Sacred Monsters: Part Two
sacred monsters: part two

pairing: lee heeseung x f reader
genre: academic rivals to lovers, vampire au, slow burn
part two word count: 12.4k
part two warnings: swearing, more blood and other vampire-y things, me forcing you to read extensive vampire lore, the supernatural elements are ramped up a notch (or, like, eight notches), semi-graphic descriptions and depictions of violence
soundtrack: still monster / moonstruck / lucifer - enhypen / everybody wants to rule the world - tears for fears / immortal - marina / supermassive black hole - muse / saturn - sleeping at last / everybodyâs watching me (uh oh) - the neighbourhood
note/disclaimer: and to absolutely no oneâs surprise, I cannot stop talking about vampire heeseung, so this story will be more than two parts. this is not the end. I want to say it will be around 4-5. potentially more. (yay if youâre excited, and my apologies if youâre not.) again, I want to name the sources I used to help me create this: the dark moon webtoon is where lots of the lore comes from, and influences from twilight are also scattered throughout. okay I think thatâs it. for now at least⊠as always, happy reading âĄ
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A literature student in your third year of university, youâve been dreaming of having your writing published for as long as you can remember. With a perfect opportunity dangling at your fingertips, the only obstacle that stands in your way comes in the form of a ridiculously tall, stupidly handsome, and unfortunately, very talented writer by the name of Lee Heeseung. Unwilling to let your dream slip out of reach, you commit to being better than the aforementioned pain in your ass at absolutely everything.
But when a string of vampire attacks strikes close to your city for the first time in nearly two hundred years, publishing is suddenly the last thing on your mind. And, as you soon begin to discover, Heeseung may not quite be the person you thought he was.
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Everything hurts.Â
As your consciousness slowly begins to trickle back in, pain is the most prominent sensation. It comes in slow, steady waves. With a certain kind of deep ache.Â
Eyes still screwed shut, your brow furrows. The movement only inspires anothing intense wave of throbbing pain that thuds against your temples.Â
As senses begin to emerge, you can tell that youâre horizontal. Lying down. The surface beneath you is soft. It dips and curves, gives to the shape of your body. A bed, maybe.Â
Delicately, you try moving your right arm. Wiggling your toes. Both are responsive, but thereâs a profound soreness sitting deep within your muscle that makes you strain against a whimper from even the tiniest of movements.Â
And your throat. Itâs so dry. Scraped raw as if someone has taken sandpaper to it. As if youâve been screaming.Â
You inhale deeply, assessing the way air inflates the lungs beneath your ribs. Even there, deep within you, thereâs a dull, muted ache. A pain that lingers. As the ensuing exhale leaves your body, you note another sensation.Â
The emptiness of your stomach. The deep pangs of hunger that roll like nausea.Â
With no small amount of reluctance, you begin the arduous task of opening your eyes. One slow blink that bleeds into another.Â
At first, the only thing you see is a vast expanse of white. Blinding light makes you want to squint. Close your eyes again. But itâs nothing but a trick of your own senses. Causes by eyes that have gone unused for an extended period of time.Â
Slowly, the space above you begins to take on its true tone. A soft, even light gray that coats the expanse of the ceiling. Turning your head to the side, you ignore the protest of pain from your neck.Â
You let your eyes wander for a minute. But as the space around you begins to come into focus, youâre left with more questions than answers.Â
Your earlier assertion had been correct. You are lying in a bed. But itâs not the one youâve grown used to. This isnât your apartment.Â
No, the bedroom around you is an unfamiliar one. But thatâs undoubtedly what it is: a bedroom. Threadbare maybe, but with small touches of life. Aside from your current resting place, thereâs a desk on the opposite side of the room. A nightstand right next to you. A small lamp that emanate a warm, golden glow.Â
Forcing your body into an upright position, you wince at the effort it takes just to sit upright, to maneuver every aching limb into place.Â
More details of the room come into focus. A computer monitor and keyboard on the desk. The small stack of books next to it. A record player. A small dresser. Little trinkets of personality, but nothing that serves you now.Â
Even through the haze in your sleep-addled mind, youâre sure youâve never seen any of it before. Why are you here? Where is here?
And why does your body hurt so damn much, nerves under your skin singing like theyâve been wrung out to dry?
The fog in your mind refuses to clear. Soon, another emotion begins to emerge alongside the confusion as the reality of the situation sets in.Â
Youâre alone. In an unfamiliar room. Hungry as if itâs been days since youâve eaten.Â
Judging from the way your limbs respond to even the most minute of movements, youâre injured. Badly.Â
Flexing your left leg again, you wince. Can you even walk right now?Â
This is bad. This is very, very bad.Â
The beginnings of panic begin to trace your mind. Again, youâre searching the room. This time, however, you focus on memorizing the layout. Finding anything that might be of any use to you, that might help you identify your location. That might help you craft an escape.
Your search turns up two doors, one to your left and one directly across from the foot of the bed. Both are unmarked. Both are pulled shut.Â
Itâs possible that your panic is premature. If you didnât know any better, youâd think that this was nothing more than the bedroom of a rather minimalistic university student. But if that were the case why did you wake up here alone, head pounding, body aching?
That alone is definitive. Something is very wrong.Â
Instinctively, you try to retrace your steps. You must have gotten here somehow. But the more you try to walk back through your memory, the hazier things become. The inside of your mind is like a murky labyrinth, dead ends at every corner. Rearranging and shifting the more you try to focus.Â
Itâs as if a dense fog has clouded over your ability to think, to recall. No matter how close you get to a memory, you canât see anything.Â
That alone is enough to send another fresh wave of panic straight to your bones. Alone, injured, and you canât remember any of the events that led you to this strange place.Â
Gingerly, you turn your body so that your legs hang off the side of the bed, bare feet resting lightly on the floor. That movement alone requires several of your deep inhales.Â
Slowly, you try putting weight on your feet, your legs. Itâs not pleasant by any means, but they hold steady. Or at the very least, they donât buckle beneath you. Aside from the soreness, thereâs a distinct fatigue in your extremities. One that gives them a slight shake the longer you try to stand.Â
You doubt you can run, but at least youâre not completely immobile. Maybe, given enough adrenaline, you can walk. Crawl.Â
But now youâre faced with another dilemma. Two doors. Two points of entry, two potential routes to escape. Or two paths to further danger. Trapped in a windowless room, you have no way of knowing which of your two choices, if any, is better.Â
But you canât just stay here. Backed into a corner, practically a sitting duck. Eyes darting between the two doors, you steel yourself for the inevitable flash of pain fully standing will inevitably cause.Â
The door to the left of the bed. The door at the foot of the bed.Â
Just as youâve decided to veer to the right, muscles tensing in anticipation, a knock rings out. Your breath catches in your throat, panic reaching its peak as your heart beats a furious rhythm in your chest. Thereâs nowhere to hide. Nowhere to go.One rap against the door to your left. Two. Three.Â
You wonât make it to the other door in time. Not on your legs.Â
Thereâs a moment of suspended silence. And then, the door is opening.Â
Instinctively, you push yourself backwards on the bed., trying to put as much space as physically possible between you and the stranger that enters.Â
And a stranger he certainly is. With a tentative sort of slowness, a boy peers around the edge of the door, squinting in the low light.Â
When he sees that youâre upright, he pushes into the room fully, closing the door quietly behind him. The glimpse you get over his shoulder doesnât reveal much. Another room, maybe, but itâs gone too quickly to be certain.Â
âYouâre awake,â he nods, more to himself than anything. âI thought I heard your heartbeat pick up.â
Back pressed against the wall, you have nowhere left to go. Still hunched as if that will do anything to protect you, you stare at the boy in front of you.Â
Maybe, you think. Maybe you could move fast enough to grab the lamp from the nightstand before he realizes whatâs happening. Could use it as some sort of weapon, some meager means of self-defense.Â
âWho are you?â Your throat is scraped raw. It hurts to speak, to think, to do much of anything. âWhere am I?â
âOh.â The boy pauses for a moment. For the first time since he entered, he stops to look at you. Really look at you. The extent of the terror thatâs embedded in your features, written in the positioning of your body.Â
Immediately, he stops in his tracks. Retreats a few steps until heâs back at the far edge of the room, just in front of the door he entered from. âSorry, I guess it was probably quite the shock to wake up here. My name is Jake. Youâre in ourâŠâ He trails off, searching for the right word. âWell, our home, I suppose.â
For a moment, you just look at him. Chest still rising and falling rapidly as you struggle to even your breathing. You can still feel your pulse in your neck.Â
If the situation weren't so disorienting, so terrifyingly confusing, you might be mildly amused by the almost⊠sheepish look that crosses his features. Where he avoids eye contact with you from the doorframe, this boy certainly doesnât look like a threat.Â
If you had to guess, youâd say that he â Jake â is around your age. With dark hair that falls across his forehead and wide, dark eyes, he has a distinct sort of beauty that almost reminds you ofâŠÂ
Suddenly, in the confines of your missing memories, youâre grasping at straws again.Â
âSpecifically,â Jake adds, realizing the information might be pertinent to you, âthis is Heeseungâs room.â
Heeseung. You know that name. You think itâs the one you were searching for.Â
Heeseung.Â
It sparks something. A flicker of a memory. A ghost of the answers you seek.Â
You feel like youâre on the verge of a revelation when you ask, âWhere is he? Heeseung?â
Jakeâs expression betrays no surprise. Heâd expected you to ask him that, you realize. It does, however, suddenly appear a bit more guarded. âHeâs recovering. That poison he got out of you really did a number on him.â
For a moment, his words do nothing but reverberate in your aching skull. And thenâ
âPoison?â
Jake just looks at you for a second, brow pulling down in confusion as if youâre the strange one in this situation. As if poison and Heeseungâs apparent removal of it should already be old news. Then, a flicker of realization crosses his features. His brow softens.Â
âThatâs right,â he mumbles. Again, it seems more for his benefit than yours. âI always forget that moonflower can cause memory loss in humans.â
Moonflower? In humans?Â
âMemory loss?â
âItâs only temporary,â Jake says, as if thatâs enough to make everything better. âEverything will start to come back soon, Iâm sure.â He pauses, frowning. A flicker of sympathy enters his gaze. âI feel like I should warn you, though. Judging from the way you and Heeseung came in here a couple of nights ago, it might be a lot to take in all at once when they do.â
A couple of nights ago. Which meansâ
âHow long have I been asleep?â
âJust over two days. Itâs Friday night now. Almost midnight.â While the shock of that settles into your system, Jake continues, âWhich reminds me, I brought you some things I thought you might need.â
He turns away from you, opening the door. When he closes it behind him again, he now has two bags in his hand. Carefully, like one might approach a wounded animal, he takes slow footsteps towards you.Â
Setting the bags down next to the nightstand, he explains, âThis one has water and food. I wasnât sure what you would like, so feel free to have whatever, and let us know if thereâs anything else you want.â
Looking at the second bag, he adds, âI also brought you some clothes. We didnât really have anything for a girl here. I mean, Sunghoon had a couple of things, but I didnât really think youâd want them. Sunoo and Niki went out and got some stuff. Iâm sure they did their best, but, uh,â He scratches the back of his neck sheepishly. âNo promises.â
Jake nods towards the dresser that sits by the desk. âIf you hate everything, you can also look through whatever Heeseung has in there. Iâm sure he wouldn't mind.â
That name again. Heeseung. Thereâs nothing solid in your memory, but heat finds itself on your cheekbones anyway. The thought of wearing his clothes just feels like something that should warrant that reaction, even if youâre not sure why.Â
âThereâs also a bathroom through that door.â Jake jerks his chin towards the door across from the foot of the bed. And maybe itâs a good thing you didnât have enough time to craft an escape through there, you think. This conversation might have been significantly more awkward in a bathroom. âFeel free to use anything in there, including the shower, if you want. There should be clean towels in the bottom drawer.â
He takes another long look at you, that same sympathy from earlier coloring his gaze. It feels weighted, heavy. As if heâs forseen some great tragedy youâre not yet privy too. As if he knows something you donât. âIâm sure you have a million questions, but I think youâll feel better with some food and water in you.â He nods towards the bags he set close to you. âAnd a fresh change of clothes.âÂ
Heâs probably right. With the urgency of your former panic subsiding, you still donât feel at ease. But neither fight nor flight seem like appropriate responses to this situation. Which leaves you stuck with a third one: reluctant trust.Â
As you make your peace with it, something begins to press at the fog in your mind. It swirls, collects as if being pressed against a glass window. Your memories are still evasive, but thereâs something there, in that haze. Syllables stuck on a loop, a constant repetition that begs your attention.Â
Heeseung.Â
Thereâs a sudden urgency in your gut. The distinct feeling that things will start to make sense again if you can just see him, talk to him. Jake said that heâs recovering. From poison. But you donât know what that means, donât understand what kind of gravity it might hold.Â
Vague sentiments conveyed through a messenger are hardly enough to satisfy the tugging in your mind.Â
So you ask, âCan I see him? Heeseung?â
Something flickers across Jakeâs gaze, too fast for you to catch it fully. Concern maybe. A premonition of fear. Still, he says, âHeâs okay. I promise. Youâll be able to see him soon.â For a moment, Jake falls into silence, weighing words on his tongue like he canât decide if he should share them or not. âBut heâs not really in the best shape for visitors right now. Take care of you first, and then we can talk more if you want. And when youâre both ready, you can see Heeseung, too.â
Itâs hardly a satisfying answer, but Jake holds the cards here. You have nothing to leverage, nothing to bargain.Â
Before he leaves, he reiterates, âIâm sure that your memories will start to come back soon. Like I said, it might be a lot all at once. Iâll let you eat and get changed, if you want. The door locks.â He nods to the door handle. âSo does the one on the bathroom door. And please, let me know if you need anything. Iâll be just outside.â
Gently, Jake opens the door, pulls it shut behind him. And then youâre alone again.Â
Gone is the frantic terror you awoke with, and left in its wake is a gentler sort of fear. A deep sense of unease that refuses to fade.Â
Pushing it aside for now, you attend to your baser needs. Heeding Jakeâs advice, you retrieve the first bag he left for you, pulling it up onto the bed.Â
The first thing you see is a bottle of water. You make quick work of pulling it out, removing the cap, and taking a long sip. Itâs cool, refreshing. Soothes your aching throat before settling heavily at the bottom of your empty stomach.Â
Taking another handful of gulps, you replace the cap before setting it on the nightstand. Opening the bag further, you reveal its other contents.Â
Itâs possibly the strangest assortment of food that youâve ever seen. Frowning in confusion, you take stock of what youâve been given. It just gets weirder the more you look at it. Itâs as if Jake went to the grocery store and just grabbed the first thing he saw in every aisle with no regard for how they would fit together. As if he hasnât made himself a meal since the day he was born.Â
The first thing you pull out is a box of dry pasta, completely inedible without cooking utensils you currently have no access to. Jake did say you could ask him for anything, but even boiling water has a way of feeling like an insurmountable task in your current state. You move on.Â
What follows is hardly better. Thereâs a singular, unripe avocado, an entire family sized bag of clementine oranges, three boxes of breakfast cereal, a loaf of bread, and â you pause a moment to count â eight different kinds of granola bars.Â
Pushing past the strangeness, you figure you donât need a Michelin star meal to ease the hunger. For now, you decide that one of the granola bars and a clementine look the most appetizing.Â
After a few minutes, the blunt edges of hunger lose their sharpness. But even with a bit of food in your system, the nausea hold steady.Â
Mind addled, you curse yourself for not asking him the most obvious question. What the hell happened to you?Â
But he did say your memories should be coming back soon, and you decide youâll just have to trust in that for now.Â
Next, you reach for the bag of clothes. You didnât think it was possible, but it somehow manages to be even stranger than the food.Â
To your shoppersâ credit, they are girlsâ clothes, yes, but it seems that was the only criteria for selection. Itâs the dead of winter, and the first two things you pull out are a pair of denim shorts and a sundress. Frowning, you refold them both, placing them back in the bag. At least they still have their tags. Hopefully the two boys Jake mentioned kept their receipt.Â
That leaves you with your other option. Glancing over at the dresser, his dresser, youâre at an impasse.Â
Even with gaping holes in your memory, it feels invasive, far too intimate to look through his things. To go through his clothes until you find something that suits you. To wear it without his permission.Â
Taking a sidelong glance at the pair of denim shorts, you decide you donât have all that much pride left to barter, anyway. After all, you work up disoriented, weak, and missing all of your memories in the boyâs bed. Whatâs a spare change of clothes in comparison with that?
As you gingerly pad your way to the dresser, you decide it feels less like snooping if you only reach for whatâs on top. Luck is on your side. The first thing you see when you open the top drawer is a sweatshirt and matching pair of sweatpants, both of which are ridiculously soft.Â
Stolen goods in tow, you continue towards the bathroom door. Pulling it closed behind you, you see that Jake was telling the truth. The lock slides into place with a small click. Â
Like his bedroom, Heeseungâs bathroom is fairly nondescript. Devoid of decor, it holds what he needs and little else. Opening the bottom drawer of the vanity, you find a clean towel and set it down on the counter, next to the clothes.Â
Lifting your head, you catch your reflection in the mirror. Itâs enough to have you double take. You almost donât recognize yourself. The tangled mess of hair and dark circles of exhaustion beneath your eyes are things you could forgive. Two days of straight sleep is enough to wreak at least a little havoc on anyone.Â
But thatâs not what has your reflection freezing.Â
Delicately, as if the truth will somehow be less awful if revealed slowly, you tilt your head to the side. Pull your hair away, tuck it behind your ear. Expose the dark, mottled assortment of discolored marks that extend all the way from your jaw to the base of your neck.Â
Bruises. Deep, dark bruises.Â
And on top of them, uneven, flaky patches of multicolored crimson. Dried blood, you realize as your stomach gives a sickening lurch.Â
Is it yours? Heeseungâs? Someone elseâs?Â
The fog in your mind suddenly feels like an enclosure. Holding you hostage and dangling your forgotten memories just out of reach. Trapping you in the darkness and offering no way out, no way through. Just a dim candle against the vast, midnight darkness of terror.Â
Youâre too wrung out to cry, too confused to so much as gasp. As reality unfolds, devastation seems to be the norm, not the exception. Even if your throat werenât raw, youâre not sure youâd scream.Â
With trepidation, you raise a hand, watching the way your fingers tremble in your reflection. And then your run a gentle touch over the evidence of destruction, a war waged on your skin. Once it nears your jaw, you feel something. A small bump that has you hissing at the contact.Â
Leaning forward, you examine it closer. Itâs a tiny wound, barely perceptible. It reminds you of a vaccination at the doctorâs office. Neat, sterile.Â
Enough to be confusing, yes. Arguably even concerning. But itâs not what has you reeling.Â
Because around the tiny mark are two more puncture wounds. Perfectly circular still, but decidedly larger. Rougher. Deeper. Theyâre embedded into your skin on either side of the smaller wound. And if you didnât know any better, if your mind had any more capacity for the impossible, youâd almost think they look likeâŠ
Youâd almost think they look like bite marks.Â
The longer you stare, the more sinister they appear. The more hopelessly horrified you feel. What happened to you? Why does the side of your neck look like a watercolor painting of violets? Why does it look like youâve been bitten?
If this is what you look like, what kind of state is Heeseung in? Jake said it himself that heâs in no condition for visitors.Â
What if heâs not recovering as well as Jake said? What if itâs your faultâ?
No. You wonât let yourself spiral there.Â
Memories, you just need your memories.Â
Which means you just need a little more time.Â
The shower, to your relief, has plenty of hot water to spare. For long minutes, you just stand there, letting it pour over you, your skin, your aching muscles. As water seeps through the drain, it carries some of your tension with it.
You watch as the water that circles the drain runs red before it clears again, blood washed away from your skin.
Itâs instinct, mostly. The desire to confirm what you already know, that has you retracing the strange marks on your neck.Â
A hiss of pain is the only thing that ensues in response at first. But then something else comes.Â
A flicker of a memory.Â
A strange place, a dark room.Â
New Haven. The publishing house. Because you had gone there to meet Professor Kim, to show him your draft, to see the space youâd won an internship in.Â
Itâs coming back now, in fragments.Â
There had been something strange, though. It was dark when you arrived. Dark and empty and quiet untilâ
Until suddenly it wasnât. Until Heeseung was there with you.
Warm water traces steady lines on your skin. Your memory reappears in tangled, discombobulated jumbles. Things clicking into place as you do your best to sort them chronologically.Â
Heeseung was there, but he wasnât supposed to be. You had gone there to see Professor Kim. Why wasnât heâ?
The sudden flash of memory is sickening. Has another bout of nausea threatening the contents of your stomach.Â
It all comes back, all at once. Replaying like a nightmare, like a scene plucked from a horror film.Â
Blood dripping from your professorâs mouth. Clothes tattered on his body. Heeseung shielding you, protecting you.Â
But Professor Kim wasnât himself. He wasnât right. He threw something at you. Something that hit you right where he intended.Â
Without your permission, your fingers are back on the slippery skin of your neck. The blood is gone, but the wound remains just the same. The wound that Professor Kim gave to you.Â
You remember the feeling of floating, of being distant from your body, removed from reality. Mind on some other plane of existence.Â
You remember gentle, insistent, desperate hands on your waist. Your jaw. Your forehead.Â
Heeseung, bent over you, consuming your limited plane of vision as your eyelids became too heavy to remain open.Â
Pain in your neck. Sharp at first. Then dull, numbing.Â
Heeseung. Heeseung bit you. Held you in his arms as consciousness drained from your body along with your blood.Â
Poison, Jake had called it. âPoison he got out of you.â
Itâs all so strange. Theyâre your memories, yes, and youâre sure of them, but why was there poison in your neck? Why was biting you the solution? How did his teeth leave such perfectly circular marks onâ?
The final puzzle piece clicks into place.Â
Vampire attacks. You had been worried about Heeseung, relieved to see him safe and sound at New Haven. Because you had just read about vampire attacks.Â
Robotically, you turn the water off. Step out of the shower, wrap a towel around your body.Â
His clothes are soft against your skin.Â
Heeseung saved you. Of that, youâre sure. But what about the three people at the river? The three victims of a vampire attack?
It canât be true. It canât. You donât know him, not really, but heâs just⊠Heeseung.Â
An annoyingly competent poet and a massive pain in your ass. Someone that walks you home when you stay too late in the library. Someone that calls your writing awful when it is, when you need a cold, hard reality check.Â
Heâs⊠heâs just Heeseung. Heâs not aâ
You canât even bring yourself to finish the thought.Â
But your memories are back, and thereâs a alertness to your mind that only sharpens as the fog clears.Â
At the edge of your mind, Jakeâs voice replays. Something you glossed over in your confusion, something you fixate on now.Â
âI always forget that moonflower can cause memory loss in humans.â
âI thought I heard your heartbeat pick up.â
The strange assortment of food. Jakeâs undeniable, uncanny beauty. The kind youâve only ever seen in one other person.Â
Jake was right. You do feel a bit better with food and water in your stomach. With the last three days of horror washed off of your skin. But your mind is alert now. The memories are coming back. Puzzle pieces rearranging and clicking into place with alarming accuracy.Â
And as the dust settles, youâre suddenly very, very afraid of the reality that greets you.Â
In your mind, the facts play on a loop.Â
You donât know where you are. You donât know how to leave. Jake has been nothing but kind, but if he so wished, youâre sure he could overpower you easily. And he insinuated that heâs not the only one here.Â
You need answers. You need to leave. But HeeseungâŠ
You have to know.Â
Is the boy youâve been trying to outwrite for months, the boy you shared a moment under a moonlit sky with, is he a⊠a vampire?
Why was he at New Haven that day? Did he know about Professor Kim? Did he know about the deaths at the river? Was he complicit in them? Was he responsible for them?
Clothed in determination and a fleeting moment of bravery, you undo the lock on the bathroom door, passing through the bedroom, his bedroom, on furious footsteps. The second door opens just as easily as the bathroom had, and suddenly, youâre in the room you caught just a glimpse of before. A living room, of sorts. Some sort of common area.Â
True to his earlier word, Jake sits nearby. Planted on a navy sofa, he looks up when you enter. âHow are you feeling? Do you need anyââ
Manners are the last thing on your mind when you interrupt him mid-sentence. âWhat are you?â Not âwho are you.â That wonât give you the answer you seek. The difference is subtle. The difference is cavernous.Â
Jakeâs mouth falls shut, presses into a line. Hesitation paints his features. âI donât think this is the bestââ
You wonât hear it. âWhat are you?â
Jake holds up his palms in surrender. âYour memories are starting to come back, I take it. Look, we can explain everything, justââ
On the far end of the room, another door opens. Another boy enters. Just like Heeseung, just like Jake, heâs beautiful. Moves with that same unnatural grace that you used to admire when you thought no one would notice. Now, it has another surge of nausea rolling in your stomach.Â
Jake glances at the new arrival. He sighs. âThis isnât really a good time, Sunghoon. Why donât youââ
The boy, Sunghoon, never hears Jakeâs suggestion. Instead, he cuts him off. And once again, your world is spinning.Â
âHeâs back.â
âŠ..
You are the last to enter the strange room. On the heels of Jake and Sunghoon, despite the formerâs insistence that you wait and see him later, you take in your surroundings.Â
Odd enough was the long, winding hallway that led you here, but this is even stranger. Instead of a proper door, the room is guarded by long, thick metal bars. They stand ajar now but bear a rather impressive lock. You have the distinct impression that this place was designed to keep people out. Or maybe rather to keep someone in.Â
You hear him before you see him. Memories recovered, the sound of his voice is something youâre well attuned to, even if it flickers with a strong tone of annoyance.Â
âYes, Iâm fine. I told you, itâs a ridiculously strong sedative at its core. Weâll react strangely, yes, but itâs not the same as bloodlustââ
âStill,â another voice argues. âWe all saw how she looked when you brought her in. You had to have drank a considerable amountââ
âI told you Iâm fine, Jungwon,â Heeseung counters. âDo I look out of control to you? Would I be sitting here having this conversation with you if I was?â
âFine.â Itâs the same voice. Jungwon. âIf youâre alive and well, then maybe you can answer my question. What were you doing at New Haven? Do you know how long weâveââ
Itâs probably stupid, shoving past people in their own home. People that you suspect are dangerous, that might not really be people at all. But you have to see him. You have to know.Â
Once you finally get around Sunghoon, your view of the room opens up. Sparsely decorated, dimly lit, and there are four other boys you donât recognize. You pay them no attention.Â
Because in the middle of it all stands Heeseung. Maybe, if you squint, you could argue that he looks a little worse for wear. Thereâs a pink flush under his eyes, a slight disarray to his usually perfect hair, but other than that, he paints the perfect, untouchable picture he always has.Â
At the commotion of your sudden movement, all eyes in the room turn from Heeseung and land squarely on you. For a moment, seven gazes just look at you. All of them are blank. Lost. Out of depth.Â
All except for the one you match.Â
Where he stands, Heeseung stares at you with an intensity youâve only seen once before. In a moment you wish you could forget. In a fragmented memory you already know youâre cursed to carry forever.Â
Slowly, his eyes scan the length of your body, something in his jaw tightening when he notes the clothes youâre wearing. His clothes.Â
Jungwon is still pressing him for answers. Heeseung doesnât bother to provide any.Â
Instead, he says, âGive us a minute.â
Heâs still looking at you. Frozen in place, his eyes trace the line of your neck, ghosting over the array of bruises, the twin wounds he left there. His voice betrays no emotion, but his eyes flash with something that looks all too much like regret, shame.Â
Jungwon balks for a moment. âNo, Iâm not giving you a minute. You could have jeopardized everything weâve been working towardsââ
Heeseung does break eye contact with you then. Turning to the boy that stands next to him, he says, âWhatâs done is done, Jungwon. A few more minutes wonât change that. You can shout at me some more in a minute.â
âOuch.â A boy that you donât recognize winces.Â
âRight?â another one of the strangers agrees. âA pretty human over five hundred years of brotherhood.â He shakes his head. âIâd expect that from Sunghoon, maybe, butââ
Behind you, Jake sighs. âIs this really the time, you two?â
âYeah,â Sunghoon agrees, arms crossing his chest as he pouts. âAnd I take offense to that, you know. I would not put all of your hard work in danger for a human.â Sunghoon takes a sidelong glance at you. âNo offense.â
âJust give us a minute,â Heeseung repeats again, more command in his voice this time as he slides a palm through his hair in frustration. âPlease. All of you.â
Thereâs enough authority in his voice time. Or maybe enough pleading. Whatever it is, the rest of the room files out, one by one. Even Jungwon, although he does cast one final, warning look over his shoulder.Â
Itâs lost on Heeseung, who has already turned his attention back to you. âAre you okay?âÂ
An echo of the past, a reminder of why youâre here. Of why your throat threatens to close up now, just looking at him. Â
Even if you wanted to, you have no idea how youâd answer him. Physically, youâre sore. Tired even though youâve been sleeping for days. Temporary aches. Things that will heal with rest and time.Â
Mentally, though⊠Your mind is spinning a million miles a minute. Even now, face to face with him, you canât reconcile all of the pieces of Heeseung youâve gathered.Â
Indifferent student. Brilliant writer. Honest reviewer. Maybe even a friend.Â
Vampire.Â
You donât know what to make of him. You donât know how to piece him together.Â
Heâs here, standing in front of you. You used to stare at the back of his head during lectures. Used to fantasize about him giving you a minute of his time.Â
And now, itâs just the two of you. Alone. His eyes search your face, his focus consumed by you. And heâs never felt further away.Â
You don't answer his question. Instead, you ask one of your own.Â
âWhatâs going on?â Your voice is small, holds none of the command you wish it could. âAnd donât⊠donât you dare lie to me.â
Across from you, Heeseung exhales. Thereâs a distinct sorrow in his eyes. âI wonât. But itâs a long story. And there are parts of it Iâm not sure youâll like.â
âI donât care.â But you do, so much that it hurts. You almost wish you were still begging for scraps of his attention. At least then, you knew where you stood. âI want the truth.â That much, at least, is honest.Â
Heeseung nods, as if any of this is simple. âThen youâll have it.â
A beat of silence passes. You remember the question you had asked Jake less than an hour ago. What are you? You canât quite bring yourself to ask it now. Not with everything that has passed between you. Not when it feels like more of an accusation than an inquiry.Â
You wear his wounds on your skin. You donât know why you still want to give him the benefit of the doubt.
Still, you ask, âWho are you?â The difference is subtle. The difference is cavernous.Â
Heeseung doesnât smile, but thereâs a twitch at the corner of his lips. âIâm not undercover. My name is Heeseung.â The flicker of amusement dies. He knows what youâre really asking him. He knows itâs not an easy answer to give, not an easy truth to receive. âBut Iâm⊠different. I was born with a strange ability.â
You breathe. âWhat kind of ability?â
Heeseung looks down at his hands. Studies them for a moment before turning back to you. âIt would be easier to show you, if youâll let me.â
Instinctively, your hand finds the wound on your neck.Â
A dark shadow crosses Heeseungâs features. âThatâs not the ability Iâm referring to.âÂ
Thereâs a chair in the room, just behind him. He walks to it and sits down at the edge, knees wide. âCome here.â
You shouldnât. You should stay as far away as space allows. You shouldnât let him do anything. In every sense of the word, he holds the advantage here. Youâre in his home. He has knowledge you donât. The only thing you have left to leverage is the distance between you and your decision to maintain it.Â
But every inch between you was doomed to be a losing battle. Steady, slow footsteps erase the distance between you as you come to stand directly in front of him.Â
At this angle, with your positioning, heâs forced to look up at you. Chin lifted, he whispers, âHold out your hand.â
You could try to fight. You could question him. You donât. Resistance was always going to be futile. In no time at all, your hand is outstretched.Â
Once again, Heeseung studies his own fingers. A shudder traces the length of his spine. Hesitation spills from every minute movement, every microexpression youâre allowed. Itâs straining him, you realize. This ability is not something heâs excited to share.Â
You canât decide if that eases your worry or increases it tenfold.Â
But after another wasted moment, his right hand reaches out to encircle the skin of your left wrist. For a few stilted heartbeats, itâs just the two of you in a strange room, a cage of sorts, your wrist cradled in his loose grip.Â
Then, your vision begins to flicker. At first, you think itâs a trick of the light. Something lingering side effect of a long sleep as everything begins to go out of focus.Â
But as the room around you fades, something takes its place. It takes a moment to manifest completely, for your eyes to adjust.Â
In front of you, Heeseung still sits in his chair, gaze trained on your wide eyes. But the two of you are no longer in the small, threadbare room. Instead, you stand in an open field, freckled with wildflowers and teeming with butterflies. Above you, the sky is blue and vast, the late summer sun casting a vibrant glow over everything.Â
In your shock, you nearly wrench your arm out of Heeseungâs grip. He senses the movement, tightens his fingers around your wrist before you can pull away.Â
âSorry.â He glances at where you two are touching. âItâs better not to break contact once youâre in. Itâs quite disorienting if you do. And it will give you awful motion sickness.â
Once youâre in where? Turning your head, you look for something, anything, that makes even the tiniest bit of sense. But all you see is grass. The vast expanse of an open field that only ends where it meets the sky.Â
âWhere are we?â
âStill in the same room,â Heeseung says. âPhysically, at least.â He takes a deep breath. âThis is the ability I referred to. Itâs a bit difficult to describe, but I can⊠project my consciousness, I guess. As long as we maintain physical contact, I can show you things from my mind. Memories, visions, anything I dream up. What you see now is the field where I discovered my ability, actually. A friend and I were playing here. I was ten.â He pauses, looks at you. âThe year was 1534.â
The full weight of his words barely has time to settle before the vision is morphing, the scene changing into another.Â
âItâs difficult to know where to start, but I suppose the beginning is as good a place as any. In the Kingdom of Celedis,â he narrates, âthere were eight noble families that had been feuding with each other for over a century. As a result of their petty infighting, the common people suffered. There was constant strife throughout the kingdom. Pains that caused immense suffering but left the nobles untouched. There were frequent blockades, limits on trading, restricted movement, and nasty skirmishes along the borders. Petty crime ran rampant, unchecked. People werenât safe anywhere, not even in their homes.â
You see it just as he imagines it. Tired, hungry, exhausted people. Mistreated and left to the whims of whatever best suited the noblesâ current desires.Â
And the rulers, the nobles themselves. Eight men, adorned in finery, showered with gifts and praise and fine wines while the people just outside the walls of their ornate homes suffered just to survive, starving to death while they gorged themselves on luxury.Â
You wouldnât consider yourself an expert in history, and itâs not like the scenario is exactly uncommon, but you still find it strange that youâve never heard of this place, not even in passing.Â
âCeledis?â You frown.Â
âItâs been erased now,â is all Heeseung says. âFrom both existence and memory. But it was real, a long time ago. And it was where I was born.â
Again, the scene around you starts to take on that odd, unfocused quality. Itâs changing again. By now, you almost feel accustomed to the way images and light start to distort as one vision bleeds into another.Â
âCeledis was a strange kingdom,â Heeseung continues. âFull of old magic. Ancient rituals and rites that faded from most places but held true there. The land was, in many ways, just as alive as you and I. And it grew weary of seeing its people suffer.â
You see a man now, dressed in simple clothes, tucked in the back corner of what appears to be a shop. Heâs surrounded by crystals, trinkets, and old, leather-bound books.Â
âOne night, the eight noble lords received a message from a seer, one that claimed to communicate with the land, to speak for Celedis as its messenger. The seer told them that the old magic of the land would grant them a single wish on one condition: There had to be peace in the kingdom by the night of the blood moon. A night that comes only once every hundred years. When the moon itself shines bright red. Â
âSeven of the lords, eager to have a wish granted, did as the seer advised. They ceased their fighting, recalled their troops. Began to support and protect their people once again. The eighth lord, however, did not.â
After a moment, youâre plunged into darkness. Above you, the night sky of Heeseungâs mind twinkles with distant stars and a distinct, crimson red moon. Seven men, all dressed in finery, stand around an oak tree. The rules of Heeseungâs ability donât seem to be governed by the laws of physics. You watch as an eighth man appears, seemingly out of thin air. The same man from the crystal shop.Â
âThe seven who heeded the seerâs advice gathered on the night of the blood moon to pass along their wish â they wanted their bloodlines to endure forever.Â
âThe seer passed this message along, but old magic is a fickle thing. You have to be precise with your words, or things will be lost in translation. Interpreted in strange ways.â
Now, you stand in a nursery. Thereâs a crib in the corner. A pregnant woman bends over it, singing a soft lullaby.Â
âWithin the year, each of the seven noble lords gave birth to a son. They took this with great joy, a sign that their wish had come true. Before the year reached its end, each of the seven had procured a strong, healthy heir to succeed them.â
Suddenly, youâre back in the endless field from before, watching two young boys play in the distance.Â
âBut these were no ordinary sons. And around the age of ten, each of them revealed a special ability, a supernatural gift.âÂ
The two boys are playing a game, you realize. You canât decipher the rules, but you watch as they throw their heads back in a burst of carefree laughter. The first young boy grabs his friend by the wrist. A harmless gesture. A meaningless touch.Â
The second boy recoils as if heâs been burned. Hand back at his side, he doubles over in pain, emptying the contents of his stomach.Â
In front of you, Heeseung looks away.Â
In the distance, another version of Heeseung apologizes profusely as the other child turns his back.Â
He changes the scene before you can watch any further.Â
Youâre in a bedroom now, watching a young man put on a jacket. Itâs startling, almost, how similar he looks. The two of you watch as Heeseung, because it is undoubtedly him, pulls the jacket over his back, slides his arms through the sleeves.Â
The resemblance is so uncanny that the only thing that sets this Heeseung apart, really, is the style of his clothing. The coat that obviously belongs to another century, lost to time.Â
âAnd once each son reached their twenty-first birthday,â Heesung says. âThey stopped aging.â
Heeseung and his jacket dissolve, change into something else. The new scene you look out upon is somber. Heeseung is there again, this time dressed in all black. The clothes of a mourner. Aside from that, he looks exactly the same.Â
Then you see the casket. The portrait standing next to it. Itâs her, you realize. The woman from the nursery, the one who hummed the lullaby. Much, much older though. Fifty years older. Maybe sixty.Â
You look at this visionâs Heeseung again. He hasnât aged a day. Still the epitome of youth, even as he mourns the death of his mother.Â
âThis was the interpretation of the wish, how it was warped through old magic. The bloodline would endure forever, because each son that had been born in the year of the blood moon was born immortal. But by doing so, the seven lordsâ wish had also effectively ended their bloodline. Their sons would never grow old, never bear children. And none were ever given a sibling.Â
âThe eighth lord, the one that did not agree to peace and therefore did not receive a wish, had not yet foreseen this tragedy. He didnât understand the implications of immortality, the terrible burden it brings. All he saw was an opportunity that he had lost. In his eyes, it had been stolen.â
You watch as the eighth lord bangs on the door of the crystal shop, face red, fury obvious in every inch of his visage.Â
âWhen he discovered the nature of the gift the other lords had been given, the eighth became enraged. He went to the seer and demanded that he pass along his wish to the old magic of the land. That his son, born as an ordinary human, would also be given the gift of immortality.â
In front of you, the lord lunges at the seer, rage in his eyes. The seer raises his hands in a pitiful attempt at self-defense.Â
âThe seer pleaded with the lord. He tried to explain that he had no way of passing his request along. That the ability to communicate with old magic was not something he could do whenever he so pleased.â
The scene changes, the seer and his shop disappearing. Again, you see the oak tree. This time, though, it is only the eighth lord that stands before it. His eyes are sunken, shaded with deep, dark shadows. A mad desperation is painted across his features.Â
âAfter murdering the seer for his insolence, the eighth lord went to the oak tree, a place rumored to be full of old magic. He wished for his son to become like the other seven sons, and he gave the seerâs blood as an offering.âÂ
The scene morphs again, fading until youâre surrounded by the ghastliest thing youâve seen yet. You and Heeseung are in a small room. In the center, thereâs an ornate dining table adorned with expensive cutlery and fine china. Lined with a lacy white tablecloth.Â
And blood. The room, the tablecloth, the plates, are covered in dark, red blood.Â
âThere was one last thing that the eighth lord did not yet understand about immortality. About the other seven sons.â
One by one, you watch as they appear.Â
Jake. Sunghoon. Jungwon. The others whose names you do not yet know. Heeseung.
Their mouths, clothes, faces, are all covered in it, dripping with it. Blood.Â
âThe old magic, above all, favors balance. In exchange for eternal life, it deemed that the only thing capable of sustaining it would be the life of others. Their blood. Once a year, on the anniversary of the day the seven noble lords cast their selfish wish, their seven sons would need to feed. To consume blood. This would sustain them for the rest of the year. They did not need to eat, drink, or sleep on any other day.
âBut that one day, every year, they would always need blood.â
The horror of the bloody dining room fades. Now, you see the eighth son. Your eyes widen in fear as the image continues to develop in front of you, one ghastly scene traded for another. He is in a throne room, back bent unnaturally, a predatory glint in his eyes. Blood covers his mouth, his jaw. And as he rises to his full height, the rest of the horror is unveiled.Â
He stands above the pale, drained, lifeless body of his father.Â
âAs I said before, old magic is a fickle thing. It listened to the eighth lordâs request that his son âbecome like the other seven sons,â but not everything was the same. He was granted immortality, yes, and he also needed to consume blood to sustain himself. Unlike the original seven, he needed to feed frequently. Consume blood often. If he didnât, the urges would drive him mad. Send him into a frenzy.Â
âIt was in such a state that he killed his own father. Murdered the rest of his family and every other living soul he found in the castle.â
You now stand in the dim light of a castle corridor. Beams of moonlight cast a cool glow as a soft breeze rustles tree branches just outside the window. Itâs quiet, eerily so. In front of you, a person lies motionless. The wound on their neck matches yours, but instead of bruising, itâs surrounded by fresh blood.Â
You watch in silent horror as the eighth sonâs victim begins to twitch. At first, itâs just the fingers of their left hand. A spasm that shakes their shoulder. And then their mouth opens, face contorted in agony as they let out a long, blood curdling scream.Â
Heeseung spares you the burden of hearing it.
âOne of his victims, however, he did not drain fully of blood. Lost to his instinct, he had gorged himself so full that he could drink no more. This human, nearly dead, began to transform. And after long hours of acute agony, turned into a vampire of the same nature as the eighth son. Uncontrollable. Frenzied. And full of bloodlust.â
It reminds you of a montage, the scene that plays next. Still standing in front of Heeseung, your wrist still between his fingers, you watch as villages appear and fade. Families, lovers, children running in fear as the domino effect begins to take place. As one vampire becomes ten. As they fall into bloodlust, leaving a bloody path in their wake.Â
The image of a young woman, mouth agape and features frozen in terror, remains imprinted on the backs of your eyelids as the small, dark room of Heeseungâs home comes back into view. As the last of the illusion fades, he releases his grip, freeing you from his ability.Â
Your arm falls limply to your side.Â
âFor years,â he tells you, and thereâs no image to accompany his words now. Nowhere to look but his eyes. âWe just existed. Tried to carve meaning into our lives, tried to find a reason to keep living once it became apparent that was never something we would need to fight for.Â
âBut terror continued to reign. Vampire populations continued to spread and after three hundred long years of acting only in our own self-interest, we decided to intervene. To help the human effort to eradicate vampirism and the blight it had become.Â
âBut we never wanted to become judge, jury, or executioner. And playing god was never something we found pleasure in. We let many live. Vampires that demonstrated restraint, that chose to live far away from humans. Vampires that we came across on days we were tired of killing. Of being monsters.â
His words hang heavy between you. Was it a mistake, not finishing the job? Was it mercy?
âProfessor Kim is what brought us here, actually. He has an unnaturally high level of control over his instincts. One weâve never seen from a descendent of the eighth son.â
You inhale, more pieces beginning to fall into place. âSo you enrolled in his courseââ
âWith the intention of winning the internship, yes,â he confirms. âOf getting a chance to study him up close.âÂ
Heeseung smiles wryly. âYou were quite the pain at first, actually. After those first few days of class, I wasnât so sure I could outwrite you.â
You have no idea what to say to that. An apology feels strange, but heâs just told you that you essentially foiled a grand plan to reduce the threat of vampires, to better understand their nature. âIâŠâ
Heeseung pushes on, âIt didnât end up mattering, though.â He frowns. âThe last day of the semester, the day I was late. Iâd been following him. Trailing him from his house when heâŠâ He trails off. âTo be honest, Iâm not entirely sure what happened. But I think he scented me. Or somehow realized I was on his tail.â
You frown. âIs that unusual?â You remember Jakeâs words earlier. I thought I heard your heartbeat pick up. âI thought that vampires had heightened senses.â
âWe do,â Heeseung clarifies. âBut there are differences between us â the original seven â and all other vampires. Our senses are much stronger. They still have sharper senses than a human, yes, but I accounted for that. He shouldnât have been able to detect me.â
âWhat are the other differences?â
âThe seven of us are the only ones with any kind of additional abilities. We each have one, and theyâre all different. We only need to feed once a year, and we have far more control over our instincts. We donât experience bloodlust nearly as strong.â He passes you a meaningful glance. âUnless weâre feeding.â
Looking around, Heeseung confirms your suspicions. âThatâs what this room is, actually. A precautionary measure. It hasnât happened in the last five hundred years, but we like knowing that thereâs somewhere we wonât be able to escape, should the need for that ever arise.âÂ
âAnd youâre in here, because you⊠you drank my blood.â
Heeseungâs expression is unreadable. âYes. The others thought it would be wise. It was precautionary. And ultimately unnecessary.â Again, he glances at your neck. âI didnât experience any bloodlust. I was weak for a couple of days, but that wasnât because of you. The dart that the professor shot you with had traces of moonflower in it. Itâs poisonous for us.âÂ
As he looks at you, he explains, âHumans can ingest it safely in small doses, usually. Some brew it as a tea. You just have to be careful not to have too much, since it can cause temporary memory loss. But injected straight into the bloodstream, the effects are unknown.â His eyes flicker with a memory. You, crumpled in his arms, losing your grip on consciousness. âBut it didnât look good.â
So he had sucked it out of your neck.Â
Your neck. Where he bit you.
Another piece of the vision heâs just shown you comes flashing back.Â
âYou bit me.âÂ
Heeseung meets your gaze. âI did.â
âAm IâŠâ Itâs hard to quell the panic once the realization starts to set in. Flashes of faces contorted in agony swim across your vision. âAm I going to change?â
âNo,â Heeseung shakes his head. Leans forward, as if to reach for you. He thinks better of it, letting his hand fall back to his side. âNo, thatâs another difference. The seven of us canât create new vampires.â
âOh.â As the panic ebbs, you find yourself at a loss again. He saved you. Knowingly ingested a substance that could harm him to do so. Gratitude feels in order, but you canât quite bring yourself to express it.Â
The truth you want most to avoid dances on the tip of your tongue. âAnd you only⊠feed once a year.â
Again, Heeseung nods. âIt doesnât hurt us to ingest blood more frequently, but itâs not necessary. And like I said, we avoid it. Weâre better at maintaining our inhibitions, but blood still has power over us. When we feed, itâs in a room like this. One we canât get out of until we have complete control again.â
The questions that arise are morbid. How much blood is required to satisfy a yearâs worth of thirst? How do they choose? Who lives, who dies for the hunger that binds them to this world? In the last five hundred years, how much blood has been washed from their hands, from his hands?
You can hardly ask him, but the truth still remains. âYouâve killed people.â
Heeseungâs gaze falls to the floor. âI wonât pretend to be innocent.â Thereâs a distinct edge of self-loathing when he says, âI wonât pretend that Iâm not still⊠a monster. But the blood we ingest comes from animals, not humans.âÂ
He looks back to you, gaze searching as if he craves something from you. A flicker of trust. The reassurance that youâre not appalled by him, by everything heâs told you.Â
You match his eye, and he hates the fear he finds reflected there.Â
A moment of stilted silence passes. Another. The weight of a million revelations and a thousand unanswered questions rests heavily between you. Itâs a lot to digest all at once. Too much. So much that your mind struggles to bear the weight of it all, to organize the information youâve received into categories that give sense to the illogical, the impossible.Â
Outside the barred door, you hear the whisper of a scuffle.Â
âStop that!â
âMove over. Itâs been way more than a minute. I donât care what he says. Iâm going toââ
Heeseung sighs, rolling his eyes as he turns towards the door. âJust come in if youâre going to.â
Six boys tumble through the door in an excited heap. It reminds you a bit of overenthusiastic puppies. Again, you find the differences hard to reconcile. Killers. Monsters. Immortals beings with unnatural powers.Â
And they look about as threatening as a gang of kittens.Â
âSo,â Jake starts, glancing between the two of you. âDid he tell you everything?â
You spare a look at Heeseung. The long fingers that rest at his side. âShowed me, actually.â
A flicker of surprise crosses Jakeâs features. âOh.â He tamps it quickly. âThat is more efficient, I suppose.â
âWell,â another boy pipes up, one you donât yet have a name for. âAt least now you know why heâs been following you home like a lovesick puppy every night. You can rest assured heâs not just some crazy stalker, and heââ
âJay,â Heeseung bites. âWould you shut up already?â
âYouâve been following me?â
âOh.â Jay winces, realizing the misstep a moment too late. âSorry, man.âÂ
Heeseung exhales again. âWe were worried Professor Kim might do something,â he explains, looking at you. âIt was a precautionary measure.âÂ
Behind you, you hear a snicker. âPrecautionary measure, my ass.â
But youâre too caught up in a sudden realization. Your professor. âIt was Professor Kim, then. Those bodies at the riverâŠâ
âNo, actually.â Jake shakes his head. âWe donât think he was responsible for the bodies at the river.â He nods towards another boy. âSunoo had eyes on him that night. He was home when the attacks occurred.âÂ
You frown. âSo who was?â
âWe donât know.â Jungwonâs ire may not be directed at you, but you feel it all the same. âWe have no idea, and your professor was our best shot at figuring it out.â He looks at Heeseung. âThanks to the stunt you pulled, we have no way of getting closer to him now.â
Heeseung glares back. âIf by stunt, you mean saving someoneâs life, then yes, I pulled a stunt.â
âAnd now there have been three more attacks in the last two days!â
âWait.â For a moment, your voice reverberates off the walls as all seven of them fall into silence, gazes turning to you. Your face heats at the sudden influx of attention. Finding your words again, you state the obvious oddity. âBut it doesnât make any sense that Professor Kim is a vampire. He hates vampires. Everything New Haven has published is essentially just anti-vampire propaganda.â
âThatâs another mystery,â Heeseung says. âSomething else we were trying to figure out. And honestly, Jungwon, I donât think it would have mattered. I told you, he scented me that day, so Iâm sure he already knewââ
âThatâs impossible.â Jungwon scoffs.Â
âAnd yet it happened.â Heeseung frowns. âThereâs something strange about him.â
Jungwonâs lips pull into a thin line. âSomething that weâre no closer to finding out. It will take months for another one of us to get any sort of trust from him. Never mind access to New Haven.â
With the urgency of an alarm bell, an idea starts to take form in your mind. Rough around the edges but solid in shape. âI think I can help with that.â Again, seven pairs of eyes fall on you, all in varying states of disbelief. âIâm interning with him. At New Haven.â
Heeseung is the first to break the silence. âLike hell you are. Or did you forget that the last time he saw you, he shot you with poison?â
Sunghoon nods. âIt does seem like a pretty bad idea.â
âNo, it doesnât.â You shake your head. âThink about it. He shot me with something thatâs poisonous to vampires. And I think itâs because he saw Heeseung. If he really did⊠scent you, then he knew you were a vampire. I think⊠I think he might have been trying to protect me.â
The room is quiet for a moment, your inference settling into the air. Itâs a long shot maybe, but itâs starting to come together.Â
After a minute, Sunoo says tentatively, âShe might be right.â No one else speaks up, but you see a few heads nod in agreement.Â
Heeseung is quick to shut them down. âNo way. No fucking way. Those are terrible odds, and Iâm not betting on them. None of you should be either.â
But the more you think about it, the more it makes sense to you. Why else would your professor shoot you full of something poisonous to vampires?Â
You try to think of the scene from his eyes. He walked in on you and Heeseung alone in a dark room. You were frightened out of your mind, and in the split second he had to analyze things, he could have misjudged the source of your fear. One vampire for another.Â
So you double down. âIâm serious. This could be the in we need.â
âThere is no we,â Heeseung shakes his head. âYouâre not a part of this.â
His dismissal makes you bristle. If what Jungwon said is true, the attacks are only increasing, leaving more victims in their wake. And your professor may have unusual amounts of control, but he certainly wasnât demonstrating that two nights ago.Â
âSo what, Iâm supposed to go home, pretend that everything is normal, and just let people keep dying?â Your gaze meets Jungwonâs. âThatâs what will happen, isnât it? You said there were three more attacks just in the time I was unconscious. How many people have died now?â
Jungwonâs lips are tight. âEleven.â
âEleven people,â you echo. âIf I go to Professor Kim and tell himââ
âYouâre not going anywhere near that man,â Heeseung counters. âWeâll take care of it. Itâs what we do.â
But his excuses are wearing thin in your mind, turning flimsy the more you consider them. âHow? If he can identify you as vampires, then thereâs no way youâll ever get close enough to figure out how he might be connected to all of this.â You turn, addressing all seven of them. âI, on the other hand, have a draft written about the intrinsic evil of vampirism. I have a bite mark healing on my neck. If I go to him and say that I hate vampires too, that I was attacked by Heeseung, and his poison was the only thing that saved me, then Iâll earn his trust.â
Heeseung just scoffs, shaking his head. âAre the rest of you hearing this?â
Sunghoon opens his mouth hesitantly. âI mean⊠she kind of has a point.â
Heeseung glares. âBesides you.â
Sunoo frowns for a moment, parts his lips.Â
Heeseung doesnât let him get a word out. âDonât even try it.â He turns to the others, something pleading in his gaze. âJungwon, Jay, Niki, Jake, you have to see how insane this is. Sheâs a human.â
Your lips pull tight. âA human thatâs standing right here.â
Jungwon maintains an even tone when he restates the simple fact, âIf this professor truly can scent us, we donât have any way of investigating him further. Not without using force.â He turns to look at you, gaze assessing. âDo you really think heâll believe that youâre on his side?â
Do you? Maybe Heeseung is right. Maybe youâre betting on ludicrous odds, wasting the last of your luck on a game that was rigged from the beginning. But why inject you with a substance poisonous to vampires? Why publish all of those anti-vampire stories?
You match Jungwonâs eye. âI do.â
âOkay.â Jungwon nods, mulling it over in his mind. âOkay.â
Heeseung watches the exchange with heated eyes. âAbsolutely notââ
âYouâve been overruled,â Jay interjects.Â
âSix to one,â Niki agrees. Glancing at you, he amends, âMake that seven to one.â
Heeseung is still seeing red. âThis isnât a fucking group vote. Weâre not deciding which coffee table to put in the living room. This is a life.â Turning to you, his voice softens, an edge of pleading in his tone. âThis is your life.â
âExactly.â Youâre begging too, for a bit of understanding. âItâs my life. A week ago, it was completely consumed by winning an internship, getting my writing published. And now there are vampire attacks ravaging my city. The professor I wanted to impress so badly might just be one of them. Even if I walk away from here and vow to never go near New Haven again, my life wonât go back to what it was. I wonât be safe. So Iâm going to do what I can to get back to the things that are important to me.â Eyes heating, you add, âSo yes, I am a part of this now, whether you like it or not. And I have the marks on my neck to prove it.â
âDamn,â Sunghoon whistles lowly. âThat was kind of beautiful.â
âYou have a way with words,â Sunoo agrees.Â
âOf course she does,â Jay nods. âRemember how frustrated Heeseung was a few months ago after she presented her analysis or whatever in class? He was so stressed heâd lose out on the internship becââ
Heeseungâs glare could freeze hellfire. âDo you ever stop talking?â
âItâs late,â Jungwon interrupts, sensing the response that builds on Jayâs tongue. Pouring water over the flames before they can escalate into a full blown argument. Again, he addresses you. âYouâre welcome to stay here tonight.â He glances around the room, and you imagine heâs trying to see things from your perspective. âOr any one of us would be happy to take you back home, if thatâs what you prefer.â
There are aspects of your apartment that appeal to you. Sleeping in your own bed comes to mind. As does getting some distance from all of this. From him. Youâve taken in far too much information in the span of a few hours, and the throbbing against your temple has yet to ease.Â
But your apartment is also empty. Quiet, isolated. With recent events in mind, youâre not sure it would feel like such a safe haven. If youâre quite ready to be truly alone.Â
Still, youâre tentative. âI donât want to overstay my welcome.â
âYouâre not,â Jake shakes his head. âItâs been a long few days. Iâm sure you could use some rest.â
âHasnât she been asleep for, like, two days straight?â Sunghoon whispers to Jay.Â
The only thing he gets in response is an elbow to the ribs.Â
Jungwon ignores them. âYouâre not overstaying anything. You can go home when youâre ready.â
âUgh,â Niki grumbles. âDoes that mean Heeseungâs gonna try and hang out in my room again? Becauseââ
He falls silent when at least three matching glares turn in his direction.Â
Suddenly sheepish, you offer, âI can sleep somewhere else.â Glancing at Heeseung, you add, âIâm sure you want to sleep in your own bed again.âÂ
Heeseung just gives you a strange look. Niki bursts out laughing.Â
âDamn,â Jay says. âTwo hundred years really is a long time, I guess. Humans these days donât remember anything about vampires.â
Cheeks heating with embarrassment, you realize your mistake. Of course. Not only are the boys in front of you blood-drinking immortal beings that have been alive since the early sixteenth century, but they also donât sleep.Â
Mollified, you feel the urge to defend yourself. âWhy do you even have beds, then?â
This time, itâs Sunghoon that erupts in a fit of laughter. The other six avoid your gaze pointedly.Â
You didnât think it was possible, but once the realization sinks in, your cheeks heat even further.Â
âOh, cut the poor girl some slack,â Sunoo scolds. Turning to you, heâs kind when he explains, âWe donât sleep, but we do relax. An old force of habit, I suppose. Itâs nice to just lay down sometimes.â
Jay canât help himself. âAmong other things, right Sunghoon?â
âIgnore them,â Jungwon advises. âFive hundred year old children.â
âHey!â Sunghoon protests. âWeâre not the ones that couldnât handle a sex jokeââ
Heeseung just sighs, a stray strand of hair falling over his eyes. For a moment, he looks like the boy you used to sit behind in class. Dreamy. Moody. Untouchable. So painfully out of reach that spite made you want to try anyway.Â
Heâs here now. Within your grasp. And when he looks at you, the quiet words he whispers are meant only for your ears. âI can walk you to myâerâyour room, if youâre ready.â
Youâre not ready. You donât think you ever will be. But even a life spun on top of its head has a way of unfolding in predictable ways. Such is the nature of things, and so flows the progression of time.Â
You donât say anything, but you do nod.Â
Trailing after him silently down the hallway you came from, youâre not sure if it feels more right to fall into step beside him or let him lead you. In the end, he makes the decision for you. Without breaking stride, Heeseung slows down until your shoulders are aligned, eyes facing forward.Â
He doesnât say anything as the two of you track a steady path to his bedroom. Mind leaden with the weight of the last five hundred years, you remain silent as well. Finally, you pass the common room again.Â
He opens the door to his bedroom, steps to the side to let you walk in first.Â
Unwittingly, your eyes land on the most conspicuous piece of furniture in the room. Your cheekbones are flaming again, and finding sleep in that bed suddenly feels like an arduous task.Â
Heeseung follows your gaze. The golden glow of his skin remains the same, but his eyes flash with embarrassment. âYou don't, uhâŠâ He trails off. Even poets struggle with finding the right words at times. Finally, he settles on, âNot all of us live like Sunghoon.â
âHe seems nice,â you say, desperate to draw your minds away from where theyâve wandered.Â
âThatâs one way of putting it.â But thereâs affection in his voice when he says it. Brothers, you think. All of them. They seem like brothers.Â
Heeseungâs eyes scan the expanse of his bedroom as if heâs looking at it for the first time. âThereâs not much.â He seems almost apologetic for it. âBut help yourself to whatever you like. The computer doesnât have a password. And thereâs books on the desk, too.â
âThank you,â you tell him. And you mean it. Heâs not someone you expected to be generous with their space, their belongings. Another aspect of him you had all wrong.Â
âIâll let you have some space then.â He pauses at the door. âDonât be afraid to let me know if there's anything you need.â
âOkay,â you whisper.Â
He hesitates a moment longer. You can see it in the curve of his lips, the arrangement of his features. Thereâs more he wants to say. Something else he wants to tell you.Â
Instead, he closes the door behind him on his way out. Gently, so that it hardly makes a noise.Â
His bed is comfortable when you lay down, even if your mind is still racing a million miles a minute. Distantly, you wonder if he can hear your heartbeat now. What he thinks of the way it picks up speed every time certain moments replay in your head.Â
But despite yourself, despite him, despite everything, you manage to drift off after only a few long minutes. Tucked away in the corner of a strange home, the sleep that greets you is blissfully dreamless.
â.Ë⥠àŁȘ Ëâ.Ë⥠àŁȘ Ëâ.Ë⥠àŁȘ Ë
note: WHEW. This is the most info-dumpy we'll be getting, so I hope this made for an enjoyable follow up to the first part regardless. The relationship between our two leads will really start to take off in the next part, as will the remaining aspects of the ~mystery~ now that (most of) the lore/backstory is covered. as always, I love to know what you're thinking!
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This is the most horrific thing recorded. Only God can give them the most suitable punishment that even death cant do justice to

ABOLISH ISRAEL. ABOLISH THE FUCKING DEMONS.
Even though I am discontinuing the Jungwon fiction, I WILL write a winx club smau for Jungwon since I do need to do him justice đ
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