nocturna | c.w
feat. Charlie Weasley x vampire!reader
summary: 7k. your immortal life is spent in the shadows, working at your Maker’s bar in Romania to keep yourself fed and occupied, but everything changes when you catch the eye of a certain dauntless dragonologist.
cw: MDNI 18+, vampires and all the things that come with it (blood! many mentions of blood!), vamp bites are pleasurable, canon divergence probably, simp!Charlie, some primal play if you squint, dry humping, general feral behavior, incorrect usage of the Romanian language (i’m sorry romania, i really tried)
an: there will probably be a part 2 for this lol
masterlist | inspired by this request | divider by @strangergraphics
Knock knock.
“Yes?” you called, not looking up from the account books sprawled across your desk.
“Alexei still hasn't shown up for his shift.”
Fuck. You turned to look at Nik, who was apparently your lone bartender for the evening. They were leaning against your office door, dressed in all black and a scowl, with a blood red towel slung over their shoulder.
“How busy?” You asked, pinching the bridge of your nose. You already knew the answer, could smell the dozens of humans in the bar, could count each tremor of their unique heartbeats.
“Too busy for just me,” Nik sighed. “I hate to ask, but I could really use a hand out there.”
When your Master, Florin, decided to open the Nocturna, a vampire bar in Brasov, you agreed to work there under one condition: you could stay in the back. No bartending, no serving, no “entertaining”.
You preferred your solitude, content to spend your immortality between the pages of books, both accounting and fictional. And you preferred to feed on an as-needed basis. The more time you spent around humans, the more challenging that was.
But you'd fed a few days prior, and your annoyance at Alexei overpowered that ever-lingering thirst.
“I’ll let you take the regulars. They're easy,” Nik added. “Mostly ursas and brandy snifters.”
“Fine.” You flipped your books closed and pushed to your feet, making a feeble attempt to straighten your own all-black outfit. “But I'm going to complain the entire time.”
Nik beamed, gesturing towards the bar with a flourish. “I’d expect nothing less.”
You stalked out to the bar, bracing yourself for the onslaught of scents and sounds. Nearly every table was full, the chatter like a discordant orchestra grating against your sensitive eardrums. The Nocturna was bathed in crimson and low candlelight, the windows draped with red velvet, the ceiling aglow with polished bronze tiles and glittering chandeliers.
Vampires and humans alike filled the plush booths and mahogany tables, co-mingling safely due to the strict rules Florin enforced. The Nocturna was a haven to drink and be drunk, to feed and be fed upon, and it always kindled a flicker of pride in your hollow chest to see it in action.
You and Nik moved behind the bar, and you tied your hair back, slapping a smile on your face.
“So, who's regular?” You asked, busying yourself with wiping down the already glossy bar.
“There's the hiking group,” they gestured to a pile of college-age kids by the fireplace. “And those are the farmers, swingers, Americans—”
You made mental notes of each of them, tallying up their drinks and who would need refills sooner rather than later. Fuck, this was going to be such a long night.
Your eye caught on a rather rugged group tucked into one of the quieter sections by the windows, a haze of smoke lingering over their pints, cards scattered across the table.
One of them—you detected his heartbeat quicken—felt your gaze, eyes lifting from his cards and flicking towards you. He was breathtaking, with amber eyes and freckles scattered like stars across his cheeks, his loosely tied hair and short beard the same ruddy auburn as a candle's halo.
You felt a pang where your dead heart slumbered, caught off guard, and averted your eyes.
But, of course, Nik caught you.
“Ah, our most interesting patrons,” they hummed, pulling a pint with a knowing smile. “The dragonologists.”
Your eyes widened. “They work at the sanctuary?”
You've heard of Romania’s dragon sanctuary, buried deep in the Carpathian Mountains. But, despite being a bona fide monster yourself, the concept of dragons still sent a childlike thrill through you.
“Mhm.” Nik’s smile widened, but you realized they were looking not at you, but just over your shoulder. “How are the beasties today, Charlie?”
You turned on your heel, and—oh, fuck—tall, ginger, and handsome was standing right there. Up close, you could pick out his unique scent, caramelized sugar and muddled cherries, woodsmoke and pine. A dull ache pulsed through the roots of your teeth.
“A pleasure, as always.” Charlie's voice was low and melodic, laced with mirth. “The horntail was especially lovely.” He pushed up the sleeve of his Henley, forearms thick and lined with damn near juicy veins, and revealed a crude bandage looped just above his elbow.
He must be an idiot, a supremely sexy idiot.
The dull ache in your teeth grew to a distracting throb, an echo of the bodily rhythm you no longer had.
Nik set the pint in front of him, pointedly not looking at the carmine that had seeped through the gauze. “What'd you do to piss her off?”
“I made the mistake of looking her in the eye.” His eyes shifted to yours, whiskey-rich and mischievous, catching you like a snare.
“You're awfully bold, coming into a vampire bar with an open wound,” you chastised. The last thing you needed was a frenzy on your watch. And right now, you felt like you might be the one to start it.
Charlie shrugged, unrolling his sleeve while holding your gaze. “Vulnerability doesn't scare me.”
Oh. Supremely idiotic and arrogant.
“Charlie, this is Y/n. Y/n, Charlie Weasley,” Nik introduced you, relishing in the stunned look on your face.
“It’s an honor,” Charlie said, taking a slow sip of his pint. “I've heard a lot about you.”
You cast a side-eye at Nik, who winked at you. “All terrible?” You asked, nails tapping anxiously against the wood. You folded them into your palm before you accidentally marred the glass-like surface.
They, along with your fangs, seemed to have grown marginally sharper over the course of the conversation. The animal in you stirring beneath a placid smile.
“The worst.”
“I have nothing but praise to heap upon you, and you know it,” Nik chuckled. “I was actually telling him about your obsession with books after I caught him reading Nostalgia.”
“Nostalgia?” You raised a brow. Perhaps you were being judgmental, but you'd never expect someone with biceps the size of your head to be into classic Romanian anthologies.
A flush crawled up his neck, his heart thumping a little heavier. “Yeah, one of my younger brothers sent it to me. Doesn't have nearly enough pictures for me, though.”
A smile tugged at the corner of your mouth.
Okay, supremely idiotic, arrogant, and oddly charming.
“Your brother and I would probably get along great, then,” you teased, his levity almost contagious.
Maybe this night wouldn't be so unbearable after all.
“I imagine so. But, unfortunately, he's in London working for the Ministry, so you'll have to settle for the second most intelligent Weasley.”
“And how many are there?”
Charlie counted on his fingers. “Six? No—seven.”
“Seven?”
Nik bumped your hip behind the bar, then turned to help customers while Charlie regaled you with delight about his giant family.
Ten minutes passed, then twenty, an hour, with you and Charlie yapping about anything and everything between serving customers, the steady melody of his voice, the drum of his heart, drowning out the rest of the Nocturna.
It wasn't just his good humor that was infectious, but him. His charm, his wit, his dauntless curiosity—you couldn't remember the last time you met someone that piqued your interest so much. Or at all, for that matter.
When a human and vampire pair brushed by, hanging on one another like tendrils of ivy, Charlie fell quiet, gaze trailing after them, lingering on the curtain of the private lounge they entered.
“Does it hurt?” He asked, turning his attention back to you. Trying in vain not to look directly at your lips, red as a thorned rose.
“Only at first,” you shrugged.
“And then what happens after?” His heart revved like an engine.
You bit your lip, fangs elongated enough to prick the tender skin, hoping the reality of them would deter whatever idea had bloomed in his mind. “Nothing good.”
But instead his scent deepened, honey-sweet and tart as ripened fruit, and the ache in your teeth began to spread. Thrumming in time with the flickering artery under his jaw.
Fuck, he smelled divine.
“Well, if you ever want to take me out for dinner sometime…” he flirted, brazen.
Your muscles coiled, hunger tying your guts into ribbons. If you sank your teeth into him, you feared you'd never let go. “Don't hold your breath, Weasley.”
He smirked. “I think you'll find I can be very patient, love.”
“Hey,” one of Charlie's friends appeared at his shoulder, and you turned away, trying to look busy. “Early shift tomorrow, you ready to go?”
You could feel Charlie's eyes sweep over you, heat blooming beneath your chilled skin in his wake.
He tipped the last of his beer into his mouth, swiping his tongue over the rim to collect the last of the foam. “Lead the way, mate.”
You fought down the surge of disappointment that tightened your throat.
His friend headed towards the door where the rest of the dragonologists were waiting, and Charlie stood, bracing his hands on the bar to lean towards you. “Will I see you tomorrow?”
“Doubtful,” you said, but failed to suppress your smile.
Charlie tossed you a wink before waving to Nik and following his friends out into the night.
“Not a word,” you said, pointing to Nik as their grin turned giddy.
They mimed zipping their lips and threw away the key.
Charlie barreled through the trees, branches whipping his face and snagging his clothes. Thousands of tiny fingers trying to hold him back as he ran.
A flash of white fabric ripped a hole in his periphery.
THUMPTHUMPTHUMPTHUMPTHUMP
Footfalls. His heart. The ancient drum of the world.
He knew it could hear him.
He knew it was gaining on him.
He also knew he wasn't afraid—or, not as afraid as he should be.
Was he fleeing? Or was he chasing? He couldn't be sure, couldn't remember. The trees were an endless viridian sea, held in a basin of stone. No beginning or end.
Only the forest, and the hunt.
The roots rose to trip him, yanking his boots off his feet. He pitched forward, tumbling through the brush. Spinning, spinning, stop.
Another flash of white. Not fabric, but teeth. Your teeth. You. Sinking into the damp valley of his throat, into the soil, into the earth. Down, down, down.
He was afraid, now, with the heat of his life spilling out beneath him, fluid and hot against his skin. It was endless, infinite. You never filled, he never emptied. A constant cycle and endless loop. Him and you and you and him and him you him you you him teeth and blood and bone and dirt and sky and—
Charlie jolted awake, hand clawing at the animal racing inside his throat, frantic footfalls echoing in his mind. His room was dark, skin intact, sheets bloodless, and he exhaled, willing his heart to slow.
But a lingering warmth in his lower belly kept him tethered to wakefulness. He shifted his legs, trying to understand what he was feeling, because surely not—and the cool kiss of the sheet had him gasping.
He was achingly hard, the top sheet clinging to his balmy skin, and he groaned, wrapping a fist around his base in a feeble attempt to dissuade his body from what it was begging him for.
On unsteady legs, he slipped out of bed, the floor a shocking cold against his overheated flesh. But he welcomed it, let it ground him fully in reality, even as dream’s gossamer webs still clung to the edges of his mind—
—you, your teeth ripping through his flesh like the skin of a peach, the weight of your body against his as he gave to you, nourished you, filled you—
He shook himself, smoothing a hand over his face.
The clock on the wall read 5:03 a.m. The Nocturna opened at eight p.m.
Only 14 hours and 57 minutes until he could see you again.
Charlie took a shower, ice cold at this hour, and got ready for the day. Cargo pants, slash-proof thermal, utility jacket, tool belt, boots.
Only 14 hours and 23 minutes until he could see you again.
He ate breakfast at the cantina, mămăligă and bitter black coffee, and sat in on the morning briefing of the recruits. Though he spent most of it daydreaming about your smile, the way your eyes crinkled when you laughed.
12 hours and 36 minutes.
Did the morning feeding rounds with his assigned dragons and checked on the clutch of eggs being guarded by a cantankerous Ridgeback. Got whacked by her tail when thoughts of your lips made him careless. Then, sitting on the infirmary table while the medic prodded his ribs, imagined you chastising him with that sharp tongue for not paying closer attention.
Nine hours and 12 minutes.
It was going to be a long fucking day.
You could smell him as soon as he stepped through the doors of the Nocturna. Burnt sugar and merlot, leather and dragon-smoke. His heart was thumping heavily in his chest, knocking against the walls of your mind like a fist.
Let me in.
Thoughts of him had kept you up all day, tossing and turning so much that Florin threatened to stake you if you didn't knock it off.
He was kidding, mostly, but you took yourself down to your office in the bar anyway, hoping to catch some sleep on your pull-out before doors opened at eight.
You hadn't.
And now, with Charlie's scent on the air, a fresh hunger bloomed.
With a wave of your hand, your office door swung shut, the lock clicking into place. Then, you lit a few candles and a stick of incense, hoping the smoke would clear what the door couldn't block.
Charlie was too decent to have you drooling over him like an animal. Or worse, losing control and hurting him.
Exhaustion and hunger could be a deadly combination.
It worked for a while, until Nik barged in without knocking.
“Hey, what are you—fucking hell, are you performing a seance in here?” Nik coughed, waving a hand in front of their face.
The scent of Charlie wafted in, along with dozens of other humans, and you buried your head into your arms. “Go away,” you grumbled.
“He's asking for you,” Nik said, drawing out the ‘you’ with great relish.
“Tell him I’m out.”
“Ah, but you're sitting right here.” Nik rested a hand on your shoulder. “Hiding again, are we?”
“No,” you muttered, petulant, and lifted your head.
Nik crouched down beside you. “I think he really likes you,” they whispered. “His heart would start racing whenever someone came up from the back. His eagerness is stinking up the joint.”
Your lungs grew buoyant, something fluttering to life low in your belly. Not hunger, something delicate, toothless.
Terrifying.
“Seemed like you liked him too…” they continued.
“He's human,” you huffed.
“He's hot.”
“I don't want—what if I—” you cut yourself off, head dropping back onto your forearms.
“Oh, honey. You won't hurt him,” Nik soothed, expression softening. “You keep yourself on such a tight leash, it's okay to live a little.”
“We don't live at all,” you argued, but it was hollow. Deep down, you knew they were right.
“Maybe you don't,” they teased, pivoting before you dragged yourself down too low. “What do you want me to tell him?”
“Just…tell him I'm too busy tonight,” you sighed. “And that I'm a raging bitch.”
“Should I tell him you're a lone wolf, too?” Nik smirked.
“Yes!”
“No.” They tsked. “But I will tell him that you're not feeling well.”
“Fine,” you exhale, relieved.
Nik patted the top of your head before leaving, closing the door behind them. Leaving you alone to ruminate in your cloyingly perfumed cave.
Their words rattled around in your brain, taunting you. Charlie barely knew you; whatever he was feeling was, at best, mild interest, and, at worst, fetishizing you because you were a vampire.
Plenty of vampires indulged in wizard's morbid fascination with your kind, as evidenced by the constantly booked lounges at the Nocturna, but you were never interested in that.
You were a vampire, but you weren't just a vampire.
Did Charlie like you? Or was he just chasing a new adrenaline rush? Would you be able to tell the difference? Could he?
It was all too much, too risky. And it was a poorly-calculated risk that got you in this bloodthirsty mess in the first place.
At the end of the night, just when the sunlight began to paint the mountains lavender, Nik knocked on your door again, holding something behind their back.
“What's that?” You asked, blowing out the few candles that hadn't melted down to a puddle.
“For you.” They held it out, barely containing the smile on their face.
It was a book, a thin volume with bent corners and a wrinkled spine. Clearly, well-loved.
“Charlie asked that I give it to you—” they were grinning fully now, “—and sends his well-wishes.”
Your jaw went slack, and you took the little book with trembling fingers. It was a collection of poetry by John Keats, and the world went still around you.
You could smell Charlie as you flipped through the pages, the salt from his skin, the soap he used on his linens, the ink from notes he had made in the margins.
When you reached “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”, a slip of paper fluttered out from between the pages.
To discuss next time. Hope you feel better soon.
Charlie
A full week passed, and Charlie had yet to return to the Nocturna. You pretended not to care, despite the fact that you'd fallen asleep every morning with the stanzas of John Keats swimming behind your eyes, and the mounting hunger that seemed to crave only one thing.
Rather, one man.
You'd even tried to sate yourself with a bottle of the preserved blood Florin keeps in the back, but it only made the gnawing worse. And after nearly ten days without a full meal, you were growing more unstable by the hour.
You hunkered down in your office, a scarf doused in peppermint oil wrapped around your neck to dampen the reek of humans just outside your door. But the words on the account book in front of you were blurring together, meaningless, and you shoved it away, growling with frustration.
But in your state, you had less control of your strength, and the book went sliding off the edge of the desk, crashing to the floor with a bang that made your ears ring, your head pound.
No, your head wasn't pounding—someone was knocking.
“What?!” You snapped, wrenching the door open.
Nik startled, fist hovering above the wood. “Sorry to, ah, disturb you.” Their eyes swept over you, the corner of their mouth tugging down in concern. “Are you alright?”
“I’m fine, what do you want?” You were fine. You could control yourself. You weren't an animal.
“There's a bit of an issue in lounge 7, I tried to resolve it, but—”
You shoved out past them, tossing your scarf onto the floor as you stalked down the hall. Normally, you'd let Florin handle any incidents, but the beast in you was jonesing to show its teeth, and your impulse control was rapidly depleting.
Perhaps a little scuffle would be just the thing to take the edge off.
“Wait, maybe I should—” Nik hurried after you, looking mildly alarmed at your urgency.
“I can handle it,” you bit.
“When’s the last time you ate?” they asked, but you were already wrenching open the curtain.
The smell of him caught you across the face like a slap, and your fangs gave an agonizing lurch, mirroring the way your stomach flipped.
Charlie was sitting on one of the red velvet chaises and jumped to his feet, his smile faltering when he saw the look on your face.
“Hey, love. I didn’t—ah—”
His pulse was hammering in his chest, so flush with blood it colored his cheeks, engorged the veins in his throat—
Nik stepped between you, hands up. “This was my idea, Charlie didn't want to do it, but I insisted—”
Something possessive flared, a low rumble behind your ribs, a serpentine clicking that had Nik’s eyes going wide, and it snapped you out of your trance.
“It's okay,” you rasped, clearing your throat as you tried to get your bearings. “Everything’s okay.”
Nik raised their eyebrows.
“I’m okay,” you reassured them.
They looked unconvinced, but relented. “Okay…call if you need anything,” they said, giving you a pointed look before stepping out from the curtain. Leaving you and Charlie alone in the velvet-draped room.
Candles flickered along every surface, shadows stretching long and wine-rich. There were no windows, only plush couches, a fur rug, a sink, and a minibar. A room made to feast in.
“I’m sorry about this,” Charlie said tentatively. “I just—I really wanted to see you again.”
You felt the coil in your muscles begin to loosen, hunger abating slightly at the calm baritone of his voice. You'd never met someone who could settle you and rouse you in such extremes.
You should find it unnerving, alarming, even, but instead, you just felt…seen.
“I wanted to see you too,” you admitted, despite your reservations. “Thank you for the book.”
He smiled, a boyish, unreserved thing that had your own mouth twitching upwards. “I'm sure you've read like, every poem ever written, but I thought maybe—”
“Charlie.” You took a step towards him, setting a hand on his bicep with measured gentleness. “I loved it.”
You could smell how nervous he was, but it was cut with the unmistakable honey-thick scent of desire. But it wasn't the same, house-on-fire burn that you smelled on others, tearing their way through the bar to get to the lounge. This was softer, sweeter, but no less intense.
You wanted to guzzle it like wine. Get drunk on it until you couldn't remember your name, your life, yourself. Until all you could feel was him, warm and buzzing through your veins.
“Are you feeling better?” He asked, brows knitting together as he guided you onto the couch with a hand hovering over your hip.
“Much better. How's your arm?” You leaned against the plush cushions, tucking your legs underneath yourself.
“Much better.” His hand moved to push up his sleeve, but he hesitated, then let it fall back down. “Look, I wanted to say something, but I don't—” he carded his fingers through his waves, chuckling dryly. “Fucking hell, you make me so nervous.”
The corner of your lips curled up, chest fluttering. A distant part of your brain clanged with alarm. You were close, too close. Teetering on the edge of something you'd spent several lifetimes avoiding.
But, sitting here, surrounded by his warmth, his sweetness, it was growing increasingly difficult to remember why.
Maybe you could do this.
Maybe Charlie was worth the risk.
“I just—I know that there are a lot of wizards who seek out vampires for—ah—reasons. And I know I made a comment about taking me out for dinner, but I didn't mean it like that, and I don't want you to think that I don't respect you or your kind—er, vampires? Fuck—”
You set a hand on his knee, and he fell silent, jaw a little slack as he stared down at your hand, then looked back at you. You could feel his blood surging through the thick denim, the slight tremble of his muscles as he fought to stay still.
God, he was so darling it made you want to scream. This beefy, rugged, gorgeous man was practically putty on the couch beside you, a simple touch melting him like sugar.
“I like you,” he managed, carefully resting a large hand over yours. His touch was scalding, deliciously warm, and you wanted to shrink down to the size of a peanut just so you could curl up into his palm. “And I don't want you to think I have ulterior motives besides getting to know you.”
When humans lie, it turns their scent sour, acrid like rotten lemons.
Charlie was being sincere.
Your reservations slipped even further out of reach. And at the moment, his thumb rubbing gentle circles over the back of your hand like you were some fragile little thing, you found you didn't care.
“I don't usually interact much with humans,” you confessed, withdrawing your hand only so you could trace the thick veins running along his forearm. He tried to suppress a shiver, but you could feel every twitch down the delicate fibers. “But I like you too, Charlie.”
His eyes lit up, pulse rioting under your fingertips.
“You realize Nik served you up on a silver platter for me, right?”
Charlie's smile turned wicked, eyes twinkling. “I do, best wing-person I ever had.”
Your hunger flared again, stoked by his openness, his refusal to shy away from what you were, and you recoiled a bit, withdrawing your hand when you felt your nails begin to elongate and folding them into your lap.
You're in control. You're in control.
Charlie's brow furrowed, eyes lingering on your clenched hands, then lifting to your face. “When Nik said you were sick, you weren't actually sick, were you?”
You opened your mouth, then snapped it shut, realizing a second too late that your fangs would be all too visible.
His heart rate quickened, but his expression remained concerned. “Are you hungry, love?”
You averted your eyes, shame scorching your cheeks. Apparently, that was answer enough.
“Do you want me to ask Nik to bring one of the, uh, pre-made bottles? Or I could get someone—”
“No, Charlie—” Your hand shot out when he shifted to stand, coiling around his wrist like a constrictor, startling you both. You immediately released him, tucking your hands underneath your thighs. “Shit, sorry, just—I’m okay, really.”
“Hey.” He brought a hand up to your cheek, brushing your hair out of your face. His pulse rang loud in your ears, the scent of his blood like a crimson fog in your mind. “If you're hungry, eat. It doesn't bother me. If you need something…” he trailed off, noticing the way your eyes darkened, your body betraying you.
Part of you wanted him to turn tail and run. The other part wanted the same thing, but only so you could give chase.
He shifted closer, the rough pad of his thumb grazing your lips, his hand so warm against your cheek. “If you need something,” he repeated, lifting your upper lip to expose a razor-sharp canine. “Take it.”
“Are you sure?” You whispered, voice wobbling as much as your control.
His thumb grazed your tooth, featherlight, and he pressed the pad of it against the point. Puncturing himself. And the world went scarlet.
Pain lanced through his arm, bright as a lightning strike, but he didn't dare move, holding his breath as your lips wrapped around his thumb, and you began to suck.
At first, he was acutely aware of his blood moving through his veins, shifting against the current of his heart, but it was quickly overpowered by the movements of your tongue and teeth, lapping, scraping against his knuckle as you took a long pull, then another, lashes fluttering against your cheeks. Delicate as moth wings.
Then, something else began to stir in his chest, radiant as sunlight, spilling warmth through his body until a moan nearly slipped out between his teeth.
Fuck—your mouth was around his thumb, but it may have been his cock with the surge of pleasure that was coursing through him. And from the little quirk at the corner of your mouth, you knew it.
You shifted closer, nearly climbing into his lap, as your hands wrapped around his wrist, holding him still as you fed from him. You made a tiny sound in your throat, a delighted little squeak, and his cock throbbed so hard he got a little lightheaded.
You were so fucking beautiful, lips tinged red, skin glowing as he sated you. He did that for you, and with the pleasure came a surge of pride, too, a fierce protectiveness that clutched his heart like a vice.
And he knew then that if you needed it, he would let you drain him dry. He wanted to be the blood in your veins, the life in your cheeks, the warmth in your skin.
Whatever you needed, it was yours.
Suddenly, you were lunging forward, and your teeth sank into the meat of his palm. Tearing through the flesh like tissue paper. The pain returned, a blistering burn that had him grunting, but it was gone as quickly as it came, replaced with that same, delirious pleasure.
He almost felt drunk, his body languid and heavy on his bones. You were fully in his lap now, body flush with his, his achingly hard cock pressed right against your clothed cunt.
“Fuck, baby,” he panted, free hand grabbing your hips. Your skin was so much warmer now, nearly a regular temperature—or maybe he was getting colder.
You whimpered, rolling against him in a sinful wave, and he bit back a pathetic moan at the friction.
“Good girl—that’s it, all yours,” he murmured, daring to press a kiss to your shoulder as you started rocking against him, gyrating your hips with each pull of your mouth. He matched your movements, thrusting up against your heat while he mouthed along your throat, feeling the tendons and muscles work while you swallowed the blood. His blood.
He pulled back to look at you, smoothing your hair out of your face so it wouldn't get in the way. Were his fingers shaking? No—no, he was fine.
“Sooo fuckin’ gorgeous—” his words were slurring, tongue thick and stupid in his mouth.
Your eyes opened, locking onto his, and the breath was knocked out of his chest. Your iris had gone blood red, the sclera fever-bright, pupils blown wide.
Your fangs detached with a wet sucking sound, and you scrambled off of him, grabbing at one of the curtained walls. “Charlie, I’m—fuck, oh fuck—”
“Hey, hey—” Charlie pushed himself up, and the world spun, a dizzying whirl of red, and he collapsed back onto the couch. “M’okay,” he mumbled, blinking rapidly to clear his vision. His whole body felt tingly, floaty in the best way. The most intense afterglow he'd ever experienced, and he hadn't even come.
“Shit, here.” You grabbed the bar cart and rolled it over, perching on the side of the couch beside him.
“Pretty girl,” he cooed, reaching for you, wanting to feel your weight on him again.
“Fuck, fuck, fuck,” You caught his hand, which was very much still bleeding, and doused it with something in an amber bottle. Immediately, the bleeding stopped, the ruined flesh knitting itself back together.
His head lolled back onto the couch, basking in dregs of pleasure still swimming through his veins.
“Charlie, baby, are you okay?” You patted his cheek, and his eyes opened.
He hadn't realized he'd closed them. “I'm great,” he hummed, catching your fingers and pressing a kiss to your palm before you pulled them away. “You're good at that.”
A giggle bubbled out of you, pitchy with nerves but still effervescent, and he was flying all over again. “I didn't mean to take so much, I'm really sorry.”
“Don't apologize—” you shoved a bite of cookie into his mouth. Gingerbread.
How'd you know gingerbread was his favorite?
“I am apologizing. I could have seriously hurt you—”
“Nah, I’m tough. I work with monsters ten times your size every day,” he joked, already starting to feel steady again. His hand was mostly intact, save for the drying blood that coated him to the wrist. Though his cock was still half-hard in his trousers, begging for more of that delicious friction.
You scoffed, rolling your eyes, but you were still smiling. The blood had done you good; you were luminous, cheeks bouncy and hair glossed, eyes bright and shiny. You'd looked beautiful before, almost otherworldly, but now you looked…loved.
And he wanted to make you look like that every damn day.
He reached for you, not caring about the traces of blood still lingering at the corners of your mouth, and drew you in. You melted into his arms, lips parting, nose pressing against his. A brush of contact, sparking like flint off a stone—you stiffened, retreating with a pained expression.
He was about to ask what was wrong when the curtain was pulled aside by a talon-tipped hand, and Florin Ciobanu glided into the room.
The ancient vampire was dressed in brocade and velvet, his skin flawless, but lifeless beneath his curtain of white hair. Charlie had only glimpsed him in the bar, and heard stories of his generosity, and sordid history, exchanged over campfires and ursa back at the sanctuary.
Florin was also the vampire who created you and at least a dozen other vampires, if the stories could be trusted. And you seemed even more frightened than Charlie to see your Maker standing there, despite the relatively placid look on his face.
Charlie reached for you instinctively, draping a protective arm over your lap and drawing you into his side.
Florin tracked the movement, a smile hooking the corner of his mouth, flashing a bone-white fang. “Ah, I was wondering where you’d gotten off to, draga mea,” he purred, his Romanian accent thick as the luxurious carpet beneath your feet. “This must be Charlie.” His name sounded strange in the noble accent, too casual, borderline demeaning.
Charlie gritted his teeth.
“It is.” You removed Charlie’s arm, rising to your feet. “Florin, this is Charlie Weasley. Charlie, this is Count Florin Cioba—”
“He knows who I am,” Florin interrupted you.
Charlie’s temper flared hotter, but he held his tongue.
Florin’s head tilted, crimson eyes sliding over him, appraising. “What an interesting find—el arde.”
He burns.
You moved closer, muttering to Florin in Romanian, too hushed and hurried for Charlie to follow. His Romanian was elementary at best. Florin listened, an ear tilted down towards you, but his eyes never wavered from Charlie.
“We have rules for a reason, fată.” Florin withdrew a gold-trimmed handkerchief from his breast pocket, used it to clean the remaining blood from the corner of your mouth. “Aleargă acum, aș vrea să vorbesc puțin cu mica ta jertfă.”
The only word Charlie caught was sacrifice.
You nodded, head bowed low, and cast Charlie one last glance before slipping out of the room, the curtain fluttering shut behind you.
Charlie was on his feet in an instant. “You can’t just—”
“I will only say this once, Master Weasley.” Florin held up a heavily-ringed hand, fingers long and gaunt. “If you have an ounce of self-preservation in that thick skull of yours, you will never return to this place. You will not seek her out. You will not think of her, or dream of her. You will forget this ever happened. Do I make myself clear?”
“And if I do?” Charlie taunted, crossing his arms over his chest. “What, you’ll kill me?”
Florin shook his head, a malicious smirk on his face. “No, dear boy, I won’t. But she will.”
Before he could respond, the Count swept out of the room, the flourish of his cloak snuffing every candle in the room, and leaving Charlie alone in the smoke-filled dark.
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