Vampire!Wilson AU
He usually has Icy blue eyes, but they turn red when he gets hungry for blood
He can float!
He has the typical abilities of a vampire
He was human before, but woke up as a vampire after a long time of comatose after an incident involving a cursed apple.
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Buck, wrapping an arm around Eddie: Me and the bad bitch I pulled by being a vampire.
Eddie: Just because you came back from the dead doesn’t mean you’re a vampire.
Hen: Those bite marks on your neck might beg to differ, Eddie.
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it's knowing that this can't go on forever
likely, one of us will have to spend some days alone
maybe we'll get [twenty] years together
but one day i'll be gone
or one day you'll be gone
if we were vampires and death was a joke
we'd go out on the sidewalk and smoke
and laugh at all the lovers and their plans
i wouldn't feel the need to hold your hand
maybe time running out was a gift
i'll work hard till the end of my shift
and give you every second i can find
and hope it isn't me who's left behind
(if we were vampires / jason isbell and the 400 unit)
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the vicodin would make house’s blood taste bitter but vampire!wilson wouldn’t care because it’s house’s blood and it will always taste so sweet to him. and also because he would get addicted to the vicodin
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One day, we’ll discuss how fandoms have a tendency to attach hyper masculine traits to black characters. More especially if it’s in a same-sex relationship with a white character, no matter how soft canonically the black character is. 
There is this an errant need to always attach “protector“ or “the strong one“ title to black characters, and it’s even worse when they are portrayed by darker skinned black people.
It happens with Finn and Poe in the Star Wars sequel trilogy fandom. Finn is always the one who must defend or console or step up for Poe, even though he’s a 24 year old who was stolen from his family, and turned into a soldier against his will as a child, and then thrust into a war, which, he did not have to fight in and could’ve run from. However, he is the one who must always protect the “softer“ Poe.
It happened in the First Kill fandom with Juliette and Calliope. Calliope was attached hyper masculine traits even though we’ve seen her dress in “feminine“ ways and carries herself in a “more feminine“ manner. However, she is the one who has the job of protecting Juliette in a fandom eyes.
We have it with Devon and Jake in Chucky, even though they equally fight to protect one another. Devon is always portrayed by fandom, as having to be the one who “protects“ or “consoles” and is always there for Jake meanwhile fans rarely ever give scenarios where it could be the other way around. Canonically Devon and Jake protect each other as equal as possible. However, you could never tell from fandom speaks of them. Devon always has to be the protector. Devon is always be the aggressor. Devon must always be the one who looks after Jake.
Don’t get me started on how Interview With The Vampire fandom attached Louis is “the man of the household” connotations when placed against Lestat even though the show itself tells you HE’S the housewife, and we see who really has the power between the two of them, but it is so rarely reflected in how fans write and speak of them. LOUIS is the soft-spoken, LOUIS is the one who needs the constant protection, LOUIS is the one who is insecure overtly however, it is almost never reflected in how fans engage the characters. 
And if I were to get into how they’re almost always treated by fans as cruel whenever they do not agree with their white partners actions, or they do something for themselves or how they are never given empathy that black fans don’t have to fight for them to be given, or they are held to a much higher standard than their partner, I could be here all day. 
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