"I happen to be precisely 126 seconds older than my beloved twin sister, Lynette." The magician proudly announces while dramatically placing a hand over his chest, eyes closed as if he were basking in the glory of technically being older.
You can faintly hear an exasperated sigh coming from Lynette as she merely crosses her arms, refusing to give her brother the satisfaction of a reaction.
...Freminet seems to be trying to stifle a chuckle as he stands close behind.
✧ a glimpse through the storyglass: vampire au. thats it.
✧ beware the thorns beneath the roses: mentions of blood, isabel goes through an identity crisis but its fineeeeeee, mentions of blood, lots of fights, betrayals yippee, kinda messy plot + the pov keeps switching bc i can do that, also i didnt add it in but jy absolutely does help with the first mentioned (?) wound in some way. like he returns back i was jst lazy to write that part bc this is super long as is, this thing is 11.9k words help me
✧ scribbles from the dreamweaver: this is all vivi's fault. honestly when i was talking to mirei i realized a vampire au is more suitable for sylus but im p sure vivi hasnt realized how deep my obsession goes yet /lh
thank you sm to @lovedbykaveh for proofreading and also hyping me up. i love you <3
The night smelled of iron and woodsmoke. Isabel tightened the leather straps around her gloves, flexing her fingers once before pulling her cloak over her shoulders. Her blades lay ready on the table, catching the faint glow of the lantern in the corner of the room: sharpened silver, polished to a mirror finish, every edge honed with the kind of diligence born not of pride but of necessity. There was no forgiveness in her profession. A dull blade was the difference between a kill and a grave.
She snuffed the lantern, leaving the cabin swallowed by shadow, and stepped outside. The air was sharp, chilled with the promise of dawn still hours away. Her boots crunched against the frost-dusted dirt as she made her way down the worn trail, eyes already scanning the tree line. Her quarry was close; the signs had been too clear to ignore. Villagers whispered of livestock found drained, of claw marks scarring barn doors, of shadows that lingered too long near the edge of torchlight.
Rumors, most would say. But Isabel knew better. Rumors were the trailheads of truth.
Her pace quickened as she reached the woods. The trees loomed, skeletal in the winter night, their bare branches tangling together to form a canopy that filtered the moonlight into thin silver ribbons. Every sound carried—owl cries, the snap of twigs under small creatures, the hush of wind threading between trunks. To someone less trained, it was a peaceful night. To Isabel, it was a chorus of warnings.
She slowed near a stream, crouching low. There, in the mud, were tracks: not deer, not wolf. Too elongated, the toes curling almost clawlike, the indentations too heavy for anything human. She touched the imprint with her gloved hand, tracing its edges. Fresh. Hours old, at most.
“Too careless,” she murmured under her breath, rising. Most vampires were meticulous about covering their trail. This one wasn’t. A fledgling, perhaps, or simply arrogant. Either way, the hunt had begun.
She pressed forward, her senses sharpening with every step. Branches snagged on her cloak; frostbitten leaves crunched faintly beneath her boots. She was a shadow among shadows, her body attuned to silence, her breath measured, her heartbeat calm. Years of training, years of discipline—they carried her like a second skin.
But for all her poise, something pricked at her tonight. A subtle wrongness she couldn’t quite name. The woods felt empty, too still between the ordinary sounds. The silence had weight, pressing against her chest like unseen hands. It wasn’t fear—Isabel was long past fear—but something more instinctive. The feeling of being watched.
Her grip tightened on the hilt of her blade. She didn’t look up immediately, didn’t want to give herself away. Instead, she walked further until the trees thinned into a clearing. Only then did she pause, letting her eyes drift upward.
The moon hung low, bathing the open space in silver. The grass glittered faintly with frost. At first, nothing stirred. And then—her gaze caught on the edge of the clearing. A dark figure, tall, leaning with casual grace against the trunk of an oak tree.
Her breath stilled.
The figure didn’t move. Didn’t lunge. Didn’t even seem surprised she had spotted him. Instead, he stood in quiet composure, as if the forest itself bent around him, cloaking him in shadows too thick to be natural. She could make out the outline of broad shoulders beneath a dark coat, hair pale as moonlight, eyes that glinted gold when they caught her stare.
Not a feral. Not some rabid fledgling. This one radiated control. Power tempered by patience.
Her blade slid free of its sheath with a whisper of steel.
“You’ve been careless,” Isabel said evenly, masking the spike of adrenaline in her chest. Her voice carried across the clearing, steady and sharp. “Leaving marks on barns, clawing at doors. For someone who’s lived as long as you clearly have, that’s sloppy work.”
The man chuckled, low and warm, a sound that slid over the frost-laden grass like smoke.
“Sloppy?” he echoed, tilting his head. “Hunter, if I had wanted to hide from you, do you think we would be meeting like this?”
Her jaw clenched. He knew what she was. He’d been waiting.
The man stepped forward at last, not rushing, not aggressive—just deliberate. His coat brushed against the grass, his pale hair gleaming faintly in the moonlight. Those golden eyes never wavered from her, and Isabel felt the pressure of that gaze settle on her like an unspoken challenge.
He was unlike any vampire she had hunted before. Not because of his composure, not because of his presence. But because she couldn’t immediately read him. Predators had patterns—she knew them well. This one was a book with no cover, no spine, only pages hidden within.
And that unsettled her more than she cared to admit.
“Stay where you are,” she ordered, raising her blade. “Or I’ll put this through your heart.”
The man smiled, not unkindly, but with the quiet amusement of someone indulging a child’s tantrum.
“You think I have a heart left for you to pierce?” he asked softly.
Her grip tightened. The air between them stretched taut, silence wrapping them in its suffocating shroud. She could hear her own pulse in her ears, steady but insistent. She refused to give ground.
Isabel had faced vampires who snarled, who lunged, who begged for mercy as the blade struck. But never one who stood with such calm, who looked at her not as prey, not as foe, but as if she were some curiosity under glass.
And she hated that it made her hesitate.
“I don’t need to understand you,” she said coldly. “I only need to kill you.”
The vampire’s smile deepened, though his eyes softened with something she couldn’t name. Amusement? Interest? Pity?
“Ah,” he murmured, tilting his head again. “Then it seems you and I will be seeing a great deal of each other, hunter.”
And with that, he stepped back into the shadows. In an instant, the clearing was empty save for her, the frost, and the whisper of the wind.
Isabel stood rigid, blade still drawn, heart hammering against her ribs. Slowly, she lowered the weapon, though her hand trembled against the hilt.
She hated that she could still feel the weight of his gaze, even after he had vanished.
She hated even more the faint flicker of curiosity that sparked in her chest.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The forest was quiet long after the hunter had left.
Jing Yuan remained where he was, leaning against the great oak with arms folded loosely, listening to the faint echo of her footsteps recede into the distance. For centuries, he had learned to empty his mind into silence, to let the passage of years wash over him without concern. But tonight, something lingered. The imprint of her voice, sharp and unyielding, clung to him like smoke.
A hunter. Bold, precise, carrying herself with the posture of someone who had survived more battles than her years should allow. The way she had held her blade—firm but not reckless—told him all he needed to know about her skill. She was not one of those would-be zealots who stumbled into the dark with torches and holy prayers. No, this one was carved of discipline and steel.
And yet, for all her control, he had seen it: the flicker of hesitation when she met his gaze.
Jing Yuan let out a low hum, the sound almost lost to the sighing branches overhead. His lips curved faintly in amusement. Hunters prided themselves on their certainty, their unwavering belief in the monster they chased. To make one falter, even for a heartbeat, was more satisfying than any victory by claw or fang.
He stepped from the shadows at last, boots pressing soundlessly against the frost. The clearing seemed smaller without her in it, as though her presence had filled it with an edge of vitality that now dissipated into the night air. He tilted his head toward the moon, its cold light painting silver against his pale hair, and let his mind drift backward.
How many hunters had he met in his long existence? Dozens. Perhaps more than a hundred. Some screamed when they found him, others charged with blind fury, still others prayed with trembling lips until his fangs silenced them. None had left an impression worth remembering. Until now.
This one—Isabel, if the whispers he had caught from the local villagers were true—carried something different. A fire that did not burn recklessly, but carefully tended, like an ember in a hearth that could warm or consume depending on the hand that stoked it.
He found himself smiling, a genuine, soft curve of his mouth. How long had it been since he had felt anything more than passing amusement? Centuries had dulled the edges of his emotions until they were no more than echoes. But tonight…
Tonight, he was intrigued.
Jing Yuan moved with unhurried steps through the forest, his senses stretching outward. He did not need to follow her trail; her presence already lingered in the air, sharp and metallic, tinged faintly with the scent of silver polish and the faintest trace of human warmth. His kind could taste emotion on the wind as easily as blood, and hers had been taut as a drawn bowstring, filled with duty and something she tried desperately to hide: weariness.
He knew it well. The exhaustion that comes from carrying one’s duty so long that it begins to eat into the bones.
His steps carried him to a ridge that overlooked the village. The cluster of houses below huddled close together, their chimneys puffing thin streams of smoke into the night. Candlelight flickered faintly behind shutters, and dogs barked now and then, uneasy though they knew not why. The people slept under the fragile illusion of safety, unaware of how close predator and protector both circled them.
Jing Yuan’s golden eyes softened as he watched. He did not hunger for them—not tonight, not in many nights. The old hunger was still there, yes, coiled at the core of his being, but he had long since learned restraint. To him, their lives were not prey but pieces in a delicate balance. To feed indiscriminately would be to draw hunters like moths to flame, to upset the order that allowed him to exist undisturbed.
He was not interested in chaos. He had ruled battlefields long ago, commanded armies, and watched rivers of blood soak the soil. That life no longer interested him. He preferred stillness now, the long quiet where centuries passed like seasons.
Yet even stillness can shiver when disrupted.
He closed his eyes briefly, recalling her face. The sharp line of her jaw, the determination set into her eyes, the way her voice had not wavered even when she threatened to drive her blade through his heart. A heart, she believed, that no longer beat.
For the first time in many years, Jing Yuan wondered what it might feel like if it still did.
A faint sound stirred him from thought. A twig snapping somewhere near the base of the ridge. His eyes opened, sharp, attentive, though his posture remained languid. A fox emerged, small and rust-colored, its nose twitching as it pawed through the snow. It spared him a wary glance, then scurried off into the brush.
The world resumed its calm rhythm, but the moment was not lost on him. Even the smallest creatures understood the quiet gravity of predators.
He let his gaze wander once more toward the village. Somewhere down there, the hunter would be sharpening her blades, oiling her crossbow, preparing for another night of pursuit. She would think of him as the enemy, as the monster who needed to be felled for peace to hold.
And perhaps she was right. But Jing Yuan could not help the curl of amusement that tugged at his mouth again.
He had no intention of fleeing her hunt. Quite the opposite.
Let her sharpen her blades, let her steel her will. He would be waiting, again and again, until the cracks in her certainty grew too wide to ignore. He wanted to see how long her resolve would hold beneath the weight of doubt.
The hunter had crossed into his territory. She would not leave it unchanged.
And he would not let her leave unchanged either.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The forest did not sleep.
It breathed, it shifted, it murmured through the branches overhead, but it did not sleep. Isabel had walked among trees long enough to know the difference between ordinary night sounds and the quiet that meant something more ancient stirred. Tonight was the latter. The silence pressed against her ears like a heavy hand, muting even the rush of her blood.
She adjusted the strap across her chest, where the sheath of her long knife sat snug against her ribs. Her crossbow hung at her side, silver bolts nestled in the quiver slung over her back. Each weapon was a familiar weight, grounding her as she stalked the undergrowth. But her body betrayed her discipline—her shoulders were tight, her breath caught short, and her eyes scanned the darkness with an edge sharper than usual.
Because she knew he was near.
It wasn’t just instinct. It was presence. An awareness that prickled the back of her neck, whispering that she was not alone. That she was the one being hunted now.
The clearing from last night lay only a mile behind her, but she had not returned there. Hunters did not chase shadows—they anticipated them. She followed the signs instead: a half-buried claw mark in frozen bark, a smear of something too dark to be sap glistening against stone, the faint drag of fabric against bramble. The trail was subtle, left not with carelessness but intent.
He wanted her to follow.
Isabel gritted her teeth. Every lesson she had ever learned told her not to walk into the jaws of a predator knowingly. But her oath as a hunter demanded she cut down threats before they grew bold enough to reach the village. If this vampire wanted her attention, he had it.
She stepped into another clearing, her boots crunching softly against frost. The moon had shifted higher tonight, bathing everything in cold silver. The trees circled her like watchful sentinels, shadows twisting between them.
And then, a voice. Low, smooth, drifting from the darkness like the brush of silk against skin.
“You’re quicker than most,” it said. “I thought it might take you longer to find me again.”
Her spine went rigid. She turned, blade drawn, and there he was—emerging from the treeline as if he’d been part of it all along. His pale hair gleamed faintly beneath the moon, and his golden eyes caught the light with a predator’s glow. He carried himself with the ease of someone who had nothing to fear.
Isabel leveled her weapon at him, jaw set. “You’re bold to taunt a hunter, monster.”
He smiled, faint but unmistakable. “Monster. Is that the word you’ve chosen for me?” He stepped closer, his boots silent against the frost, until he stood barely a dozen paces away. “I wonder if you truly believe it.”
Her pulse kicked, sharp and hot in her throat. “I don’t need belief. I have proof. Your kind leaves enough of it scattered across the dirt.”
“Ah,” he murmured, tilting his head. “The bodies. The blood. Yes, those are convincing arguments.” His gaze sharpened, though his voice never lost its velvet tone. “But tell me, hunter—do you think I’ve survived centuries by being careless? By leaving trails of death for you to follow?”
She faltered, if only for a heartbeat. His words rang with too much truth to dismiss outright. He did not have the stench of feral hunger about him. He stood before her with composure, not frenzy. And still—she raised her blade higher, unwilling to give him ground.
“Step closer,” she warned, “and you’ll see how careless you’ve truly been.”
The vampire’s smile deepened, though there was no mockery in it—only something like quiet amusement. He spread his hands slightly, palms open, as if to humor her. “So fierce,” he said softly. “But fierceness can blind, if you clutch it too tightly.”
She hated the way his words slipped under her skin, hated the calmness that made her own pulse feel too loud in comparison. Every fiber of her being screamed to strike, to end this cat-and-mouse before he turned it against her. And yet, her body resisted. It was as though something in his presence bound her in place—not magic, not compulsion, but sheer gravity.
With a sharp breath, Isabel lunged.
Her blade sliced through the air, silver flashing. He moved, faster than sight, his body twisting out of reach with inhuman grace. She struck again, a clean arc toward his chest, but steel met only the whisper of his coat as he stepped aside.
Again. And again. Each time her blade found only air, and each time he danced back with maddening ease, his expression calm, as though indulging her strikes were a game.
Finally, in a burst of frustration, she swung wide toward his throat. But before steel could bite, his hand snapped out, catching her wrist mid-strike.
Isabel hissed, teeth clenched as she strained against his grip. His hold was firm but not crushing, his skin cool against her glove. Their faces were close now, close enough that she could see the fine lines at the corners of his eyes, the faint scar just beneath his jawline. Close enough that she could feel the unnatural stillness radiating from him.
“You’re skilled,” he said quietly, golden eyes locked to hers. “But you waste your strength fighting a battle that isn’t here.”
She wrenched free, staggering back a step, blade raised once more. “You’re trying to confuse me.”
“If confusion is all it takes,” he murmured, “then perhaps your certainty was never as strong as you believed.”
Her chest heaved with uneven breaths. The weight of his gaze pressed heavy against her, and for a moment, the world narrowed to nothing but the space between them—the hunter, the hunted, the question of which was which hanging in the cold night air.
Finally, he stepped back, releasing the tension with infuriating ease. His smile softened, though his eyes burned with something unreadable.
“We’ll meet again,” he said. “And when we do, perhaps you’ll be ready to ask yourself the questions you fear.”
Before she could react, before her blade could rise again, he dissolved into the shadows, vanishing between the trees as though the forest itself had swallowed him.
Isabel stood alone, chest tight, her blade trembling faintly in her hand. Her heart thundered, though she refused to acknowledge it as fear. No—fear she could master. This was something else. Something far more dangerous.
Because for the first time in years, she wasn’t sure who she was hunting anymore.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The night carried her scent long after she had gone.
Jing Yuan lingered in the treeline, his form half-shadow, half-man, golden eyes tracing the path the hunter had stormed down with her blade still clenched tight in her hand. She had left the clearing as if the earth itself burned beneath her feet, fury crackling in every stride. But beneath the sharpness of her movements, he had seen something else—hesitation, confusion, the unsteady rhythm of a certainty shaken.
And he had caused it.
He leaned back against the rough bark of an ancient pine, folding his arms loosely across his chest. For centuries he had lived without care for hunters. They came, they struck, they died, leaving behind only the faintest ripple in the endless stretch of time he inhabited. Never had he thought to linger on one. Never had he thought to play.
Yet here he was, the echo of her heartbeat still thrumming faintly in his ears.
It had been strong, that heart. Furious, even. She had fought with precision, each strike clean and deliberate, the mark of a warrior who had carved her skills from blood and necessity. She had been quick, quicker than most humans he had met. And yet—he had held her wrist so easily, as though her strength were a child’s compared to his.
He could have broken her then. Could have ended the fire in her eyes with a twist of his hand.
But he hadn’t.
Instead, he had let her go, let her breathe, let her rage. And it amused him, deeply, how that choice unsettled her more than the threat of his fangs ever could.
He tilted his head upward, gazing through the skeletal canopy at the pale disc of the moon. Its cold light painted the frost-covered branches, glinting silver against the night. A memory stirred at the edge of his mind, unbidden—a battlefield long ago, moonlight gleaming against steel as men bled into the earth. His soldiers had once looked at him with the same fire the hunter carried in her eyes: fierce, unyielding, willing to throw themselves into the jaws of death if it meant striking true.
They had all turned to dust centuries ago. And yet that fire lived still, in the form of a hunter who should have been his enemy.
Jing Yuan exhaled softly, a sound that misted faintly in the cold air. He did not feel warmth, not as mortals did, but tonight his chest carried something unfamiliar. Not hunger. Not rage. Something subtler, far more insidious.
Curiosity.
With measured steps, he slipped deeper into the woods, his senses stretched outward. The world unfolded for him in layers invisible to humans: the heat of a rabbit beneath its burrow, the pulse of an owl perched high on a branch, the faint shimmer of veins glowing beneath the skin of a doe as it bent to drink from the stream. He ignored them all. His focus was fixed elsewhere.
On her.
The hunter's trail was easy enough to follow. The faint scuff of boots on frost, the scent of steel oil and leather, the quickening of her breath as she tried to shake his words from her mind. He could have reached her in moments, could have pressed her once more until her fire cracked into desperation. But he didn’t. Instead, he followed at a distance, watching as she moved through the forest with careful steps, every motion laced with discipline.
She was hunting. He could see it in her posture, the way her gaze snapped to every shift in shadow, the way her fingers lingered against the hilt of her weapon. Not him, not tonight—her quarry was smaller, weaker. Another of his kind, perhaps.
And then he saw it.
The fledgling crouched near the edge of the clearing ahead, pale skin stretched thin over brittle bones, its eyes wild with hunger. It had been feeding poorly, surviving on scraps of livestock, not enough to sustain it. Its hands trembled as it tore into the carcass of a hare, crimson streaking its mouth.
Jing Yuan’s eyes narrowed.
A fledgling like this would not live long. Too reckless, too desperate. Hunters would find it easily. Or worse, it would slip into frenzy and tear through the village below, unable to stop itself. The hunter would not hesitate to strike. He could already see her raising her blade, her body sliding into practiced rhythm as she stepped from the brush.
But before steel could flash, Jing Yuan moved.
He stepped from shadow into moonlight, deliberately placing himself between hunter and prey. The fledgling hissed at him, baring bloody teeth, but at the sight of his golden eyes, it faltered, shrinking back. Even half-starved, it recognized authority when it saw it.
She froze at the treeline.
Jing Yuan did not look at her immediately. Instead, he crouched slightly, his gaze fixed on the trembling fledgling. “Go,” he said quietly, his voice carrying weight that pressed into the night air. “Leave this place. Do not return.”
The creature whimpered, then scrambled into the dark, vanishing into the brush with desperate speed.
Only then did Jing Yuan turn.
The hunter stood rigid, her blade drawn, her expression caught somewhere between fury and disbelief. Moonlight carved sharp lines across her face, catching the tight set of her jaw.
“You let it go,” she said, her voice low, taut with restrained anger.
Jing Yuan tilted his head, his tone infuriatingly calm. “It was no threat.”
“It was a vampire.”
His smile was faint, almost imperceptible. “So am I.”
Her grip on her blade tightened. “And that’s exactly why you should be ash.”
He studied her in silence for a moment, golden eyes tracing the lines of her defiance. She was so certain, so rooted in her creed. Yet her voice carried a crack, a thin line of uncertainty beneath the steel. He had seen it before, in the way she faltered during their clash, in the way she now stared at him as if trying to reconcile two truths that could not coexist.
Finally, he stepped closer—not enough to strike, but enough to remind her of the weight he carried, the gulf of power that separated them.
“You speak of ash, hunter,” he murmured, “but tell me—when you struck at me that night, why did your blade never find its mark?”
Her lips pressed into a thin line. She did not answer.
Jing Yuan’s smile deepened, though it held no cruelty—only quiet amusement. “Perhaps,” he said softly, “because some part of you wonders if the lines you’ve drawn are not as clear as you believe.”
Her eyes flashed with anger, but he could smell it now—the doubt. Sharp and bitter, clinging to her like smoke.
He let the silence linger, savoring it. Then, as before, he stepped back into the shadows, leaving her in the clearing with nothing but her blade and her pounding heart.
But this time, he did not vanish into the night.
This time, he lingered at the edge of the trees, unseen, watching as she lowered her weapon at last. Her shoulders sagged, her breath uneven. She looked less like a hunter then and more like a woman caught in the weight of questions she did not want to ask.
Jing Yuan’s golden eyes softened. He could break her conviction with force, but force was clumsy. He preferred patience.
A predator does not lunge at once. It circles, it waits, it tests.
And so he would.
He would watch. He would wait. And slowly, inevitably, the hunter would learn that she was not the only one writing the rules of this hunt.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The night bled silver across the rooftops, moonlight clinging to the edges of broken stone and empty alleys. Isabel’s breath misted in the air, sharp and ragged, as she pressed her hand to her side. The wound burned, hot and ugly, blood seeping between her fingers in a steady, treacherous trickle. She had been careless—too slow, too certain she was the hunter in control.
The vampire she had cornered turned on her with a strength she hadn’t accounted for, its claws raking across her armor, tearing through the leather, grazing skin. She had driven her blade home, yes, had felt the beast crumple and fall—but not before it had struck. The copper sting of her own blood clung to her like a curse, and now every step down the shadowed streets felt heavier, slower.
She stumbled once, catching herself against the wall of an abandoned building. The stone was cold against her palm, grounding her even as her body protested. Her training echoed in her mind—never falter, never show weakness—but her blood betrayed her, dripping onto the ground, a trail no predator would fail to notice.
It didn’t take long.
The sound reached her first—soft, deliberate, a footstep that was too controlled to belong to anything mindless. She froze, forcing her breathing steady despite the pain slicing through her ribs. Then came another step, then another, the rhythm deliberate, almost patient, as though whoever—or whatever—followed her had no need to rush.
Her hand went instinctively to her weapon, slick with her own blood, grip tightening despite the weakness in her arm. Her heart beat once, twice, thunder in her ears. She turned.
And there he was.
The same figure she had seen before, the one who lingered at the edges of her path, the vampire with the eyes that seemed more calculating than hungry. He stood at the far end of the alley, his posture calm, his presence deliberate. Moonlight spilled over him, catching in the pale strands of his hair, painting him in silver. His gaze fell to her side—her wound—and lingered.
Her throat tightened.
“You.” The word slipped out sharper than she intended, a hiss of recognition and fury tangled together. She should have drawn her blade, should have lunged despite her injuries, but her body wavered and her pride caught in her throat.
He tilted his head, regarding her not like prey but like some puzzle. His voice was low when it came, smooth, carrying an odd weight.
“You’re hurt.”
Isabel gritted her teeth. “Stay back.”
He didn’t move closer, but neither did he retreat. Instead, he studied her as if testing the boundaries of her resolve. “That wound won’t close on its own.”
Her grip tightened on her weapon, her knuckles whitening. “I don’t need help from a creature like you.”
For the briefest moment, something flickered across his expression—something unreadable, a shadow of amusement, or perhaps disappointment. Then he moved, slow enough that she could track him, raising his hands slightly as though to show he carried no weapon.
“If I meant to kill you,” he said softly, “you wouldn’t still be standing.”
The words hit her like ice. Because she knew, deep down, they were true. The way he carried himself—unhurried, restrained—spoke of strength he hadn’t yet shown. Her wound throbbed as if agreeing, reminding her how close she had already come to death tonight.
She swallowed, the taste of blood thick in her mouth. “Then what do you want?”
His gaze held hers, unwavering. “To keep you alive.”
The alley spun for a heartbeat, her blood loss stealing clarity. She wanted to laugh at the absurdity of it, wanted to spit in his face for daring to speak such words—but all she managed was a shaky exhale, anger and exhaustion blurring into one.
“Don’t mock me,” she whispered.
“I’m not.” He took one step closer, measured, cautious. His eyes glowed faintly in the moonlight, sharp but not predatory. “Let me help you.”
Her stomach twisted. Every instinct screamed no, screamed that hunters did not bargain with vampires, did not trust their words, did not let them close enough to sink their teeth into exposed flesh. Yet her legs wavered beneath her, strength bleeding out with every drop staining the cobblestones.
“How?” The word left her against her will, ragged, betraying her weakness.
He paused. “Not in a way you’ll trust.”
Her chest tightened, fury rising to cover fear. “Then stay away.”
His lips curved faintly—not quite a smile, not quite anything she could read. But he didn’t press closer. Instead, he remained at that fragile distance between them, his presence filling the alley, heavy as a storm.
Silence stretched, broken only by the drip of her blood and the faint rasp of her breath.
Finally, he said quietly, “Believe what you will. But you should know—I had no reason to step in tonight.” His gaze dropped, briefly, to her wound. “And yet, here I am.”
Her pulse stuttered, unease rooting itself deep inside. He was right. He had saved her from the other vampire, had intervened when he could have easily let her fall. And he was right about something else, too: she had no answer for why.
Her weapon trembled in her grip, heavy now, her strength fraying. She wanted to speak, to force certainty into the space between them, but the words withered on her tongue.
He turned, finally, his silhouette breaking against the edge of moonlight. Before disappearing into the night, his voice reached her one last time—calm, certain.
“You’re not alone in this city. Remember that.”
And then he was gone, the alley empty but for the sound of her uneven breathing.
Isabel pressed her back against the wall, her blade slipping from her hand, clattering against stone. Her chest rose and fell too fast, her mind whirling. She hated him—she had to hate him—but the line between hate and something else had grown dangerously thin.
She slid down the wall, blood warm at her side, heart colder than the night around her. He had saved her. Not once. Not twice.
Why?
And why did the question frighten her more than the thought of facing another vampire?
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The forest was quieter than it should have been. Jing Yuan noticed first, though he suspected the hunter had felt it too in her own way—the unnerving stillness that wrapped itself around the trees and pressed against the skin like a damp cloth. No birdsong, no rustle of small creatures in the underbrush, no telltale whisper of fangs cutting through the night. He had lived long enough to know when silence was unnatural, and this was silence with intent.
From where he stood, a little behind her, he could see the way she moved more cautiously now. The proud stride she had carried into the woods on their first encounter had given way to something sharper, more guarded. Her hand hovered near the hilt of her weapon, eyes flicking constantly to the shadows as if expecting the darkness itself to bare its teeth. He almost pitied her—almost—but the sight of her fighting instinct was far too fascinating for him to interrupt.
She hadn’t thanked him for saving her life. That much was no surprise. A hunter with pride enough to enter his domain alone would never bow her head to a creature she was taught to despise. Still, her silence since then carried weight. She had not left, even when she should have; she remained in the perimeter of his woods, pacing his territory as though hoping the answers she sought might emerge from the trees themselves. He wondered if she realized that her very choice to linger here had already placed her beneath his shadow.
He let her continue her careful circuit before speaking, voice smooth, warm enough to be mocking but not cruel.
“Curious, isn’t it? How quiet the night has been since you arrived here. Almost as though the very things you hunt have learned caution.”
She froze at his voice. He thought she might not answer—the hunter was prone to that, swallowing her words as though silence itself could shield her from him—but then she turned her head just slightly, enough that he caught the faint outline of her profile against the trees.
“Or they’re plotting,” she murmured, her tone low but steady. “Silence doesn’t mean safety. You’d know that better than I.”
He smiled at the defiance wrapped so neatly in her words. She had claws under all that suspicion, and he admired the way she kept them sharp. “True enough,” he said, drifting closer, though he kept a careful distance. She always stiffened when he drew near, like a bowstring pulled taut, and he had no intention of snapping her—yet. “But if it comforts you, they avoid this land for a reason.”
That made her glance back fully, eyes glinting with that steel-edged suspicion he had come to recognize. “Because of you.”
“Perhaps,” he allowed, letting the word hang with deliberate vagueness. He wanted her to ask more, to demand what exactly he meant—but she pressed her lips together and turned forward again. She would not give him the satisfaction, and that, too, amused him.
The two of them moved through the woods in tandem, predator and hunter, though the lines blurred more with each step. Jing Yuan found himself watching her as often as the trees: the way her shoulders tensed at every distant sound, the rhythm of her breathing as she measured the silence, the faint stiffness in her gait from the wound she had sustained days ago. She was strong, certainly, but strength always came with seams. He wondered if she knew how visible hers were.
When the path narrowed, she slowed just enough that he had to step to the side or brush against her. Her choice was deliberate, he suspected—a reminder that she was aware of him, that she would not grant him any chance to close the distance unnoticed. He obliged her by veering off to walk through the tall grass, cloak trailing soundlessly.
“You keep circling this territory,” he said at last, tone almost conversational, though the words were anything but idle. “If you’re hoping to find what lurks, you’ll be disappointed. It doesn’t linger where I am.”
She shot him a sharp look over her shoulder. “Then why are you still here?”
He let the question sit in the air a moment, considering how best to tease out her reaction. Then, with a faint curve of his lips, he said, “Because you are.”
Her hand tightened on the hilt of her blade, but she didn’t draw it. That was answer enough.
The night stretched on, thick with unspoken words and brittle restraint. He guided their path subtly, angling her away from the deeper, more dangerous groves without ever making it obvious. She would not thank him for it, but then, he did not require her gratitude. Watching her bristle at the smallest of his interjections was its own quiet reward.
At one point, they reached the ridge where the trees broke and the land dipped toward a river glimmering faintly in the moonlight. The hunter paused there, gaze scanning the opposite bank as if searching for some sign, some slip in the unnatural calm. Her posture was still wary, but Jing Yuan noted the faint crease of unease in her brow. She was beginning to feel what he already knew—that whatever kept the other vampires at bay, it was not fear of her.
He stepped to her side, folding his hands behind his back, and let the silence stretch until she finally spoke.
“They’re avoiding you. Not me.”
It wasn’t a question.
“No,” he agreed softly, eyes following the current below. “Not you.”
She breathed out, sharp and quiet, as if she hated giving voice to the realization. He glanced sidelong at her, catching the faint flicker of conflict in her eyes, and almost, almost pitied her again. To need the protection of the thing you swore to kill—that was a cruel irony.
Still, she didn’t leave. She hadn’t turned her back on him even when she had the chance. That, to him, was worth more than all the words she refused to give.
Jing Yuan let the silence take them again, content to walk beside her, a shadow at her shoulder, until the dawn began to press faint gold against the horizon. And though she would never admit it aloud, he knew she matched her pace to his all the same.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The fire in the hall burned low, its glow flickering against the stone walls, but Isabel barely felt its warmth. She sat stiff-backed at the long wooden table, her cloak still smelling faintly of blood and night air. Around her, the hunters spoke in hushed tones, the scrape of blades being sharpened cutting through their murmurs. This was familiar—home, in its own brutal way. Yet tonight, she felt like an intruder among her own kind.
“You’ve been out longer than usual,” one of them remarked, a tall man with scars trailing down his jaw. He eyed her with a sharpness that belied casual interest. “Didn’t see you return with any trophies.”
Isabel didn’t flinch. She met his gaze coolly, fingers tightening around the cup in her hand. “Not every hunt ends with a kill. Sometimes you watch. Learn.”
Another hunter, younger and less subtle, leaned forward. “Funny,” he said, “because it looks like you’re returning lighter every time. Less steel in your eyes. What exactly are you watching out there?”
A ripple of unease passed over the table. Isabel’s heart thudded, slow and deliberate. She had prepared herself for this—of course they would notice. Hunters lived on instinct, suspicion sharpened like the blades at their belts. They could sniff out weakness like wolves.
She chose her words carefully. “The forests are quiet,” she said. “Too quiet. The vampires are avoiding certain ground. I need to know why.”
“Maybe they're avoiding someone,” the scarred man murmured. His words were soft, but they sliced deeper than a shout.
Isabel’s knuckles whitened around the cup. A flicker of memory rose unbidden: pale hair catching moonlight, a low voice speaking with disarming calm, the brush of a clawed hand that had saved her instead of ending her. She shoved it down.
“I don’t answer to rumor,” she said flatly. “If I track something, it’s because I know it’s there. If the trail is cold, I’ll say it’s cold. You want me to invent corpses just to keep your pride intact?”
That earned a few grim chuckles, but it didn’t dispel the weight pressing on her. The younger hunter’s grin was humorless. “No one’s asking for corpses. Just loyalty. It’s dangerous out there. If you’re not killing, then maybe you’re—” He cut himself off, but the implication hung heavy.
A traitor.
Isabel pushed her chair back and stood, the scrape loud against the stone floor. Her voice was low, steady, the kind that brooked no challenge. “You think I’d side with them? After all I’ve done? After all we’ve lost?” She let the silence stretch, her glare sharp enough to silence any protest. “Don’t mistake caution for weakness.”
For a moment, no one spoke. The fire crackled, throwing shadows that twisted across their faces. She saw doubt in their eyes, but also wariness. Hunters didn’t turn on their own lightly. Still, a seed had been planted, and she knew seeds could grow into poison.
A hand touched her arm lightly, stopping her as she turned to leave. It was Rowan—the oldest among them, his hair long gone to silver. His eyes, though weary, were as piercing as ever. He had trained her, once. He had praised her ferocity when she was still more girl than woman.
“Isabel,” he said softly, pitched so only she could hear. “I know the weight that lingers after battle. I know the silence that creeps in when you begin to think too much. But do not let your heart falter. Doubt will rot you faster than any fangs.”
She stiffened under his touch. His voice wasn’t cruel like the others, but it carried more danger. It wasn’t suspicion he laid upon her—it was disappointment. And somehow, that cut deeper.
“My heart hasn’t faltered,” she said, sharper than intended. She pulled back from his hand, forcing herself to meet his gaze. “If you think me unsteady, then you’ve forgotten who I am.”
Rowan only studied her a moment longer, then nodded slowly, as if her defiance were an answer he had already expected. “Prove it then. The next hunt. No hesitation.”
He let her go, but his words clung to her like a curse.
Later, when the hall grew louder with drink and smoke, Isabel lingered in the shadows near the door. That was when she heard it—the whispers that were never meant to reach her ears.
“Rowan still shields her.”
“She’s not the same, you see it too. There’s a softness.”
“She’ll get one of us killed if she falters. Best to watch her closely. Closely.”
Their voices bled together, low and bitter, until Isabel could stand no more. She slipped into the night, the cold air biting harder than any accusation.
The forest loomed, silent as always, but she no longer found comfort in that silence. It reminded her of him—how the night bent around his presence, how the air seemed to still when he stepped into it.
She cursed under her breath, dragging her hands down her face. Hunters doubted her. She doubted herself. And yet, in the chaos of her thoughts, one thing rang clear: she could not—would not—allow them to see how deep that doubt ran.
When she returned to the hall, her mask would be intact again. Steel in her spine, fire in her words. But alone in the woods, she admitted the truth only to herself.
That vampire had spared her life. Saved it. And whether she liked it or not, some part of her was beginning to wonder why.
Days later, the memory of him—calm, deliberate, unyielding—still pressed against the edges of her mind. She could feel it in the subtle way her pulse quickened whenever she imagined his golden eyes, hear it in the echo of his voice that refused to leave her thoughts. She had tried to convince herself it was irrelevant, that the hunters’ code left no room for distraction. Yet the questions gnawed at her, persistent and unwelcome.
Now, back among the trees, the forest pressed in around her like a held breath. Every rustle of leaves, every whisper of wind through the branches seemed too deliberate, too restrained, as though the world itself were waiting. Isabel had hunted long enough to recognize that kind of silence. It was the silence of a predator circling prey. And she knew exactly who the predator was.
Her hands itched toward her blade, not from fear of what lurked in the shadows, but from the restless tension that the gold-eyed vampire had left behind, an invisible weight she could neither shake nor ignore.
Her grip tightened on her sword. Her boots moved noiselessly over the damp soil, but her chest burned with a fury she couldn’t still. He had been near all night—close enough to sense, far enough to evade. A shadow to her every step, a ghost just beyond her reach.
When she stepped into the clearing, he was already there.
Moonlight poured silver over his figure, glinting across the edge of his armor, catching in his eyes. Golden, unreadable, steady. His posture was relaxed—infuriatingly so—as though her blade wasn’t already in hand, as though she weren’t here to kill him.
“You’ve been following me,” she spat. Her voice came out harsher than she intended, jagged with the frustration building in her chest.
He tilted his head, as calm as if they stood on a training field instead of the heart of a battlefield. “Observing,” he corrected, his voice low, unhurried. “You hunt differently than the others. Efficient. Relentless. I find it… worth studying.”
Her blood boiled. “Studying.” The word tasted like ash. “Do you think I don’t know what you’re doing? You think saving me once gives you a hold over me? That I’ll falter—betray my mentor, betray the hunters—because you lurk in the shadows and pretend restraint?”
A flicker—something unreadable passed over his face. Regret, maybe. But it was gone before she could grasp it.
“I don’t pretend.”
That single sentence snapped something inside her. She lunged.
Steel hissed through the air, a flash of silver slicing for his throat. He twisted aside, the blade missing by a breath. Isabel pivoted, letting fury guide her, pressing forward in a storm of blows. Sparks flew as her sword clashed against his guard—he deflected with a vambrace, with the flat of his hand redirecting her swing, with movements so fluid it infuriated her.
Her training screamed precision; her rage demanded blood.
“Fight me!” she screamed, striking again and again, each blow heavier, faster. “Stop circling, stop running, fight!”
At last, he moved with force—catching her blade mid-swing, steel locking against his own weapon drawn in a flash. The impact shuddered up her arm. For the first time, their faces were inches apart, her fury burning against his maddening calm.
“I will not kill you,” he said, his voice quiet but resolute.
“Then you’ll die by my hand anyway.”
She shoved him back, blade arcing toward his chest. He met her strike, the clash ringing through the clearing. The ground bore their struggle—soil torn by boots, branches breaking as their fight spilled between trees. Isabel’s blade drew shallow cuts across his arm, his cheek; his counters left bruises blooming across her ribs, her shoulder, her wrist where he wrenched too close.
And still, he held back. Every strike he landed was meant to push, not pierce. Every opening he could have taken, he let slip.
Her chest burned with fury. With grief. With confusion so sharp it hollowed her bones.
“Why—” she gasped, driving her blade forward only to be deflected once more, “—why won’t you finish it? Do you think this is mercy? Pity?”
His golden eyes locked onto hers. For the first time, she saw something other than calm in them. Pain.
“I told you,” he said softly, almost brokenly, “I don’t want to kill you.”
That hesitation cost her. She swung, missed, stumbled—and when she looked up again, he was gone.
The silence returned, heavy as a grave.
Isabel staggered to her knees, her sword slipping from her bloodied hands. She pressed her palms to the dirt, trembling as the world tilted around her. Her breath came ragged, her throat raw from shouting. Rage crackled through her veins, but beneath it—worse, sharper—was fear.
Not fear of him.
Fear of herself.
She slammed her fists into the soil, once, twice, until dirt and blood smeared her skin. A scream tore free, raw and jagged, echoing into the trees. She hated him. Hated his calm, his restraint, the way his words threaded into her chest like barbs. But most of all, she hated the part of herself that had hesitated. That hadn’t struck with all the force she could have. That had faltered.
“Damn you,” she choked, voice shaking. “Damn you for—” Her words collapsed into silence, leaving only the ragged sound of her sobbing breath.
Moonlight washed over her bowed form. Her hands shook too badly to retrieve her blade. And for the first time in years, Isabel wept—not for the kin she had buried, not for the hunters she had lost, but for the unsteady, splintering thing inside herself that she could no longer deny.
The forest stayed silent. Only the echo of her own breaking remained.
Her breathing still hadn’t steadied. The taste of blood clung to her mouth—hers, his, she couldn’t tell anymore. Her blade was streaked with it, dark and sticky where she had struck him, though the vampire’s skin had already begun to knit itself back together before he vanished into the trees. He had escaped, like smoke slipping through her fingers, leaving only the ghost of his presence behind.
Isabel staggered to a tree and pressed her back to it, her chest heaving, her weapon trembling in her hand. She should have been triumphant. A hunter standing her ground, reminding herself what side she belonged to. Instead, her whole body shook—not with victory, but with something rawer, sharper.
Anger burned through her veins, hot and choking. Anger at him for making her hesitate. Anger at herself for faltering when she should have been merciless. She slammed her fist against the tree bark, once, twice, until her knuckles stung.
“Damn you,” she whispered, voice breaking. The sound cracked apart in the air, caught somewhere between a sob and a curse.
Her knees buckled, and she slid down the trunk, curling forward as if she could press the confusion right out of her chest. Tears blurred her vision, spilling hot and unwanted down her cheeks. She buried her face in her hands, but it didn’t silence the storm inside her.
That vampire. He had saved her once, then dared to look at her as though she were the one worth sparing. Worse, tonight, even as they clashed, she had seen it again—that steadiness in his eyes, not malice, not hunger, but something infuriatingly calm. Something that whispered he had no reason to fight her at all.
She hated it. Hated the weakness clawing up her throat, hated that some small, trembling piece of her wanted to believe him.
The forest was too quiet. Her sobs filled the silence, ragged and unsteady. Her body trembled as the adrenaline began to ebb, leaving her raw, exposed, and afraid—not of what stalked the woods, but of herself.
She pressed the heel of her palm against her chest, as though she could steady her racing heart. “I’m a hunter,” she choked out. The words were meant to anchor her, to remind her of what she was. But in the hollow of her voice, they sounded fragile, almost like a question.
When the wind finally stirred, rustling through the branches overhead, Isabel flinched and rose shakily to her feet. Her blade was still in her grip, though her hand ached from holding it so tightly. She wiped her tears roughly with the back of her wrist, forcing her expression into something harder, sharper. The hunters would never see her like this. Rowan would never know how close she had come to wavering.
But as she stepped deeper into the forest, a single truth followed her like a shadow she couldn’t shake: she had crossed blades with a vampire and seen something in him that terrified her more than his strength.
She had seen something she almost wanted to trust.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The night air was thin and sharp, sliding cold into his lungs with every breath. He had moved deep into the trees, away from the clearing where blood still stained the earth, away from the place where her blade had nearly ended him. His body remembered every cut, every bruise, the echo of steel against bone. His kind healed fast, but hunters had long since learned how to temper their weapons with things that burned. Silver dust, aconite, tinctures that clung to wounds like salt in the sea. They were clever. Dangerous. Relentless.
Already the edges of his injuries were closing, flesh pulling taut and pale under the moonlight. The ache remained, sharp but tolerable, like a reminder of what she had nearly done. Jing Yuan pressed a palm to his ribs, exhaling slowly, forcing the rhythm of his breathing into control. His body would recover. It always did.
What unsettled him was not the wound.
It was her.
He shut his eyes, the image rising unbidden: Isabel, standing over him with fire in her eyes, blade quivering in her grip. He had seen the moment—the heartbeat of hesitation, the fracture in her resolve. She should have ended him. She had every reason to. And yet… she faltered. Her lips had pressed tight, her knuckles white around the hilt, as though she were fighting two battles at once: the one with him, and the one tearing her apart inside.
That hesitation. That fracture. That was dangerous.
The forest pressed closer around him, its silence unnatural. He leaned against a broad trunk, grounding himself in its rough bark. The night creatures were returning now that the clash had passed—the cicadas humming in their endless chorus, the flutter of a bat winging through the dark, leaves whispering high above. To most, it would sound alive again. To him, it was a different kind of speech, and he could hear what others could not.
The human voices came faint at first, a ripple carried on the breeze. He stilled instantly, head tilted, breath caught. Hunters.
“…she’s faltering.”
The tone was low, sharp. Another voice followed, gruffer, impatient: “Rowan saw it. Her blade didn’t land when it should have. He said she froze.”
“She’s not committed,” a third murmured. “And if she isn’t, then she’s a liability. A liability among hunters is a death sentence.”
Their words slipped through the branches, carrying far more than sound. They carried intent.
Jing Yuan’s lips parted in the faintest breath, though his expression remained unreadable. He eased closer, moving silently, each step of his boots sinking without sound into the forest floor. These hunters thought her weak. Worse—they were deciding what to do about it.
“Do we wait?” the gruff one asked.
“For what? For her to turn her blade the wrong way, for her to slip when we can’t afford it?”
“No,” another voice cut in, certain. “We’ll speak to Rowan at dawn. No more chances. She hesitated for the last time today, we’ll put her down ourselves. Better that than she costs us all our lives.”
The words curdled in his mind, sharper than the ache of any blade. Put her down. As if she were nothing but a hound gone astray. As if she were not flesh and bone and will, as if her existence were theirs to weigh and discard.
The thought came, dark and treacherous: he should let them.
Let them turn on her. Let them tear her apart from the inside. She was a hunter, sworn to their cause, her hands stained with his kin’s blood. If she fell, it meant one less weapon raised against him. One less reason for his path to fracture.
But his heart refused the logic.
Because in that moment when her blade wavered, he had seen something raw in her—fear, yes, but not only fear. He had seen grief, longing, a crack in the steel shell that hunters wore so fiercely. She had been raised to see him as a monster. And yet, she had not killed him. Some part of her still saw something else.
That kind of hesitation, that kind of humanity, was rare. Precious. And the others had scented it like blood in the water.
The murmurs drifted further, the hunters spreading apart to finish their patrol, unaware that his ears still tracked them, every word stitched into memory.
“She’ll get us all killed if she keeps wavering.”
“No more leniency.”
“Tomorrow. We’ll make sure of it.”
Jing Yuan straightened slowly, pushing away from the tree, letting the shadows fold around him. His wounds had vanished, sealed over by the unnatural speed of his kind. The moon struck his face as he stepped into a gap in the trees, illuminating the hard edge of his jaw, the curve of his lips pressed into something that was not a smile.
The choice was no longer a choice. The hunters could conspire all they liked. He would be listening. He would be watching.
And when they made their move—if they dared turn their knives inward—
His gaze glinted silver in the moonlight, his voice low as thought slipped into vow.
They would not have her.
He would not allow it.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The night had teeth. It always did, but tonight they sank deeper, dragging every step she took through the underbrush into something heavy, almost suffocating. Isabel could feel eyes on her long before she turned and found the hunters—her hunters, the people she had bled with, fought beside, trusted. Or thought she had trusted.
They blocked the path like a wall of shadows, weapons drawn but not yet raised. She had seen this kind of stillness before, in ambushes they’d laid for vampires. Only this time, she was on the other end of it.
“Late again,” one of them said, voice sharp as flint. A man she had trained beside since she was fourteen. His face, once familiar, seemed carved into something hard and unreadable.
“I told you,” Isabel forced the words through her throat, though her lungs ached, still worn thin from her fight with the stranger vampire hours ago. “I was hunting on the ridge. I lost the trail.”
“Lost the trail,” another echoed, mocking. She caught the glint of a knife in their hand, the same blade she’d watched skin more than a dozen leeches clean. “Convenient.”
Her jaw clenched. She had been here before—their sidelong looks, their whispered suspicions—but never had it been this blatant, this pointed. She took a step forward, fists curled tight. “What are you saying?”
“That you’ve had enough chances,” the first one said. The fire in his eyes made her stomach pitch. “Too many excuses. Too many nights gone missing. And yet you’re always still standing, while others come back with wounds—or don’t come back at all.”
It was like being struck. Isabel’s heart pounded against her ribs, wild and furious. “You think I’ve been—what? Collaborating? Helping them?”
“Don’t play the innocent,” someone else spat. “We’ve seen you—wandering too far, staying behind when you should keep up, returning with blood on your clothes and no clear answers.”
“That blood was mine!” she snapped, the heat in her chest breaking loose before she could stop it. She shoved up her sleeve, showing them the faded cuts, the bruises still painting her skin from battles they hadn’t seen. “Do you think I’m faking these? Do you think I—”
“You’ve had your last chance, Isabel,” Rowan cut her off, his voice as final as a blade sliding free of its sheath.
The words froze her blood. Her last chance.
She barely had time to breathe before they moved.
Steel hissed in the air, moonlight glinting off sharpened edges. Isabel’s body reacted before her mind caught up, muscle memory driving her into a desperate parry. Her sword screamed against another’s, the impact rattling up her arms. She staggered, already weaker than she wanted to admit.
“Don’t do this!” she shouted, twisting away from a strike aimed for her ribs. Her breath tore ragged in her chest, sweat burning her eyes. “We’re supposed to be—”
The rest was lost in the clash of metal and the thud of boots churning the forest floor. They weren’t listening. They didn’t care. Whatever bond had existed was broken, and the pieces were cutting into her now, sharper than any blade.
One caught her shoulder. Pain split through her, white-hot and blinding, forcing a cry from her throat. She stumbled, knees almost buckling, and drove her elbow into their chest out of instinct. They reeled back, but another was already on her, pressing the attack.
She was fighting for her life. Against the people she had once called her family.
The forest seemed to close in, the shadows leaning closer with every clash of blades, every gasp torn from her lungs. She was tired—so, so tired. Her arms felt leaden, every swing of her sword slower than the last. Her vision blurred with sweat, blood, rage.
And underneath it all, something darker: fear. Not of dying, but of what they saw in her. Of the possibility that they were right. That she was no longer one of them. That the line she had sworn to hold had already blurred too far.
A strike slipped through her guard, cutting across her thigh. She went down on one knee, biting back a scream, and swung wildly just to keep them back. The world tilted. Her breath came in shallow bursts.
“Traitor,” one hissed above her, raising their blade.
Her heart hammered, panic rising in a raw wave. No. Not like this.
The blade never fell.
A shadow surged between them, movement too fast for her eyes to follow. Steel met something stronger, sparks leaping as if the night itself had snapped its jaws shut.
The hunters staggered back, curses ripping the air. Isabel blinked through the haze, her chest heaving. And there he was.
The vampire.
She didn’t know his name, didn’t know why fate kept throwing him across her path, but his presence swallowed the clearing like a storm. His eyes burned gold in the dark, his sword an extension of his body as he intercepted strike after strike.
The hunters fell back a pace, shaken.
Isabel’s hand pressed to her bleeding thigh, her body trembling, her mind torn in a dozen directions. Saved again. By him.
She hated it. Hated the relief flooding her chest as much as she hated the fear that lingered still in her bones.
⋅───⊱༺ ♰ ༻⊰───⋅
The clearing reeked of steel and blood. Moonlight spilled across the jagged edges of blades and the trembling form of the woman who stood at their center, surrounded and cornered by those who should have been her allies. Jing Yuan lingered in the shadows, watching, waiting. He had told himself he wouldn’t interfere—not unless it became necessary. But he knew, deep down, that the moment had already come.
The hunters’ words cut sharper than any weapon. They hissed accusations, old arguments sharpened into daggers. “You’ve had your last chance,” one of them snarled, voice taut with the satisfaction of final judgment. The hunter—his hunter— stood her ground, though her body was ragged from exhaustion, wounds old and new slowing her movements. Her chin lifted in defiance, but Jing Yuan could see the flicker of despair in her eyes.
That flicker was enough.
He stepped forward before he could stop himself. His boots crushed the undergrowth with deliberate weight, and in an instant, every head turned toward him. The hunters stiffened, caught between fury and fear. He could feel his hunter’s gaze on him too, wild and unreadable—half relief, half betrayal.
“Stay out of this,” the leader spat at him, brandishing a silver blade. “This isn’t your fight.”
Jing Yuan’s lips curved in something that might have been a smile, though there was nothing warm in it. “On the contrary,” he said softly, voice calm but steady, “I find myself making it mine.”
The hunters lunged once more.
Steel flashed in the pale light, but Jing Yuan moved with a predator’s grace. His blade met theirs with fluid ease, parrying, redirecting, never wasting energy. Where his hunter fought with desperate strength, he fought with calculated control, his every strike measured not to kill but to dismantle, disarm, humiliate. He could hear her ragged breathing behind him, could sense her faltering steps as she tried to hold her own against the betrayal of those she had once trusted.
“Stand down,” he warned the hunters, his tone almost bored. “You’re already finished.”
They didn’t listen. They never did.
One of them broke past him, lunging at his hunter with a blade raised high. She tried to block, too slow—her arms trembling from fatigue. Jing Yuan’s body moved before his mind did, intercepting the strike with a crash of steel. Sparks flew, and for a moment his golden eyes burned like fire in the night.
He shoved the hunter back, then turned his head just enough to meet her stunned gaze. “You’re still standing,” he murmured. “Don’t fall now.”
The battle raged on, but it didn’t last long. Against one hunter, she could have held her own. Against three or four, she was faltering. But with Jing Yuan in the fight, the balance shifted like the tide turning. He fought like someone born to command, like every motion was inevitable. Eventually, the hunters broke, retreating into the trees with curses and promises of unfinished business. Their shadows slipped into the night, leaving only silence and the wreckage of the fight behind.
For a moment, the clearing was still.
Jing Yuan lowered his sword, scanning the trees until he was certain the threat was gone. Only then did he turn toward her. She was still standing, though barely. Blood slicked her arm and stained her torn clothes, her face pale with fatigue. And yet, she met his gaze with a fierceness that startled him.
“You...” Her voice cracked, strained with pain and emotion alike. “You shouldn’t have—”
“Saved you?” His brow lifted, and he stepped closer, calm as if he hadn’t just fought off half her allies. “You’d rather I let them cut you down?”
Her lips parted, but no words came. Only silence. And in that silence, he read the storm inside her—anger, confusion, shame. She didn’t want his help, and yet she couldn’t deny that without it, she wouldn’t still be breathing.
When she swayed on her feet, Jing Yuan closed the distance in two strides. She flinched when his hand brushed her arm, but he didn’t release her. “Enough,” he said, quiet but firm. “You can argue later. Right now, you’re bleeding.”
She tried to pull away, but her strength was gone. The fight, the betrayal, the exhaustion—it had wrung her dry. He felt her tremble against him before finally, reluctantly, she allowed him to take her weight.
Jing Yuan carried her through the forest with an ease that felt almost insulting. One arm supported her back, the other hooked beneath her knees, his stride unhurried yet impossibly steady. His fierce hunter muttered protests at first, biting words that tried to mask her weakness, but he paid them no mind. His silence was immovable, as if her words weighed less than the burden in his arms. Before long, her voice faltered, swallowed by the rhythm of his steps and the steady hush of the night, leaving only the sound of his breathing and the faint rustle of leaves overhead.
He found a sheltered hollow not far from the clearing, lit by the faint glow of moonlight filtering through the leaves. Gently, he lowered her onto a fallen log, kneeling in front of her. His hands worked with surprising care as he examined her wounds, fingers brushing over torn fabric and bloodied skin. She hissed at the touch, glaring down at him as though daring him to make a mistake.
“Relax,” he said, voice almost teasing. “If I wanted you dead, I wouldn’t have gone through all this trouble.”
Her glare faltered, though she didn’t drop it entirely. He tore strips from his cloak, binding her arm with steady precision. His movements were practiced, efficient—he had done this before, many times. She watched him in silence, her breaths uneven, her eyes searching his face for answers he didn’t give.
When the bandage was tied and secured, he leaned back slightly, studying her. The moonlight caught the faint curve of her cheek, the defiance still burning in her eyes despite her exhaustion. It was that fire that had drawn him in, he realized. That refusal to break.
For a long while, they sat in silence. The forest was quiet again, the air heavy with things unsaid. His hunter shifted slightly, as though gathering courage, and finally muttered, “Isabel.”
He tilted his head. “Hm?”
“My name.” Her gaze flicked away, as though the words cost her something. “It’s Isabel. Don’t think this means I owe you.”
Jing Yuan’s lips curved, the faintest of smiles. “A beautiful name,” he said softly, savoring the weight of it. Then, as though it were only fair, he added, “Jing Yuan.”
Her head snapped toward him, eyes narrowing. He could almost hear the unspoken thought—finally.
Before she could speak, before the storm could return to her eyes, he leaned closer. His hand brushed her temple, sweeping a stray lock of hair from her face. Then, with the same careful gentleness he had shown in binding her wounds, he pressed a soft kiss to her forehead.
She froze, caught between protest and silence.
“Rest, Isabel,” he murmured, voice low. “You’ll need your strength.”
And though her glare lingered, though her pride burned even in her broken state, she didn’t pull away.
carved names upon the storytree: @milk-violet , @lovedbykaveh , @lagenxria , @myliefdes ♡︎ Please let me know if you'd like to be added or taken out !
@irisunderglass. do not re-upload, copy, translate, etc. my works on any form of media, do not feed my works to ai.
you ever talk to someone face-to-face for one of the first few times and you've never really studied their face before and well turns out they have the most beautiful smile you have ever seen in your life and you kinda just think about it for days and you don't really know how to say that to them and you're not sure how to make them happy like that again either so you just vaguepost about it on tumblr
OMG I accidentally found one of my old tumblr mutuals on threads.... I notice that I keep running into tumblrites on the insta/threads sphere and I'm thinking like should I get More Anon on here if this is happening to my mutuals too (。ŏ_ŏ)