t stop thinking about you,” you whispered. “Your voice—your fucking voice—it’s like every fantasy I’ve ever had about Chan, but worse.”
He choked. “Worse?”
You whimpered softly, dragging your palm across your soaked core, no longer caring if he could hear.
“He ruins me,” you breathed. “In my head, he’s so mean. Doesn’t even give me time to adjust. Just whispers, ‘take it,’ and—”
“Jesus Christ,” he growled.
“—And I do. I take it like a good girl. Like I’m supposed to.”
He was silent. But you could hear his breathing—heavy, desperate. Like his hand was wrapped around himself already.
You swallowed, voice dipping lower. “I imagine riding his thigh and crying when he doesn’t let me come. You think I’m sick for that?”
“…No,” he rasped. “I think I wanna see it.”
You bit your lip hard. “You’d really watch me fuck myself stupid over your voice?”
“I’d hold your hips down,” he said. “Make you say please. Make you scream.”
And you moaned. Right into the speaker.
Soft. Real. Honest.
He gasped—just a little. That sound did something to him. You felt it.
“Say it again,” he whispered. “Say my name.”
“Chan—” It slipped. You didn’t even think.
And he shuddered.
“Fucking hell. Say it again.”
“Chan—” breathy, broken.
“Keep going.”
“Chan, please,” you whimpered. “Please, I need—fuck—I need you inside me, I can’t—”
His voice broke, cracked, fractured in your ear. You still didn’t hear it. You didn’t notice.
Because in your head, this wasn’t real. There was no way your ultimate fantasy, your favorite idol, the man who owned your soul with one smirk on stage—was the stranger breathing ragged into your phone right now.
There was no way Chan could be real. No way he’d call you baby in that exact voice. No way he’d whisper—
“Say yes.”
Your lashes fluttered.
“To what?” you asked, dizzy.
“Say yes,” he repeated. “To seeing me. Let me prove what I’ll do to you.”
You swallowed hard. You wanted it. All of it.
Still clueless. Still soaked. Still talking to the one man you thought was impossible.
“yes.”
⸻
The car ride felt longer than it was.
Your thighs stayed pressed together the whole time, hands fidgeting in your lap. You kept reapplying lip balm even though it was perfect. Kept checking your phone even though he hadn’t messaged again—not since you said yes.
Just one message. “Penthouse” One pin drop location.
No name still. No other clue.
But you went. You had to.
You reached the building—quiet street, upscale high-rise. Your heels clicked softly against polished marble floors as you made your way through the lobby, every step heavier than the last.
Penthouse suite.
Of course.
He had money. You knew that already. The voice, the confidence, the way he said he’d show you what your fantasies felt like in real life—he wasn’t bluffing.
You stopped in front of the door.
Stared.
And then, hand trembling, you raised your knuckles and knocked once.
Silence.
And then—
The door opened. Your heart stopped.
The man standing there was familiar.
Too familiar.
Too—
“…Chan?” you whispered, eyes wide, stomach lurching.
He leaned against the doorframe, black hoodie hanging off one shoulder, hair messy like he’d been running his fingers through it for hours. His chain glinted in the soft hallway light.
One corner of his mouth curved up.
And that voice—that voice that had ruined you all night—slid through your skull like molten sin.
“Surprise, baby.”
You froze.
Mouth parted. Eyes locked on his. Brain not catching up.
You were standing face to face with Bang Chan.
Your idol. Your obsession. Your late-night fantasy.
The man who whispered filth into your ear like it was made for you.
“You’re—” You choked. “No way. There’s no fucking way—”
Chan stepped closer. Just one slow, predatory step.
“You called me Chan when you moaned,” he said, dark eyes locked on your lips. “You knew.”
“I—I thought I was just—I didn’t think—”
He laughed softly, jaw flexing. “But it was always right there in front of you baby”
You backed up a step, but his hand shot out—gripped your waist. Firm. Steady. Possessive.
“I’ve been dying to touch you since the second I saw your profile, Y/N. You think I didn’t notice the way you talk about me online? You practically begged me to ruin you.”
Your knees buckled slightly.
“Now,” he murmured, dragging you inside and shutting the door behind you, “I’m gonna make good on every filthy thing we both said.”
Your back hit the wall.
“But this time,” he whispered, voice all gravel and heat, “you won’t be able to pretend it’s just a fantasy.”
His mouth hovered inches from yours. Pupils blown.
Close enough to feel the heat, to smell the faint trace of his cologne—clean, smoky, dark. Your pulse thudded in your ears, wild and loud. You still couldn’t believe it. Couldn’t breathe.
Chan’s hand slid from your waist to your jaw, slow and steady, like he was testing how much of you he was allowed to own. His thumb grazed your bottom lip, tugged it slightly, eyes never leaving yours.
“Still think this is a dream?”
You shook your head, barely.
“Good,” he whispered. “Because I don’t want you waking up anytime soon.”
You leaned in, lips parted, waiting—begging—for his mouth.
But he smirked. Didn’t kiss you.
Instead, he leaned to your ear, breath hot against your skin, and whispered—
“You thought about me in this hoodie, didn’t you?
Your stomach dropped.
“Imagined me pulling it off, pressing you into my mattress—making you forget your own name.”
You whimpered, thighs clenching together.
“I heard every sound you made earlier,” he murmured. “You didn’t even try to hide how wet you were.”
“Chan—” you whispered, but it cracked.
“Mm. Just like that. Say it again.”
“Chan—”
He groaned.
“You don’t know what you’re doing to me,” he muttered, leaning back just enough to look you over. His gaze dragged down your body—slow, heavy, hungry. “Fuck, you’re exactly my type. Pretty little mouth, skin I wanna bite, and thighs begging to be spread.”
You shivered, hands gripping the front of his hoodie.
“Touch me,” you whispered.
“Not yet.”
You blinked. “W-What?”
His mouth was at your neck now, barely brushing your skin. Not kissing. Not biting. Just hovering.
“You already gave me everything over the phone, didn’t you? Your moans. Your voice. Every filthy thing you wanted me to do.”
His voice dropped to a sinful purr.
“So now I wanna watch you beg.”
You gasped.
“You gonna let me see how desperate you get for me? Right here, baby. Against this wall.”
You swallowed hard. Your hands slid down his chest, fingers trembling.
He grabbed your wrists—lightly, but enough to stop you.
“Mm-mm,” he hummed, lips brushing your cheek. “I said beg.”
“Chan, please,” you whimpered, arching your back just slightly, pushing your chest against his. “You don’t know how badly I need you.”
“No,” he said, low and lethal. “I do. And that’s why I’m not giving it to you yet.”
His hand slid up your thigh—almost. Almost.
Then it stopped.
“You think I’m cruel now?” he whispered. “Wait until I’m inside you and still not letting you come.”
You whined—loud.
And he laughed, dark and breathless. “There she is.”
Then finally—finally—he kissed you.
Not soft, Not sweet.
Claiming.
Tongue first. No warning. Hands gripping your hips like he owned them. You barely got a breath in before he pressed you harder into the wall, lips devouring yours like he’d been waiting a lifetime.
You moaned into his mouth, and he swallowed it whole.
And then—he pulled back, chest heaving.
“One more chance to back out, baby,” he said, voice wrecked. “Because after tonight, things are gonna be different.”
“Please—”
He led you down the hallway with his hand on your lower back—no words, no teasing now, just heat radiating off his body like it was built to burn you.
The lights were low, but his room still felt rich. Sleek lines, black sheets, cool-toned walls. And you—blinking at your reflection in the floor-length mirror across from the bed—trying to remember how to breathe.
“Sit,” he said, and you did.
The bed dipped beneath your weight, silk beneath your fingers. He stood in front of you, hoodie still on, eyes dark and patient like a man who already knew how the night would end.
But then—you stilled when you saw what was in his hand.
A blindfold.
You looked up at him, breath catching.
“Trust me?” he asked softly.
You nodded. He stepped closer, brushing hair away from your face before tying the fabric around your eyes. Not too tight. Not uncomfortable. But enough to change everything.
“You don’t need to see me tonight,” he whispered against your cheek. “You’ve heard me. Felt me. Begged for me.”
He guided you backward, hands careful on your shoulders, until you were flat on the bed.
“Tonight,” he whispered, breath ghosting your throat, “you only get sound. And touch. And need.”
You whimpered, arching instinctively, trying to find his mouth, his hands, anything—
But he just laughed. Dark. Low. Almost cruel.
“Desperate already?” he murmured.
“Chan, please—”
“Mm. That’s the one.”
Then his hands—warm, wide—slid down your sides. Slowly. Reverently. But he still hadn’t really touched you.
Until— He moved.
Positioned you without a word. Straddled his thigh between your legs, gripped your waist, and pulled you flush against him.
You gasped—sharp, involuntary.
The muscle flexed beneath you. Solid. Hot. Right where you needed him.
“There,” he whispered. “Didn’t you say you thought about this?”
You nodded frantically, blindfolded and panting.
“Riding my thigh while I whisper all the things I’d do to you?”
“Fuck,” you whimpered, already grinding.
“That’s it, baby. Show me.”
He let you move. Just watched. Let you use him, breath heavy and dirty in your ear as he spoke.
“You’re soaked, aren’t you?”
“Yes,” you cried.
“Messing up my pants like a good girl. Gonna leave a stain right there, huh?”
He flexed again.
You whined.
His lips brushed your ear.
“You want my cock already, but I’m making you come just like this. Wanna hear how greedy you sound.”
You moaned—loud, desperate.
“Shh,” he whispered. “Or I’ll stop. We don’t come until I say so.”
“Chan, please—please—”
But he stayed still, hand pressing lightly on your lower back.
“You’ll come when I let you. Not a second before.”
And that broke you.
Your body shook, thighs trembling as he slowed you down, holding you in place.
“You wanna be good for me, baby?” he breathed, lips against your neck. “Take the blindfold off and get on all fours.”
You froze.
He tugged the blindfold free.
You blinked, dazed, ruined.
“Turn around,” he said. “Now.”
And you did.
Hands on the sheets. Ass up. Back arched.
You looked over your shoulder—heart stuttering when you saw him standing there, hoodie off, black tank hugging his chest, chain catching the light.
“You’re gonna take me now,” he growled, stepping closer, voice low and possessive. “Every inch. Every word. Every fantasy.”
“And after that?” you whispered, eyes wide, skin burning.
His smile turned sinful.
“You’ll never think of me as your idol again.”
You felt his body behind you before you heard him move.
A warm palm smoothed over your back, from the dip of your spine to the curve of your ass. Gentle. Reverent. Worshipping. He breathed slow, like he was grounding himself. Like if he wasn’t careful, he’d devour you whole before he even got inside.
“You’re perfect like this,” he murmured. “Fuck, baby. Do you even know what you’re doing to me?”
You tried to answer, but the words melted on your tongue when he leaned down—chest grazing your back, lips brushing your neck.
“You let me hear you. Let me tease you. Let me own your body before I ever saw your face.”
His fingers slid under the waistband of your underwear, dragging slow.
“And now that I have all of you…” He kissed your shoulder. “You’re not leaving my bed until I’ve ruined you.”
You whimpered.
He laughed, breath hot and low.
“Still so shy? After everything you said to me?”
You turned your head, lips parted. “I want it. All of it.”
That broke him.
The sound he made wasn’t human.
He tore your underwear down and off in one swift pull. Fingers gripped your thighs—tight. Spreading them wide. Exposing you completely.
“Fuck me…” he breathed. “So wet. And you haven’t even been touched yet.”
“Chan—”
He dropped to his knees behind you.
And licked a stripe up your center.
You screamed.
“That’s it, baby,” he growled against you. “Sing for me.”
He devoured like a man starved—tongue precise, relentless, cruel. Two fingers slipped inside, curling just right. Your moans turned messy, hips jerking, hands clawing the sheets.
“That spot?” he rasped. “Right there?”
“Yes—yes—please—”
He spanked your ass once, hard.
“Then take it.”
You shattered—body convulsing, legs trembling, gasping his name like a lifeline. But even through your orgasm, he didn’t stop. Didn’t slow. Didn’t let you rest.
“One more,” he ordered. “I want you crying before I even fuck you.”
Your vision blurred. Your thighs trembled. You came again—harder, louder, incoherent.
And then— He pulled away.
You blinked back into the world to see him standing over you, eyes blown black, jaw clenched.
He grabbed your hips, dragged you up and back, and lined himself at your entrance.
“Last chance to run.”
You shook your head, tears on your lashes. “Want you.”
He thrusted in—slow, deep, unrelenting.
You both moaned—his hands squeezing your hips so tight you knew you’d bruise.
“So fucking tight,” he growled. “Like you were made for me.”
You whined, head dropping.
He started slow. Intentional. Torturous.
Then leaned over, mouth at your ear, one hand wrapping around your throat.
“Gonna fuck you so deep you’ll forget your name. Gonna fill you so full you’ll know who you belong to.”
Your moans spiraled into sobs. You were wrecked. Completely gone.
And still—he praised.
“Good girl. Taking me so well. Look at that pretty pussy swallowing me whole. Just for me.”
You lost track of time. Of the room. Of anything but the sound of your bodies slapping together and his voice dragging you through every layer of hell.
Then he flipped you. Straddled you.
Fucked you facing him. Eyes locked. One hand holding your face.
“I wanna see you come again,” he whispered. “Right here. Look at me while I ruin you.”
You nodded, tears spilling, body ready to shatter.
He slammed into you—hard, deep, ruthless.
“Now,” he ordered. “Now.”
And you screamed.
Came harder than you ever had. Back arched. Vision gone. World spinning.
He held you through it—kissed your forehead—whispered filth you couldn’t even process.
Then he followed you—coming with a groan so low and raw it vibrated through your bones.
He collapsed over you, breath tangled in your skin.
You lay there, chest heaving, both of you coated in sweat and bliss and something dangerous.
Then— A kiss to your temple.
—
The silence that followed wasn’t awkward. It was dangerous.
Your bare skin still touched his, tangled in sheets that smelled like sex, sweat, and the kind of risk you weren’t supposed to crave. His fingers traced lazy lines down your spine, like he didn’t want to let go. Like he was still memorizing how you felt stretched around him.
Neither of you spoke.
Because what the fuck was there to say? He wasn’t your friend. He wasn’t just a stranger. He wasn’t even just some faceless number anymore.
He was him.
And he knew exactly who you were now too. You could feel it in the way he looked at you. Like you were something forbidden he couldn’t stop tasting.
You shifted, chest rising and falling against his, still breathless.
“I probably should go,” you murmured.
His hand flattened against your lower back.
“Should you?” he said.
But he didn’t move. Didn’t let go. Didn’t stop you either.
You pulled away slowly. Found your shirt in a messy heap on the floor, sliding it over your head without bothering to fix your hair. Your thighs still ached. The inside of them still sticky. You weren’t sure if you were shaking from pleasure or adrenaline or both.
“Is this the part where I pretend this didn’t happen?” you asked, voice light but not teasing.
He propped himself up on one elbow, eyes dragging across your figure.
“You don’t have to pretend.”
A beat passed.
Then another. And then—
“I probably should’ve stopped this,” he added, quieter this time.
“But you didn’t.”
You turned to face him fully now, shirt barely covering anything, mouth still swollen from the way he kissed you like he wanted to destroy you.
“No,” he said. “I didn’t.”
You stepped toward him, slow.
Deliberate.
He watched you like prey—like the only reason he hadn’t pounced again was because he wasn’t sure he’d be able to stop the second time.
“I’m not asking for anything,” you said, standing between his knees now. “I know what this is.”
His gaze flicked up.
“What is it?”
Your lips twitched.
“Stupid. Risky. Completely fucking insane.”
He smiled.
And fuck, that smile—you could feel it between your legs.
“But you want more,” he said.
It wasn’t a question.
“I do,” you breathed.
“So do I.”
You swallowed hard.
The air between you practically buzzed.
No confessions. No declarations.
Just need.
And beneath it all, the low, simmering thrill of getting away with something you shouldn’t.
“So what happens now?” you whispered.
His hand slid up your thigh. Not possessive—familiar.
“You wait for me to text you,” he said. “Then you come back. Let me fuck that fantasy out of you again.”
Your breath hitched.
“And if I don’t?”
He smirked.
“Then I’ll send you a reminder.”
His fingers dipped between your legs through your shirt, slow and cruel, and you nearly collapsed right there.
“I’ll see you again,” he added, voice rough against your throat now. “You know I will.”
You kissed him. Hard. Brief. Addictive.
Then slipped from his grip like a storm cloud—messy, dark, full of promise.
You didn’t say goodbye. You didn’t need to.
The second the door shut behind you, your phone lit up.
Unknown Number:
Next time, I want you riding my face before you even say hi.
Your smile was sinful. And your reply came fast.
You:
Next time’s too far away.
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Authors note: ‘Unknown number’ portrays one of my most vivid imaginations about how i wanna meet Chan 😩 we’re all delulu so dont look at me like that! But yeah, Chan is always lurking? Well i hope he lurks and finds this fic too 😏😏❤️❤️
Taglist: @tsunderelino @innieandsungielover @inlovewithstraykids @reignessance @jeonismm @sttnficrecs @herejusttemporary @krssliu @kenia4 @miilquetoast @thackery-blinks @leeminho-hall @suga-is-bae @butterflydemons @inejghafawifesblog @malunar28replies @minchanlimbo @mal-lunar-28 @breakmeofftbr @itvenorica124 @slut4junho @deepblueocean97 @thequibbie @yaorzu-blog @imagine-all-the-imagines @just-bria @mischievousleeknow @universeyuto @ifyxu @melanctton @thelostprincessofasgard @binniebb @sillylittlecat1 @darkwitchoferie @m-325 @headfirstfortoro @imseungminsgf @ihrtlix @vernorica123 @hwangjoanna @swordswallower2000 @niki007 @yxna-bliss @firelordtsuki @justwonder113 @mbioooo0000
04. The Phantom — By Order of the Black Pirates
An 'Ice On My Teeth' Comeback Special Series
Pairing: gang member!Yeosang x fem!reader
AU: gang au
Word Count: 20k
Summary: Mysterious and elusive, the Black Pirates' intelligence expert is known for his sharp instincts and unparalleled skill in espionage and reconnaissance. But when he crosses paths with a woman who surpasses him in both skill and wit for the first time, his confidence begins to waver. As she outsmarts him at every turn, he finds himself unexpectedly drawn to her, eagerly anticipating each challenge—because the thrill of being near her is something he never expected to crave.
Genre: angst, hurt/comfort
Trigger Warnings: violence, manipulation, abuse, blood, murder, language, contains dark themes in general
SERIES MASTERLIST | ATEEZ MASTERLIST
"Well? You bailed on the Prestige Asylum mission and left Yunho to handle it solo—so what's next? Got some grand plan, or are you finally taking a break?" San asked, one brow arched in curiosity as he lounged across the desk from the Phantom, who was currently sifting through a thick stack of documents.
Yeosang smirked, barely sparing his brother a glance as he flipped through the files Jongho had dug up for him. "A break? You know I have no interest in dull things like that. I've already found myself a new mission. Yuyu's doing just fine without me—the last thing I need is to play the third wheel to whatever awkward tension he's got going on with his precious Dr Prude."
"A new mission?" San repeated, leaning in with interest. "What kind of mission?"
Yeosang tilted his head, eyes narrowing playfully. "You've been awfully curious about what everyone's up to lately. What's gotten into you, Sannie? Or could it be your little withering flower—"
"Don't." San's voice dropped to a dangerous whisper, his sharp glare cutting across the room. "Don't ever call her that again. And this has nothing to do with her." Without waiting for a response, the Tempest pushed back his chair and stood. "Forget it. If you don't want to tell me, fine. I'll leave you to it."
The Phantom sighed, guilt tugging at him as he watched his brother turn away. "It's a series of heists," he finally muttered, tossing the files onto the desk for San to see. Artefacts, gold, and rare treasures. "Hongjoong hyung already gave me the green light. Figured it's time we expanded our collection."
"Good luck, Yeo."
Thrilled to finally have something of his own after spending so long assisting with his brothers' missions or acting as the Captain's go-to informant, Yeosang dove into his meticulously planned heists. Unlike the rest of the crew, who were either chasing volatile targets or caught up in messy affairs of the heart, he was certain his operations would go off without a hitch.
After all, he was the Phantom—the master of locks, the ghost in the shadows. No vault had ever kept him out, no trap had ever slowed him down. High security, tight patrols, complex encryption—none of it mattered. He could slip through fortresses like smoke through cracks.
So naturally, he expected his missions to be the cleanest. The smoothest. The most successful. With his contribution, he was confident he'd help Hongjoong restore the Black Pirates' reputation in the underground scene in no time.
But things... didn't go as planned.
He thought he was fast. He thought he was invisible. He thought he was untouchable.
Until now.
The Black Pirates' latest intel reveals a string of high-profile heists—artefacts, gold, and precious rarities vanishing without a trace. The only thing left behind? A calling card, marked with a signature so elegant, it almost mocked him.
Yeosang—an expert in espionage, surveillance, and silent infiltration—has never been outplayed. His instincts, his pride, his entire reputation were built on being the smartest one in the room.
But this thief? She doesn't leave footprints. Doesn't leave room for mistakes. Doesn't follow any pattern.
For the first time, he feels it: the sting of being bested. And worse—he's intrigued.
The room was cold and silent, save for the faint echo of the Phantom's boots against marble floors as he stepped into what should've been a locked, high-security vault.
He froze.
Empty.
Not a single artefact remained—not the ancient relic he'd been tracking for weeks, not the encrypted lockbox he'd expected to crack, nothing.
Just like the last time.
And the time before that.
His jaw tensed as his eyes swept the chamber, instinctively scanning for the only thing she ever left behind. And there it was—placed delicately on the velvet pedestal where the artefact should've been.
A single white rose, petals unbruised, impossibly fresh. Tied to its stem was a narrow strip of paper, curled slightly at the edges. He plucked it off with a sigh, already knowing what it would say.
"Sorry, I got here first. Better luck next time. xoxo"
The note was signed off, as always, with a seductive lipstick print in deep crimson, the faintest trace of rose and something spicier—sandalwood, maybe—lingering in the air around it.
Yeosang let out a slow breath, rubbing his temples before muttering a quiet, colourful string of curses under his breath.
"Not again."
This was the fifth mission she'd intercepted. Five high-profile jobs. Five flawless thefts. No alarms. No forced entry. No noise.
And each time—the rose. The note. The kiss.
A part of him simmered in frustration. Not at the loss—that was irritating, sure—but at the fact that she was winning. Beating him at his own game.
But another part? That part laughed.
A soft, breathy chuckle escaped him despite himself as he reached for the delicate rose, brushing a thumb along the curve of the note. Without thinking, he lifted the flower to his nose.
It was ridiculous, he knew. Who carries a fresh rose into a high-security vault just to leave it behind? Who plans their thefts with such finesse and style, just to gloat—just to tease him?
Who the hell was she?
Yeosang lowered the rose, an amused smile tugging at his lips. "You're nothing if not consistent," he murmured to no one, folding the note neatly and tucking it into his coat pocket alongside the last two.
He didn't know her name. He didn't know her face. But her message was loud and clear: Catch me if you can, Phantom.
And now, more than ever, he wanted to.
Not for the artefact. Not even for the mission.
But for the thrill of the chase.
Because someone had finally managed to make the master of shadows feel like prey.
And he liked it.
You smirked from the shadows, concealed in the narrow gap between steel support beams and the cold stone of the vault's inner frame—your favourite vantage point.
There he was. The infamous Phantom of the Black Pirates. So sharp. So calculated. So smug. And yet, here he stood, blissfully unaware that you'd been watching him the entire time.
You leaned against the metal, arms crossed, quietly savouring the sight of him lifting the rose to his nose like some smitten fool. You had to bite back a laugh. He always did that like clockwork.
Honestly, you were starting to wonder if he looked forward to finding your little gifts. He never shouted. Never raged. Never trashed the room in frustration. No—he smiled. He chuckled. He took the rose with him. Every time.
Adorable.
But that wasn't going to save him.
Not tonight.
He'd gotten here barely three minutes after you'd finished the job, as if he almost had a chance. But close calls didn't count in your world. You were always faster. Always cleaner. Always ahead.
Still, you weren't heartless. Well… maybe just a little. With a quiet sigh, you turned toward the door, fingers brushing lightly over the emergency control panel you'd rigged earlier on your way in. You tapped a single button.
The alarm shrieked to life.
Red lights bathed the room in an urgent glow, sirens echoing through the vault's thick walls. A mechanical whir signalled the lockdown beginning—steel gates lowering, magnetic locks sealing.
You didn't even glance back to see his reaction. You could picture it perfectly in your mind: the narrowing eyes, the shift in posture, the way his jaw would clench just slightly—not from fear, but from anticipation.
This wasn't sabotage. Not really.
You were just… levelling the playing field.
After all, you'd stolen his treasure—the very thing he came for. It was only fair to give him a little something in return. A challenge. A thrill. A taste of danger.
You smiled to yourself as you disappeared down a hidden shaft leading out of the building, your coat fluttering behind you like a wraith in the dark.
Consider it my apology, Phantom.
You might've taken his prize… but you're leaving him something just as sweet: a reason to chase you harder.
And deep down, you knew he would.
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The front doors of the Black Pirates' mansion creaked open, and Yeosang stepped inside, limping slightly. His coat was torn at the hem, boots scuffed with soot and dirt, and a fresh cut curved along his cheek—just beneath his birthmark. Blood had dried there, crusting into the corner of his jaw.
It was well past midnight.
He was hours late. And from the way he staggered through the hall, he clearly hadn't taken the quiet way home.
The Captain's office door was ajar, light spilling into the corridor. He didn't even knock. Just pushed it open and let it swing behind him. Hongjoong looked up from his desk instantly, rising to his feet the moment he saw his brother's condition. His sharp gaze scanned the limp, the bruise forming under his eye, the smug—but exhausted—tilt to his mouth.
He didn't waste time on pleasantries.
"Was it her again?"
Yeosang let out a breathy laugh, dragging a hand through his tousled hair as he collapsed into the nearest chair without invitation.
"Who else?" he muttered, voice laced with both irritation and reluctant admiration. He pulled the torn glove from his hand and tossed it onto the desk. "I walked into the vault not five minutes after she left. The damn rose was still cold."
Hongjoong grimaced. "And the alarm?"
Yeosang gave him a look. "Triggered. Locked me in. No exit points. No ventilation escape. Had to improvise."
A beat of silence passed between them.
"How bad?"
The younger man winced, rolling his shoulder. "Jumped three floors. Landed on a moving patrol truck. Limped two kilometres until I hijacked a bike." He gestured vaguely to the gash on his cheek. "Guards had sharp aim tonight."
Hongjoong sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. "That's the fourth mission she's hit before you."
"Fifth," Yeosang corrected, eyes narrowing faintly as he reached into his coat and pulled out the familiar note. He held it up between two fingers like a trophy—and an insult. "She switched her lipstick shade this time. Cherry red. Thought I wouldn't notice."
He tossed the note onto the desk with a bitter chuckle, and the Captain stared at it. The mocking message. The perfect handwriting. The damn lipstick kiss.
"You know this isn't a game, right?" Hongjoong said quietly. "If she's targeting the same objectives we are, it could mean someone's feeding her our intel."
Yeosang shook his head, eyes unfocused, lost somewhere between frustration and fascination. "No. She's not working for anyone. Not like that. She's… playing with me."
Hongjoong raised a brow. "You sound flattered."
Yeosang gave him a flat look—but couldn't stop the corner of his mouth from twitching. "I'm furious."
"Uh-huh."
"She left me a flower, hyung. And a trap."
Hongjoong folded his arms. "And you kept the flower, didn't you?"
The Phantom didn't answer. Just reached into his coat again and carefully withdrew the white rose, only slightly wilted from the heat of the chase. The scent was still there. Hauntingly familiar.
He stared at it for a long moment.
"She wants me to find her."
"You sure?"
Yeosang smiled—slow, dangerous, amused. "If she didn't, she wouldn't be leaving me clues."
The gang leader's gaze hardened. "Then find her. Before she starts aiming higher."
Yeosang nodded slowly, still holding the rose between his fingers. "Oh, I will." And for the first time in years, he didn't care about the treasure anymore. He just wanted to see you.
Just you wait, little vixen.
The thrill of the chase still buzzed under your skin as you stepped through the reinforced steel doors of your hidden base. The adrenaline was fading, replaced now with the familiar calm that came after a perfect job.
Your coat slipped from your shoulders as you moved through the dim corridors—your heels quiet on the marble floor, the scent of the rose still faint on your gloves. The aura of mischief, the flirtatious game, the playful smirk—all of it faded the moment you reached the tall double doors of the main chamber.
This was not the place for indulgence.
You pushed open the door.
The room was bathed in warm firelight. Shadows danced across the stone walls, flickering with each crackle of the flames. And there, in his usual place, sat him—your boss. An imposing figure in a tailored suit, swirling a glass of brandy with the kind of poise that came from power long held and rarely challenged.
He didn't look at you as you entered. He never did, not at first. Just sat there, one leg crossed over the other, gaze fixed on the fire as if it whispered secrets only he could hear.
"I take it the mission was successful," he said at last, voice deep, unbothered, like he already knew the answer.
You stepped forward with purpose, spine straight and voice steady. "Yes, sir. Every single piece of artefact the Black Pirates had on their radar is now in our inventory. Undamaged. Untraced."
A satisfied smirk tugged at the edge of his mouth. He took a long sip of brandy, savouring it. Then, still staring into the fire, he asked: "And the most important part of the mission?"
Your lips curled into a small, secret smile. The real objective. The reason he'd chosen you for this series of thefts. "I'd consider it a success," you said, folding your hands behind your back. "The Phantom didn't seem too disheartened. If anything… he looked thrilled. I may have stolen his target, but I gave him something in return."
A pause.
"In return," you continued smoothly, "he was gifted an exciting escape mission. Complete with locked doors, a ticking clock, and the satisfaction of surviving something no one else could've walked out of."
Now, your boss finally turned his head—just slightly. You could feel the weight of his gaze settle on you like a cloak. Measuring. Evaluating. Approving.
"You continue to entertain him."
You inclined your head. "He's easy to read—and surprisingly fun to provoke."
"Good." He leaned back, swirling his glass again. "Keep him interested. The longer he plays, the deeper he'll fall. And eventually…"
"He'll jump right into the trap we've set for him," you finished for him.
"Exactly."
He raised his glass in a toast to the flames.
And in that moment, you were reminded: this wasn't just about treasure. It never was. This was a game layered in shadows and misdirection—and the Phantom was slowly being lured into the centre of it.
The chase was far from over.
And you? You were just getting started.
But so was he.
The mansion was quiet at this hour. Most of the crew had already turned in, and the halls were dim, lit only by the soft flicker of sconces along the walls. But Yeosang's office remained lit—warm, golden, and undisturbed.
He sat at his desk, a fresh line of stitches hidden under a bandage on his side, and a thin strip of gauze just below his cheekbone. The in-house doctor had worked quickly, wordlessly. She knew better than to ask questions when any of the members came back from a mission looking like that.
His fingers hovered over his files, schematics and intel on the pages, but his gaze was elsewhere. Drawn—again—to the modest vase at the corner of his desk.
Five white roses sat there now.
Each one carefully preserved. Each one taken from the scene of a stolen mission. Each one yours. The latest bloom—barely beginning to wilt—stood tallest, its petals still holding that soft, ghostly scent. A scent that was slowly becoming too familiar.
He should've thrown them out. Should've scoffed, torn the notes, and incinerated every last petal. But he didn't. Because for some reason… they made him feel alive. Driven. Sharper than ever.
He leaned back in his chair, studying the flowers like they held answers, like they were puzzle pieces in disguise.
This was no ordinary rival. No opportunist thief. This woman was deliberate. Precise. And you had him dancing on the edge of his own ego. He told himself it wasn't personal. Not like Hongjoong's situation. Or Seonghwa's. Or Yunho's, definitely.
This was different.
He wasn't being distracted. He was refocused.
Because catching her—outwitting her—wasn't just about getting back the treasures. It was about proving he was still the best at what he did. Still the Phantom. And if he pulled this off? If he could trap her, the one ghost even he couldn't touch?
It would be his greatest triumph yet.
He pulled up the latest map on his file—an exclusive auction rumoured to feature another item the Black Pirates had been eyeing. Word had already spread that the underground elite would be attending.
He knew you'd be there. You could never resist something like that. And this time… He would be waiting.
No roses. No lipstick. No escape.
Just you—and him—and a reckoning long overdue. A slow smirk formed on his lips as he went through the blueprints. "Let's see how well you dance when the trap's already closed," he murmured.
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The underground auction had been whispered about for weeks now—an exclusive event, tucked away behind a labyrinth of security and secrecy. Invitations were coded, locations encrypted, and only the highest bidders in the criminal world were welcome.
Naturally, you had found your way in.
You'd already acquired the encrypted access, memorised the floor plans, rehearsed your entrance and exit routes until you could walk them blindfolded. Another night, another prize.
You were nearly ready—dressed in sleek black, your hair pinned just right, tools concealed and steps silent. You fastened the final clasp on your utility belt when you heard it: A soft knock on your door.
Your breath hitched. You knew that rhythm.
The moment the door cracked open and he stepped into your room, you straightened instantly, spine taut, arms behind your back. Always alert in his presence. Always prepared.
The middle-aged man walked in slowly, eyes scanning your setup with cool approval. Then came the flick of his finger—the subtle signal that meant relax. You obeyed immediately, allowing your shoulders to drop, though your heart still raced.
A gentle smile curved his lips, warm enough to melt the steel cage around your chest. "You know how crucial this mission is, yes?" he asked, his voice like velvet. He moved to stand beside your table, picking up a small tool and turning it in his fingers with idle curiosity. "What you're stealing tonight isn't just another valuable relic. It's a key. A key that will unlock a hidden treasure—something the Black Pirates have been desperate to acquire for years."
You nodded, swallowing the flicker of pride in your throat. His voice was always calm, measured. And when he spoke of trust, of importance, it always filled you with fire.
He stepped closer now, placing the tool down and turning toward you fully. His hand came to rest lightly on your shoulder. The warmth of that touch seared through the fabric of your suit.
"You know I reserved this mission just for you, yes?" he said, softer now. "You're different from the others, kid."
You blinked. Your chest fluttered.
"Do well tonight, and…" He paused, smiling deeper—something almost fatherly. Almost. "You'll finally get to call me Father."
Your heart stuttered.
That word—it struck something raw and desperate within you. The part of you still trapped in the memory of a rain-soaked alley, cold and afraid, abandoned with nothing to your name but a broken past and a stolen future. He had taken you in and given you purpose. Raised you. Trained you. Moulded you into what you are now.
Your voice didn't waver when you answered, "Yes, sir. I will not let you down."
He smiled again, the pride in his eyes glowing like it never had before. To you, it was warmth. You didn't notice the way his smile lingered too long, or how his gaze flicked past you momentarily, distant and calculating. You didn't see the shadows shifting behind his approval.
Because to you, his recognition was all that mattered. And tonight, you would earn it. You picked up your mask, slipped it on, and left without a second thought.
I won't let you down, Father.
The auction hall glowed like gold beneath the chandeliers—opulence dripping from every corner, every guest draped in luxury and shadows. The air was thick with wealth and deception, masks hiding more than just identities.
Yeosang leaned against the upper balcony rail, dressed impeccably in a tailored black suit with a silver half-mask hiding the sharp cut of his cheekbone. No one would recognise him as the Phantom tonight—at least, not until it was far too late.
Below, the auctioneer's voice echoed through the chamber, bidding rising for a centuries-old dagger—just a taste of what was to come.
He didn't need to look at the blueprint tucked in his back pocket; he had memorised the layout hours ago. Every exit. Every ventilation shaft. Every camera blind spot. He had Jongho monitoring the perimeter, San blending in as a buyer, and Wooyoung stationed near the vault, ready to block any attempt at retreat.
But Yeosang wasn't watching the stage.
He was watching the crowd.
Waiting.
Anticipating.
His gloved fingers tapped a silent rhythm against the marble railing, his gaze sweeping over masks and gowns and whispers. His heart beat with an unfamiliar tempo—half thrill, half tension.
After five stolen missions, he had finally stopped chasing shadows. He knew your patterns now—how you circled the scene first, how you blended in with the elite, how your every step was artfully calculated yet deceptively casual. You were unpredictable. But he was precise. And tonight, he trusted his gut.
"Movement near the west stairwell," Jongho's voice crackled softly in his earpiece. "Slim build. Doesn't match the guest list. Looks like she's heading toward Vault C."
Right on cue.
The Phantom's lips quirked. Not quite a smile—more a silent acknowledgement.
He moved swiftly, cutting through the crowd without so much as a glance. Past flirtations and fine wine. Past relics and red velvet drapery. Every step was fueled by anticipation. He had waited so long for this moment—not just to see your face, but to finally outwit you.
Yeosang reached the hallway leading to Vault C and slipped into position, pressing himself into the shadowed edge of a pillar. The vault entrance was just ahead—unguarded for the moment, exactly as planned.
This time, he had set the trap.
And you were walking straight into it.
He steadied his breathing, eyes locked on the hallway, counting the seconds. Ten… Nine… Eight…
Then he saw you.
For the first time—not in glimpses or illusions, not in whispers of perfume or the curl of a mocking note—but truly. Clad in sleek black, your mask elegant, your movements effortlessly fluid, like you belonged to the darkness itself. You scanned the hallway once, graceful and confident, and his pulse surged.
So it's you.
There was something maddeningly satisfying in seeing you like this—real, tangible. Beautiful, yes, but dangerous. Focused. He let you get close. Closer. Just a few feet from the vault when—
Click.
The floor under you shifted just slightly. A trap panel. Subtle, but enough. Your weight had triggered it.
You froze.
Too late.
Yeosang stepped forward from the shadows, his voice calm, almost amused. "Expecting someone else tonight?"
You turned sharply—and for the first time, your eyes met. The infamous Phantom and the bearer of the white rose finally stood face to face, seeing each other clearly at last.
His gaze glinted with smug satisfaction as he added, "Took me a while, but I'd say the wait was worth it."
Your breath hitched—but only for a second.
He was unfairly beautiful.
Even under the low lighting and behind that silver half-mask, you could see the sharp lines of his face, the calculated calm in his eyes, and that slight tilt of his lips—infuriatingly self-assured. You hated how easily he wore that smirk. How, even now, standing between you and your goal, he managed to look like he was the prize.
And yet… you couldn't look away.
You hadn't expected him to be this striking up close. All the reports, the files, the rumours—they never quite captured this. Yeosang, on the other hand, looked just as stunned. If only for a heartbeat.
You noticed how his eyes briefly widened—taking in the black ensemble that clung to your form like smoke, the soft glint of your earrings, the way your lips were painted the same deep red as the lipstick on every note you'd left him.
He inhaled slightly, and you saw it—the way his breath stuttered, ever so subtly. So the great Phantom wasn't so unreadable after all. The realisation gave you a flicker of satisfaction. But you didn't have time to savour it.
Focus.
Your boss' words echoed in your mind—"This isn't just another relic. It's the key to a greater treasure. Do not fail me." The vault loomed just behind you. Your objective was so close… but so was he.
"Didn't anyone teach you it's rude to spy on a lady?" you finally spoke, recovering with ease, your voice smooth as silk as you tilted your head slightly, letting your eyes trail over him with calculated curiosity.
"I've never been good with manners," he replied, his tone still casual, but his stance sharp, ready. "Besides… I think you like the attention."
You smiled sweetly. "Flattery? From the Phantom himself? I'm flattered." You took one step back—close enough now to touch the vault keypad. His eyes flicked to your fingers, then back to your face.
"Don't," he warned, stepping forward.
You raised a brow, hand hovering just an inch away from the code input. "Or what? You'll trap me like I was trying to trap you?"
There was no humour in his eyes now. Just steel. "You won't win this time."
You exhaled through your nose, almost a laugh. "You sure about that?"
In a blink, your free hand flicked something from the inside of your sleeve—a smoke pellet. You dropped it at your feet. Yeosang cursed as the thick white smoke exploded instantly, clouding the hall in seconds. You moved fast, flipping backwards from the keypad, rolling low, using the dense fog to shift direction.
But he was fast too.
Faster than you expected.
A strong hand closed around your wrist just as you tried to slip past him toward the west corridor. You both froze mid-motion, hidden by the smoke but locked together—his grip firm, your balance thrown off just enough.
You were both breathing hard now. Inches apart.
"Nice trick," he muttered near your ear.
"Likewise," you whispered, jerking your wrist hard and twisting your body. You knew the exact angle to dislodge his grip without hurting either of you—but just enough to slip free.
His fingers slipped from your skin.
You were already gone.
By the time the smoke cleared, you were nowhere to be seen.
Yeosang stood in the corridor, alone again. The vault untouched. A faint trail of your perfume still lingering in the air. But on the floor, just by the corner of the hallway, lay another white rose. This one had no note. He stared at it for a moment before letting out a breathless laugh.
You were good.
But now… he was better.
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You ducked into the narrow alleyway between two crumbling buildings, heart pounding like a war drum in your chest. The adrenaline that had carried you this far was starting to wear thin, replaced by something far heavier—frustration.
You pulled off your mask and ran a hand through your hair, exhaling sharply. "Damn it," you muttered under your breath, leaning against the cold stone wall behind you. "Damn it, damn it."
This wasn't how tonight was supposed to go.
You had planned every move—timed every step, memorised every route, even anticipated his presence. You knew he'd be there. You'd even wanted him to be there.
But you hadn't counted on them.
You cursed again, louder this time, drawing a startled hiss from a nearby alley cat. You didn't care. You'd meant to slip back in after shaking him off, get to the relic before he recovered from the smoke. Maybe even lift it right out from under his nose, again—a poetic twist to an already entertaining game.
But you'd only made it to the edge of the auction grounds when you saw them. The others.
The towering figure who could crush bones with his bare hands—the Anchor. The silver-tongued negotiator whose charms could talk secrets out of shadows—the Charmer. And of course, the unpredictable storm himself, the one they called the Tempest, known for levelling entire black market routes in a single night.
He didn't come alone this time.
The realisation hit like a slap across the face.
For the first time since your missions began, a cold tendril of fear curled in your chest. You weren't just up against the Phantom anymore. You were staring down half the Black Pirates' elite. And even you had to admit—that was a gamble not even you were arrogant enough to take lightly.
You slid down the wall into a crouch, breath ragged, hands trembling against your knees. You'd never retreated like this before. Never had to. But the odds tonight? They weren't just stacked against you—they were practically carved in stone.
You shouldn't go back.
You couldn't go back.
But…
Your boss' words echoed in your mind, thick with that false warmth you'd always craved: "You're different from the others, kid. Do well in this mission, and you'll finally get to call me Father."
Your jaw clenched.
After all these years—after everything—you finally had a chance at a real place by his side. You couldn't return empty-handed. You couldn't throw away the one mission that had been reserved just for you.
He trusted you.
He believed in you.
And you…
…You needed that belief to mean something.
Slowly, you stood again. The cool night wind wrapped around you like a whisper of warning, but you ignored it. If you were going to fail tonight, you'd do it trying. No more clever escapes—just you against them. You cracked your neck, threw your mask aside, and adjusted the twin daggers hidden beneath your sleeves.
Let's see how determined you really are, Phantom, you thought bitterly, starting your silent path back toward the auction grounds.
Finally. The relic was finally in his hands.
Smooth. Cold. Priceless.
After weeks of preparation and months of frustration, Yeosang closed his gloved fingers around the artefact with a rare sense of victory. But that sense didn't last long—not when a shift in the air tugged at his instincts, honed sharper than any blade.
From his vantage point in the upper chamber, he tilted his head, scanning the corridor where Wooyoung stood on lookout. The Charmer's brows furrowed, then he lifted two fingers, signalling movement.
"How many?" Yeosang asked quietly, eyes narrowing.
Wooyoung didn't look back, keeping his gaze trained on the hallway's shadows. "Just one. Light steps… I think it's your girl again."
Yeosang exhaled sharply, though it came out more amused than annoyed. Of course, you weren't done. Of course, you'd come back. He should've been frustrated. Instead, he found himself smiling—just a little—at your persistence.
"You're relentless," he muttered to no one, tucking the relic safely into a pouch before turning to his brother. "Take this," he said, handing over the prize. "I'll deal with her. You head for the eastern escape route. The auction officials will be back soon to do inventory. If they find this missing, it'll blow our cover."
Wooyoung raised an amused brow, securing the artefact under his coat with a smooth flick of his wrist. "Right. But let's not pretend this is about the mission anymore."
Yeosang shot him a flat look.
Wooyoung grinned wider. "Just say you can't bear to leave without seeing her again."
"Oh, fuck off, Woo."
"Have fun~" he sang quietly, already slipping down the exit path.
Now alone, Yeosang rolled his shoulders, adjusting the fit of his coat. His heart was beating faster than it should've. Not out of fear—no, it was something far more dangerous.
Anticipation.
The kind that buzzed under your skin, knowing someone was coming for you. Someone clever. Unrelenting. Beautiful. Dangerous.
The moment he had longed for—dreaded, even—was approaching again. This time, he wasn't going to let you disappear into the smoke. This time, he would be the one setting the trap. And this time, he'd finally see the fire in your eyes, not through the lens of security footage or vanishing shadows—but up close.
He waited in the shadows, body taut with anticipation, every sense tuned to the footsteps growing nearer. He expected a flourish, a sly grin, maybe even a flirtatious remark dripping with overconfidence. That was how this game had always gone—push and pull, banter and brilliance.
But when you finally emerged into view, everything inside Yeosang came to a halt.
No mask.
No smug smile.
No elaborate, dramatic entrance.
Just you—eyes wide, chest heaving, and tears. Actual tears. Big, fat ones that carved glistening trails down your cheeks as you stumbled toward him. For a moment, his mind couldn't process what he was seeing. All he could think was how they said a woman's tears were her greatest weapon. He never believed that crap until now.
He didn't move. Couldn't. His hand instinctively twitched toward his back pocket—but hesitated.
Then you spoke, voice trembling and ragged.
"Please… I—I'm sorry for everything I've done so far. But I—look, I have no choice in this, alright?" you cried, eyes locking onto his with a desperation he couldn't ignore. "If I don't clear this mission tonight, I might not live to see the day again."
That struck him.
Harder than any blade.
You took another step forward, your expression cracked wide open with fear. Raw. Human. Nothing like the cunning ghost that had danced through every security system he'd built.
His fingers twitched again, uncertain, reaching for the weapon behind him—but you saw it. Panic surged through you, and before he could react, you lurched forward, collapsing into him.
He caught you instinctively, his arms wrapping around your trembling frame as you sobbed into his shoulder. His mind screamed trap—but his body refused to let you fall. The warmth of your body, the shuddering breath against his collar—it all felt too painfully real.
"Please…" you whimpered again, and something inside him frayed.
That moment was all you needed.
A swift flick of your wrist, and the needle hidden in your sleeve slipped between your fingers. Your hand darted up—and with frightening precision—you pressed the tip just beneath his jawline.
A barely audible hiss. A faint click.
The sedative surged into his bloodstream.
Yeosang's breath hitched, his grip on you tightening involuntarily for a fleeting second before his legs gave out. His body went slack in your arms. "So long, Phantom," you whispered coldly.
Then you shoved him off.
His body crumpled silently to the floor, landing in a heap of black leather and stolen breath.
Without missing another beat, you tore off into the hallway, chasing after the route Wooyoung had taken with the relic. You didn't even allow yourself to look back.
Not at the man who had once scared you.
Not at the man who had unknowingly softened you.
And certainly not at the man who now lay unconscious—because of you.
But despite the cold victory blooming in your chest… something didn't feel right.
Not anymore.
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You bolted down the marble corridor, every step echoing off the polished floors like gunfire. Your breathing was ragged, but your eyes were sharp—locked onto the prize that glinted faintly under the lights in Wooyoung's hands.
The relic.
You'd come too far. Endured too much. Betrayed too deeply. Tonight couldn't end in failure. Not when the meaning of your entire existence hinged on it.
You tightened your grip on one of your daggers and shifted your weight, judging the distance. He was fast—but not untouchable. You zeroed in on the sweet spot between his shoulder blades. One clean throw could stop him. Just one.
You inhaled—
Threw—
"Duck, Woo!"
And missed.
That voice—too close, too powerful.
Then something collided with you like a freight train.
SLAM.
The world blurred as you were pinned, back crashing against the stone wall with a hard, breath-snatching impact. Your eyes darted up—wide, panicked—and met the calm, unwavering stare of Jongho.
The Anchor.
His grip was like iron, unmoving and merciless as he wrenched your second dagger from your hand and twisted your wrist until it stung. The cold kiss of your own blade now hovered dangerously near the base of your throat, trembling against your pulse as he held it there with terrifying ease.
Fuck.
You'd been so focused on the Charmer, so distracted by the aftertaste of Yeosang's damn scent still lingering on your shoulder, that you'd forgotten the one thing he always reminded people of too late: never underestimate the Black fuckin' Pirates.
You caught a blur in your peripheral vision—Wooyoung, slipping through a door at the end of the corridor, the relic safe in his hands.
Gone.
No—
Gone.
You let out a shaky breath, bitter and seething.
"I don't suppose saying 'oops' would cut it?" you muttered, forcing a smirk despite the sting of failure biting at your ribs.
Jongho didn't smile.
His stare didn't waver.
"You should've stopped while you were ahead."
Your mind raced. You let your head rest back against the cold wall, not in surrender—but calculation. Think. Think. You weren't out of cards yet. He was stronger—undoubtedly so—but even the most solid anchor had weak spots.
And lucky for you, men shared a universal one.
You shifted slightly, feigning weariness, watching carefully as his grip loosened just a little. Just enough. His body language said it all—he thought he'd won.
That was his mistake.
In a flash, you struck with your knee, driving it right where the sun doesn't shine. Jongho's breath left him in a grunt as he recoiled. That was your cue. You dropped low, slipping out from under him, your body hitting the floor and rolling as you twisted around, hand darting for the dagger in your boot.
One hit. One clean hit anywhere would buy you time.
You rose with the blade and spun—
Only to be caught mid-motion by another body slamming into yours from behind. Bigger. Heavier.
Strong arms coiled around you like steel cables, locking your limbs before you could react. A sharp twist to your wrist sent your dagger clattering to the ground with a metallic clang.
Shit.
And then you felt it—the cold press of steel against your temple. "Do you have any idea how lucky you are?" came the low, venomous growl behind you. The voice of a man whose reputation made grown criminals sweat.
The Tempest.
"Had you been a man, you'd already be dead," San hissed, voice like thunder against your skin. "I try not to harm women… but I can make an exception for you."
You stilled, breath catching, rage and frustration rising like bile in your throat. You were so close. You could still see the exit Wooyoung had used in the corner of your eye. So close, yet now impossibly far.
Oh, I'm so fucked...
Yeosang's breath came out ragged as he fought the numbing haze clouding his mind. His legs felt like lead, his limbs sluggish, but his thoughts were sharp—sharp with frustration, disbelief… and something else he wasn't ready to name.
"For fuck's sake…" he muttered, weakly laughing to himself as he leaned against the wall for balance. "She got me. Again. When… will I learn…"
His hand moved slowly to the side of his neck, fingers brushing the tiny prick left behind. His head throbbed, but he shook it violently, willing the sedative to leave his system. He staggered forward, one step at a time. The mission was technically over. He should've headed for the exit. Should've disappeared before the auction officials came swarming in.
But instead—he followed you.
He couldn't explain why.
Maybe it was instinct. Maybe it was pride. Maybe it was something else entirely—but every step he took screamed a single truth: You wouldn't survive his brothers.
By the time he reached the hall where the confrontation echoed off the stone walls, his vision was blotting at the edges. But he saw enough. Jongho was doubled over, groaning with one hand braced against the wall, eyes sharp and filled with venom. San stood tall and steady, one arm tight around your body, the other pressing a gun to your head—finger already flicking the safety off.
But it was your face that truly stopped Yeosang cold.
You weren't struggling. You weren't bluffing or mocking or smirking like usual. You were still. Resolved. Eyes open, mouth parted slightly, a single tear trailing down. Like you'd accepted it. Like you knew this was how it would end.
And suddenly, everything you'd said before came rushing back—"If I don't clear this mission tonight, I might not live to see the day again."
It could've been a lie.
Should've been a lie.
But his gut twisted anyway.
And he didn't care if it was stupid, or reckless, or a complete lapse in judgement, he took a shaky step forward, his voice hoarse and broken but clear enough to cut through the tension.
"No… let her go."
San didn't move at first. His eyes flicked sideways, gun still pressed against your skull. "You're awake," he said coldly, not lowering the weapon. "Didn't think that little jab would wear off so soon."
Yeosang dragged in a breath, forcing his shoulders to square. "She's not a threat right now. Just let her go."
Jongho snarled from the side, "She nearly gutted me, hyung."
"And I didn't say forgive her," Yeosang snapped, the steel slowly returning to his tone. "I said let her go."
You blinked at him, lips parting in disbelief.
He shouldn't be doing this.
Not for you.
Not after everything.
And yet there he stood—between you and the storm—his eyes never leaving yours.
You didn't know what happened after that. Everything blurred. Voices rose. San cursed. Jongho groaned. And Yeosang—he had started to fall again, the sedative dragging him under once more.
You moved. Instinct? Desperation? You weren't sure.
But in the end, none of it mattered.
Because you'd failed.
And when you finally returned, hours later, you were already on your knees the moment you stepped into the room, head bowed low, fingers clenched so tightly into your palms that you felt your nails pierce skin. The scent of blood—your own—was faint, but grounding. The only thing keeping you from shaking apart completely.
You didn't dare look up.
You didn't dare speak.
The fire crackled in the hearth, deceptively warm. Mocking, almost.
Your boss hadn't said a word since your return. And that silence… it was worse than shouting. Worse than punishment. It was disappointment—the one thing you never wanted to see in his eyes. Not from him.
And you had failed him. You'd promised. You'd vowed not to come back empty-handed. But you had.
You failed the mission.
You let the Phantom get to you.
You got caught.
Even now, you weren't sure which of those three things enraged him the most.
When he finally spoke, his voice was calm.
Too calm.
"Well," he said, swirling his brandy as he stared into the fire, "I trust you don't need me to tell you what's next." Your stomach plummeted. You wanted to beg. Plead. Something.
But that wasn't allowed.
You weren't a child anymore.
You weren't allowed to cry.
The double doors behind you opened with a thunderous clang, and your heart seized as the sound of heavy boots approached—his most trusted men. Your worst nightmares. "Time Out Room," he ordered without looking at you, "until further notice. Perhaps that'll teach you that making empty promises… is bad."
The men grabbed your arms, hauling you up, and though you didn't resist, your body trembled. You stared straight ahead as your feet were dragged backwards, your mind spiralling with dread.
The Time Out Room wasn't just a punishment.
It was a lesson.
And no one ever came out the same.
You told yourself you could endure it.
That this pain was temporary. That you'd earn his trust back. That one day, you'd sit beside him—not kneeling like a pawn.
But as the doors to the chamber slammed shut behind you, the cold darkness wrapped around your spine like chains, and for the first time in years, you weren't sure if you believed that anymore.
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The ceiling above him was an uninspiring shade of white—bland, clinical, too bright for the pounding in his skull.
Yeosang stared at it anyway, as if the plaster might suddenly give him the answers he didn't have.
The infirmary was quiet, save for the soft beep of machines and the distant hum of life elsewhere in the mansion. The sting at his neck had dulled into a persistent throb, the last remnants of that damn sedative finally bleeding out of his system.
But the weight in his chest? That hadn't left.
He replayed it all—again.
The mission. The trap. The way your mask had been gone. The tears. Your voice, small and trembling. The please that had cracked something open in him he hadn't even known was there.
And the way you had fallen into his arms.
Only to betray him.
Again.
He sighed harshly, throwing an arm over his face, as if darkness would drown out the memory of your scent on his jacket or the tremble in your voice when you said you had no choice.
He should be furious.
He was furious.
But more than that—he was confused.
"So," came a voice from the doorway, quiet but sharp as a blade. "Why'd you let her go?"
The Phantom didn't move. He didn't have to. He knew that voice. And the weight of it. His leader didn't speak without reason.
Yeosang slowly lowered his arm and closed his eyes. "I didn't," he said flatly. "She drugged me."
Hongjoong stepped into the room with a soundless sort of grace only a leader of his calibre could manage. He didn't speak, just waited.
"I… miscalculated," Yeosang muttered after a beat. "Thought I had her read. She came in crying. Maskless. Threw me off."
Excuses. "She got to you."
"I was off-guard," Yeosang snapped, more to himself than the Captain. "But that's on me. I was… careless."
Another pause.
Hongjoong exhaled through his nose. "You know damn well that's not what I asked, Yeo."
Yeosang's jaw ticked as he turned his head away from the Captain's gaze. His voice, when he finally spoke, was quieter. "Because… it didn't feel like an act. Not all of it. The fear was real. Her desperation. The way she looked at me—she meant it. At least some of it."
Silence stretched again. But this time, it was different. He could feel the gang leader thinking, and that was always more dangerous than when he spoke.
"So," the Captain said at last, eyes narrowing, "you believe the enemy has a soft spot."
"I think," Yeosang said carefully, "she's being used. And if that's true, then we're not just dealing with a skilled thief. We're dealing with someone who doesn't know how to get out."
Hongjoong studied him for a long moment before speaking again. "Then maybe," he said, voice heavy with layered meaning, "you shouldn't wait for her to come back next time." Then he turned on his heel and left without another word.
And Yeosang, still staring at that stupid ceiling, felt the first flicker of something even more dangerous than anger.
Resolve.
And so he returned to work.
For the first time in what felt like forever, the Phantom had been the first to arrive. No flurry of footsteps behind him. No shadow flitting past his peripheral vision. No scent of sandalwood teasing the edges of his senses.
Just silence. And the prize.
The relic gleamed under the low light of the Captain's office, sitting in the velvet-lined case like a trophy. One he had secured. Alone.
He set it on Hongjoong's desk without a word. The gang leader looked up, offering a pleased nod. "Efficient," he said simply. "Exactly the kind of momentum we need."
Yeosang inclined his head, murmured a clipped "Yes, hyung," and turned to leave before the moment could stretch too long.
That was the first time. The first mission after the auction where you didn't show. No white rose tucked into the vault door. No playful taunt written in sweeping script with a smudge of lipstick in a different shade this time. No chase.
He'd told himself it was a fluke. Maybe you were regrouping. Maybe your boss had assigned you elsewhere. Maybe you were waiting.
So he pushed forward.
One heist after another. More treasures acquired, more enemies bested, more praise from the Captain. The Black Pirates were thriving. Their inventory glittered with artefacts, gold, secrets—everything they had set out to gather when he had first pitched this operation to Hongjoong. And he delivered, exactly as promised.
He should've felt unstoppable.
He should've felt proud.
Instead, every time he slipped into the shadows to begin another mission, he found his senses sharpened not for danger—but for you. Always listening for that sigh you made when you barely missed a step. Always scanning for the glint of your daggers. Always waiting.
But there was nothing.
Not a whisper.
Not a trace.
The world felt duller without you in it.
By the fifth job, he had grown used to it.
By the seventh, it was starting to ache.
He sat alone one night in the corner of the library, the spoils of his most recent success catalogued and locked up. A quiet buzz of celebration echoed faintly in the distance—some of the younger crew tossing cards, drinks clinking. Wooyoung had tried to drag him into the festivities earlier, flashing his usual grin.
But Yeosang hadn't moved.
He stared down at the pages of a book he wasn't reading, jaw tight, fingers drumming against the worn table surface.
What was the point of winning if no one was keeping score?
No one was matching him move for move.
No one was slipping through his fingers with a smile and a wink and that damn rose tucked behind their ear.
He was winning.
And it never felt more like losing.
But more than anything, he wondered about the possibility that your words had been true. That you hadn't lied. That you might not have lived to see another sunrise if you failed that mission.
Could that be why you'd vanished?
Could you be… gone?
The thought twisted in his chest like a blade, but just as quickly, he scoffed at himself. Why should this bother him? He wasn't like the others—emotional, sentimental, easily swayed. He was the Phantom. Sharp. Precise. Unshakable.
This wasn't grief.
This was just boredom.
He was restless because the game was over. The thrill was gone. The challenge had evaporated.
Yes, that was it.
He told himself this lie over and over again until it sounded like truth. To fill the void, he aimed higher—proposing increasingly impossible heists, each more dangerous than the last. A fortress in the sky. A vault beneath the sea. He didn't care. He needed something to set his blood on fire again.
The brothers protested, of course. Mingi was the loudest, San the most sceptical. Even Wooyoung had narrowed his eyes and asked, "You trying to die or something, Yeo?"
But in the end, they'd relented—like they always did—silently pledging their support with muttered curses and weary loyalty.
And now, he stood at the edge of his latest mission—breaking into the royal vault itself. The jewel of an empire. A feat even the Black Pirates once deemed untouchable.
Until now.
He moved through the layered security with elegance and efficiency, each locked chamber, each coded seal falling like dominoes before him. It was working. This was the high he'd been chasing.
Until it wasn't.
Because as he passed through the final set of laser grids, his senses locked onto something else—something far more jarring than the alarms he'd bypassed.
A scent.
Soft, familiar. Sandalwood.
His heart missed a step. His hands froze mid-motion. It couldn't be. He whipped his head toward the far end of the hall, where moonlight poured through the stained glass and bathed the room in pale colour. And there—half-shadowed, half-bathed in light—was a silhouette.
You.
Not a dream. Not a ghost.
Just you.
Everything roared back at once—heat, thrill, fury, relief. The mission? Forgotten. The prize? Irrelevant.
Because suddenly, all meaning returned.
You shot him a smirk, voice laced with that familiar teasing edge. "Right on time, Phantom. Looks like you're finally learning. But don't get too comfortable—this win won't be yours."
He couldn't stop the grin that tugged at his lips, adrenaline already coursing through his veins. "Oh, is that so? We'll see about that, princess."
And just like that, the game resumed.
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Yeosang was back. Or so he told himself.
Back to scaling impossible heights, slipping through security like smoke, cracking codes with that old gleam in his eyes. The thrill had returned—so had the pace. So had the challenge.
And so had you.
He'd catch fleeting glimpses of you during these encounters: the sly curl of your lips, the taunting glint in your eyes, the whispered "better luck next time" as you disappeared through skylights or back alleys. It was all there—the chase, the tension, the rush.
Almost.
The first time he saw you again, there'd been something off. A half-second delay in your movement, like your body lagged just behind your usual rhythm. You'd wrestled the relic from its pedestal with your usual finesse, but the Phantom, sharp-eyed as ever—noticed your hand trembling as you clutched it. And then the red. A faint stain blooming under your jacket, spreading slowly like a secret unravelling.
He'd let you have the win that night.
The second time, mid-heist, as you vaulted over the maze of laser lines, your shirt rode up ever so slightly—and he spotted it. The shadow of a bruise, dark and blooming against your ribs. His steps faltered. Just a little.
You still beat him, of course. Smug as ever with a wink over your shoulder. But that bruise stayed in his mind longer than your words did.
Then came the third. He noticed the limp before you even broke into a run. Barely there, expertly masked—but not from him. You moved like someone holding their breath through pain. Gritting through every step. The sweat clinging to your brow had nothing to do with exertion. That night, he didn't even try to beat you. Just followed.
He never said anything. Never called it out.
But it lingered.
A whisper in the back of his mind louder than any of your teasing words: Something's wrong. And no matter how hard he tried to push it aside, it only grew louder with every heist.
"Well?"
The word cut through the air like a blade.
You dropped to one knee, arms outstretched as you presented the prize, its polished surface glinting under the cold light of your boss' quarters. "It was a success, sir."
A pause. Then a scoff, sharp and bitter. You didn't dare lift your eyes, but you felt the heat of his glare like fire against your skin.
"You think this is the success?"
Your breath caught.
"You know your real purpose out there."
Your head bowed further, hands curling tight around the prize in offering, as though your grip on it could deflect his disappointment. Of course, you knew. You'd never forgotten. Kang Yeosang was the mission. Not the jewels. Not the ancient scrolls or stolen artefacts. Him.
The Phantom.
The untouchable.
The monk among wolves.
No vices. No weaknesses. No distractions.
Not until you.
And that had been the point.
Infiltrate his walls. Crack the shell. Expose the heart—if it even existed—and bring it back to your boss in a box made of proof and vulnerability. That was the job. Always had been.
You'd told yourself that every step of the way. When you studied his patterns. When you timed your entrances. When you perfected that smirk that you knew irritated and intrigued him. At first, he was nothing more than a blueprint to analyse, a challenge to conquer.
But after that night...
The memory still stung like a healing wound.
You had betrayed him. Lied to his face. Drugged him, left him behind, and still, he let you go.
He'd stood between you and the gun you'd earned with your own treachery, bloodied and half-conscious, and still he told his brothers to let you go. Something shifted in you that night. You didn't want it to. You didn't ask for it. But the fracture had begun, and no matter how hard you tried to tape it over with pride and purpose, it wouldn't stop bleeding.
Still, what choice did you have?
You forced the corners of your lips to lift. Not a real smile—just a flicker of one. The kind you'd learned to wear like armour.
"It's looking good, sir," you said evenly, even as something tightened in your chest. "The Phantom seems to be letting me win." Letting. The word tasted bitter on your tongue. And worse, you knew there was truth in it.
A silence followed. Thick. Measured. Then the slow curl of a smile tugged at your boss' lips. Cold. Knowing.
"Good," he murmured. A flick of his fingers dismissed you, but his voice chased after your retreating steps. "Looks like the walls around his heart aren't so impenetrable after all. A man is still a man. Keep doing what you're doing."
You rose to your feet carefully, each movement deliberate—like your bones remembered the Time Out Room too well to tremble.
You turned, walked out, head held high, but something inside you still faltered. Because he wasn't wrong. Yeosang was changing. He hesitated more when you crossed paths. His eyes lingered longer. His aim wasn't always as sharp. Sometimes... he let you go. Just like that.
Your mission was working.
So why didn't it feel like winning?
You told yourself it didn't matter. That you'd keep going until your boss was satisfied. Until your bruises faded. Until Yeosang stopped letting you win.
Until you figured out why, despite everything, it was starting to feel like you were the one being dismantled.
Piece by piece.
You stepped into the Time Out Room with steady feet, but your insides twisted with every step. It was cold—always cold—and smelled faintly of iron and old pain. You hated that you were starting to recognise the scent. Your fists clenched and unclenched at your sides.
The boss said until further notice.
And somehow, you knew that wouldn't be anytime soon. Because this time… you weren't sure you hated what you were doing to him as much as you hated what all of this was doing to you.
The men were already waiting—your punishers, your reminders, your keepers. Their expressions unreadable. Efficient. Cruel.
They didn't speak as they began. They didn't need to. Each hit was practised. Measured. Designed to bruise, not break. Not too much. Just enough to scar.
You shut your eyes and endured.
As always.
You'd told yourself this pain was a path. That suffering was the way forward. That it would be worth it when the Phantom fell and your boss finally looked at you with pride instead of passing disinterest.
Remember who you are, you told yourself.
It's just another target, you said again and again.
This is loyalty, you whispered inside, trying to swallow down the bitter taste rising in your throat.
When it ended, you got up slowly. Bloodied lip. Ringing ears. Shoulders heavy with bruises, but not broken.
Never broken.
You walked out of the room with your chin raised and your mind reset. You would take him down. Until the next heist. Until the next smirk. Until the next time you came face to face with Yeosang—and forgot what you were fighting for all over again.
It was becoming an endless cycle.
And yet, you had no other choice… but to keep going.
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The moon loomed high above the old city museum, its pale glow slicing through the mist that curled around the gothic arches and stone gargoyles perched along the roofline. Inside, the halls were dimly lit by flickering sconces, and the only sounds were the echo of dripping pipes and the low hum of the ancient heating system groaning to life.
The target: an empress' gemstone—said to have commanded kings and bent empires to her will. Kept in a velvet-lined glass case, guarded by nothing more than a heavy lock, a sleepy security guard, and a few well-placed pressure plates along the marble floor. No lasers. No biometric sensors. Just the kind of old-school security you could feel under your fingertips.
You were already inside, the musty scent of old books and waxed floors grounding you as you slipped through the main hallway in silence.
Every movement ached.
Your ribs burned with each breath, your thigh pulled tight with every step, and your wrist throbbed from the last time-out session. But your expression stayed steady as ever. This wasn't your first job under pressure. And it wouldn't be your last.
At least, that's what you told yourself.
Then you felt it—the air shifted. A breath behind you. A shadow where there should've been none. Then, his voice, smooth and low like the jazz playing from the gramophone downstairs. "Was starting to think you forgot our little tradition."
You didn't turn right away, just let a smirk curl the corner of your mouth as you adjusted your gloves. "Ah, Phantom," you said like a greeting, your voice light and sharp, "late as ever."
Yeosang stepped into the amber light spilling from the stained-glass windows, trench coat brushing his legs, black gloves tucked into his belt. A flat cap cast half his face in shadow, but his eyes—his eyes were sharp. Too sharp.
He looked you over like a man inspecting a crime scene. "You're slower tonight."
You raised a brow, forcing yourself not to favour your left leg. "You always this observant, or just when I'm about to win?"
"I'm saying…" he stepped closer, voice dipping to something quieter. "You're hurt."
You hated the way those words dug under your skin. So you did what you always did. You offered him a slow, sly grin, brushed invisible dust from your coat, and said with a glint in your eye, "Try and stop me then."
And then you ran.
Your boots thudded softly on the carpeted floor as you ducked behind statues, slid down bannisters, and threw open the door to the main exhibit.
Behind you, the chase echoed like a dance—his steps steady, unrelenting. But this time, it wasn't just about the gemstone anymore. For him… it was about uncovering what you were hiding beneath that smile.
And for you… it was about pretending you could still outrun everything breaking inside.
Fuck me, it hurts...
The alley behind the museum reeked of soot and old rain. Smoke curled from nearby chimneys, mingling with the metallic tang of blood already drying against your ribs. Your boots hit the cobblestone in uneven rhythm, coat sticking to your skin as you moved through the fog. The velvet pouch beneath your coat was secure.
The cost of getting it? Still bleeding.
Not much. Just a reopened cut along your ribs, soaked through the linen bandage that did a piss-poor job of holding you together. But you didn't stop. Not yet. The mission came first. It always did.
But your steps slowed when you heard him—steady, deliberate. "Thought you were faster than that." Yeosang's voice cut through the fog like a knife, smooth and low, tinged with quiet frustration. He emerged from the shadows.
You didn't bother to turn fully. "Following me again, Phantom? Didn't think you liked easy wins."
"You're not making this easy," he muttered. "Not when you look like you've barely made it out alive."
You let out a soft laugh, hollow and dry. "You should see the other guy."
He didn't smile. "I'm serious."
You turned just enough for him to see the shadows beneath your eyes, the bruising that makeup couldn't quite hide. "Don't look at me like that," you said, tone sharpening. "You wouldn't understand anyway."
He took a step closer. "Try me."
You smiled then—but bitterly. "Greatness doesn't come without pain. If I want to be acknowledged… truly acknowledged… then I have to earn it. That's what you don't get. Some of us don't get handed power. Some of us bleed for it."
His jaw tensed. "Is that what you call this? Earning it?"
You looked away.
"You think I've never bled for anything?" he asked, voice quiet but edged. "You think I was born into this with a silver dagger in hand?" He scoffed to himself, shaking his head. "I've seen what that kind of hunger turns people into. That's why I made sure I'd never be like that."
You frowned, caught off guard by the emotion simmering beneath his words. And then the silence came—heavy and charged, the kind that clung to the bones.
His gaze met yours, deep and unreadable. The longer he looked at you, the harder it became to remember what you were even doing here. What side you were meant to be on.
Your breath caught. And that's when you knew you had to go. You shoved him—not hard, but enough to startle—and turned on your heel. "Just stay out of my way, Phantom." Your voice cracked just a little. Enough for him to hear it.
And then you were gone, coat whipping behind you as your silhouette vanished into the fog and firelight, leaving him standing alone in the alley with nothing but the echo of your retreat and the bitter taste of something he wasn't ready to name.
The door to his room creaked open, but Yeosang didn't bother with the light. He moved on autopilot—coat slung over the back of a chair, gloves discarded carelessly onto the floor—before heading straight into the bathroom.
The cold tap groaned as he twisted it on, water splashing into the basin. He stared at his reflection, jaw tight, blood smudging his cheek where you'd managed to get a lucky cut in.
Another failure.
Another missed shot.
And yet, as Hongjoong's voice echoed in the back of his mind from earlier—sharp and unimpressed, "So she slipped through again? You're slipping, Yeo."—he hadn't flinched. He hadn't flinched, hadn't defended himself, hadn't cared.
At least… not about the mission.
His knuckles whitened as he gripped the edge of the sink. His eyes, sharp and weary, met his own reflection. He hated this. He hated you. He hated that he didn't.
Once—years ago—he would have understood your desperation.
Born into a house that barely qualified as one, he had spent his earliest years chasing love the way children chase kites—hopelessly, with bleeding hands and skinned knees. His father, a failed revolutionary turned drunk, had instilled in him nothing but bruises and bitterness. His mother—once a brilliant violinist—had withered under that roof like a flower trapped in frost, taking her own life when Yeosang was twelve. And him? He was nothing more than a disappointment in a boy's skin.
He remembered the way he used to sit outside his parents' locked bedroom door, whispering apologies he didn't even understand for things he didn't do, hoping they'd let him in. Hoping they'd say something. Anything.
They never did.
And so he stopped hoping. Stopped asking. Stopped enduring pointless beatings. And somewhere along the way, he'd decided that love was for fools. Love was for the naive. Love was a leash waiting to be yanked. All it ever did was hurt.
The streets were cruel, but at least they were honest. It became his teacher, and the underground, his home. He fought, stole, bled his way through alley fights and black market rings until he was noticed by the right person—the Captain. Hongjoong hadn't promised love. Only purpose. And that was all he needed. That was all he wanted—structure, loyalty, silence where affection used to be.
And it worked.
It worked for years.
Until now. Until you.
He slammed the faucet shut, water dripping off his chin. His chest heaved slightly, though he wasn't sure if from rage or regret. Probably both. "You burned that version of yourself," he muttered, staring into the mirror with cold determination. "You buried that boy."
But why, then, did he see the boy staring back at him now?
Why did it feel like he was slipping?
You were never meant to matter. You were a mark. A rival. A name on the board. And yet—your words wouldn't leave him.
"Some of us bleed for it."
You bled, alright. He'd seen the bruises. The limp. The hidden agony you covered with smiles. And still, you pushed forward.
Just like he once did.
And now, he couldn't stop seeing himself in you. That terrified boy begging to be seen.
He grabbed the towel and scrubbed his face hard. He hated that he was starting to care. Because caring was the first step to needing. And needing had once broken him.
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You slammed the door shut behind you with a force that rattled the frame, disregarding the relentless pain pulsating throughout your body. The prize was in your bag. Mission complete.
And you hated every second of it.
You should've been proud. You should've been thrilled. The Phantom had let you go again tonight. No chase. No clever trap waiting to outwit you at the last second. Just that infuriatingly concerned gaze of his, calm and knowing as he watched you go.
And you'd walked away. You walked.
As if you hadn't spent months training to best him. As if you hadn't spent your whole life preparing for this mission. As if you hadn't begged to be the one assigned to him.
You dropped the satchel onto your desk with a thud, the stolen artefact clinking faintly inside, and stared down at it with clenched fists. You hated that your reflection in the glass surface looked so hollow.
What the hell was wrong with you?
This was success. This was what you wanted. This was what you were meant to want.
And yet all you could feel was rage. Rage at the way he looked at you. Rage at the way he let you go again. Rage at yourself—for feeling this way in the first place.
You sat down heavily, elbows on your knees, head in your hands. A bitter laugh bubbled up your throat before you could stop it. "Why?" you hissed into the silence. "Why are you doing this?"
You didn't deserve kindness. Not from him. Not after everything you'd done. The lies. The manipulation. The little games. The way you wormed your way into his blind spots.
And still… he kept letting you go.
Surely he had already figured out that you were up to no good. He was the Phantom of the Black Pirates after all. He saw through people like glass. So why was he playing along?
The more you tried to rationalise it, the more it all slipped through your fingers like smoke.
Was it pity?
You flinched.
Was it some twisted sense of mercy?
Or was he simply tired of fighting?
That one made your stomach twist the worst.
He had been your challenge. Your perfect, untouchable opponent. He made you feel alive. Made your mission feel like it meant something. And now he was... softening.
For you.
For you, of all people.
And it made you feel sick.
Because you weren't worth it. You weren't worth the warmth in his eyes, the way he seemed to see through your mask and still… hesitate.
And the worst part? You knew exactly why this anger clawed at your chest, why it left you trembling and breathless every time you thought of him. You were afraid. Afraid you didn't want to destroy him anymore. Afraid that somewhere along the way… you'd started to care.
But you couldn't let that be true.
So you locked your jaw, wiped the tears you hadn't realised had fallen, and stood. You still had a job to do. You were not going to fall for the enemy. Not when you'd bled and clawed your way here. Not when you'd already been broken for this mission. Not when this was all you had left.
You'd end this. You had to.
Before he saw too much. Before you forgot how to walk away. Before this mission became something else entirely.
You reminded yourself, with clenched teeth and a heart you swore was steel, that Kang Yeosang was your target. Nothing more. You were not here to feel, to hesitate, to hope.
The next heist would be the start of your distance. The cold line drawn in silk and deception.
The ballroom was bathed in gold and smoke, jazz humming low beneath the soft clinking of champagne flutes and the hollow laughter of men in suits too expensive for their character. Tonight's prize—a priceless family heirloom belonging to the reclusive conglomerate boss hosting the soirée—rested somewhere within the estate, heavily guarded and rumoured to be worth enough to fund a small country. But you moved through it all like silk—graceful, elegant, untouchable. No one questioned your presence. Not in that platinum white dress, not with that disarming smile, and certainly not with the invitation forged with such precision, even the host himself might be fooled.
The white rose nestled behind your ear was an afterthought. Or so you told yourself. It wasn't until your path curved toward the grand staircase that your eyes locked with his.
Yeosang stood at the far end of the room, flanked by a few of the richer patrons he'd long since outgrown. In a tailored black three-piece with a silk cravat tied at the throat, he looked every bit the elite he was pretending not to be. His eyes found you with frightening ease—always had—and the glint in them told you he'd recognised you instantly, despite the disguise.
You didn't falter.
Not a flicker. Not this time.
With a turn of your head and a slight arch of your brow, you simply walked on. Past him. Past the ache. Past the game you didn't want to play anymore. Not a smirk. Not a wink. Not even the satisfaction of a witty jab.
He could barely believe it.
For a moment, he just stood there. Like a statue carved of disbelief. He turned slowly, watching as your white silhouette glided through the crowd like smoke he couldn't catch.
Only the soft familiar trail of sandalwood hung in the air where you'd stood, and that single white rose glinting in your hair like some cruel farewell. He hated how it twisted something deep in his chest.
You weren't supposed to haunt him like this. But damn it… you did. His jaw clenched. No teasing tonight. No tug-of-war. Just ice where fire used to be. It unsettled him more than it should have.
He didn't hesitate. Without so much as a word, he veered off from his intended path and slipped down one of the side corridors, silent as a ghost. He knew where the target was kept—the master suite above the third landing, past the reinforced gallery wing. You'd be there. Of course you would. You always were.
And yet tonight, everything felt... off.
He took the back stairwell, avoiding the guards with practised ease. Every step he took, the memory of your expressionless face looped in his mind. No mask of flirtation. No sly amusement. No you.
Just a vision in white with no warmth in your eyes.
What are you doing to me...
By the time he reached the gallery doors, he no longer cared about the heirloom. He needed to see you. To look you in the eye and ask—what the hell is happening to us?
And somewhere deeper still, a quieter question clawed at him.
Are you trying to protect me... or yourself?
The gallery was quiet, tucked deep within the mansion, far away from the function. Hidden behind walls of velvet and gold, it was a vault in all but name—lined with ancestral paintings, ivory-framed mirrors, and ornate vases under spotlights. And in the centre of the room, poised atop an intricate pedestal encased in glass, sat the prize of the night: a priceless family heirloom. Known to have been handed down for generations, it shimmered with legacy and wealth, too revered to be replicated.
You slipped past the last set of red beams like liquid shadow, breath even, body graceful, each movement practised to perfection. You'd done this a hundred times before. But this time, something in your chest was heavier.
Then came the sound you were waiting for—footsteps behind you, soft but unmistakable. You didn't turn, didn't offer him your usual smirk or tease. Only cast a cold glance his way before continuing, moving with efficiency, not flair.
Yeosang stopped at the threshold, his breath catching slightly—not from exertion, but something more hollow. You looked radiant, like a ghost from some other world, white silk catching the dim lights just enough to remind him why he hated crossing paths with you. Because you made it hard to stay numb.
No teasing remark. No smirk. No challenge.
Only silence.
And the sandalwood scent clinging to the air between you. It shook something loose in him. Frowning, he took the shortcut he knew by heart, skipping the usual dance. He had no patience for games tonight. He reached you just as your fingers curled around the heirloom, lifting it with ease. You didn't flinch. Didn't look up. Just held it out toward him, still not meeting his eyes.
"Here for this, Phantom?" you asked, voice cool.
"I guess I am, princess," he said as he stepped forward—but didn't take the prize.
You arched a brow. "Well? It's right here. Aren't you going to take it? You know you don't have to go easy on me."
He scoffed, folding his arms, though tension was already gathering in his shoulders. "You know damn well I never have to."
"Then why aren't you completing your mission yet?" you asked, voice sharp, accusatory. "Have you forgotten what you're here for? What you began this series of heists for? What would your leader say about this? Is he okay with you letting him down again and again?"
Yeosang blinked, thrown by the sudden venom in your tone. His lips parted as if to say something, but nothing came out. He just stared at you, confused and bothered.
You shoved the heirloom into his chest again, harder this time. "You've grown so boring, Phantom. You used to be so challenging because of your spirit. But now? You've gone soft. It's pathetic."
His brows furrowed, but he didn't move away. He let your hand stay pressed against him, even when it lingered just a second too long. Even when your fingers trembled.
You hated that your throat threatened to tighten, but your voice didn't waver. "Don't forget who you are. Don't overthink it. This is all just a game."
But he didn't speak. He only looked at you—really looked at you—and the silence between you thickened, like fog before a storm.
You tore your hand away with a shaky exhale, trying to retreat into words that hurt less than the truth. "Go back to how you were. Go back to being the man who didn't care. The one who never hesitated. The one who only focused on the prize. He was stronger. Better. Safer."
"For who?" he asked quietly, breaking his silence.
You stilled. The answer sat on your tongue, heavy and aching. For me. But you swallowed it down, letting a bitter, hollow laugh escape as you looked away. "Doesn't matter."
"Why are you doing this?" he asked, stepping closer. His voice had dropped lower, more intimate now. You could feel the heat of his body just inches away, the air between you tightening like a wire. "You're pushing me away like it's going to fix something."
You met his gaze again, and this time, there was no shield—only rawness. "Because it's the only way you'll live."
That startled him. He leaned in instinctively, one hand brushing your arm in a gentle touch you almost flinched away from. Almost. But you turned the softness into venom again, a reflex you'd perfected. "You're just a job, Phantom. I'm only here to win. So stop making things so damn hard."
He moved in closer, slowly, deliberately, until your back was nearly touching the wall behind you. His hand ghosted over your waist before settling there, anchoring you in place, not forceful, but steady. "I don't believe you," he said, voice almost a whisper.
"You don't have to," you whispered back.
His forehead grazed yours as you both breathed the same air, a heartbeat apart, and for a second, you let yourself stay in that moment. Let his touch hold you. Let the war fade.
But then you pulled away—forceful, panicked. "You need to forget whatever this is," you said, backing up. "I don't want your pity or concern. You think you're the only one who's fought through blood and pain to get where you are? You don't know what it's like to claw your way to a place that might finally mean something."
"I do," he said. "I've been there."
"No," you snapped, eyes gleaming now. "You are loved. Respected. You have your brothers. You don't know what it's like to be beaten into shape and told you're nothing until you prove your worth with your own blood."
He stepped forward again, brushing his fingers lightly along your jaw, forcing you to look at him. "And what, so you think letting them keep breaking you makes you strong?"
You flinched at the softness in his voice. It was almost worse than anger. You looked away, blinking hard. "One must endure if they want greatness. It's all worth it in the end."
"Bullshit."
You blinked. That wasn't what you expected.
"Strength isn't letting them destroy you and calling it progress," Yeosang said, his voice louder now, eyes burning. "I used to think like you. Thought that if I earned enough, bled enough, maybe my parents would finally look at me like I mattered. But they never did. I chased that for years, and I lost myself in the process. That's why I stopped. That's why I chose this gang. Because here, no one fakes love. No one hands it out as a reward."
You froze, his hand still warm against your cheek. The silence stretched between you. You didn't want to care. Didn't want to need him. But the way he looked at you—
You gulped, panic rising. You were forgetting your purpose again.
So you did the only thing you could think of. You shoved him back, not hard enough to hurt, but enough to break the moment. "I don't want to play this game anymore," you said, voice tight. "Let's stop pretending. Just take the prize, Phantom. Let's go back to being enemies. It was simpler that way."
Yeosang didn't chase you.
Not because he didn't want to—but because, for the first time, he knew this game had never been a game at all.
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The old Graymoor Archives loomed in the mist like a relic of its own—stone walls darkened by soot and decades of secrets, its iron gates twisted with vines and rust. Once a fortress, later a wartime prison, now a confidential storage site reserved for relics that governments wanted buried. There were no visitor entries. No maps. No traces.
But tonight, that changed.
Your target: the Blade of the First Flame, a royal heirloom said to have ignited a revolution. A blade soaked in legend and power—priceless, protected, practically unreachable.
Except, you had a plan.
Every move you'd made over the past months had been leading here—each forged document, each hand shaken, each identity worn like a mask. You'd sold lies as easily as you breathed. Every blueprint stolen and studied until your mind ran through corridors in your sleep. You knew this place better than its architects.
And this prize—this was the one.
The one that would rewrite your future.
You were certain: no successful mission could ever outshine this. Not even the one involving the Phantom.
If this went right—if you walked out of this fortress with the Blade in hand—it would be the pinnacle. It would prove your worth once and for all. It would make your boss untouchable, and you, finally, irreplaceable. The years of scars and sacrifice would have meaning. You would rise.
No more time-outs. No more blood in the name of loyalty. No more whispers behind closed doors about whether you could deliver.
This was it.
It had to be.
Meanwhile, in the shadows just outside the perimeter, Yeosang waited. His eyes were fixed not on the vault, not on the prize—but on the one person he couldn't stop thinking about. You.
He'd seen enough. The way your boss operated, the way you were always sent on missions no one else would survive—there was a pattern. One final glorious job. One last push.
Then disposal.
He clenched his jaw, a sick feeling brewing in his gut. You thought this heist would make you indispensable, finally free from being used and punished. But Yeosang suspected the opposite. That your boss had saved this prize—the impossible one—for last. A way to wring every last ounce of brilliance from you before cutting you loose.
Before making sure you never rose high enough to threaten him.
Yeosang didn't know when exactly his mission had shifted. When watching you had become protecting you. But tonight, if you walked into that vault thinking the Blade was your ticket to freedom—he had to make sure you walked out again. Alive. Intact.
Whether or not you ever forgave him for it.
Almost... there.
You were seconds away.
Each breath came sharp, ragged, as crimson bloomed from a fresh gash slicing across your side. Blood trickled down your leg from where one of the retractable spikes had scraped your thigh—fast, vicious, and entirely uncharted in the blueprints you'd studied for weeks. This wasn't supposed to happen.
None of it was.
The Blade of the First Flame glinted ahead, sitting cold and proud on its pedestal, guarded by a vault far more lethal than you'd been led to believe. Pressure sensors, hidden blades, pulse-reactive wires... and now, seemingly sentient traps that activated with no clear trigger.
Every step forward had cost you something.
A sliver of flesh.
A jolt of pain.
A piece of doubt.
You clutched your side, barely holding yourself together, gritting your teeth as another pressure plate hissed beneath your feet. Nothing happened. For now. Still, your vision blurred.
Shit.
You weren't even sure if you'd make it out of this one.
And then—
"Don't touch it." His voice. Kang Yeosang.
You froze. Not from surprise—somehow, you expected him. Like a shadow you couldn't shake. Like a memory refusing to fade. But not now. Not when your body felt seconds from collapsing and you were already questioning if you'd make it out alive.
You didn't turn.
You didn't want him to see you like this—weak, trembling, bleeding. "How poetic," you rasped. "Arriving just in time. Again."
He stepped further into the vault, his eyes sweeping over you like a storm, his expression crumbling as he caught the bloodstains, the way you favoured one leg. "What the hell happened to you?"
You forced a smirk through the pain. "Turns out the rumours were true. It is impossible."
"And yet here you are," he murmured. "Still trying."
"I'm close," you said, voice low, strained. "I just need a few more seconds."
"No. You need to stop."
You finally turned.
And Yeosang's expression twisted—raw concern bleeding through the cracks of the Phantom's usually unreadable mask. "I know why you're here," he said. "I know what your boss promised you."
"Then get out of the way and let me earn it," you hissed.
"You think this blade is your key to freedom?" His voice rose with disbelief. "You think bleeding out in a vault is how you prove your worth?"
"If that's what it takes," you shot back. "I'm not like you, Phantom. I have to endure. If I want power. If I want recognition."
"You call this recognition?" he snapped, taking a step forward. "You're just a pawn to them. A piece. And when they've used up your brilliance, they'll leave you bleeding in some other vault. That's not power—it's a death sentence."
Your eyes locked on his, fury clashing with something softer in his gaze. "I endured worse than this to get where I am," you said bitterly. "So don't lecture me about survival."
His tone lowered, sorrowful. "I chased love like that, too once. My parents, the people I thought were family. I bent until I broke, all just to be seen. It left me empty."
He stared at you—no mask, no shield.
Just a man who didn't want you to die.
"I swore I'd never let anyone break me again," he added, softer now. "Don't let them do it to you."
You looked away, unable to hold his gaze anymore. Your arm was shaking now, and the edges of your vision were darkening. But still, you reached for the pedestal.
Forget him. I'm already this close.
One more step, maybe two—if your body could still obey you. The pedestal stood just ahead, glowing faintly beneath the deadly web of light sensors and unpredictable, ever-shifting traps. The Blade shimmered in its resting place like it was laughing at your pain, at your desperation. Your vision swam. Your knees buckled.
"No! Don't move!" Yeosang's voice ripped through the air like a shot.
You didn't need to look to know he was charging in. "What are you—" you started, but the words never finished. A new trap sprang from the floor—razor-thin wires whipping out like vipers, slicing toward you so fast that even blinking felt too slow. But you never felt the blow.
Because he reached you in time.
You gasped as his arms wrapped around you and you were yanked roughly into his chest—his body turning, shielding you as the wires slashed through the air. You heard the sound first.
Then the warmth. Then the blood.
"No," you whispered in disbelief.
He grunted, holding you tighter despite the searing pain you felt in the tremble of his arms. Time slowed. It was happening again. He was holding you. Protecting you. But this time, it wasn't a trick, not a ploy from either of you. It was real.
Your thoughts blurred back to that first night—the first true encounter between predator and prey—when you'd cried fake tears, trembled like a lost thing, and he'd fallen for it. He had let you. Had held you. But this… this was different.
No more deception. No masks. Just your body trembling for real in his arms, and his blood dripping down for you. "Let me go," you choked out weakly, trying to push at his chest with your failing strength. "Yeosang, let me go before you get yourself killed."
He didn't budge, only smiling at the sound of you saying his name for the very first time. Perhaps he finally understood how his brothers had felt. Seems he was just another lovesick fool like them after all. His hand only gripped the back of your head, pulling you tighter against him. "Not this time," he muttered, jaw clenched. "I'm not letting you fall alone again."
Your vision blurred for another reason now.
Tears, hot and ashamed, slipped past your lashes before you could stop them. No one had ever protected you like this. Ever. Not your comrades. Not your handlers. Not even the man you called "boss"—the man you once so desperately wanted to call Father. He only ever measured your worth by your pain. Your failure was discipline. Your success was silence. His affection? A ghost you chased your whole life, too afraid to admit it never truly existed.
And yet… you'd still bled for him. Still called every scar a badge of loyalty. Still told yourself that one day, he'd look at you and say, you've done well.
But he never did. He wouldn't.
You knew it now.
But you'd been too afraid to let go—because what else was there to live for?
Until Yeosang.
Until now.
"Why… why would you do this?" you whispered into his shoulder.
His voice was low. Shaky. Honest. "Because someone should have done it for you a long time ago."
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You had never run from a mission before.
Not once.
But here you were—bleeding, gasping, half-held upright by the man you were meant to destroy—racing against the fading strength in your limbs and the echo of alarms to escape the vault.
You didn't look back.
The Blade stayed behind, sealed in a cage of death traps and your shame. You'd given up the prize. And still, you didn't care. You'd made it out. With Yeosang. But you didn't make it far.
The doors blew open to the night.
And he was there.
Your boss. Flanked by his monsters—the two right-hand men who'd known every weak spot on your body since you were a teenager. The ones who etched every punishment into your bones like scripture. You stopped dead.
The Phantom moved instinctively, slightly in front of you, protective even as he swayed on his feet.
"All those years I invested in raising you…" the man said, almost wistfully, shaking his head. "I should've known you'd betray me one day." His words were calm, but the rage behind them coiled like a whip. "Couldn't even secure the Blade," he went on. "And here you are—fraternising with the enemy."
Yeosang's jaw clenched. "She's more loyal than you ever deserved."
The boss finally acknowledged him, gaze cool and cutting. "So, the infamous Phantom of the Black Pirates does speak. Pity that voice wasn't enough to win battles lately. All those losses. A shame, really. I had hoped for more from you."
"And I had hoped a man who hides behind fists wouldn't be so predictable," Yeosang shot back coldly. "I guess we're both disappointed."
Your boss' expression darkened. "You got smitten, that much was clear. But I never expected her to fall for you," he added, glancing between the two of you with mock pity. "How… disappointing."
He sneered, stepping closer. Your stomach twisted. "I guess," he continued coolly, "that just makes your disposal easier." With a flick of his hand, the right-hand men moved. You stiffened—ready to fight despite your wounds—but instead of attacking you outright, your boss held up a hand to stop them. His lips curled.
"Or…" he said smoothly, "you could finish the job."
Silence. Cold and deafening.
He took another step, his voice nearly coaxing. "Deliver the Phantom. I'll forget tonight ever happened. Walk away now, and you're on your own. You know what that means."
Your blood ran cold. You were wounded. So was Yeosang. There was no guarantee you'd survive being on the run. And part of you—the part that had spent years surviving the only way you knew how—hesitated. That instinct to obey. To submit. To live.
Your eyes flickered uncertainly.
Yeosang saw it.
He didn't beg. He didn't move. He simply looked at you and said, softly but with unwavering strength, "You don't owe me anything. But you do owe yourself a life that isn't dictated by fear."
His voice broke something in you. Your lip trembled as your hand curled into the fabric of his shirt, his blood soaking into yours. He held you steady, gaze unflinching. You hated that this was happening. Hated that it had come to this.
And in that fragile, suspended moment… you didn't notice the right-hand men slowly reaching for their guns. Your boss watched, smirked. "Still so easy to manipulate," he murmured. "You think he's going to save you from what you are? From what I made you?"
Click.
Yeosang moved first.
But so did they.
One of the right-hand men lunged for his gun, the other drawing his blade—chaos erupted instantly. Before they could strike, a piercing alarm shrieked through the compound. A blinding floodlight cut across the courtyard, and then—
"FREEZE!"
A dozen voices. Boots thundered across the concrete. Flashbangs lit up the night. The Graymoor Archives' private security had finally arrived, their rifles raised and shouts echoing through the smoke. "Security breach in Vault Sector C! All units respond!"
Gunfire cracked the air.
"Move!" Yeosang barked, dragging you behind a concrete barricade as bullets whipped past your head. You barely registered the pain anymore—your limbs were numb, your ears ringing. It was chaos, pure and absolute, and you didn't know how you were still alive.
But he didn't let go. He hauled you forward as the two of you weaved through the mess of shadows, bodies, and fire, until the front gates loomed through the haze.
You didn't think you'd make it. But then, a sleek black car screeched to a halt in front of the gates. The back door flew open.
"Get in!" a familiar voice roared.
And just like that, you saw him. The Tempest. You could've cried. Not because you were happy. Not entirely.
You never thought you'd be glad to see San again—not after the last time. Not after he'd pressed a gun to your head, unwavering, steady, like you were nothing but a stain to be wiped clean. His fingers had been on the trigger, ready to end you then and there. The only reason you were still breathing was because his brother had stepped in at the last second. His voice. His mercy.
And yet, here he was now—saving your ass. Well, more like his brother's. But you were grateful nevertheless.
Yeosang didn't hesitate. He pulled you inside with him, and the moment the door slammed shut, the car shot forward like hell was behind it. Which, for once, wasn't an exaggeration.
You collapsed against him in the back seat, limbs trembling, blood sticking to the leather, your breath catching in your throat.
He said nothing.
You said nothing.
But his arm stayed around you, firm and steady. Like he wasn't letting go.
Not this time.
The next thing you knew, the gates creaked open to a world you never thought you'd enter alive. The Black Pirates' mansion loomed before you — all imposing stone and thick shadows and centuries of buried secrets. You'd heard whispers of it before, in hushed tones and half-truths. Enemy stronghold. Death trap. No return.
But now, bathed in moonlight and strangely silent, it didn't feel like a battlefield. It felt like a sanctuary.
You didn't remember crossing the threshold, only the weight of Yeosang's hand at your back as he helped guide your stumbling steps. Blood left a trail behind you — both his and yours — but no one said a word about it.
Inside, it was quieter than you'd expected. Dim, but warm. Not what you imagined from the most feared gang on the continent.
And then you were in the infirmary.
They didn't treat you like a prisoner. No chains. No accusations. Just a bed, warm light, and hands that worked carefully to patch up every inch of your broken body. You winced, silent, biting your tongue through every stitch.
The Phantom lay on the next bed, close enough to touch. He kept glancing at you. You didn't return the look. Not once. You stared at the ceiling. The corner. Your bloodstained hands. Anywhere but him.
He knew why. You could feel it in the way he fidgeted — unusual for him — with the edge of his blanket, lips parting more than once before he finally worked up the nerve to speak.
"Are you okay?" His voice was low. Careful. Like if he was too loud, you might shatter again.
You didn't answer.
He tried again. "You've barely said anything. Since we got in the car. Since the vault."
Still, nothing.
The words clawed at your throat, but you couldn't make yourself speak. You were scared that if you did, you'd break. You didn't know how to explain the storm in your chest — not to him, not to anyone.
He shifted, wincing as he sat up despite his injuries. "You're safe now," he said softly, his voice hoarse. "You don't have to shut me out."
You closed your eyes. Safe. You'd never really known what that word felt like before. And maybe that was the problem. Maybe that's why the silence felt safer than his kindness — because if you let yourself believe this was real, if you let yourself feel it… you weren't sure your heart could handle the break that would come after.
"I'm fine... I just—"
You didn't mean to speak. You really didn't.
But something about the way Yeosang looked at you—bruised, bandaged, bloodied, and still soft with concern—tugged too hard at the thread holding you together. "I didn't think I'd make it out." Your voice was barely above a whisper.
He froze. Then, slowly, he leaned forward, pain flickering through his expression as he shifted to rest his elbows on his knees, facing you. "I did," he said gently. "I never stopped thinking you would."
You let out a bitter laugh, quiet and shaky. "I almost took the deal."
The words hung heavy in the space between your beds. He didn't flinch. Just waited.
"I... considered handing you over. Letting them take you," you admitted, eyes focused on the fresh white bandage around your palm. "Not because I wanted to. But because I was scared. Because that's all I've ever known. Choosing survival. Even if it meant losing something that mattered."
Yeosang's voice was softer now. "But you didn't."
You swallowed. "No. I didn't. Because for once, I wasn't scared of dying. I was scared of being without you."
That made him go still. The air seemed to shift.
"I've lied to you so many times," you whispered. "Used you. Let myself believe that keeping you away was protecting you. But all I did was hurt you—and myself. You saw through me from the start, didn't you?"
"I saw you," he said, his voice breaking just a little. "Even when you were hiding."
You finally looked at him then. Not a glance. Not a flicker. A look. Full and aching. And he met it with something stronger—something steady, unwavering, real.
"I don't know how to be good," you murmured, the tears sliding down without your permission. "I only know how to survive. And it's always been alone. But… I don't want that anymore."
Yeosang reached out with his bandaged hand and rested it over yours—gentle, patient, asking nothing. "You don't have to be good," he said. "Just be here. With me."
And for the first time in your life, you let yourself want that.
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The Captain's office was far too quiet.
You sat rigid in the leather chair, back straight despite the pain in your ribs, feeling more like an intruder than a guest. Yeosang sat beside you, close but not overbearing, and when Hongjoong finally looked up from the papers on his desk, you braced yourself.
"Are you…" he began slowly, eyes piercing, "working for the White Serpents?"
You didn't hesitate. "No." You shook your head. "The Snow Syndicate. That's who I've been working for."
You caught the flicker in the leader's expression—the way his shoulders slumped, the corner of his mouth twitching in disappointment. But beside you, Yeosang let out a breath you didn't realise he'd been holding. He was relieved. You hadn't lied. Not about this, at least.
"But…" you continued, voice quieter now, "I believe they've struck some sort of deal with my boss. I've only heard about the White Serpents in passing. And then… next thing I knew, I was given this mission. To target the Phantom."
The room fell still.
"I thought I heard something… about Yeosang being the only one left."
Jongho, who had been leaning against the bookshelf behind Hongjoong, straightened slowly. His face hardened. "So this does have to do with the White Serpents then," he muttered, more to himself than anyone. "We've been tracking them down for years."
Wooyoung, who'd been silent for once, let out a low whistle. "Damn. That explains why they were always a step ahead. They weren't just using pawns. They were using Syndicates."
"I suppose," the Anchor continued, "it's a good thing we have you on our side now."
That's when the fear began to creep in. You bit your lip, lowering your gaze. What if they'd made a mistake letting you in? What if you had nothing useful to offer?
Then you felt it. Yeosang's hand brushing over yours. You looked at him. The way his thumb gently moved against your knuckles was barely perceptible, but his eyes—his eyes said everything. It's okay. You don't have to prove anything. Not to them. Not to me. Just tell your truth.
You inhaled shakily and looked up again. "I… I don't actually know anything about the White Serpents," you admitted, voice quiet with shame. "My boss never let me in on anything bigger than the mission I was assigned. He said I didn't need to know."
Silence blanketed the room. No judgement.
But the heaviness was real.
You forced yourself to meet Hongjoong's gaze again. "But I do know about the Snow Syndicate. At least them. Maybe we could go after them instead. Would that help?"
The Captain stared at you for a long moment, expression unreadable.
Then, just slightly, he nodded. "That would help a lot." And just like that, you'd gained something you'd never expected in enemy territory.
Approval.
The mansion's back terrace was empty.
The others had dispersed to follow up on the intel you'd shared, leaving you with Yeosang in the quiet dusk. The air was thick with the scent of lavender and woodsmoke, the kind of peace you weren't used to. Maybe never had been.
You stood at the balcony's edge, gripping the stone railing, eyes fixed on the horizon. Your shoulders ached—not from the wounds, but from the weight of everything unsaid.
He leaned beside you, close enough that your arms nearly brushed. His presence was like a whisper against your skin—warm, unassuming, steady. Neither of you spoke at first. Then—softly—he broke the silence. "You did well in there."
You didn't answer. Your throat felt too tight. After a beat, you murmured, "I didn't tell them anything useful."
"You told them the truth," he said, turning slightly so his shoulder lightly bumped yours. "That's more than most do."
Your hands curled tighter around the railing. "I was raised to deceive, Yeosang. Raised to manipulate. And when I finally had something real… I nearly traded you for a second chance at survival."
He was quiet. The breeze lifted a strand of your hair, and before you could react, his hand gently tucked it behind your ear. "But you didn't," he said.
You looked at him, and your breath caught. The fading light caught in his eyes—steady, calm, and painfully kind. You hated how much it shook you. "I almost did," you whispered, your voice crumbling all over again. "I hesitated."
"You're allowed to," he replied. "Survivors hesitate. It's how we stay alive."
You didn't realise you were crying until he reached up again, thumb brushing a tear from your cheek—slow, deliberate, almost reverent. His hand lingered against your skin longer than it needed to.
"I'm scared," you admitted, blinking through the blur. "I don't know who I am without them. Without orders. Without needing to earn someone's approval just to exist."
Yeosang stepped closer. Not invading—just… there. "You're someone who walked away from everything you knew," he said, voice low and steady. "Someone who chose to protect the person you were supposed to destroy."
He reached for your hand. Not forcefully. Just an offer. You hesitated—but only for a second—before lacing your fingers through his. His palm was warm, solid. Real.
"Someone who's still standing," he added, "despite every reason not to be."
You shook your head. "You make me sound braver than I am."
"No," he said, gaze fixed on yours, "I make you sound exactly as brave as you are."
You turned to him fully now, overwhelmed. His hand never left yours. "Why do you keep believing in me?" you asked.
"Because," he murmured, "you're not the only one who used to survive by following orders. I know what it's like… to want out and not know how. To hurt someone because you thought it was right. Or because it was the only thing you were allowed to do."
You stared at him, every part of you unravelling.
"I'm still figuring it out too," he said. "But maybe we don't have to do it alone anymore."
Your breath hitched. It was too much, and not enough. "I'm not good at this," you whispered.
"Neither am I," he replied, and a tiny, crooked smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.
Then, without thinking, your hand came up to rest against his chest, fingers curling slightly in the fabric of his shirt. "Thank you," you said. "For being here. For not giving up on me."
Yeosang didn't answer with words. He simply leaned in and pressed his forehead to yours—gently, quietly—eyes closed, as though just the contact between you was sacred.
It wasn't a kiss. But it felt like one. And for the first time in your life, closeness didn't feel like a threat. It felt like a beginning.
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Preparation began the very next day.
You found yourself spending long hours in the meeting room of their mansion, surrounded by blueprints and surveillance photos, your finger tracing paths you once took blindfolded. Every corner of the Snow Syndicate's base, every shortcut and security measure you remembered, was laid bare on the table under the sharp gazes of the crew.
Some of them didn't trust you yet, and you couldn't blame them. Jongho, ever the tactician, challenged each piece of intel you gave, questioning every detail. But you never faltered, answering each test with quiet confidence. Even when Wooyoung's eyes followed your every movement, sharp and sceptical, you stayed steady.
Seonghwa and his partner were the first to show subtle signs of acceptance. The Gentleman had passed you a water bottle during a particularly long session without a word, and you nodded in silent thanks. Yunho pulled you into a sparring match one afternoon, clearly testing your mettle. He didn't go easy. You didn't want him to. You blocked and countered until your arms ached, but you stayed standing. And when he finally offered a hand to help you up from the mat, you took it with something close to a smile.
But Yeosang—he was your constant.
He was never far. Whether you were hunched over files late into the night or mentally reeling from memories stirred by old maps, he was there. Sometimes he didn't say anything at all. He didn't need to. A brush of fingers as he passed you a pen. A shared glance that said, "You've got this." A hand on the small of your back when it all became too much.
Even the dining hall, once a battlefield of sideways stares, began to feel less cold. At first, you sat in silence. Then the occasional murmur. Then, one evening, a laugh—small, involuntary—at something Yeosang whispered, and the tension eased slightly around the table. You were still the outsider, but no longer the enemy.
Then, at last, came Hongjoong's quiet nod. "It's time."
You led them in.
Father, I'm home.
The compound hadn't changed.
Your footsteps echoed down its hollow halls, your eyes darting to each corner that used to mean home. You guided the crew through a rear passage you'd used in emergencies. A route you had memorised like a prayer.
But something felt wrong. The air was too still. Too quiet.
The grand marble hall you once knew was in shambles. Furniture overturned, walls cracked, the polished floor smeared in streaks of dried blood. But not a body in sight. You drew your weapon, breath shallow. The others moved in formation behind you.
"This wasn't recent," Seonghwa murmured, stepping cautiously over a broken chandelier.
Heart pounding, you pushed forward.
And then—you saw it.
His office. The place where you knelt so often. The place where orders came cloaked in patience and poison.
Your boss was there.
Seated in his favourite leather chair, slumped back, mouth ajar, lifeless. The drink he always held—the crystal glass only he was allowed to use—was still clutched in his hand, tilted slightly as if he'd just taken a sip.
You stepped forward slowly, your stomach twisting. Yeosang appeared at your side, eyes sweeping the room before dropping to the body. He bent slightly, carefully plucking the small piece of paper stuck beneath the glass.
His voice cut through the heavy silence.
"Better luck next time, pirates. – WS."
Time seemed to freeze. You stared at the words. At the mocking loop of those final initials.
WS. White Serpents.
A chill ran down your spine. It wasn't grief that made your legs tremble. It was the realisation that this wasn't retaliation.
It was bait.
A message meant to be found. And the White Serpents had just painted a target on every one of your backs. The weight of it settled in your chest like a curse.
When the others began combing the scene, voices rising in alarm or fury, you barely heard them. Your gaze had been fixed on the glass in your boss' limp hand. You didn't remember how you got back to the mansion. Just that everything between the discovery and now blurred into a silent fog.
And now…
You didn't know how long you'd been sitting there. The moonlight spilt in through the half-drawn curtains, casting long, silver streaks across the floor of your room in the Black Pirates' mansion—the one they'd offered without question. A place that had once been enemy territory… now the only place you could breathe.
And yet, you felt like you were suffocating.
Your arms were wrapped around your knees as you sat on your bed, shoulders hunched, lips pressed together tightly. The tears had come without warning. At first, you thought it was just exhaustion. Then maybe grief. Then guilt. Maybe it was all of it.
You'd led them into an empty stronghold. Given them hope. And what had you found?
A message. A corpse. And a bigger storm coming.
A sob clawed its way up your throat before you could swallow it down. You turned your head into the pillow, wiping angrily at your cheeks, as if hiding the tears might undo the pain that came with them. But they kept coming, traitorous and warm.
You didn't notice the door creak open. Didn't hear the soft footsteps until the bed dipped slightly at the foot. You flinched, startled—until your gaze landed on him.
Yeosang.
He didn't say anything. Just met your eyes from where he sat cross-legged on the floor, leaning gently against the mattress. There was no judgement in his face. Only that quiet strength, that soft warmth you'd grown to crave. "Hey, there."
When he offered you the smallest smile—tired, but reassuring—your composure crumbled.
You didn't think. Didn't hesitate.
You lunged forward, throwing your arms around his neck, burying your face into his shoulder. He caught you instantly, pulling you into his lap, holding you so tightly you thought maybe he was the one who needed this just as much. "I'm sorry..." you choked out between breaths, clutching his jacket. "I'm so sorry."
He shook his head and pressed his lips to your hair. "Don't be, princess," he murmured against your temple. "It's okay."
You clung to him tightly as he gently rocked you, his voice low and steady like the ocean after a storm.
"We knew the White Serpents had been targeting us all along anyway. This isn't anything new," he continued, his hand soothing along your back. "Sure, getting to the Snow Syndicate might've helped… might've made things a little easier, perhaps. But it's fine."
He leaned back just enough to look you in the eye, brushing a tear away with the back of his knuckle.
"We'll get through this. Together. Hm?"
You nodded slowly, lips trembling as your forehead fell against his. He stayed like that with you—no pressure, no demands.
Just him. Just this.
And for the first time since that cursed vault, you allowed yourself to believe it.
Together.
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"The job's done, sir. The Snow Syndicate's been wiped out. The Black Pirates won't find a single thread leading back to us."
The man exhaled sharply, eyes narrowing as he glared down at the Phantom's file. With a sudden slam, he shut it—rage bubbling up for the first time in a long while. "So… he does have a weakness now. But at what cost?" His tone turned bitter. "The Snow Syndicate were such loyal dogs all this time. And look at what he's made us do."
His subordinate shifted uneasily, then gestured to the next file laid out on the table. "True… but maybe this just exposed their incompetence. Cutting them loose might've been a blessing in disguise. Besides, this gives us the perfect chance to shift focus."
"To the Tempest?" the man asked, his mood already shifting.
The subordinate gave a nod. "Yes, sir."
That did it. A slow grin curled on the man's lips as he slid the new file toward himself, fingers drumming once before he flipped it open. His eyes lit up, excitement flickering in them as he read the first few lines.
"Well, well," he murmured, biting his lip, relishing what he saw. "This one's practically gift-wrapped. No effort needed. The weakness is already in place…" He chuckled, low and cruel. "And the best part? She won't be around much longer anyway."
His grin widened.
"This might just be the best one yet."
Y'all, I'm so sorry this took like a million years to complete. Work has been and still is crazy. I'm sick and am still tRYING TO RECOVER FROM THE DAMN NEW ALBUM. My apologies. I hope this one was decent and met expectations because I struggled a little midway through *sobssss*
Thank you for reading, and as always, let me know your thoughts! <3
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03. The Enforcer — By Order of the Black Pirates
An 'Ice On My Teeth' Comeback Special Series
Pairing: gang member!Yunho x fem!reader
AU: gang au
Word Count: 22.7k
Summary: The towering enforcer of the Black Pirates, both disarming and deadly—his easy charm capable of winning over enemies, while his legendary fury dominates the battlefield. But his unbreakable facade begins to crack when he meets a psychologist during a mission—someone who can see through his carefully crafted mask, just as he can see through hers. Beneath her confident exterior lies a frightened soul lost in a dark world, and for the first time, he finds himself compelled to protect someone in a way he never expected.
Genre: angst, hurt/comfort
Trigger Warnings: mentions of child abuse, emotional blackmail, attempted sexual assault, scars, trafficking, blood and slight gore, language, contains dark themes in general
SERIES MASTERLIST | ATEEZ MASTERLIST
"Ryoichi Sato," Hongjoong murmured, studying the profile in his hands. "Founder of the Prestige Asylum—a supposed haven for the mentally ill. And you're telling me targeting him will benefit us... how exactly?"
Yunho gestured for him to turn to the next page. "Take a closer look, hyung. Do you notice a pattern in the patients he takes in?"
The Captain flipped through the thick file, his brows furrowing. Then, slowly, he straightened in his seat, his expression hardening. "They're... holy shit. They're all high-profile criminals. Wait—this isn't just a regular asylum, is it?" He looked up sharply at his brother, who wore a smug smile.
"Exactly," Yunho said, his tone calm but charged with conviction. "It's a front—a sanctuary for wealthy criminals. Cartel bosses, human trafficking kingpins, and, most importantly, rival gang leaders. All hiding out under the guise of being mentally unfit to face trial. And guess who's running the whole operation? A corrupt, retired official." He leaned forward, his voice lowering. "Now imagine the rise in our standing if we take these fools down and expose them. The Black Pirates would dominate the underworld again."
For a moment, Hongjoong stared at the Enforcer, his jaw slightly slack in astonishment. While their gang still held a prominent position at the top, he couldn't deny that their recent missteps had affected their reputation in the mafia world. Yunho's plan was undeniably tempting—a chance to reclaim their dominance.
But reality soon intruded, and his expression hardened. Seonghwa's precarious situation with the Red Room loomed large, the weight of unresolved tensions pressing heavily on his mind. Could they really afford to take on such a massive mission right now?
"I'm sure it all sounds good, Yunho," he began cautiously, "but—"
"Hyung, I know what you're thinking," the taller man cut in, raising a second file. "But I've already thought this through. You'll see here that Yeosang and I have everything planned out. Listen, I know things haven't exactly been smooth for us lately, but think about it—who are we? We're the Black fucking Pirates. It's time we reminded the underworld who runs this game."
The leader glanced at the new file, then back at Yunho. For a moment, hesitation flickered in his eyes, but it was quickly overtaken by a glimmer of determination. Whatever obstacles lay ahead, Yunho's unwavering confidence was infectious, and the prospect of restoring their gang's power was too enticing to ignore.
"Yeah, you're right. Let's do it."
With that, he pushed thoughts of his eldest brother's precarious situation to the back of his mind. The Captain had given him the green light, and now it was time to execute. With Yeosang's meticulous planning and Jongho's steady hand in logistics, the groundwork had been laid faster than even he anticipated.
Now, dressed in a sharp suit and carrying an air of unshakable authority, Yunho strode into the Prestige Asylum under the alias Stefano Lee, a "security consultant" hired to assess the facility's operations. From the moment he stepped through the doors, his towering presence commanded attention. Unease rippled through the staff; the occasional nervous glance cast his way only fed his confidence. Awe wasn't uncommon, either—not that it surprised him. The Enforcer knew the effect he had on people.
His steps echoed purposefully through the pristine halls, his sharp eyes taking in every detail. He allowed himself a moment of smug satisfaction, recalling how effortlessly he had sold his cover. If life had gone differently, he may have ended up on a movie set, playing the leading man. But fate had dealt him a different hand—a far grittier role to play.
And that was fine. He owed everything to Hongjoong, the man who had saved him from a life of aimless wandering. This mission wasn't just about taking down the asylum or the criminals it sheltered—it was about proving himself again, reminding the underworld of what the Black Pirates could do when they set their sights on a target.
His lips tugged into a small, confident smirk as his gaze locked onto the man he'd been waiting for. Dr Sergei Ivanov, head psychologist, walked with a cautious air that betrayed a sharp mind. He had spent days studying the asylum's organisational structure, and Ivanov's name stood out like a beacon. The man was vital, a potential key to cracking open this entire operation.
For Yunho, the next step was clear: bring the head psychologist to his side, whether through persuasion or pressure. The poor old Russian man would learn quickly—resistance wasn't an option.
Straightening his tie, he approached with the confidence of someone who already owned the room. His posture, his stride, even the slight tilt of his head—all radiated an unspoken message: You're going to listen to me, whether you like it or not.
"Dr Ivanov," he called smoothly, his voice cutting through the quiet like a blade. "Stefano Lee. I believe we need to have a conversation."
His tone wasn't a question; it was a declaration. Time to get to work.
From across the hall, you stood unnoticed, your gaze fixed on the interaction unfolding between your mentor and the so-called security consultant. Stefano Lee—the name had been whispered through every corner of the asylum ever since Chairman Sato announced his arrival. The founder himself had vouched for the man, boasting of his unparalleled expertise and magnetic charm.
But you'd been wary of him from the start.
Unlike the rest of the staff, who either fawned over his imposing presence or shrank under the weight of it, you felt neither awe nor intimidation. What you felt was a nagging sense of scepticism.
Stefano was too polished, his every move carefully calculated. The way he carried himself screamed confidence, sure—but in his eyes, there was something far more telling. A spark of determination that went beyond professionalism. It wasn't the kind of fire you'd expect from someone hired to conduct a mundane security assessment.
This man had an agenda.
You had written it off as mere curiosity at first, content to watch him from afar and let others fall under his spell. But now? Watching him pull Dr Ivanov aside with that charming yet no-nonsense demeanour? That was when the alarm bells went off.
He was a security consultant, for heaven's sake. What possible business could he have with the head psychologist?
Your eyes narrowed, tracking their movements as he gestured toward a side corridor. Dr Ivanov's reluctance was clear in the stiffness of his shoulders, though he followed without protest.
Something wasn't right.
The uneasy twist in your gut only tightened as you lingered, debating whether to intervene. There was no reason for you to care—not when you were already walking a thin line just by being here. But Dr Ivanov wasn't just your mentor; he was one of the few people in this institution who still had a shred of integrity left.
And Stefano Lee? He was the very embodiment of the polished predators you had learned to recognise far too well.
Your fists clenched at your sides as you made your decision. If this man thought he could play his games unnoticed, he was sorely mistaken.
You weren't about to sit back and watch.
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"Mr. Lee, to what do I owe the pleasure?" Dr Ivanov asked, his tone polite but cautious. He wore a civil smile, though the tension in his eyes betrayed the wariness beneath it.
Yunho settled into the chair across from him, his tall frame making the neat, utilitarian office seem smaller than it was. His eyes swept the room with the precision of someone who missed nothing. Sparse decor. Everything is meticulously arranged. Not a single photo or personal touch to suggest any life outside of this institution.
Work, and only work.
It was a treasure trove of deductions for the Enforcer. The absence of familial ties or sentimental keepsakes hinted at a man whose entire identity revolved around his profession. A loner, perhaps. Someone who found solace in control and order. That told the gang member all he needed to know about how to handle him.
"Ah, Dr Ivanov," Yunho said smoothly, leaning back in the chair with an air of casual confidence. "You know how thorough Chairman Sato likes to be. My job is to ensure this facility operates as securely and efficiently as possible. Cooperation from department heads like yourself will make that infinitely easier."
His tone was light, almost friendly, but his eyes carried a weight that made the head psychologist pause.
Dr Ivanov let out a small, dry chuckle, clasping his hands together on the desk. "A man dedicated to his work is always admirable, Mr. Lee. But I must admit, I fail to see how my department could have any bearing on your assessments. Surely the realm of psychology is far removed from the concerns of security?"
The scepticism was clear, though the Russian man hid it behind a veneer of civility. He was testing Yunho, trying to gauge his intent.
The taller man's lips curled into a faint smile—charming yet predatory, as if he were indulging the doctor in a harmless game of wits. "You'd be surprised, Doctor, how much overlap there can be. Security isn't just about locks and cameras. It's about people. Predicting their behaviour. Understanding their motivations."
He leaned forward slightly, his broad shoulders casting a shadow over the desk. "And from what I've gathered, you're the expert when it comes to the minds within these walls. Both staff and patients alike."
The head psychologist's smile faltered, if only for a moment before he recovered. "Flattery, Mr. Lee? I didn't take you for the type."
"Not flattery," Yunho countered, his tone hardening just enough to make his point. "Respect. The kind of respect one gives to someone with insight others might not possess. Insight that could be… very useful."
The silence that followed was heavy, the tension in the air almost tangible. The Enforcer let it hang there, his eyes locked onto Dr Ivanov's with a focus that bordered on unnerving.
"Now, Doctor," he continued, his voice dropping an octave, smooth but with an undercurrent of steel, "why don't we make this easy for both of us? I have questions, and you have answers. All I need is your cooperation. After all, it's in both our interests to ensure this institution remains… secure."
The elderly man's fingers twitched against the desk, his composure cracking ever so slightly under Yunho's gaze. He wasn't sure what game this so-called consultant was playing, but he could feel the noose tightening around him, one carefully calculated word at a time.
He adjusted his posture, his fingers steepling as he studied the man before him, his professional mask unwavering. "Mr. Lee," he began carefully, each word deliberate, "I appreciate your regard for my expertise. But forgive me if I fail to see how the psychology department intersects with your security evaluation. Perhaps if you were more forthcoming about your... intentions, I could provide better assistance."
The Enforcer leaned back in his chair, the movement slow, deliberate, and dripping with confidence, as though he owned not just the office but the very air in it. A faint smirk tugged at his lips, sharp as a knife's edge. "Intentions?" he echoed, his voice smooth, almost playful. "Doctor, my only intention is to make sure this place runs as securely as the Chairman expects. Isn't that why I'm here?"
"Of course," Ivanov replied, though the faint crack in his measured tone betrayed him. "But from my perspective, our patients and their care protocols seem far removed from your area of concern. Surely there are other departments better suited to your inquiries—maintenance, perhaps, or surveillance?"
Yunho's smirk widened, but the amusement in his expression didn't quite reach his eyes. "Oh, I've already had enlightening conversations with those departments," he said, his tone laced with charm and a trace of menace. "Very helpful people, really. But here's the thing, Doctor." He leaned forward, his massive frame casting an imposing shadow across the desk as he clasped his hands loosely. "In a place like this, the locks on the doors are only half the battle. The minds inside—those matter just as much. Don't you agree?"
The head psychologist's lips pressed into a thin line, his eyes narrowing slightly at the repeated emphasis. "I would agree," he admitted cautiously, "but that still doesn't explain—"
"Doesn't explain what?" Yunho cut in smoothly, his voice dropping a note lower, the quiet intensity in it demanding attention. "Why I'd care about the dynamics between staff and patients? Why I'd want to understand how the people here interact with each other?" His smile returned, this time sharper, more calculated. "Doctor, wouldn't you say that understanding human behaviour is key to preventing... incidents?"
Ivanov's fingers tightened around the desk's edge, the slight movement not escaping Yunho's notice. "Naturally," the head psychologist replied, his tone measured, though unease flickered in his eyes. "But if you're implying there's something amiss with the dynamics here, I assure you—"
"I'm not implying anything," Yunho interrupted, his tone softening, though the tension in the room only grew. "I'm just a curious man doing his job. After all, the Chairman hired me to be thorough." He let his gaze drift across the sparse, clinical office before settling back on the elderly man with laser-like focus. "And I am thorough."
Dr Sergei Ivanov, seasoned in dissecting minds, found himself at a rare loss. The man before him was an enigma—a puzzle that refused to align. Something about Stefano Lee spoke of a purpose that went far beyond his supposed role. Who was this man? A mere consultant, or something much more dangerous?
The silence that followed hung thick and oppressive. Ivanov exhaled slowly, forcing himself to meet Yunho's gaze. "You certainly live up to your reputation, Mr. Lee," he said finally, his voice steady but cautious. "I see why the Chairman holds you in such high regard."
The young man chuckled, low and unsettling. "Flattery, Doctor? I didn't peg you for the type."
The psychologist's jaw tightened at having his own words thrown back at him, but he managed a thin smile. "Simply acknowledging skill where it's due. Though I must admit, your methods of information-gathering are... unique."
"It's all about perspective," Yunho replied as he stood, his deliberate movements amplifying his towering presence. "And from where I'm standing, I'd say we're off to a good start, wouldn't you?"
Dr Ivanov didn't respond immediately, his mind racing to piece together the enigma in front of him. Just as he opened his mouth to speak, a sharp knock shattered the tension, and the door swung open without waiting for an answer.
"Then I'm sure Chairman Sato would be thrilled to hear about this collaboration." Your casual tone hung in the air like a threat, and for the first time, the Enforcer's composure faltered ever so slightly. The mention of Ryoichi Sato was a card played with precision—a warning that if his intentions were exposed now, it could bring his mission to a grinding halt.
You strode in briskly, a file clutched in one hand, your eyes fixed solely on your mentor as though Stefano Lee were little more than a shadow. "Sir," you said crisply, your earlier veiled threat delivered as if it were a passing remark, "you're needed in the PICU ward. A patient is threatening suicide."
The head psychologist shot to his feet, hastily snatching the file from your hand. His gaze darted toward the gang member, unease flickering in his expression. "I-I..."
You finally turned your attention to the so-called security consultant, your expression unreadable as you placed a reassuring hand on Dr Ivanov's arm. "It's alright, sir. You go. I'll handle Mr. Lee."
"But—"
"There's no time to waste," you interjected, your voice calm yet unyielding. "Go."
Your mentor hesitated for a moment longer, then nodded reluctantly. He cast the guest a wary glance, his polite facade barely holding. "Mr. Lee," he said, forcing a tight smile, "thank you for your understanding."
Yunho inclined his head, his smile returning with practised ease as he buried any trace of unease. "The pleasure's all mine, Doctor."
With one final look, the Russian man hurried out of the office, leaving the room thick with unspoken tension as the door clicked shut behind him. Now, it was just you and Stefano Lee, his enigmatic facade meeting your calculated indifference.
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"Since you're so keen on understanding how our department operates, let me show you the patients' favourite spot," you said, your tone laced with thinly veiled sarcasm as you led him down the verdant pathways of the institution. The tension between you hung heavy in the air as the distant sound of rustling leaves mingled with the faint hum of the asylum's ever-present security systems.
The path opened into a pristine stretch of green, encircled by neatly maintained fences.
"The tennis courts?" Yunho asked, his brow arching, an edge of disbelief creeping into his voice.
You turned sharply on your heel, your piercing glare locking onto him. "Why so surprised? I thought you knew everything there is to know around here. Or…" You paused, your voice dropping into a sly mockery. "Let me guess. Maybe your research wasn't as extensive as you thought. There's a lot more to this place than meets the eye, Stefano Lee… or whatever your real name is."
He froze for a moment, the faintest flicker of surprise breaking through his carefully constructed mask. You could see the gears in his head turning, his sharp mind trying to recalibrate. But for once, it seemed, he had no immediate retort.
The Enforcer straightened, forcing a grin that was too sharp, too deliberate. "Of course, that's my real name. And you're right—maybe I should have done a better job researching my client. But I know enough about you, at least," he said, eyeing your name tag.
"Do you?" you countered instantly, one brow arching in amusement. "So you know my name. Big deal. That's basic information."
Yunho leaned back slightly, shoving his hands into his pockets in a transparent attempt to feign control. But the tension in his posture betrayed him. "I know you have a love-hate relationship with your job, Dr Prude."
There it was. That name. The one whispered behind your back by the staff who envied your success, your precision, your unapologetic ambition. It stung—because it was meant to. But you'd heard it all before. And now this stranger was trying to weaponise it against you.
"Is that all?" you asked, your voice cool and sharp like a blade. "So you know the playground gossip. Congratulations. But let me make something perfectly clear, Stefano"—you spat his name with venom—"you don't scare me."
Your words hit like a slap, and his grin faltered for the briefest moment. He was losing his footing, and you could see the frustration creeping into his eyes, no matter how hard he tried to suppress it.
"You are right about one thing, though," you continued, taking a deliberate step closer. "I do have a love-hate relationship with this job. Which is why I don't care what you're really here for. Just leave me and my mentor out of it."
He scoffed, the sound laced with disbelief. "I don't know what you mean by that. I'm only here to do my job—"
You snorted, cutting him off without hesitation. "Save the act. Do you really expect me to believe intimidating the head psychologist is part of your job description?"
The sharpness of your words sent a flicker of unease across his face, and for a moment, he seemed to lose his usual composure. You followed his gaze as it shifted—almost involuntarily—toward the tennis courts.
Your smirk widened as your eyes zeroed in on the figure lingering near the edge of the court. Clad in staff attire, the man moved with calculated casualness, but it was clear he was out of place.
"And your not-so-subtle friend over there?" you added, nodding toward Yeosang, whose attempts to blend in were painfully obvious. "He tells me more than enough about you."
His jaw tightened, his calm slipping as the realisation sank in—you'd not only seen through him but had also spotted his ally.
He shot a sharp look toward his brother, who froze, his alert eyes locking onto you. The Phantom, clearly aware his cover had been blown, remained rigid as Yunho gave a subtle shake of his head, signalling him to stand down.
The silence stretched, thick with tension, as he turned back to you. His usual confidence was cracking, the weight of your words pressing down on him like a vice.
You could see it—the frustration, the disbelief, the dawning understanding that he'd underestimated you. And it was exhilarating.
Fuck, I really underestimated her.
You sighed, observing the flicker of tension in the man's expression. Despite his best efforts to maintain an air of indifference, you could see the turmoil beneath the surface—the faint crease in his brow, the subtle tightening of his jaw. For a fleeting moment, you almost felt bad for him. Almost.
It was clear that whatever grand plans he had were now in shambles, and you were entirely to blame.
"Listen, I—" he began, his voice low, tinged with exasperation, but you raised a hand, cutting him off before he could say more.
"No," you said firmly, your tone leaving no room for argument. "You don't have to explain yourself to me. You don't owe me anything. But…" You allowed a sly smile to curl your lips as you glanced toward the Phantom, who still stood frozen by the tennis courts, visibly tense. "You might owe your buddy an apology for this failure."
Yunho followed your gaze, his lips pressing into a thin line as Yeosang subtly shifted his weight, clearly displeased at their mission running into such a huge error this early on.
You turned back to the taller man, tilting your head slightly as you regarded him with curiosity. Who were these men? What organisation were they from? You didn't need to be a genius to figure out they weren't who they claimed to be. Yunho might have come here under the guise of a security consultant, but his polished act was starting to crack under scrutiny.
Not that it mattered to you. You weren't particularly interested in who they were or why they were here. If anything, you'd be amused to see them succeed. The Chairman was nowhere near a saint, and if these strangers were here to exact some kind of revenge or justice, well… you wouldn't shed a tear.
Still, you knew better than to get involved.
"I don't know what you have planned," you continued, your voice softening just slightly, "but don't worry. I won't tell anyone about this."
His brows furrowed, his confusion evident as you took a step closer, lowering your voice. "Just stay out of my way, and Dr Ivanov's, and we'll stay out of yours. Deal?"
For a long moment, the two of you stood in silence, the weight of your words hanging heavily between you. Then, with a faint smirk, you bowed your head slightly—a gesture more mocking than respectful.
"Best of luck, Stefano," you added, your tone carrying a finality that left no room for further discussion. Without waiting for a response, you turned and walked away, your confident strides kicking up the faintest swirl of dust from the gravel path.
He remained rooted to the spot, watching your retreating figure with a mix of frustration and something he couldn't quite place—admiration? Awe?
In all his years as a member of the Black Pirates, he'd never encountered anyone who could unsettle him quite like you had. His mind raced, replaying every moment of the exchange, trying to pinpoint where he'd lost control.
Damn it.
The intelligence expert of the gang approached cautiously, his usual calm demeanour marred by a hint of irritation. "She figured us out already—how? What did you do?"
Yunho's jaw tightened at the accusation, his gaze snapping to meet his brother's. The cold sharpness in his eyes made it clear he didn't appreciate the insinuation. "I didn't do anything outside the plan. It was her... she happened. We underestimated her," he muttered, though his tone carried an odd lack of animosity when it came to you.
"Great... so what now?" Yeosang asked quietly, his eyes darting toward the path where you had disappeared, his unease evident.
The taller man exhaled slowly, dragging a hand through his hair. "Now?" he repeated, a faint, almost self-deprecating smirk pulling at his lips. "Now we regroup."
But even as he spoke, he couldn't shake the impact you'd left on him. For all his meticulous planning, you'd proven to be a wild card he hadn't accounted for—a reminder that even the sharpest strategies could falter when faced with an unpredictable force.
Yeosang nodded reluctantly and led Yunho toward a secluded area away from prying eyes. His voice dropped to a whisper. "She knows we're not who we claim to be. I say we deal with her before she gets in the way."
Yunho frowned deeply, shaking his head. "Are you insane? She's the deputy head psychologist. If something happens to her, especially right after being seen with me, it'll raise every red flag imaginable."
"So what, we're just gonna let her roam around freely, knowing full well we're here to take down her boss?" the Phantom growled under his breath, his frustration simmering beneath the surface.
"She won't say anything," Yunho replied with a certainty that only seemed to irritate Yeosang further.
"Oh, yeah? And how exactly do you know that?"
Yunho closed his eyes briefly, the memory of your calm, pointed words flashing in his mind. "Because she told me so," he said simply.
His brother let out a sharp scoff. "And you believe her? She's a damn shrink, my friend. Those types know exactly how to mess with your head—get under your skin and twist the truth until you don't know what's real anymore."
The taller man's eyes snapped open, his voice cutting through Yeosang's scepticism with an uncharacteristic sharpness. "I'm not an idiot, Yeo. I know how to spot a lie, and she wasn't lying. She may be loyal to Ivanov, but she's not loyal to this place."
Yeosang's frown deepened, his jaw clenching as he weighed Yunho's words. "Well, for our sake, I hope you're right," he muttered darkly. "Because if you're not, we're fucked."
Yunho didn't respond, his mind already turning over the possibilities. Deep down, he knew Yeosang wasn't wrong to be cautious, but he also couldn't ignore the strange certainty that had settled in his gut. You weren't their ally, but for now, you weren't their enemy either. And that was a risk he was willing to take.
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"Hyung, permission to switch targets."
The words seemed to hang in the air as Yeosang's irritation with the situation persisted. "Switch targets?"
The Captain, who had been listening in silence, finally spoke, his voice calm but sharp. "Let me guess, Yunho—you want to collaborate with the deputy head psychologist now?"
The Enforcer nodded, his gaze steady even as he bowed his head slightly, ashamed of his failure. Hongjoong's lips pursed, his expression unreadable, but he didn't speak right away.
Jongho, who had been sitting quietly nearby, leaned forward slightly, his thoughtful gaze fixed on Yunho. "You know what? That actually makes a lot of sense," he said, his voice calm and measured. "Based on what you said, she's incredibly observant and perceptive. Just the fact that she managed to see through you and spot Yeosang hyung, despite all our precautions, speaks volumes about her. If there's anyone on the inside who could be an asset, it's her."
The faintest hint of a smirk tugged at Yunho's lips at the youngest's words. He agreed wholeheartedly—you were something else.
Hongjoong sighed deeply, running a hand over his face as he considered the implications. "If we're going to shift our approach, I want this done carefully. No risks we can't manage." His voice dropped slightly, tension seeping into his words. "We're already stretched thin with Seonghwa still stranded at the Red Room. I don't want another loose thread to worry about."
Yunho nodded, his voice firm. "I'll handle it, hyung. She won't be a problem."
The gang leader's sharp gaze fixed on him. "Go ahead, then. Do what you think is best, but if this backfires, it's on you."
"Understood."
Yeosang let out an exasperated breath, his frustration was evident. "You're really putting a lot of faith in someone who works for the Chairman. Just because she hasn't blown our cover yet doesn't mean she's not a threat."
"She hasn't blown it because she doesn't want to," the Enforcer countered, his tone unyielding. "Again, she's not loyal to Ryoichi Sato—we've been over this already."
The Anchor nodded, his thoughtful expression unwavering. "If she's really disillusioned with this place, that gives us leverage. She could be the key to understanding the Chairman's weaknesses."
Hongjoong sighed again, rubbing his temples. "Fine," he said finally, his tone resigned but firm. "Do it. But tread carefully. The moment she becomes a liability, you pull out. Clear?"
"Crystal," Yunho replied without hesitation.
The leader's gaze softened just slightly, enough to show the trust he still had in his team. "Good. Now go before I change my mind."
As Yunho left the room, a faint smirk playing on his lips, Yeosang shook his head in disbelief. "This is a mistake," he muttered.
"Maybe," Hongjoong admitted, his voice measured. "But mistakes can lead to victories if you know how to play them."
"Or they can get us all killed," Yeosang muttered under his breath.
Jongho offered a faint smile. "Let's hope Yunho hyung's instincts are as sharp as he thinks they are." The room fell silent, the weight of their gamble settling heavily over them all.
The Enforcer adjusted the cuffs of his tailored coat as he stood outside the towering gates of Prestige Asylum. This time, he was alone. Yeosang had made it clear he wouldn't tag along—not because he didn't care but because watching his brother navigate the intricate dance of persuasion with you had proven too frustrating for the Phantom. Yunho didn't blame him; even he wasn't entirely sure what to expect from you.
The mansion had been tense that morning, Yeosang offering only a curt nod and a muttered "good luck" as Yunho prepared to leave. It wasn't that he didn't want this to work; in fact, Yeosang probably wanted success more than anyone else. But his scepticism about you was evident. Yunho could almost hear the Phantom's voice in his head as he walked up the familiar path leading to the asylum: Don't mess this up. Don't let her outplay you again.
Yunho smirked at the thought, his confidence unshaken. She won't outplay me. Not this time.
Inside the asylum, the sterile halls felt even quieter than before, as if the oppressive atmosphere itself could sense the weight of his intentions. He stopped at the front desk, his smooth charm carefully masking the tension simmering beneath his calm exterior. "I'm here to see the deputy head psychologist," he said with a polite smile.
The receptionist glanced up, a flicker of hesitation crossing her face. "Mr. Lee?" she asked, her tone cautious. She suppressed her reservations, silently questioning what the new security consultant could possibly want with Dr Prude. "Do you have an appointment?"
"No," Yunho replied smoothly, his tone calm yet firm, "but I believe she'll want to see me."
The receptionist hesitated briefly before picking up the phone. After a quiet exchange, she looked back at him and nodded. "She'll meet you in her office. Down the hall, third door on the left."
As he made his way, his mind replayed the events of your last encounter—a potent mix of frustration and admiration swirling within him. You had dismantled his plan with precision, exposing cracks he hadn't even considered, and yet it wasn't just your brilliance that lingered in his mind. It was the fire in your eyes, the unyielding confidence that matched his own, if not exceeded it.
He knocked twice before opening the door.
You sat at your desk, head tilted slightly as you scribbled notes into a file. For a moment, you didn't acknowledge him, but when your sharp gaze finally met his, the tension between you crackled, unspoken yet palpable. Neither of you was willing to back down.
"Back so soon, Stefano?" you asked, your tone dripping with sarcasm. "I thought you'd had enough of me last time."
He chuckled softly, closing the door behind him. "Believe it or not, I'm not here for round two of our verbal sparring match." His voice dipped slightly, deliberate and measured. "I'm here to make you an offer."
You leaned back in your chair, raising an eyebrow as if to say, This should be good. "An offer? What could someone like you possibly offer me?"
"A way out," he said simply, his confidence unwavering.
Your reaction was subtle but telling—a faint twitch of your brow, a brief stilling of your fingers as they tapped against the desk. "And what makes you think I need a way out?" you countered, your voice steady and cool.
"Because you're too smart to waste your talents here," he said, his tone softening, almost conspiratorial. "You know this place is rotten to its core. You've seen Ryoichi Sato's true nature. Why stay loyal to an institution that doesn't deserve you?"
You folded your arms, your expression inscrutable. "So, your grand plan is for me to betray my employer and join forces with… whoever you really are?"
He stepped closer, his intense gaze locking with yours, shrinking the space between you. "I'm not asking you to betray anyone. I'm asking you to work with us. Help us take down the Chairman, and in return, we'll make sure you come out of this unscathed."
You tilted your head, studying him as if weighing every word. "And why should I trust you? You're not exactly the picture of transparency."
He smirked, leaning casually against the edge of your desk. "You don't have to trust me. Trust your instincts. You've already figured out I'm not here to hurt you or Ivanov. If anything, we're on the same side."
The room grew quiet as you considered his words, the sharp gears of your mind undoubtedly working overtime. Finally, you leaned forward slightly, your voice laced with pointed sarcasm. "Huh, sounds tempting. It might be tempting for someone reckless enough to commit treason, that is. But here's the part where you're wrong—I have no intention of risking my life for your ambitious little plan. After all, if you were as confident as you pretend to be, you wouldn't need me. Thanks, but no thanks."
The rejection landed sharper than Yunho anticipated, and though he cursed internally, a part of him couldn't help but admire your resistance. "I understand your concerns," he said, his voice calm despite the undercurrent of frustration.
"You don't understand anything, Stefano," you snapped, cutting him off with a sharp edge in your tone. Your eyes burned with something deeper—an unspoken burden he wasn't privy to but knew he needed to uncover. Why were you so adamant against cooperating, especially when your loyalty to the Chairman seemed nonexistent?
"Fine," he conceded, raising his hands slightly in mock surrender. "I won't argue with you. But think about what I said. The offer won't stay on the table forever."
You narrowed your eyes at him, but there was a spark of intrigue you couldn't completely hide. "I already said no. You can take your offer elsewhere."
Straightening, the Enforcer's smirk returned, slow and deliberate. "You know damn well there's not many in this damned institution I can rely on like you. Don't be so hasty to turn me down—I'll convince you, Dr Prude."
With that, he turned and walked out, leaving you to scoff in disbelief. Alone once more, you sat in silence, frustration mingling with the undeniable curiosity he had managed to spark.
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The soft click of the door opening broke the silence in your office, pulling you from your thoughts. Dr Ivanov entered, his sharp eyes immediately locking onto yours, weariness etched into his face.
"I heard that security consultant dropped by. What does he want?" His deep voice carried a note of concern, though he masked it well.
You rose from your seat instinctively, bowing respectfully before gesturing for him to sit. "Yes, well…" you hesitated, your lips pressing into a thin line. "He wants the same thing he wanted from you. Seems his attention has shifted to me now."
The elderly man sank into the chair across from you, his brow furrowing as he absorbed your words. For a moment, he was silent, his calculating mind undoubtedly piecing together the implications of Yunho's renewed interest. "Well?" he finally asked, his voice calm but tinged with worry. "Did you agree to it?"
Your response came instantly, your head shaking as if on reflex. "Of course not, sir," you whispered fiercely. Taking such a risk was unthinkable, the potential consequences far too dire. One misstep would endanger not only yourself but your family—and his. The asylum's unrelenting grip on your lives was an invisible shackle neither of you could escape.
Ivanov's shoulders relaxed slightly, though the tension lingered in his eyes. He glanced at your hands, clenched into tight fists on the desk, a habit that betrayed the memories threatening to surface—memories that haunted you both.
"You made the right decision," he said softly, though his words felt like cold comfort. "But you know he'll come back."
"I know," you murmured, lowering your gaze. Your voice was thick with frustration, the weight of fear pressing against your chest.
Your mind drifted, unbidden, to the beginning of this nightmare, the memories as vivid as if they had just occurred. You'd been fresh out of university then, brimming with ambition and armed with a psychology degree you'd worked tirelessly to earn. Interning under Dr Ivanov had been transformative—he had seen potential in you that no one else had, vowing to guide you through your career. When the offer from Prestige Asylum came, it had seemed like a dream.
The facility's reputation was impeccable, a beacon of excellence in mental health care. It felt like winning the lottery, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity you couldn't afford to pass up. The secrecy surrounding the institution's operations hadn't raised alarms; instead, it only added to the mystique. You felt honoured to stand beside him, your combined reputation a testament to integrity and expertise.
But cracks in the perfect facade had shown themselves quickly. The work was unlike anything you'd experienced before, the protocols unsettling and alien. Patients were scarce, their places filled by high-profile criminals hidden under the guise of treatment. The truth unravelled slowly, then all at once—a grotesque revelation that had left you and your mentor reeling in horror.
You'd both tried to leave, submitting your resignations in tandem, naively believing that principles would protect you. That illusion was shattered the moment you were summoned to meet Ryoichi Sato.
The Chairman's demeanour was calm, almost cordial, as he laid out file after file. Each one contained intimate details of your family's lives—names, addresses, routines—all laid bare as leverage. His cruel smile and carefully chosen words crushed any hope of escape. "You're the best," he had said, his tone almost mocking. "Your reputations are what make this place believable. Why would I let you go when you're perfect for the role?"
Since that day, you had been trapped, your skills and moral standing weaponised to mask the institution's sinister purpose. You'd learned to live with the ever-present fear, not for yourself but for the people you loved. Even if you somehow escaped, you knew Prestige Asylum's reach would follow you.
You glanced at Dr Ivanov now, his tired eyes reflecting your own. The two of you were bound together by this shared nightmare, captives in a gilded cage. Yet, his presence was an anchor in the storm, a steadying force. He was more than a mentor now—he was family, the closest thing to a father you had in this twisted place.
For a fleeting moment, your resolve wavered. Yunho's words echoed faintly, offering an out, a faint glimmer of hope. But hope was dangerous here, fragile and easily crushed. The elderly man's steady presence reminded you why impulsive action wasn't an option. The risk was too great, the cost too unthinkable.
For them. The mantra steadied you, as it did every day. It was why you stayed, why you endured the suffocating walls of this asylum. For the people waiting for you on the outside, for the faint possibility that one day this nightmare might end. Until then, all you could do was hold the line and navigate the razor-thin path laid before you.
Your mentor checked his watch, the faint lines on his face deepening with a sigh. "I have to get back to my post now," he said, rising from his seat with a heavy air. "But if that Stefano man ever bothers you again, let me know—"
You smiled softly, cutting him off. "Don't worry, sir. I'll know how to handle him. He won't sway me." Your voice was calm but firm, a quiet reassurance you hoped would ease his concerns.
Still, the weight of Yunho's visit lingered in your mind, the mystery of his identity gnawing at the edges of your resolve. "Besides," you added, your tone growing more contemplative, "we don't even know who he really is or who he works for. A big part of me hopes whatever he's planning works out... but I know it's in our best interests to stay uninvolved. Sato's connections make him far too powerful. I doubt one organisation alone could bring him down."
Dr Ivanov studied you for a moment, the tension in his shoulders easing slightly. He nodded, a faint smile tugging at his lips. "You're right. I'm more reassured now, knowing you've thought this through so carefully. Stay safe, my dear."
"Thank you, sir. You too," you said quietly, bowing your head as you rose to escort him out.
At the door, the elderly man turned back to you, his expression briefly softening. "I will. We'll be okay," he murmured, his voice laced with the kind of warmth and care that reminded you of all the reasons you trusted him so deeply.
As the door clicked shut behind him, you stood in the quiet of your office, the lingering echoes of his presence both a comfort and a reminder of the precarious line you walked. Your gaze drifted to the sterile walls around you, the faint hum of the asylum's machinery a backdrop to your thoughts.
Stay uninvolved. The words repeated themselves in your mind, a steady mantra to counter the flicker of temptation Stefano Lee's offer had planted. Whatever freedom he hinted at wasn't worth the risk—not when the stakes were this high, not when so many lives were intertwined with your own.
With a deep breath, you returned to your desk, steeling yourself once more. In a place like this, where trust was a rarity and survival meant walking on a knife's edge, resolve was the only armour you had.
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"Good morning, Dr Prude."
You sighed, the sound of his voice confirming what you already knew without needing to glance to your left. Of course, it was him—the persistent, tall, and infuriatingly handsome man who seemed to make it his mission to pester you.
"The more you call me that, the quicker you'll lose whatever slim chances you think you have," you replied, your tone sharp but laced with subtle amusement.
He smirked, nudging your shoulder lightly with his. "Ah, so you're admitting I might've had a chance otherwise?" he teased, his words carrying that familiar mix of charm and mischief.
You raised a brow, feigning indifference while suppressing the flicker of amusement threatening to surface. For a brief moment, your thoughts wandered. Under different circumstances—if you were just an ordinary psychologist and he, an ordinary man—things might have been different. You might have seen him as a potential partner, someone worth taking a chance on.
But the moment passed quickly, and you blinked away the dangerous line of thought, locking it down as you focused ahead. Damn him for being so charming. No, you reminded yourself firmly, he wasn't going to rattle you. Not now, not ever.
Letting your guard snap back into place, you shifted direction abruptly, veering deeper into the hallways where the more intensive care patients were held. "You're wasting your time, Mr. Lee. Go bother someone else. I can't help you."
He exhaled in what sounded like momentary defeat, watching as you strode off with the same confidence you always carried. But even as you walked away, his gaze lingered, catching the briefest flicker in your eyes—something unguarded, something vulnerable. It was subtle, barely noticeable, but it was enough to spark a quiet curiosity within him.
The Enforcer knew it wasn't his business, and it certainly wasn't part of his mission. Yet something about you gnawed at the edges of his thoughts, compelling him to want to know more. There was a strength about you that was undeniable, but it felt... manufactured, like a mask you wore too well.
It was as if you were holding yourself back, tethered to something invisible yet suffocating, something that bound you so tightly it stopped you from moving freely. Yunho didn't know what it was, but the thought of it bothered him. Whatever it was that weighed you down, it wasn't just your burden to bear. At least, not if he had anything to say about it.
Wait... why did he even care so much? He paused, forcing himself to refocus on the mission. That was the only reason he was here—to make use of you, to get you on his side. Yet, there was something about you that unsettled his resolve, something beyond your sharp remarks and unwavering confidence that he couldn’t ignore.
It wasn't just attraction, though he couldn't deny how drawn he was to your competence. If there was one thing he admired in a woman, it was the ability to hold her own, and you had that in spades. You carried yourself with a strength that demanded respect, but it wasn't just the surface that intrigued him. Beneath the polished exterior, there was something raw, something real.
It reminded him of himself—not the man he was now, but the boy he used to be. The boy who had once cowered in the shadow of fear, trapped in a home that offered no love, only control and pain. He had known what it was like to feel bound by circumstances, to see no way out—until the Captain of the Black Pirates found him and gave him a second chance at life. Seeing you now was like looking into a mirror of his past. You were afraid—he could sense it, even if you hid it well. But afraid of what? That question clawed at him, sparking a need to understand you better.
Of course, he told himself, this curiosity wasn't personal. No, it would only serve his mission. Learning more about you would help him coax you into cooperation. That's all it was. This was about ensuring the success of his assignment, about proving Hongjoong's faith in him wasn't misplaced. He couldn't afford to get sidetracked—not with the stakes so high.
And besides, he thought with a faint smirk, he couldn't let Mingi have the satisfaction of questioning his ability to get the job done. No, Yunho would handle this—and you—exactly as planned. Or at least, that's what he kept telling himself.
Yes, this is all for the mission.
Stepping into the intensive care unit, any thoughts of Stefano Lee were thrown out the window as you tightened your grip on your composure, your expression a carefully crafted mask despite the wild, unrelenting thrum of your heartbeat. It wasn't the work itself that unnerved you—far from it. Caring for those in need had once been your passion, the foundation of your dreams. But here, in this place, the people you were forced to deal with weren't patients in any sense of the word. They were predators masquerading as something else, wolves dressed in the clothing of the vulnerable.
"Mr. Zhou has specifically asked for you today, Doctor," the nurse in charge informed you, her tone indifferent as she handed over a clipboard you had no choice but to accept.
Of course, he had.
Zhou was among the most vile of them all—a man who thrived on the suffering of others, the mastermind of a sprawling human trafficking network. And yet, he had decided that you were to be his source of amusement. It wasn't hard to see why; you were nothing like the other women here, those who simpered and flattered him in a desperate bid to curry favour. No, your quiet defiance, your refusal to play his games, seemed to intrigue him in ways that made your skin crawl.
You hated him. More than anyone else in this twisted facility. Others dealt in drugs or gambling—abhorrent crimes, yes, but nothing compared to Zhou's grotesque trade of innocence and humanity. To you, he was the embodiment of everything that was wrong with this place, and being near him felt like willingly stepping into quicksand.
But Zhou wasn't just another criminal. He was one of Sato's prized 'patients,' his wealth ensuring a status that made him untouchable. "He's a high-paying customer," the Chairman had said, his voice dripping with disdain as he slid a photograph across his desk—one of your parents, their unsuspecting smiles now burned into your memory. "We can't afford to lose his business. Do us all a favour and keep him happy. After all, you have a family to think about, don't you? Wouldn't want anything to happen to your sweet parents."
The helplessness of that moment still clawed at you, the suffocating sense of being trapped. All you'd been able to do was nod and whisper, "Yes, sir," as your nails bit into your palms, drawing blood you hadn't even felt at the time.
Now, that same photo flashed in your mind as you clutched the clipboard with trembling hands, forcing yourself to walk toward Zhou's ward. Each step felt like another inch toward a gaping abyss, yet you kept moving. The whispers and judgemental stares of your colleagues barely registered—what did their scorn matter when the stakes were this high? Let them call you 'Dr Prude.' Let them roll their eyes and mock your cold demeanour. None of it could compare to the suffocating weight of the threat hanging over your family.
"There you are, my darling!"
The voice, sickly sweet and dripping with false affection, sent a chill coursing through your body. You swallowed hard, the lump in your throat almost choking you, before forcing your lips into a polite smile. "Good morning, Mr. Zhou," you said evenly, the calmness in your voice hiding the storm of despair and disgust that churned within.
You couldn't falter now—not when every move you made was a performance for survival.
You stepped into his ward, clutching the clipboard so tightly to your chest that your knuckles turned white. It was a flimsy barrier, but it was all you had against the man sprawled in his cushioned chair, exuding an air of unearned power. His hospital gown, clean and unassuming, was a cruel mockery of the monster you knew he was.
"Ah, my favourite doctor," Zhou greeted, his voice syrupy with mock warmth that sent a chill racing up your spine. He leaned back leisurely, his sharp eyes sliding over you like a knife against skin. "What a lovely sight first thing in the morning."
You forced a polite smile, though your throat tightened painfully. Every instinct screamed at you to run, but that was not an option. Not here. Not with him.
He gestured to the chair across from him, a smirk pulling at his lips. "Come, sit. Let's chat before we get into all those boring tests you insist on."
You took a step closer but stayed standing, your spine stiff with an invisible armour you hoped wouldn't crack. "Thank you, Mr. Zhou, but I'd prefer to get this done quickly. I'm sure you have more important matters to tend to," you said, your tone firm yet careful.
He chuckled—a low, deliberate sound that made your stomach twist. "Important matters? None more important than you, Doctor. In fact—" His smirk widened, and he patted his lap with mock invitation. "Why don't you sit here? We could get much closer that way."
The air seemed to thin as his words settled between you. Your nails dug into the clipboard, anchoring yourself as your mind raced. You couldn't let him see your terror, couldn't let him sense the way your heart thundered wildly against your ribs. The Chairman's words replayed in your mind like a sinister mantra: Don't offend him.
Keeping your mask intact, you summoned a professional smile that felt like glass ready to shatter. "That's very kind of you, Mr. Zhou, but I'll have to decline. Maintaining the proper distance helps ensure I do my job effectively. I'm sure you understand."
His smirk faltered for a fraction of a second before returning, sharper this time. He leaned back, his gaze cutting through you like a blade. "Always so professional," he mused, his voice dripping with mockery. "That's why I enjoy our time together. The chase makes it all the more satisfying."
The bile rising in your throat threatened to choke you, but you pushed it down and turned your focus to the clipboard, setting it on the table beside him. With painstaking precision, you prepared the syringe, your hands trembling ever so slightly despite your effort to steady them.
As you approached him, Zhou tilted his head, his lips curling into a twisted smile. "You know, Doctor," he drawled, his voice laced with faux sweetness, "if you'd just relax, we could have so much fun together. Don't you ever get tired of being so... rigid?"
Your pulse roared in your ears, but you forced an even tone. "I appreciate your concern, Mr. Zhou," you said softly, looping the tourniquet around his arm with methodical care. "But my focus is on ensuring your health and well-being. I take that responsibility very seriously."
His chuckle was slow and ominous, the sound of a predator circling prey. His narrowed eyes glinted with something dark as he watched you lean in to draw his blood. "You're a tough one, aren't you?” he murmured, his voice dipping lower. "I like that. But you know... everyone breaks eventually."
Before you could process his words, his arm shot out, the syringe slipping from your grasp as a gasp escaped your lips. In one swift motion, he wrapped his arm around your waist and yanked you onto his lap, his grip iron-tight.
"Come on, darling," he whispered, his breath brushing against your ear as his tone turned sickeningly sweet. "How much longer are you going to play hard to get, hm?"
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For the first time in what felt like years, Yunho's mask of calm nearly cracked. He stood frozen at the gap in the door, his breath catching as he registered the scene before him. This wasn't what he had expected when he decided to drop by and observe you at work—hoping to glean insights about your habits, preferences, and perhaps the best way to approach you.
But this?
This was a nightmare come to life.
His fists clenched so tightly that his knuckles turned white, the rage coursing through him threatening to spill over. It was all he could do to keep his breathing steady. The sight of you, trapped in Zhou's grasp, was a brutal reminder of the powerlessness he once endured. It dredged up memories he thought he had buried—moments when he, too, had been forced to endure, unable to fight back, unable to say no. But while his pain had been physical, yours was a violation of an entirely different kind.
This wasn't just wrong; it was unforgivable.
The injustice of it all burned in his chest, but the Enforcer swallowed the fury. Letting his emotions take over now would do neither of you any good. He needed to act, but carefully. With a steadying breath, he placed a hand on the door handle, forcing a bright, innocent smile onto his face.
Pushing the door open, he stepped inside, his voice casual and warm, masking the storm within. "Hey, doc, I hope I'm not interrupting, but I—" He paused mid-sentence, pretending to notice the scene before him for the first time. His performance was flawless, his jaw dropping in mock surprise as his eyes widened.
"Jesus Christ!" he exclaimed, striding forward with just the right mix of alarm and authority. "What the hell is going on in here?!"
In one fluid motion, he crossed the room and reached for you, prying you free from Zhou's grip with a practised ease. You stumbled into him, trembling, your tear-filled eyes locking onto his face. If you weren't so shaken, you might have seen through his act, might have caught the cold fury simmering beneath his polished facade. But in that moment, all you could feel was the safety his presence suddenly offered.
Zhou shot up from his seat, his narrowed eyes blazing with irritation. "Who the hell do you think you are, barging in here?" he growled, his tone laced with barely contained anger.
Yunho ignored him entirely, his focus solely on you. "Are you okay?" he asked, his voice soft but loud enough for the Chinese bastard to hear. He placed himself firmly between you and the criminal, his broad frame shielding you. "Did the patient get out of control? This is exactly what I warned about—no security for the psychologists? It's unacceptable!" His tone carried a sharp edge, each word a carefully veiled reminder to Zhou that, here, he was just a patient. Nothing more.
Zhou's jaw tightened, recognition dawning in his eyes. He knew exactly who Yunho was—everyone did. The new security consultant hired to oversee operations, though none of the real players dared to let him in on the darker truths of the facility. The man was an outsider, and Zhou knew better than to draw unnecessary attention to himself now.
"I-I'm fine, Mr. Lee," you managed, your voice trembling despite your best efforts to sound composed. Your hand gripped Yunho's wrist as if it were a lifeline, grounding yourself through the chaos. "Mr. Zhou just... has his episodes, but he's harmless."
Zhou's smirk returned, though it was thinner now, less certain. The irritation in his eyes was clear as he reached for the nurse call button, signalling for someone to remove this 'disruption.' For all his arrogance, he knew better than to risk crossing a line in front of the taller man.
Yunho glanced back at you, his eyes softening for just a moment before returning to Zhou, cold and unyielding. "Episodes or not, no one should have to deal with this alone," he said firmly. "I'll make sure the Chairman hears about this."
His words were a warning, a subtle reminder that Zhou wasn't untouchable. And for the first time in that suffocating ward, you felt like someone was truly in your corner.
You didn't wait for the nurse to arrive. The moment the Enforcer had diverted Zhou's attention, you made a swift exit, clutching the clipboard to your chest like a shield. The stark, sterile hallways blurred as your legs carried you on autopilot, adrenaline coursing through your veins. You didn't stop until you reached the safety of your small office, slamming the door shut behind you and locking it with trembling hands.
Your breaths came in sharp, uneven gasps as you leaned against the door, the clipboard slipping from your grasp and clattering to the floor. Shoulders quaking with silent sobs, you bit down hard on your lip to stifle any sound. You couldn't afford to break here—not now.
The knock came so suddenly that you flinched, a small gasp escaping your lips.
"Hey," Stefano Lee's voice called through the door, calm yet resolute. "Open up."
Your pulse spiked again, panic flaring anew. The last thing you wanted was to face him—not like this, with tear-streaked cheeks and shattered composure.
"I'm fine," you managed to call back, though your voice trembled, betraying your facade.
"I'm not going anywhere until you let me in," he replied firmly, though a thread of unrelenting patience was woven into his tone.
For a moment, you hesitated, your hand hovering over the lock. Maybe if you stayed silent, he'd give up. But deep down, you knew better. With a reluctant sigh, you undid the lock and cracked the door open just enough for him to see you.
His expression softened instantly. "Can I come in?" he asked gently.
You nodded, stepping aside to let him in. His presence wasn't going to change anything—you wouldn't let it—but at least you could hear him out. That much you owed him. He closed the door softly behind him, leaning back against it as his eyes swept over you in silence. Arms crossed, his gaze—once so warm—was now edged with an intensity that made you shrink under its weight.
"What the hell was that back there?" he asked finally, his voice low but laced with restrained anger. "Why didn't you stop him? Or report him? You can't let him get away with treating you like that."
You turned away, busying yourself with the scattered papers on your desk. "It's not that simple," you murmured, your voice barely audible.
"Not that simple?" His voice rose slightly, tinged with disbelief. "You're a doctor. You shouldn't have to—"
"I can't," you snapped, spinning around to face him. Tears welled in your eyes, finally breaking free as your voice cracked under the pressure. "You don't understand."
"Then help me understand," he urged, his tone softening as he took a step closer. "Explain it to me."
You shook your head, arms wrapping tightly around yourself as if to hold your crumbling composure together. "Some people don't have a choice," you whispered, the words dripping with quiet despair. "Some of us... we're here because we have to be."
Yunho froze, the weight of your words sinking in as realisation dawned. Now it made sense—the resilience in your eyes despite the exhaustion, the quiet compliance in a place that didn't deserve you. The depths of this place's corruption ran deeper than he'd thought. "What do you mean?" he pressed, though his voice was quieter now.
You didn't answer directly. Instead, your tearful gaze met his, pleading silently for him to drop the matter. "Please," you whispered, your voice shaking. "Don't get involved. Just stay out of my business. And leave me and my mentor out of yours."
His jaw clenched, his fists curling tightly at his sides as he wrestled with the storm of emotions brewing inside him. He wanted to demand answers, to tell you no one should live like this, but the raw fear in your expression stopped him cold.
He took a deep breath, forcing himself to relax. "Fine," he said, his voice even but tinged with steel. "But I want you to know I'm not letting this go."
Your head shot up, alarm flashing in your eyes. "No," you said firmly, stepping toward him. "You have to. If you do anything, they'll—"
"I won't do anything reckless," he interrupted, his tone steady and measured. "I won't let anything happen to you or your mentor. But this?" He gestured vaguely around the room, his voice dropping to a whisper. "This isn't right. And I need you to know that what you've told me has only strengthened my resolve to infiltrate this place. Listen to me—what we're doing is to bring this place down."
You stared at him, torn between the flicker of hope his words ignited and the harsh reality you'd been enduring for so long. Slowly, you shook your head, tears slipping down your face. "You don't understand... Stefano," you whispered, the name barely audible.
He paused, his expression softening for the briefest moment. "Yunho," he corrected gently, his voice low. Your eyes widened slightly at the revelation, and he continued, "My name is Yunho. And I want you to know that what I'm offering you is a way out."
You exhaled shakily, closing your eyes for a moment as his words hung heavy in the air. You knew false hope when you saw it, and you didn't want someone like him to be crushed by the weight of his own naivety. You didn't know who he really was or who he worked for, but the way he had defended you spoke volumes about his character. He wasn't like the others here. "Okay, Yunho..." you murmured softly, your voice tinged with weary resignation. "But I need you to know that you won't succeed. There's more to this place than you could ever imagine. Trust me when I say you're only going to make things worse—for yourself and for your team."
He opened his mouth, ready to argue, but the anguish in your eyes stopped him cold. The pain etched across your face was enough to silence any retort. He nodded once, his expression shifting to one of quiet determination. "I understand that nothing I say will change your mind right now," he said firmly. "I'll step back for now. But I'm not giving up on you. Just... remember that."
Without waiting for a response, he turned and walked out, the sound of the door closing behind him echoing in the room. The silence that followed was deafening. Slowly, you sank into your chair, burying your face in your hands as the full weight of everything came crashing down, pressing heavily on your chest.
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"Here's what you asked for," the Phantom said, tossing the files labelled with your name onto Yunho's desk. His gaze was sharp, unwavering. "I hope you haven't forgotten your main objective, because ever since meeting her, it almost feels like you have."
Yunho exhaled a slow breath, reaching for the file and flipping it open without hesitation. "Thanks, Yeo. I know you're worried, but trust me—once I convince her, she'll be a huge asset to us."
"When you convince her?" Yeosang challenged, leaning forward over the desk, eyes narrowing. "And when exactly is that supposed to happen, Yunho?"
The Enforcer rubbed his temple, exhaustion creeping into his voice. "Soon, my brother. I have no intention of letting Hongjoong hyung down—just as much as you. I know I've strayed from the original plan, but I'll set things right… with her help. And for the record, she won't be a distraction."
Yeosang let out a quiet sigh, his expression unreadable. He didn't argue further, merely giving a slow, reluctant nod before turning to leave. Just as he reached the door, he muttered under his breath, "I think she already has."
Yunho leaned back in his chair as soon as his brother was gone, flipping through the file with practised ease. His sharp eyes scanned the neatly typed lines, but it wasn't the information that initially caught his attention—it was your photo.
A small, inexplicable smile tugged at his lips as he studied the image. It was you, younger and unburdened, a spark of passion gleaming in your eyes. The confidence was the same, but there was something different—something brighter. This version of you radiated ambition, the kind of fire that belonged to someone ready to take on the world. It was almost unsettling to compare it to the person he had come to know.
The you he now knew still carried confidence, but it was subdued, weighed down by something invisible yet undeniably heavy. Behind your carefully composed exterior, there was exhaustion, an ever-present weariness hidden beneath layers of restraint. He had noticed it before but never thought much of it—until now.
Flipping through the pages, he absorbed everything. Your education, your qualifications—he committed them to memory effortlessly, piecing together an image of who you had been before joining Prestige. He could almost see it: you, bent over textbooks, scribbling down notes, fueled by a dream to make a difference.
His gaze lingered on the section about your family. Supportive parents, a stable upbringing—something he himself never had. A mentor who had guided you toward success. Yunho exhaled quietly. He was glad you had people who cared for you, yet the more he read, the more things didn't add up.
Then he found it. The moment you and Dr Sergei Ivanov had been recruited into Prestige Asylum. Everything seemed normal at first—until it wasn't. Not long after joining, the both of you had attempted to resign. Yunho's brows furrowed as he skimmed ahead, expecting to find an explanation. But there was nothing.
The resignation had never gone through.
Instead, both of you have continued working at the wretched institution up to the present day. That alone wasn't what unsettled him most—it was the fact that from the moment of that failed resignation, neither of you had seen your families since.
Yunho's jaw tightened. He didn't need to see the missing details to guess what had happened. He had seen this before, in different forms, under different circumstances. Prestige Asylum had buried the truth, manipulated the narrative. He had no doubt that whatever had taken place was the reason for the exhaustion in your eyes, the anxiety lurking beneath your composed demeanour.
But what exactly had happened?
He closed the file, fingers tapping against the cover in thought. He could make assumptions, but assumptions weren't enough. He needed confirmation. He needed the truth. And now, it seemed like you were the only one who could give it to him.
But it won't be easy.
Yunho had expected many things. He had expected frustration, dead ends, and the constant need to reassess his approach. What he hadn't expected, however, was for you to be the one to break first.
After your last conversation, he had made the difficult decision to leave you alone, to respect your plea and to keep his distance. Keeping Yeosang's words in mind, he had thrown himself back into his task, digging for evidence the Black Pirates could use to expose Prestige Asylum for what it truly was. But time and time again, he met disappointment. The asylum was airtight, designed to keep outsiders from uncovering its secrets. Despite his best efforts under his security consultant cover, all he had managed to gather were fragments—not nearly enough to bring Ryoichi Sato down. If only you had chosen to help him, he could have made real progress.
But he remembered the desperation in your voice when you had begged him to leave you and your mentor alone. And despite his own firm words, he waged an internal war, wondering if he should do as you asked. If leaving you alone was truly the right thing to do.
Unbeknownst to him, his absence had unsettled you more than you cared to admit. Even though you had been the one to ask him to stay away, you had found yourself watching him as he worked, seeing the way his frustration grew at the lack of progress. You saw the way his shoulders tensed as he left the asylum each day, his patience wearing thin.
His words echoed in your mind, refusing to be silenced.
"I'm not asking you to betray anyone. I'm asking you to work with us. Help us take down the Chairman, and in return, we'll make sure you come out of this unscathed."
At the time, the idea of helping him had seemed foolish, reckless even. But after your recent encounter with Zhou, you feared things were only going to get worse. Had it not been for Yunho, you didn't even want to think about what could have happened. Staying here and obeying orders guaranteed your family's safety for now, but Sato was a snake—who was to say he wouldn't turn on you and Dr Ivanov the moment you became disposable?
The thought of aiding Yunho in taking Prestige down had once seemed ridiculous. But what if it was your only chance at freedom?
You had seen the way he had fought for you, the way he had looked at you—not with pity, but with anger on your behalf. It had changed something in you. He had finally given you his real name. And maybe that had been the final push you needed.
So now, here he was, sitting before you in your office as you carefully pushed the files toward him. Documents filled with fabricated diagnoses and records of transactions that proved what he had suspected all along—Prestige Asylum was a shield for the wealthy and corrupt, a place where justice was bought and buried.
He stared at the papers as disbelief settled in. "What's this?" he asked, his voice quieter than usual, laced with restrained shock.
You exhaled slowly, arms crossing over your chest as if to shield yourself from what you were about to do. "Evidence you've been trying to uncover all this time but couldn't. It's not enough to take the place down, but it's something. These contain information on the patients I was assigned, at least. There are more that I have yet—"
"Thank you."
His voice was firm yet sincere, cutting you off before you could finish. Your breath hitched slightly at the way he looked at you—no gloating, no smug satisfaction, just quiet gratitude. It was disarming.
You looked away, suddenly feeling exposed. "Don't thank me yet. This… this doesn't mean anything."
Yunho tilted his head slightly, studying you. "Does it really not?"
You bit the inside of your cheek. Maybe it did. Maybe it meant more than you were ready to admit.
You had convinced yourself that you were only doing this to return the favour, to repay the debt you felt you owed him after what he had done for you. But deep down, you knew it wasn't just that.
It was the way you had seen him struggle, the way he kept pushing forward despite how difficult it was. It was the way he had saved you without hesitation, how he had looked at you like you were more than just another cog in the machine of Prestige Asylum.
And maybe, just maybe, it was because, for the first time in a long time, you wanted to believe in something again.
He carefully gathered the files, his fingers ghosting over the pages before he met your gaze once more. "This is a start."
You nodded, still uncertain, still afraid. But for the first time, you weren't entirely unwilling.
And that was enough—for now.
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Time passed, though neither of you ever acknowledged the change.
There had been no formal agreement, no spoken confirmation, but it was there—a silent understanding that you and Yunho were now working together.
You continued your daily routine, performing your duties with the same composure as always, but now with a purpose beyond survival. Every session, every document, every exchange within the asylum was another opportunity to collect evidence. Yunho, on the other hand, went on with his investigations under the guise of Prestige Asylum's new security consultant, but his work had become more efficient, more precise—because now, he had an insider.
And you had finally learned everything about him.
"I'm the Enforcer of the Black Pirates."
That was all he had to say for you to immediately understand.
The Black Pirates were no ordinary syndicate. Their name alone sent ripples through the underworld, spoken of in hushed, wary tones by the high-profile criminals this institution harboured. Ruthless, strategic, and feared, they had built a reputation as one of the most formidable forces in the underground.
At least, until recently.
Rumours had spread through the asylum—criminals whispering about the gang's latest struggles. They had become the newest target of the up-and-coming White Serpents, a rising syndicate that had been making waves with their brutal and unpredictable tactics. It wasn't just idle gossip; even Sato had taken notice.
If only these criminals, if only Ryoichi Sato himself, knew that one of the Black Pirates was now walking among them, quietly dismantling their precious asylum from the inside. You wondered if they would still be so smug.
Knowing who Yunho truly was brought you an odd sense of reassurance. It wasn't that you trusted him completely—not yet—but his reputation spoke for itself. If he had come this far, if his people had been able to shake even the strongest criminal empires, then perhaps—just perhaps—he could pull this off.
But there was still a risk.
You knew what would happen if the Chairman discovered your betrayal. Prestige did not tolerate disloyalty. You had seen firsthand what happened to those who had outlived their usefulness, to those who dared to resist. Even now, you and Dr Ivanov were still trapped in this place because of one failed attempt to leave.
And yet…
For the first time in years, your fate was in your own hands. You realised now that if you continued to stay put, this nightmare would never end. Sato would keep tightening his hold, keep pulling the strings, keep ensuring that neither you nor the head psychologist would ever see your families again.
Perhaps it was time to do something about it. For your family. For Dr Ivanov and his family. For yourself. And for the first time, that thought didn't terrify you. It gave you hope.
Hope.
A cruel, fragile thing.
It wavered in your chest as you stared down at the worn photograph in your hands, your parents' smiling faces frozen in time. You traced their features with your fingertips, your vision blurring with unshed tears. It had been so long since you'd seen them, so long since you had felt the warmth of home.
And now, you were about to write them another letter. Another carefully crafted lie. Another excuse about why you couldn't return home yet. Another attempt to reassure them that you were safe when, in reality, you had never felt more trapped.
Will this be the last time?
The thought lodged itself painfully in your mind. You wanted to believe it. You wanted to believe that this was the last time you'd have to lie to them, the last time you'd have to pretend that everything was fine, now that you had a plan—Yunho's plan.
But even as you forced yourself to write, exhaustion seeped into your bones, weighing heavier than ever. You were tired—so, so tired. Tired of pretending. Tired of surviving instead of living. Tired of never knowing if you would ever be free again.
The first tear fell before you could stop it.
Then another.
And soon, they wouldn't stop.
Goddamnit, where is she?
Yunho wandered through the dimly lit halls, searching for you. It had become routine—this quiet, unspoken agreement between you. Every evening before he left, he would find you, collect whatever evidence you had managed to obtain that day, exchange a few words, and then go on his way.
But today, your office was empty.
You had left him the files, as usual, stashed in the hidden corner you had designated in case you weren't around. Technically, he had no reason to linger. His job was done for the day.
And yet, something didn't sit right.
Your absence unsettled him in a way he couldn't explain. His mind raced with possibilities. What if something had happened to you? What if Zhou had gotten to you again? What if—
Shaking the thought away, he signalled for his driver to leave the compound, ensuring it looked as though he had left. Then, moving with the stealth he had long mastered, he slipped back inside. The unease gnawed at him as he searched.
You weren't with the patients. That, at least, was a relief.
Still, the asylum was vast, and the deeper he ventured, the heavier the silence became. It wasn't until he reached the abandoned wing that he finally found you. Sitting alone. Crying.
There you are.
His footsteps were nearly soundless as he approached, but somehow, you still sensed him. Your body tensed before you abruptly turned, raising a fist in pure reflex. He caught your wrist before you could strike, his grip firm but not forceful.
"Relax," he murmured gently, his voice softer than you expected. "It's me."
The tension in your muscles unravelled as you exhaled a shaky breath, turning away almost instantly. You wiped at your eyes in a futile attempt to erase the evidence of your tears, but you knew it was useless. He had already seen.
"Why are you still here?" you asked, your voice thick with emotion, your fingers tightening around the photograph in your lap.
Instead of answering right away, the man lowered himself beside you, close enough that his warmth pressed against the cool air of the abandoned wing. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees, hands loosely intertwined.
"You weren't in your office, and I... just wanted to make sure you were alright," he whispered.
A lump formed in your throat at his sincerity. You sniffled, rubbing at your nose as you tried to keep your voice steady. "I'm fine."
He let out a quiet, disbelieving chuckle, shaking his head. "Are you, though?"
You didn't respond. You didn't have to.
The silence that followed wasn't uncomfortable. It lingered, heavy but strangely grounding.
Your gaze dropped to the photograph still trembling in your hands. He followed your line of sight, his eyes softening as he took in the faded edges, the familiar smiles frozen in time. After a beat, he dared to ask, "Your parents? Are they… safe?"
You hesitated before giving a small nod. But there was no relief in your expression, no weight lifted from your shoulders. "They are… for now." Your voice was quiet, almost fragile. "So long as I stay here like a good dog, they will be."
His breath hitched almost imperceptibly, but you caught it.
That was all he needed to hear.
His jaw tightened, fingers curling into fists against his thighs. He had suspected you were trapped here, but now, he understood just how deep the chains ran. The safety of your loved ones bound you to this place. And somehow, that realisation cut deeper than he expected.
Yunho had seen people held captive in many ways before—by fear, by greed, by debt, by loyalty. But this? This was different.
Because it was you.
The quiet between you stretched, but neither of you felt the need to fill it. Instead, he slowly, cautiously, let his fingers relax. Then, without thinking, he reached out—not forcefully, not expectantly, but just enough for his knuckles to brush against yours where they still clutched the photograph.
A silent offer. A quiet anchor.
You didn't pull away. For the first time, you let the warmth of his presence seep into the cracks of your exhaustion.
The Enforcer's resolve solidified.
Prestige Asylum had to fall. Not just for his mission. Not just for the Black Pirates. But for you.
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As your quiet alliance with Yunho deepened, it was only a matter of time before your mentor noticed.
Dr Ivanov had always been observant. Each evening, he watched with furrowed brows as Stefano Lee left your office before departing the compound. It had happened too many times now to be a coincidence. The Russian psychologist had been aware that the so-called security consultant wasn't who he claimed to be, but now a more pressing concern took root.
Was he coercing you into helping him? Was he threatening you?
The thought weighed on him until he finally decided to confront you. He waited until he was sure the taller man was gone, then made his way to your office, knocking firmly before pushing the door open at your soft "Come in." But the moment he heard your next words, he knew. He had been wrong.
"Back so soon? Did you forget something again?"
Your words faltered when your eyes lifted to meet his as realisation struck—this wasn't the charming gang member. It was your mentor. And in that single second, Ivanov saw it in your face. You had been willingly meeting with the man.
A long sigh left the elderly man as he stepped inside. "So, you gave in?"
You quickly rose from your seat, bowing your head slightly. "Sir, I can explain."
And you did. You told him everything—how Yunho had saved you, the truth about who he really was, and the fact that he wasn't just any gang member, but the Enforcer of the Black Pirates. Throughout it all, Ivanov listened in silence, his expression unreadable. But as you spoke, something in your voice softened. You reassured him that Yunho wasn't like the criminals you both dealt with every day.
He wasn't like them.
"His real name is—"
"No." His firm response stopped you short, and for a moment, your heart sank. But then, he surprised you. His lips quirked into the smallest of smiles.
"He entrusted you with his name, not me," the head psychologist murmured. "Protect it the way he protected you."
The tension in your shoulders eased. That was all you needed to know. Your mentor understood. Without another word, he took the seat across from you, silently offering his support. And for the first time in what felt like forever, you weren't alone in this.
"I will, sir."
Back at the Black Pirates' mansion, Yunho strode down the dimly lit corridors, heading for his room after leaving the day's evidence with the Captain. Just as he reached for the doorknob, his fingers brushed against something small in his pocket.
Frowning, he pulled it out—and a quiet chuckle slipped past his lips.
A candy.
The memory resurfaced immediately.
Earlier that day, his gaze had drifted to the glass bowl of sweets on your desk. "You know," he mused with amusement, "it almost feels like the amount never lessens. Who are these even for, doc?"
You smirked, leaning back in your chair as you plucked one up. "They're for patients I like. But… as you can see, there aren't many I'm capable of liking here. Or even at all." The smirk didn't last. Reality had a way of dimming those small flickers of humour.
Before you could react, he swiped the candy from your hand, his fingers grazing yours for the briefest second. Your breath hitched. "Wha—"
"I may not be a patient," he grinned, tucking it into his pocket, "but I can be your favourite."
You scoffed, rolling your eyes. "You wish." His smile lingered as he turned away, the candy now his.
"Oh, great. Not you too."
A deep voice pulled him from his thoughts. He pushed the candy back into his pocket and turned to face the source.
Song Mingi.
The Firestarter leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed, a knowing smirk tugging at his lips. Yunho's expression darkened. He had grown tired of the man's recent jabs, the barely veiled resentment in his voice. "Enough, Mingi," he said, voice low and cutting. "Let's not be hypocrites."
Mingi stiffened slightly as his best friend took a step forward. "Don't start this bullshit unless you can clean up your own mess and cut off your new lady friend too." His smirk faded.
"Everyone here is doing their best," the Enforcer continued. "And if you have nothing to contribute except complaints, shut up. We all know you're in the same damn shoes. No one calls you out on it out of respect, so don't take that for granted. Don't take the anger of your own failure out on the rest of us."
Mingi's jaw tightened, but he didn't argue. With that, Yunho turned and disappeared into his room, the door slamming shut behind him.
Silence stretched between the remaining brothers. And for once, the Firestarter had nothing to say. Yunho knew you were never supposed to be part of his mission. But unlike his hyungs, he wasn't blind to reality. This wasn't a distraction. You weren't a distraction. His protectiveness over you wasn't a weakness—it was fuel. A reason to push harder, to move faster.
Because if he succeeded in bringing Prestige Asylum and Ryoichi Sato down, he wouldn't just be completing his mission.
He'd be setting you free.
And he would see that through, no matter what.
That determination only strengthened as he returned to the asylum the next day. This mission had always been about taking down Sato, about gathering enough evidence to expose Prestige for what it truly was. But now, as he walked through the cold, sterile halls, he knew his purpose had expanded. He wasn't just here for the mission anymore. He was here for you. And that purpose solidified when he saw you break.
It started with an uneasy feeling. You weren't in your office. That alone unsettled him. Even on difficult days, you always managed to be where you needed to be. But not today.
His gut twisted as he searched through the institution, his steps quick but calculated, ignoring the wary glances from passing staff. By the time he reached the more secluded wing of the building, a faint sound stopped him in his tracks.
A choked, muffled sob.
He followed the sound until he reached the door of the female washroom. Pushing it open, he stepped inside—and there you were.
Standing before the mirror, gripping the sink as if it were the only thing keeping you upright. Your white doctor's coat was discarded at the side. Your sleeves were pushed up, revealing fresh burns marring your arms—small, circular wounds that made his blood run cold. Yunho felt the breath leave his lungs.
Cigarette burns.
Yunho's breath stilled. His hands curled into fists, knuckles white with barely contained fury. He had fought and bled through enough hellish places to recognise the work of a sadist when he saw it—because once upon a time, he had been on the receiving end of that same cruelty. The scars on his own body were proof. And he didn't need to ask who had done this to you.
Zhou.
That fucking bastard.
The anger roared in his veins, an unrelenting storm demanding vengeance, but he forced it down—for now. Because this wasn't about him. This was about you. And right now, you didn't need revenge.
You needed someone.
He moved slowly, careful not to startle you. His reflection joined yours in the mirror, but you remained unmoving, lost in a world of pain he could only imagine. It wasn't until he was close enough that you finally spoke, your voice fragile and raw.
"I... I refused him again. And he was furious."
His chest tightened.
Without thinking, his fingers ghosted over your wrist, an instinctive need to comfort—but the moment you flinched, he stopped, his heart twisting as you whimpered, "No... don't look at me. I'm ashamed to face you... or anyone."
The Enforcer exhaled, his jaw tightening as he fought the ache in his throat. Ashamed? The thought of you—someone so strong, so resilient—believing you had something to be ashamed of made his blood run cold.
"And why should you be ashamed?" he asked softly.
Your voice broke. "Because I'm weak."
A pained smile tugged at the corner of his lips. A smile that held years of unspoken memories, buried wounds that had never fully healed. "Then I guess I am too."
Your blurry eyes lifted to meet his in the mirror, confusion flickering through your exhausted expression. Before you could ask, he quietly unbuttoned the first few buttons of his shirt.
Your breath hitched.
Faded scars marred his chest—old burns, some shaped like the ones on your arms, others deeper, more jagged. Wounds left by cruel hands, by people who should have protected him.
"I was once young and defenceless, beaten and abused by the people I called my parents, all because I was the product of an accident, an unplanned birth," he admitted, voice steady but heavy. "I spent my teenage years committing petty crimes, drifting through life aimlessly because I believed I didn't deserve any better. I thought I was ruined… so I accepted my fate."
You stared at him, your own pain momentarily forgotten as you listened.
"But my leader found me. He taught me that it wasn't my fault. That sometimes, no matter how strong we try to be, we need someone to pull us out of it. He was that person for me." He took a step closer, his voice softer now, but no less firm. "And now… I just want you to know that you don't have to be strong all the time."
You finally turned to face him fully.
"Let someone else carry the weight for once." His voice was a whisper now, but it reached you in ways nothing else had. "I'm here now."
Something inside you broke. For years, you had carried the weight of your suffering alone. You had built walls, convinced yourself that no one could—or would—save you. But standing here, with him, someone who knew what it was like to be trapped in suffering, who understood what it meant to survive…
The walls cracked.
A shaky breath left your lips, and before you could stop yourself, you leaned into him. And Yunho, without hesitation, held you up.
He didn't promise that things would be okay. He didn't tell you to be strong. He simply stayed, steady and unyielding, silently promising that, for once, you weren't alone. For the first time in years, you let someone share your burden. And for the first time in years, he let someone see the scars he no longer hid behind.
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"This won't do. The evidence we've been collecting—I fear it won't be enough to take Prestige down completely. Even if we leak it to the authorities, Sato and all his friends feigning mental illness here will find a way to twist the narrative. They'll deny everything until the very end," Yunho said, his voice low but resolute.
He sat across from you in your office, a familiar sight by now. Yet, something had changed ever since that day in the washroom. Neither of you had spoken about it, but it was there—in the way his visits stretched longer, in the way his touch lingered just a moment too long, in the way your gazes held more than just strategy.
Something unspoken lingered between you, but neither of you acknowledged it. Perhaps because you both knew the circumstances wouldn't allow for more. Nothing more than this.
You bit your lip, hesitating.
Now was the time.
For days, you had debated whether or not to tell him. At first, you had kept it to yourself for his safety, or maybe it was for your own. You weren't sure anymore. But when you had told him he didn't know the full extent of Sato's operations, you had meant it.
"I…" Your voice wavered. "I do have something. Something that could destroy this place completely if it gets out."
He leaned forward, his gaze sharpening. "But?"
Your fingers curled into fists. "I have no evidence, Yunho. Sato is incredibly careful, he—"
Without hesitation, he reached across the desk, covering your trembling hand with his. His warmth steadied you, grounding you in the moment.
"Don't worry about him or the evidence," he said, voice steady, reassuring. "That's what I'm here for. Just tell me. Tell me everything you know about this place."
You swallowed hard, the weight of your secrets pressing down on you. But then his grip tightened ever so slightly—an unspoken promise. "You trust me, right?" he asked, his voice softer now.
You met his gaze, the sincerity in his eyes dissolving the last bit of doubt within you.
"I do."
Thanks to your help, Yunho's gaze stayed locked on the Chairman's office later that night, perched like a throne atop the highest floor of the main building. The faint glow seeping through the curtains barely touched the darkness of the night, but it was enough. Somewhere in that room lay the final, undeniable proof to expose Sato—and tonight, he was going to get it.
Rolling his shoulders, he tugged on his gloves, loosening his tie before throwing Yeosang a nod. "I'll leave the Records Room to you."
The Phantom smirked, tightening the straps of his gear. "This little birdie of yours best not be lying."
Yunho's jaw flexed, the protectiveness in his tone sharp. "She's not."
His brother only shrugged, adjusting his weapons before melting into the shadows. "She better not be."
With a roll of his eyes, the Enforcer turned on his heel, striding toward the Chairman's office while Yeosang vanished over the fences with practised ease. He would scour the second-best place for evidence while Yunho infiltrated the most heavily guarded room in the entire asylum. And if the security around it was that tight, there had to be a damn good reason.
And thus, the grand mission began.
Organ harvesting.
That was the truth you had given him.
Prestige Asylum wasn't just a sanctuary for criminals—it was a slaughterhouse. Yunho had seen his fair share of horrors, had waded through the filth of the underworld more times than he could count. But this? This was something else. This was monstrous. The criminals who sought refuge here weren't just evaluated by their wealth and influence. They were examined. Categorised. Sorted like cattle. The weak, the old, the ones who had nothing left to offer? They were marked. Stripped of their dignity. Stripped of their parts.
Organs—harvested, sold, and shipped off to the highest bidder.
Sato wasn't just sheltering scum.
He was butchering them.
And Yunho felt no pity for these bastards—not when their own sins had led them here. But the sheer scale of it, the grotesque efficiency, the cold, methodical way human bodies were treated as nothing more than a product—it made his stomach churn with disgust he hadn't felt in years.
And yet, in all its horror, this was perfect.
Because this was the key to bringing it all down. With solid proof, it wouldn't just be the authorities coming for Ryoichi Sato. It would be his own people. The criminals who had thought they were safe, who had paid their way into this fortress of false security, would come to a sickening realisation. They were never guests. They were inventory.
And once the truth came out, Prestige wouldn't just fall.
It would burn.
"Wait, what are you going to do now?"
Your voice echoed in Yunho's mind as he moved silently through the shadows, each step deliberate, every muscle coiled with purpose. The asylum was still, save for the occasional flicker of a distant security light. His target was near, but for a fleeting moment, his thoughts strayed—to you.
Unlike his usual self, he didn't know why he did it, but he found himself pausing. Just for a second. Just long enough to glance down at the darkened window of your office. A faint smile tugged at his lips. Were you already asleep in your quarters? Would you be furious if you knew what he was doing now? He wondered how you'd react—if you'd scold him, if you'd worry, if you'd care.
Care about him the way he cared about you.
His heartbeat stuttered at the thought, at the memory of you grasping his arm before he could leave your office earlier that evening. The genuine concern in your eyes, the slight tremble in your voice—it had made something tighten in his chest.
You were worried for him.
For him.
He could still feel the warmth of your touch, the way his hand instinctively covered yours, his thumb brushing against your skin in silent reassurance. He shouldn't have lingered, but he did. And then, for some godforsaken reason, he had winked at you, teasing, "Don't worry about it, doc. You've done all you could, and for that, I thank you. I'll take care of the rest now."
You hadn't let go.
And for a moment—just a moment—the two of you had stood there, locked in a wordless exchange that spoke louder than anything either of you could say aloud. Then he had made the mistake of looking down.
Your lips.
His resolve had nearly crumbled. He had fought everything in him to tear his gaze away, forcing himself to meet your eyes again—eyes that were no longer guarded, no longer dismissive like when you first met. No, there was a fire in them now.
And god, he liked seeing that fire.
"You better, Jung Yunho."
He had nearly groaned at the way his name sounded coming from you, low and daring. He had bitten his lip, eyes dark with unspoken thoughts before murmuring, "I promise."
And then he left—because if he hadn't, he might have done something foolish.
Now, as he shook off the memory and refocused on his mission, he felt it. The fire in you had ignited something in him too. And no matter what happened tonight, he would keep his promise.
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Yunho moved like a shadow, slipping past guards who might as well have been mannequins for all the use they were. Years of training with the Phantom had honed him into a ghost, his presence undetectable, his steps soundless. If anyone so much as blinked at the wrong moment, they'd never know he had been there at all.
The Chairman's office loomed ahead, its grand double doors guarded by two men who stood with stiff professionalism. But the Enforcer had seen better security in cheap nightclubs. A well-timed distraction—a small device flicked across the hall, producing a distant clatter—was all it took for them to step away, momentarily distracted. That was his cue. He was inside within seconds.
And he almost laughed.
That was it? Just the usual lock-picking technique? The great Ryoichi Sato, mastermind of this entire operation, was brought down by a few turns of a pick? Yunho had expected retina scanners, biometric safes, maybe even a hidden security system, but this?
Pathetic.
Shaking off his disbelief, he got to work, rifling through drawers, scanning bookshelves, even running his hands along the edges of furniture for hidden compartments. He found a safe tucked behind an abstract painting and smirked.
This was the real challenge.
Except it wasn't.
A few code attempts later—birthdates, the asylum's founding year, a few numbers from the invoices he found—and the safe clicked open. His grin vanished the second he saw what was inside.
Gold bars. Stacks of cash. A few vaguely worded invoices.
Nothing useful.
Yunho inhaled sharply, a spark of frustration lighting in his chest. This wasn't enough. They needed something undeniable, something that would expose Sato for what he truly was—a butcher masquerading as a saviour. Not meaningless transactions.
He was running out of places to search. And time.
Just as he was about to leave and search elsewhere, his fingers brushed against something buried in one of the lower drawers. He pulled it out, his breath catching slightly. A photograph.
You, smiling with your parents.
His fingers curled tightly around it as he pulled out another one. Dr Ivanov, standing with his wife and child.
Fuckin' bastard.
A sharp surge of anger coursed through him, his grip on the photos tightening. He wanted to tear them apart, to destroy the reason you're trapped in this godforsaken place. But before he could act on the impulse, a soft knock echoed through the room.
He froze. His head whipped around, every muscle tensed, every sense heightened. Had he been caught? Had the guards finally realised something was wrong?
Then, he heard it—faint but familiar. "It's me. Find a way to open this secret passage. You're in for a surprise."
Yeosang.
Yunho exhaled sharply, his heartbeat steadying as he turned toward the sound. The bookshelf near the far wall shifted slightly, as if someone was pushing from the other side. A hidden passage?
Without wasting another second, he ran his hands along the wood, searching for a mechanism. It took a few tries—pressing at different spots, pulling at certain books—until finally, something clicked. The shelf groaned as it slowly swung open, revealing a dimly lit passageway.
And there stood the Phantom, arms crossed, an infuriatingly smug grin tugging at his lips. "Seems Dr Prude wasn't lying after all."
Yunho scoffed, stepping forward. "Told you so."
With that, the brothers disappeared into the darkness below. The taller man raised a brow as he stepped into the dimly lit chamber, taking in the scene before him.
The ground was littered with bodies—some unconscious, thanks to Yeosang, and others far beyond saving. The criminals who had foolishly sought refuge in Prestige lay sprawled on cold metal tables, their chests crudely opened, the sickly scent of antiseptic failing to mask the underlying stench of blood and decay. It was clear that mere minutes ago, this room had been alive with activity—surgeons slicing, nurses assisting, transactions being made in hushed voices—until the Phantom arrived and ended it all in an instant.
"Impressive," Yunho muttered, nudging one of the unconscious workers with his boot.
The Phantom shrugged as if it were nothing. "They weren't even that skilled. Hardly worth the effort." He turned his gaze toward the far end of the room, where a row of glass walls separated them from an adjoining chamber. "Was wandering through the last few rows of the Records Room until I found a similar opening that led to this place. Figured you'd be around here somewhere."
Yunho followed his brother's nod, his attention shifting past the bloodstained operating tables to the massive archive just beyond the glass. There. He didn't need Yeosang's smirk to confirm it. It was practically a gold mine. Without hesitation, he stepped inside, his eyes immediately drawn to the endless shelves lined with thick folders. He pulled one out at random, flipping it open, and the realisation hit like a punch to the gut.
Patient files.
No, not patients.
Criminals.
Sato's team of corrupt doctors had faked their deaths, using fabricated mental illnesses as a cover for their "decline." One by one, they were marked as deceased, their medical records doctored to remove suspicion. Their organs were harvested, sold on the black market, and their bodies discreetly disposed of like garbage.
And at the bottom of each profile—cold, clinical, and damning—was a final price. The total amount each body had been worth.
His grip tightened on the folder. This wasn't just a side hustle. This was the asylum's lifeblood. The money made from these transactions didn't just line Sato's pockets—it funded Prestige's continued expansion. Every new wing, every upgraded facility, every added layer of so-called security only made the place more untouchable, burying its corruption deeper beneath a facade of legitimacy.
This was how the Chairman had managed to build a kingdom on filth and blood. By monetising both the living and the dead. By making sure that even his customers—his supposed "guests"—were nothing more than assets waiting to be cashed in.
The Enforcer exhaled sharply, shoving the file back into place. This was it. This was everything they needed. "Time to report back," he said, turning to Yeosang.
His brother grinned, already moving toward the passage. "Hongjoong hyung's gonna have a field day with this."
Yunho glanced back at the bloodstained room one last time, his jaw tightening. Sato had built this empire on greed, corruption, and death. And now, they were going to tear it all down.
But before that, there was something else he needed to do. He had told the Phantom to head back first. It was reckless to linger after the stunt they had just pulled—if security caught wind of what happened before he was off the compound, everything could come crashing down on him. But he had to do this first.
Slipping back into Sato's office with practised stealth, he made sure to reseal the hidden passage before heading straight for the drawer. His fingers found the photos instantly. A picture of you with your parents. Another of Dr Ivanov with his family.
Yeosang had called it a stupid risk, but Yunho didn't care. Something in him refused to let Ryoichi Sato keep these. He hated the idea of that bastard having something so personal, so intimate, tucked away in his possession.
This was for you.
For the sake of his own heart.
Tucking the photos neatly into his pocket, he slipped out through a side window, moving like a shadow as he made his way toward your office. He knew you weren't there, but maybe he'd leave behind a little surprise for you to find in the morning.
Only, he didn't expect to hear his name whispered from behind.
"Yunho?"
He spun around instantly, eyes locking onto your figure. You stood there in casual clothes, a stark contrast to the formal attire he was so used to seeing you in. Why were you still up? Could you not sleep? You cradled a steaming mug in your hands—coffee, he presumed—but it was the expression on your face that caught him off guard.
Shock. Then alarm.
Your feet moved before your mind could catch up. You grabbed his arm, your grip firm, urgent. "What the hell are you doing here at this time of night, you idiot?" you whisper-yelled.
He grinned sheepishly and pulled the photos from his pocket, holding them up. "Came to return these to you."
Your heart clenched. He had risked everything to retrieve them.
Before you could even begin to process the implications, the thunder of footsteps echoed down the hall. The voices of guards grew louder—searching, calling out about an intruder.
Your pulse spiked. Without a second thought, you grabbed the man and yanked him inside your office, slamming the door shut behind you just as your better judgement screamed at you for doing so. "Fuck," you cursed under your breath, your mind racing.
He was already scanning the room, searching for an escape, but there was none. The only window was too small, useless.
"In there!" a guard shouted just outside.
Panic clawed at your chest.
No time.
Without hesitation, you cupped Yunho's face. His breath hitched, his body tensing at the sudden contact. Wide, startled eyes locked onto yours. If not for the urgency of the situation, you might have laughed at how adorably caught off guard he looked.
"Kiss me," you whispered.
For a split second, the world seemed to pause. Then, he understood.
His arms wrapped around your waist just as you crashed your lips against his, your heart hammering—not just from the approaching guards but from the way he responded so instantly, so intensely. He kissed you back without hesitation.
There was no time to register that this—this was your first kiss together. No time to process the warmth of his body pressed against yours, the way his lips moved with such desperation, as if he had been waiting for this moment longer than he cared to admit.
Instinctively, he spun you around, positioning his body between you and the door just as it burst open.
"You—M-Mr. Lee? What are you still doing here?" the head guard stammered, his eyes nearly bulging out of their sockets.
The man had spent the past few months working closely with Yunho, trusting him as their security consultant. And yet, here he was—lips swollen, hair tousled, in a very compromising position with the deputy head psychologist.
You fisted the gang member's shirt as if grounding yourself before snapping, "What do you think he's doing here? You're a man too, can't you see we're busy? What's with all the ruckus anyway?"
Yunho played along perfectly, smirking against your temple before turning to the guard. "Sorry, man," he said smoothly, voice dripping with amusement. "I know this isn't exactly professional, but I promise, it's all consensual. No harm done."
The head guard's face burned at the sight of your smudged lipstick on the man's lips. He paled as realisation hit him like a freight train. He had just walked in on the security consultant and the deputy head psychologist.
"M-My apologies," he stuttered, visibly flustered. He shifted awkwardly, clearly unwilling to explain the real reason for the intrusion—because to do so would mean exposing their own illegal operations. "There's just… been a break-in. We're on the lookout for an intruder. You were right, sir. We do have room for improvement still. I uhh... we can discuss that another time. P-Please continue."
With that, he hastily backed out and shut the door behind him.
Silence fell between you and the Enforcer. Your hands were still pressed against his chest, your lips still tingling from the kiss. And that was when it truly hit you.
That was your first kiss.
Your breath caught in your throat as you hesitantly lifted your gaze to meet Yunho's. His dark eyes studied you, unreadable, but his fingers still lingered on your waist, as if he wasn't quite ready to let go.
Then, a slow smirk curled at the corner of his lips. "Well," he murmured, voice teasing, yet there was something deeper beneath it—something softer. "That was one hell of a cover-up."
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"Ahh, Stefano… how long has it been since you started working with us?" the Chairman of Prestige Asylum mused, his voice smooth as he poured whiskey into two glasses—one for himself and one for the man seated across from him.
The Enforcer leaned back comfortably, one leg crossed over the other, exuding confidence as he flashed an easy grin. "I don't know, Chairman. You tell me. Long enough for you to give me a sizable tip, I hope."
His tone was casual, his expression unreadable, but beneath the mask, he was burning with barely contained disgust. To think this man had once held power, had once been an official of the law. Now, he sat here like a king, oblivious to the empire he was about to lose. If only the world knew the true depth of his depravity.
But Yunho had one final act to play.
The evidence was secured. The truth was waiting to be unveiled. He and Yeosang had delivered everything the night before—a crucial victory after months of deception and danger. But the fight wasn't over. Not until Sato was finished.
And now, as expected, he had been summoned. He knew why.
The break-in.
Yunho wouldn't be surprised if Sato was suspicious of him. After all, his sudden appearance at the compound the night before—coincidentally during the very time the security was breached—was too convenient. Even if he had been "found" in a compromising position with you, the timing was still too perfect.
Or perhaps the Chairman simply needed his expertise. As their trusted security consultant, it was his job to assess their weaknesses—and last night had proven their defences weren't as airtight as they thought. Either way, he was prepared for this.
His brothers were on standby, waiting for his signal. He had assured them he could handle this alone, though San had been tasked with lingering nearby—mostly to keep an eye on you. You were a valuable ally, he had told them. He had promised to repay you with freedom, he had explained. But everyone knew what you truly were to him.
You weren't just a mission to him anymore. You had become something more. Something he didn't even bother denying now.
You had never been a liability, not to him and not to the Black Pirates. And for that, they had accepted you—just as they recently had Seonghwa's new companion, a woman who had proven worthy of a place among them. Perhaps even something more to the eldest than anyone dared to say aloud. But it didn't matter. She had survived hell and clawed her way out, and now, under the Gentleman's guidance, she was becoming something formidable.
Even Mingi had let go of his initial resistance after learning of the horrors she had endured at the Red Room.
Yunho could only hope for the same outcome for himself. For you.
Did you know?
Did you realise you had become his greatest motivation?
He had left you the night before, the photos finally back where they belonged—in your hands. He had watched you stroke your parents' faces through the worn paper, tears welling in your eyes. And before he could stop himself, he had leaned down, pressing a firm kiss to your cheek. Your sharp gasp had made him smirk.
As your head snapped up to meet his gaze, he had only said, "You'll see them again soon. Don't worry." His tone had been light, but the promise was real. And when you had pushed him playfully by the chest, a soft smile breaking through your sadness, he had known.
"I believe you," you had murmured.
And then he was gone.
Now, here he was, sitting across from the man who had orchestrated so much suffering. The moment he had been waiting for. The moment it would all come to an end.
"A tip, you say?"
Sato chuckled, placing the whiskey glass in front of Yunho before taking a slow sip of his own. He didn't sit. Instead, he prowled around the room, his gaze sharp as he studied the younger man. "Not sure you deserve one after messing around with my deputy head psychologist," he mused, his voice light, but his stare calculating.
He leaned down slightly as if to intimidate, but Yunho only smirked, unfazed. He swirled the drink in his hand, meeting the bastard's gaze with a bold glint of amusement.
"Oh, come on, Chairman. A little conflict of interest won't hurt, will it?" he drawled, his tone dripping with mockery. "I'll make sure to take our late-night activities elsewhere next time, hm?" He smirked, watching Sato's lip curl at the deliberate provocation. "Besides, don't we have bigger problems to deal with? Like the break-in?"
Sato's eyes darkened for a split second before he exhaled slowly, strolling back to his chair. "I suppose… as long as my staff remains loyal to me, it doesn't matter who she sleeps with in her free time." His fingers tapped against the desk rhythmically before he fixed Yunho with a pointed look. "So, tell me, what more can we do to prevent such situations from happening again?"
The Enforcer hummed, pretending to think as he glanced down at the swirling amber liquid in his glass. "I do have some ideas," he mused. "But there's just one thing I don't get."
Sato tilted his head. "And what's that?"
Yunho lifted his gaze, his expression carefully blank. "Why someone would risk everything to break into your office. I mean… it's not like you keep money or valuables in there. What could possibly be worth infiltrating such a high-security place?" His tone was innocent, but the gleam in his eyes betrayed the true weight behind his words.
For the first time, the Chairman's fingers twitched. A sharp exhale. A slow lift of his chin. And then—
"Why don't you tell me that, Enforcer of the Black Pirates?"
Silence.
The gang member's expression didn't change, but his grip on the whiskey glass tightened slightly. He looked up at the bastard, his face blank, but inside, he felt the shift in the game.
Sato grinned triumphantly. "Had fun running around with your little friend last night?" he taunted. "Enjoyed what you found? I sure hope your Captain did."
Yunho said nothing.
"Go ahead," Sato continued smoothly, pouring himself another drink. "Enjoy your little victory while you still can. Because before you even think about doing anything heroic—or shall I say foolish—know this." He leaned in, his voice dropping lower. "I have allies everywhere, inside and outside this compound. You're outnumbered."
The taller man nodded slowly, sighing as if in reluctant defeat. "You might be right…"
Sato smirked.
"But," Yunho continued, setting his glass down with a soft clink, "do your 'friends' know what you've really been up to behind the scenes?"
The room tensed.
Sato's expression flickered for just a second.
Yunho leaned forward, his voice soft but lethal. "Would they still protect you if they found out that this so-called 'sanctuary' you've built is nothing but a slaughterhouse? That you've been trapping them, bleeding them dry, taking their money while secretly preparing to harvest their organs like cattle?"
The silence was deafening.
The Chairman stared at him. Then, he burst into laughter. A slow, condescending chuckle that grew into something darker. He downed his whiskey before shaking his head.
"Like you said, Stefano. That's if they knew." He leaned back, exuding confidence once more. "But they don't. And what they don't know can't hurt them." He shrugged. "If anything, they should be grateful I'm putting their otherwise worthless lives to good use. Had it not been for me, they'd be rotting away in prison or dying in the streets. Here, they serve a higher purpose." His lips curled. "Think of it as Prestige's way of cleansing the filth of the underworld."
Yunho scoffed. "Cleansing? That's a pretty word for butchering people alive for profit."
Sato tilted his head. "Call it what you want. No one will believe you. You and your crew? You're the criminals here. Any 'evidence' you claim to have? It can be dismissed as fabrication."
The younger man chuckled, shaking his head. "You sound awfully defensive for someone who isn't worried." Ryoichi Sato's smirk twitched. Yunho leaned back. "It's almost like… you're afraid someone might believe me."
The Chairman intertwined his fingers, exhaling as if growing tired of the conversation. "You're a smart man, Jung. The Black Pirates are one of the top dogs in this world. What good does it do either of us to tear each other down when we could be working together?"
Yunho raised a brow. "And do what? Harvest organs?" He scoffed. "Sorry, not exactly our kind of business."
Sato waved a hand dismissively. "Offer us protection. In return, we'll be generous in our repayment."
Yunho tilted his head. "And if I say no?"
Sato sighed dramatically. Then, he reached into his desk drawer and pulled out a file.
A familiar file.
Your staff profile.
He placed it down on the desk, tapping it lightly. "Then you leave me with no choice." He lifted his gaze, his voice soft but sharp as a blade. "Your precious little girlfriend will have to suffer in your stead."
The air in the room changed. For the first time, Yunho's smirk disappeared. He straightened in his seat, his jaw locking. "You won't be able to touch her," he muttered, his voice dangerously low. "She's under our protection."
The Chairman only smiled. "Oh, I know. But I don't have to touch her." He tapped the file again. "She isn't the problem. It's them."
Yunho stilled.
Sato's grin widened. "Her parents, Jung. You see, they may be alive, but they aren't exactly safe. And if I wanted to, I could change that in an instant. The question is… how will she feel when she finds out you were the reason she lost them? Will she still look at you the same? Will she still hold that soft spot for you?" He chuckled. "I wonder…"
The Enforcer's vision blurred red.
With a sharp inhale, he shot up from his seat, grabbing the bastard by the collar and yanking him forward. The Chairman only laughed, his eyes gleaming with twisted amusement.
"So, what do you say, Jung?" he whispered. "Come on. It's a win-win situation. You, your brothers, your girl—all safe. Isn't that great?"
Yunho's fingers clenched tighter. His heart pounded. For the first time since he started this mission—since he took on this dangerous role since he infiltrated this godforsaken place—he felt the stakes in a way he hadn't before. Because now, it wasn't just about taking down Ryoichi Sato and Prestige. It was about you.
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"Well, Stefano? What do you say?"
Sato smirked, thinking he had Yunho trapped. That the weight of his threats—the looming danger over your parents' heads—would be enough to force the Black Pirates' Enforcer into submission.
But Yunho?
He had never been one to kneel.
"How about no?"
The Chairman's expression twisted, his nostrils flaring as he clenched his fists. "No? You'll regret this."
Yunho tilted his head, then let out the laugh he had been holding back for far too long. He bit his lip, shaking his head in amusement before casually dusting off his hands. Then, in a deliberate, lazy motion, he slipped them into his pockets, as if he had all the time in the world.
"Oh, Chairman," he drawled, his tone dripping with mockery. "I don't know about that. But I would like to thank you—for being so transparent with me. It's been an absolute pleasure."
The bastard's brows furrowed, suspicion flashing in his eyes. "What the hell are you—"
Then he noticed it.
Yunho lifted his chin slightly, nodding toward the shelf behind the Chairman. Sato instinctively followed his gaze—
And his heart stopped.
There it was. The broadcasting device.
The one usually kept in the administration office. The one used to make announcements throughout the entire asylum. The one that, somehow, was now here—in his office.
And worse? The light was on.
Every fibre of his being locked up as realisation slammed into him like a freight train. His pupils dilated. His breath caught.
"Fuck."
Yunho smirked. "Oh. So you do get it."
Sato shot up from his chair so fast that it scraped against the floor with a sharp screech. He lunged for the device—
But Yunho was faster.
The Enforcer was already moving, catching the Chairman's wrist mid-air and twisting it with just enough force to make Sato stumble. "Uh-uh," Yunho tsked, shaking his head as he tightened his grip. "Too late, old man."
From beyond the office walls—
Chaos. Shouting. Screaming. The once-calm halls of Prestige were now filled with the furious voices of the criminals who had, just minutes ago, thought they were safe.
And then—
BANG!
A gunshot.
Sato flinched, his head whipping toward the door. The unmistakable crack of shattering glass followed—a riot breaking loose.
"What the fuck have you done?!" Sato roared, his face contorting in fury as he struggled against Yunho's hold. "Do you have any idea what you've just done?!"
Yunho grinned. "Oh, I do. And man, it's even better than I imagined."
The Chairman thrashed in his grip, his entire body trembling with rage. "You bastard—"
"Me?" Yunho scoffed, yanking him back. "I'm not the one who just confessed to butchering his own people on a live fucking broadcast."
Another gunshot. More screaming.
Yunho's expression didn't falter.
Sato, on the other hand—
His face drained of colour.
"You said it yourself," Yunho continued, voice smooth as velvet. "What they don't know won't hurt them." He leaned in, his breath brushing against the older man's ear. "But now they know."
Sato's breath came out ragged. He could feel it now—the weight of all those people turning against him. The same criminals who had once worshipped Prestige, who had paid millions to find sanctuary within its walls, were now out for his blood.
All because of one mistake.
One miscalculation.
His trust in the wrong man.
Yunho finally released him with a rough shove, and Sato staggered back, gripping the edge of his desk for support. His hands shook. His mind raced.
No.
No, this couldn't be happening.
"YOU!" he bellowed, reaching for the gun tucked beneath his desk. But before he could even touch it, Yunho's fist slammed into his face. Sato's head snapped to the side, blood splattering across the desk as he crashed onto the floor, groaning in pain.
Yunho shook out his hand, exhaling. "Ahh..." He flexed his fingers. "Been wanting to do that for so long."
Sato coughed, wiping the blood from his split lip as he glared up at him. "You—"
Before he could finish, a loud boom echoed from outside. The door. Someone—no, several people—were trying to break it down. Sato's breath hitched. "No, no, no—" He scrambled up, only for Yunho to kick him back down with a boot to the chest. "Where do you think you're going, Chairman?"
Sato wheezed. "You don't understand!" His voice was different now—higher, desperate. "You think those animals out there will listen to you?! You need me alive! I'm the only one who can control them!"
Yunho's expression darkened.
"Control them?" He crouched down, gripping Sato's chin in an iron hold. "You mean like cattle? Like livestock?"
Sato swallowed hard.
"You're done, old man," Yunho whispered, voice laced with ice. "And there's nothing you can do to change that now."
Another boom. The door was breaking.
The Chairman panicked. His hands shot out, grabbing onto Yunho's jacket like a drowning man grasping for air. "We can make a deal! I can still—" The office doors burst open. A flood of people—Prestige's betrayed criminals—poured in, weapons drawn, faces twisted in rage.
Sato froze. His heart plummeted as the dozens of eyes locked onto him. Murderous. Hungry. Enraged.
"There he is!" someone snarled.
"You lying piece of shit!"
"You were gonna kill us all?!"
Sato's mouth opened, but this time, there was no audience to listen. No prestige. No power. No escape.
And Yunho?
He simply stepped back, slipping his hands into his pockets once more as he glanced toward the entrance.
There, leaning casually against the doorframe—San. The Tempest smirked, twirling a knife between his fingers. "Told ya," he drawled. "He'd be real popular soon."
Yunho chuckled, looking down at Sato one last time. "Have fun, Chairman." And with that, he turned on his heel—leaving the bastard to the very people he once controlled.
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"Flowers for you, Doctor."
You blinked up from your desk, momentarily distracted from the paperwork stacked before you as your nurse placed a bouquet of bright yellow daffodils in front of you.
A soft breath of surprise left your lips as you sat up, fingertips brushing against the delicate petals. "Who are they from?"
The nurse grinned, leaning in to nudge your shoulder playfully. "Who else? Your mysterious man who drops by once in a while."
Your face grew warm, lips parting in mild protest, but before you could say anything, she winked and poked her tongue out teasingly before slipping out of the office.
With a quiet chuckle, you reached for the small white card nestled within the flowers. The scent of fresh blooms filled your senses as you carefully pulled it free, unfolding the note. The words were written in smooth, precise strokes.
"Congratulations on your new position, doc. A real one this time. I knew you'd make it. - your favourite, JYH"
You bit your lip, a smile tugging at the corners of your mouth.
Jung Yunho.
The enigma. The storm that had crashed into your life and, against all odds, saved you. You still weren't sure what exactly you were to him. Neither of you had ever defined it. Perhaps it was better that way. Perhaps he knew better than to drag you into his world, a world far too dark and dangerous for someone like you.
But even if there was nothing more, even if he could never offer you what a normal man could, it was enough. It was enough knowing that he was there. That if you ever needed him, if the shadows of the past ever came creeping back, he would come.
You exhaled softly, standing from your chair to retrieve a vase. As you filled it with water, arranging the daffodils with care, memories of that day—the day Prestige Asylum fell—flooded your mind.
The chaos. The gunfire. The shouts of fury and desperation.
And then him.
Walking towards you through the aftermath like something out of a dream—bloodied knuckles, dirt-streaked skin, and yet—looking every bit like Prince Charming.
"You're free now."
You remembered how his voice had sounded—low, rough with exhaustion, but so sincere as he pulled you into his arms. How his warmth had seeped into you, grounding you, as you clung to him.
How, in that moment, you had believed him.
And you still did.
Because despite the scars Prestige had left, despite the nightmares that still lingered in the corners of your mind, you were free. It had taken time, but you had built something new. You had found a place where you belonged, a purpose that was truly yours.
And he—
He had let you go. Because he had always known you deserved better. But before he left, before he vanished back into the world that had shaped him, he had left you one last thing. A number. A lifeline, tucked into your pocket as he had whispered, "In case you ever need me."
You had never used it.
Not yet.
But as you set the vase on your desk, watching the golden petals sway gently in the light, you found comfort in knowing that, no matter how far he was, he was always within reach.
And maybe, just maybe, that was enough.
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The dim glow of the desk lamp flickered against the polished mahogany surface, casting elongated shadows across the lavish office. Papers lay scattered in organised chaos, but at the centre of it all was a single, closed file.
The man behind the desk tapped his fingers idly against its surface, his lips curling into a slow, knowing grin.
"Huh," he mused, almost amused. "Yet another empire taken down by the Black Pirates." He flipped the file open again, skimming over the details—the chaos at Prestige, the dramatic reveal, Chairman Ryoichi Sato's downfall.
And at the heart of it all—the Enforcer.
A man as dangerous as he was loyal.
"And yet another weakness secured," the figure murmured, leaning back in his chair. His eyes gleamed with something dark, something hungry. "This is getting a little too easy."
Across from him, his subordinate hesitated before stepping forward, a new file in hand. He swallowed, choosing his words carefully.
"Perhaps, sir," he admitted, carefully placing the next folder on the desk. "But… the Phantom seems to be the only one yet to have any weak spots."
The figure stilled. Then, slowly, he reached for the file, fingers tracing the embossed name on its cover. A spark of intrigue flickered in his gaze as he flipped it open, scanning the neatly compiled information on the most elusive member of the gang.
The corners of his lips twitched. "Does he really not?" he murmured, more to himself than anyone else.
Silence.
Then, a dark chuckle.
"Why don't we present him with one?"
Y'all, I'm so sorry this chapter took me like a thousand years! Aside from the fact that work has been crazy, my perfectionism played another huge role in the delay. I'm still not completely pleased with this, but I'm hoping you lovelies would like it more than I did.
As always, thank you for reading and let me know your thoughts! <3
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Royal Blood
Female!Reader x Alpha!Seonghwa
Genre: A/B/O, Royalty
Warning: Mentions of Poison, Sneaking Around, Claws, Fangs, Manipulation, Talks of Violence, Mentions of Blood, Pack Dynamics, Scents, Suspicions
Words: 3.7K
Chapter Six
(Prev//Next) (@starillusion13 @yizhou-time @hannahdinse8)
Prompt: You were a princess in name alone. Unable to perform any of the duties that come with the title. It seemed to be your destiny to live a quiet life. That is until you met someone who refused to see you silenced. Perhaps your fate was wrong all along.
“You’re insane, Seonghwa!”
A small chuckle escaped Seonghwa’s lips as he expected such a reaction from his friend. He had thought things over before finally telling Hongjoong what he wanted to do. How his latest desire was to reveal his scent to you and vice versa. Of course he understood that what he said was incredibly complicated and dangerous to pull off. Yet two heads are better than one to solve a problem.
“You sneak into the princess’ quarters at night, you even manage day visits sometimes, but this, this will be the thing that gets you caught.” Hongjoong remarked. “Everyone in the palace has their scents suppressed, which means the slightest hint of anyone’s true scent will be noticed almost immediately. There’s no way you can do this. You shouldn’t even attempt it.”
“I know, but there’s something I need to check for myself. I also want to do this.”
“As much as I try, I fear I just don’t understand you at times. I still don’t understand why you’ve involved the princess in your schemes.”
“We’ve been over this, Hongjoong.”
“Yes, somewhat. I just genuinely want to know why you’re going this route when there are other ways, arguably quicker ways, for you to get what you want.”
“Are you referring to the tradition of an alpha challenging the pack leader for their position?”
“I am.”
Seonghwa chuckled. “We are more civilized than our ancestors today, don’t you think? Yet that tradition remains. If someone were to challenge the king for their throne, he would have no choice but to accept. So then, tell me, how many people have challenged the king? Or the ones that came before?”
“None that I recall…”
“No one has ever challenged the king, or any king for that matter, since we established this system. Do you know why?”
“I’m not sure I do.”
“Good answer. You see, even back then, challenging the pack leader wasn’t common. It was only done by greedy fools and those who truly felt the leader was incompetent. With the establishment of a king and a royal court, such a tradition wasn’t needed anymore, but to honor our old ways, it was kept.” Seonghwa explained. “Then over time as we continued to advance, such a tradition was forgotten by the common people. Only educated individuals such as ourselves know it exists. Yet no one has ever challenged the king. You fail to see that doing such a thing isn’t as easy as you think. It never was and now it’s truly a foolish endeavor.”
“Apologies for not-”
“There’s no need for that. I appreciate you believing I’d be able to beat the king, but such a victory would only cause chaos.”
“What do you mean? The throne would be rightfully yours if you won.”
“Perhaps, but merely sitting on the throne does not mean one has power. That comes from the people, from your allies. I have none of those at the moment.”
“What about your family?”
“I’m not really speaking with my father, and he believes my ambition for the throne is foolish. He’d never support such actions. Besides, even if I attempt such a thing, my whole family would be condemned as traitors if I fail. Now if I were to succeed, the former king’s allies would become my enemies, and I don’t doubt most of my family would despise me too. Such a path is too dangerous, and lonely. Not to mention the chain reaction that would come of it.”
“Chain reaction?”
“Regardless of the outcome of such an attempt, rumors would spread. It wouldn’t be long before everyone knew that you could challenge the king for the throne, regardless of status. Groups would begin to form, and such knowledge would open the door to one blood bath after another. Our modern society would fall apart because of foolish greed and ambition. So I will not be the one to set such things in motion.”
“I see… the direct approach has major consequences, and you would likely struggle to keep the throne.”
“Indeed. If I truly want to achieve my goals, I need to use my intelligence, not physical strength.”
“So then with the princess… courting her and marriage only leads to you becoming an in-law of the royal family. It does not get you the throne.”
“Correct, but this path requires patience and strategy. By becoming an in-law to the royal family I gain some power, and from there I can build allies. It’s not expected of the princess, but if she could bear a child, everything else would fall into place eventually. I was concerned that because of her health such a task would be of great risk to her, but having discovered the truth, there should be no issue in obtaining a prince.”
“But a young prince from your marriage would not be the direct heir to the throne.”
“Unless there is no one else.”
“… you’re not… implying…”
“There are multiple ways to make my heir the Crown Prince, but that is not something to speculate about until we get there, so don’t worry.”
“Although I thought you wanted the throne.”
“Whether I sit on the throne or my child does, it’s the same to me.”
“Just as long as the Park family becomes the royal family.”
“Correct.”
“You really have thought this over properly.”
“I have.”
“Yet the first obstacle is your relationship. You have to go public at some point and ask for the princess’ hand in marriage.”
“Indeed, and that certainly won’t be easy. Although our love for each other should be strong enough. I just need to make my move at the right time.”
“So then you’re very serious about this scent reveal thing, aren’t you?”
“Absolutely. It’s very important to both of us.”
“Then your safety is the highest priority.” Hongjoong mentioned. “Both of you. Therefore it would be best for you to do this outside the palace.”
“What did you just say?” Seonghwa questioned. “Are you serious? It wasn’t that long ago that you told me sneaking the princess out of the palace was incredibly risky.”
“I’m merely offering the best option here since I know I can’t convince you to let this go.”
“You’re right there. This would work for the best, a two for one special for the princess. She’d love it, so let’s figure out how to make it possible.”
♦♦♥♦♦
“Seonghwa, I want to show you something!”
Over time you had gotten used to being up late, and now that you were truly healing, you had more energy. This night was super important though. There was something you had been working on, and you wanted Seonghwa to be the first to see. He seemed very curious about what you wanted to show him.
“What is it? You seem so excited.”
“I am. Look!”
In a swift motion you summoned your claws, showing them to Seonghwa with a proud smile on your face. His eyes quickly lit up as he gently grabbed your hands, examining them with amazement.
“Your claws came in!”
“I’ve been practicing all day! I finally got them under control.”
“Look at you, this is incredible. You’re incredible.”
“These will be great for gardening.”
Seonghwa chuckled. “I’m glad they can be of use to you. How about your fangs?”
“Not yet, but I’m happy with this right now.”
“Me too. You’re growing beautifully.”
“Thank you.”
“This should be celebrated. I’ll bring you some pastries tomorrow morning.”
“What? Seonghwa, you don’t-”
“I want to. This is a big thing for you, and you deserve something sweet. I haven’t treated you to such delights in a while.”
“It’s dangerous.”
“I’ll be quick, just a delivery and a kiss, is that alright?”
“Hm… fine, I like seeing you under the sunlight too.”
“Good.”
Since Seonghwa wanted to get something for you, the night visit had to be cut short, and you needed to get some sleep too. It was bittersweet to part, but you were excited that you’d get to see him later, even if just for a moment. You were tucked into bed and managed to sleep for a bit before being woken up by Seonghwa. For a moment you could just pretend this was your life, that every morning you could wake up and see him. Seonghwa noticed you were a bit dazed and placed a kiss on your head, helping you sit up. Soon enough the smell hit your nose, and this time it was so much more delightful.
“Oh, that smells good.”
“Freshly baked.” Seonghwa held up the bag. “You can have one, but you have to promise me you won’t eat the rest until you’ve had breakfast.”
“But they’re for me.”
“Yes, but I don’t want you to ruin your appetite.”
“Fine.”
“If I find out you broke your promise, I’m gonna get ya.”
“I’m so scared.”
You both laughed and Seonghwa got out one of the pastries, blowing on it lightly before taking a bite. You yelled and hit him playfully but then he fed you the rest, wanting to share the treat. It was good, and so warm. You really wanted another, but you’d keep your word and have breakfast before eating the rest. Of course Seonghwa couldn’t stay long, so he placed a kiss on your cheek before parting, promising to see you later at night. You’d happily wait until then.
♦♦♥♦♦
Since Yunho had taken over looking after you, he had new things in his routine. Every morning he’d look over your meal, same as his own, making sure it was good. At times he’d even switch it with his own just to be on the safe side. He’d even take a sip of your medicine every morning to make sure it was correct. Of course he couldn’t always visit, but when he needed a break he’d see you in the morning. He tended to show up unannounced, but you were always happy to see him.
“Did you already eat?”
“Yes. I finished my meal before coming over.” Yunho explained. “I didn’t mean to intrude.”
“It’s fine. I don’t mind having you over. It’s always good to see you.”
“Likewise.”
It was good to watch you eat. For Yunho it gave him peace of mind to know that you had eaten. Although now that you both shared the same meals, he was quick to notice something different. You had a few pastries on a plate that he hadn’t seen before.
“Where did you get those?”
“Huh?”
“The pastries.”
“Uh…”
You glanced over to where Yunho was pointing, realizing what he meant. You promised not to eat the rest of the pastries until you finished breakfast, but you had no idea Yunho would notice. You needed to think fast to come up with a good excuse.
“I… uh…”
“Come on, spit it out already.”
“… I asked the court ladies… I wanted to try something new…”
Yunho laughed. “Why didn’t you ask me?”
“Well… there was a chance you’d say… but the court ladies wouldn’t deny me.”
“That’s true. Just ask me in the future, alright? I’ll be going out into town more often.”
“You will?”
“Yes. My last journey took me to the outer regions, but I want to get familiar with the world right outside our front door.”
“I wish I could go out too.”
“Someday, I promise.”
Once Yunho was gone you made a note to be more careful with such gifts in the future. In the past Yunho noticed the flowers too. He came by randomly, but it was best to be cautious at all times. Still, you happily enjoyed your treats, looking forward to the rest of the day too. Yeosang would be stopping by later, and you were excited to show him the progress you had made.
“How are you feeling today, princess?”
“I’m alright, and yourself?”
“Good. Your health has certainly improved, as has your mood.”
“Really?”
“You’re a lot brighter these days.”
“I have been feeling good.”
“As you should. You are taking your medicine, right?”
“Yes. Yunho was here this morning, so he is my witness.”
“I’ll check in with him later then.”
“While you’re at it you can deliver some good news.”
“Which is?”
“This.”
You showed Yeosang your claws, and his eyes went wide, followed by a smile. He carefully examined them, processing.
“Your claws have come in? This is wonderful.”
“I’m truly getting better, aren’t I?”
“Yes, you are. Yunho will be happy to hear about this.”
♦♦♥♦♦
Even though Yunho had returned to the library to continue his studies, his mind kept thinking back to the morning. He was supposed to be looking after you, yet you managed to sneak something past him. It wasn’t harmful, but he was trying to think when such a thing could have happened. He saw your court ladies every morning, and he didn’t see them with anything. Not to mention it wasn’t common for court ladies to step outside the palace, but if you had asked, they’d surely find a way. At least he was glad you could rely on your court ladies for such things.
“Your highness!” Jongho came rushing into the library. “Your highness, I have good news!”
“What is it?”
“The princess! Physician Kang has just informed me the princess has gained her claws.”
“What! Are you serious!?”
“Yes.”
Yunho didn’t need to hear more, making his way back to your quarters. He had to see this for himself. It was later in the evening when he returned, and you were in your garden tending to your flowers.
“Is it true?”
“Oh, you got here fast.”
“Show me.”
You were rather surprised to see Yunho, given that he seemed so happy. You put on a smile and got up, showing your claws. He grabbed your hands, looking them over with a look of amazement on his face.
“Wow, incredible. I’m so proud of you.”
“Thanks. They’re really cool.”
“Yes they are. You’re truly growing up. Your fangs are next.”
“I’m excited for that too.”
‘Then your eyes…”
“Yup.”
Yunho’s excitement faltered a bit as he realized something, but he quickly covered it up, not wanting to spoil your mood. He stuck around for a bit before returning to the library. As much as this truly was good news, it meant something else too. With your power coming in, the truth would soon be revealed. It was worrying him, and to help ease his concerns he went to see Yeosang, wanting his opinion.
“Your highness, welcome, have you had a chance to see the princess?”
“Yes. I’m glad to see her health improving.”
“Indeed, it’s wonderful news.”
“Speaking of, the necklace that suppresses her scent, it will continue to work just fine, correct?”
“Yes. It works on everyone else in the palace. Simply because the princess is coming into her power doesn’t mean it will be less effective.”
“What about her eyes?”
“As you know, that’s something we all must learn to control ourselves. Although the loss of
emotions can always show our true nature. It would be best to have someone train with her now.”
“I’ll take care of that.” Yunho assured. “Thank you.”
Yunho excused himself, lost in thought. The joy he had felt was being pushed aside by these new problems that were arising. He couldn’t help but think back to the wolfsbane. It had never been enough to kill you, yet it kept you weak, and your true nature remained hidden. As if all along it was just a precaution. Perhaps it hadn’t been the Queen poisoning you out of dislike, but the King in order to keep the secret. He hated to have such thoughts. No longer sure if he could really trust anyone with your health and safety.
♦♦♥♦♦
“Y/n, do you recall the promise I’ve made you?”
“Hm… you’d have to be more specific. You’ve made a lot of promises to me, and you haven’t broken any of them.”
“I’m a man of my word, but the promise I’m talking about is sharing my true scent with you.”
“Wait, are you serious.” You looked at Seonghwa with an excited gaze. “Do you have a plan?”
“Yes, I do, and you’re going to love it.”
“Tell me! How are we going to do this?”
“For starters we need to take a little trip.”
“Huh?”
“We need to step out of the palace.”
“You… you can’t be serious… do you mean that?”
“Yes. In order to do this, it’s best we do it outside the palace. So, are you alright with that? I could maybe figure out another way but-”
“No! No, that’s amazing! You mean it? You can get me out of the palace?”
“Only at night, and for a few hours, but yes.”
“I can’t believe it…”
“Everything is all set. We can do it tonight or we can try-”
“No, I’m ready now. Let’s go!”
“Hold on, we still need to get you ready.”
“Oh? What do you mean?”
“Well, we can’t sneak you out like that. Come on, I brought a change of clothes for you.”
Seonghwa took your hand and led you back to your room, giving you clothes to dress in. They were mens clothes as it would be easy to hide your identity that way. You happily bounced around, enjoying your look as a lord, and holding your hat in place. Now you and Seonghwa matched like a couple.
“Alright, let’s get going.”
Now here was were things got truly thrilling for you. Since you were sneaking out, it wasn’t smart to just walk out the front door, so you’d have to climb your way out. The same way Seonghwa got in and out when he came to see you. Of course he helped you out, and on the other side Hongjoong was there to help you get down safely. You were doing your best to contain your excitement, looking out at the palace, finally outside your quarters in what felt like forever.
“Come on, we’re going this way, and keep your head down.”
Seonghwa took your hands in his, leading the way as Hongjoong followed right behind you. They had found a secluded place where they could sneak out of the palace, which involved climbing a wall once more. Hongjoong was the first, and then you, and lastly Seonghwa. Now you were certainly staring down at the ground and the trees around you. All your life, you had never set foot outside the palace, and now here you were.
“I’m really outside… like outside outside…”
“You are. How does it feel?” Seonghwa asked.
“Amazing!”
“Good. Now there’s somewhere I want to take you.”
“Okay.”
Seonghwa took your hand once more, and you began walking. You looked back at the palace, feeling like it was a dream to be out here. Eventually your gaze turned to the sky, realizing you were seeing the stars somewhere else now, and they felt more beautiful. You weren’t sure where you were going, but you soon began to hear the sounds of running water. It wasn’t long before you came to a river, seeing a waterfall nearby.
“Wow… this is so pretty…”
“This is the place. We can reveal our true scents without worrying about being found. The water will help hide it, and I’ve also packed a change of clothes for both of us. That is if you want to. We can just enjoy the outside tonight if you’d like.”
“We’re already here, and knowing your scent… it would make this night more incredible… I want to do this.”
“Me too.”
Seonghwa gave you a soft kiss before getting things in order. He set down a blanket for the both of you by the riverside. Spreading some white powder around in a circle as well.
“What’s that?”
“It helps to hide one’s scent. The powder is technically similar to what’s in our necklace. So it should make it so our scent doesn’t spread beyond this circle.”
“Oh… that’s cool.”
“It is. Now, come here.”
Seonghwa cleaned his hands in the river and then stepped into the circle and onto the blanket. He held his hand out to you, and you stepped into the circle with him.
“May I?”
Seonghwa reached over to take your necklace off, taking a moment to admire the one he had given you. That would stay on, always. You smiled, feeling a bit weird not having the suppressant necklace. It was a part of everyday life for you since you lived in the palace, so to take it off, it really set in that you weren’t in the palace anymore. Out here you didn’t need to wear such a thing. Seonghwa took off his own necklace, and Hongjoong took them both. He’d be around, but he would be giving you both privacy. You laid down on the blanket with Seonghwa, being pulled into his embrace for cuddles.
“It’ll take a bit, but I figured we could also enjoy our usual night under the stars.”
“This is lovely, Seonghwa. I still can’t believe I’m outside the palace. This is real, right? I’m not dreaming?”
“You’re not dreaming.”
Seonghwa kissed your head, enjoying the stars and the sounds of the water with you. The two of you had spent nights stargazing before, but this was a whole new experience. There was something extra special about it all, and it brought tears to your eyes. Seonghwa soon noticed, chuckling and wiping away your tears.
“You’re that happy, huh?”
“This is incredible.” You mumbled. “I am sorry for always asking such dangerous things of you.”
“I’m glad to do them if it makes you smile. This, being here with you right now, it’s worth every risk.”
Seonghwa pulled you in closer, wrapping his arms around you and burying his nose in the crook of your neck. He was already picking up on your scent, and he wanted to get in deep. He inhaled sharply and in the moment his grip on you became tighter. He could feel his own power coming to the surface, and his eyes glowed a crimson red. He had just discovered something new about you, and it was incredibly dangerous.
JEONGIN | DAZED x DAMIANI
HYUNJIN ⋮ LOS ANGELES SOUNDCHECK — 250531 (© Rin71251)



