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#wanderer ashes trailer
sassyduckqueen · 1 year
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Since the recent trailer from Genshin Impact decided to rip my heart out and give me the feels, I thought I'd cope by making a meme. I also made two verison of it. Normal one and Fandango edition xD those who have seen the trailer will know what I mean lol
Also if you've yet to see the trailer, here's a link: https://youtu.be/AR2n2TsJuNE
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littleeyesofpallas · 2 months
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Just spitballing some random pokethoughts...
Eternatus and the Darkest Day happened in Galar 3,000 year ago, and at the same time AZ made the Ultimate Weapon in Kalos, again 3,000 years ago.
And the two events lead to Devon co. studying Mega Evolution to develop Infinity Energy, and Macro Cosmos studying Dynamax and Power Spots to develop Rose's power plant. "Eternal" and "Infinite."
And the Eternatus power plant logo strongly resembles the new logo in the Z-A trailer.
And in Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire, the Infinity Energy was ultimately used to save the day by teleporting the Delta meteor into another universe. getting Mega Rayquaza to destroy the Delta meteor. And Eternatus fell to Earth on a meteorite (20,000 years ago).
Delta(Δ) being the mathematical variable for "Change," and obviously being a play on the Greek letter motif(ΩA). And of course Alpha and Omega as a pair are best known as the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet(and the biblical "Beginning and the End")
So, go figure, ΩA is a synonym with ZA, so the title ...Z-A can be understood as "(from)The End to The Beginning," the reverse reading of A-Z as "A to Z."
There are two kings who helped defeat Eternatus who apparently at some point shared a bloodline? (Did their descendents marry later, or were the two kings already related?) Tragically their bloodline produced the brothers Shieldbert and Swordward.
AZ was a former king of Kalos and is succeeded by a younger brother from whom Lysander is descended.
King Louis XIV was dubbed "le Roi Soleil":"the Sun King" and famously obsessed over sun motifs. His Palace of Versailles is the basis of the Parfum Palace in Kalos. The Parfum Palace was built by either AZ or one of his descendents.
The Parfum Palace garden has statues of Zekrom and Reshiram
Zekrom and Reshiram were split in two from their original united form by the Hero of Truth and the Hero of Ideals, forming Unova in the process.
The Twin Heroes built the Relic Castle in what is now the Resort Desert. The Relic Castle appears to have been built "at least 2,500 years ago".
Possibly also built the Abyssal Ruins? One castle dedicated to the sun and the desert, one to the dark and the watery depths?
The Relic Castle enshrines Volcorona, "The Sun Pokemon" said to have appeared at a time when ash blacked out the sky and saved people by acting as a replacement for the sun.
Eternatus' Darkest Day involved summoning dark clouds to black out the sky.
Alder, Champion of Unova, has a Volcorona as his signature pokemon, a backstory involving losing a pokemon and wandering the region in his grief, kind of like AZ, sans the immortality.
Alder also has a flaming mane-like hair not too dissimilar to Lysandre's.
Alder is the basis of an unspecified character design in Legends Arceus who appears to be a third, perhaps seminal or unifying factor in the Maxi/Archie ancestors' Diamond and Pearl clans. A Platinum clan? The Sinnoh people? Or just a unifier, a peace maker, a mentor, or a shared ancestor?
Cogita and Volo as members of the Sinnoh people have fixations on lore keeping/seeking. Something Cynthia sort of inherits
Cynthia is from Celestic Town in Sinnoh, where Drasna said she's from originally
Zinnia is a Dragon trainer and "lorekeeper" in ORAS
Celestic Town in DPPt has a shrine that uses the same model as the one in Ilex Forest for Celebi in HGSS
Terapagos is supposed to have an ability to alter or shift timelines, relating to the presence of the Paradox Pokemon
But Black City and White Forest also seem to exist as a kind of paradox around polar opposite futurism and primitivism
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berenwrites · 2 months
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Closure - Stranger Things - Steddie - G
Rating: G| cw: blood | tags: post season 4, eddie lives, fluff no angst
Prompt: Love is having hope for the future together (acasualcrossfade)
A/N: Written for @steddielovemonth day 12. Sorry I have missed so many days – had lots of ideas, just no umph to actually get them on paper. Feeling more creative today. Enjoy!
Also on AO3 | All My Other Stranger Things Fic
Closure: Rifts & Reactions
Steve grabbed Eddie’s hand as it was offered and let the other man drag him out of hole they had both been in only moments before. He could barely believe it as he staggered to his feet and the fissure behind them groaned as it closed.
“Teams sound off, over,” came over the walkie slung across his back in Dustin’s urgent tones.
“Team 1, all safe, over,” came the first response from Hopper.
“Team 2, all safe, over,” was the second from Nancy as Steve pulled the walkie round to the front.
“Team 3, all safe, over,” he said, as clearly as he could.
He looked at Eddie, battered, bruised, filthy, just like him, and he couldn’t help the laugh that burst out of his throat. It was over, really over this time. Vecna was dead. All his monsters were dead. The Upside Down was sealing itself off without his influence to keep the gates open. And they were all alive.
“Finally losing it, Sweetheart?” Eddie asked as Steve laughed so hard his legs gave out.
He was exhausted, had a three-groove gash across the front of his left leg, luckily not too deep, and he ached all over, but he couldn’t stop laughing.
When they had gone in, Team 1 containing El, to confront Vecna head on, Team 2 to distract as many of Vecna’s monsters as possible, and Team 3 to take out the lab in the Upside Down that had machinery in it Vecna had been using to keep open his gates, Steve had mentally given them about a fifty percent chance. That they had all come through it alive and kicking was simply amazing.
Eddie sat down next to him.
“It’s over,” he said, unable to keep the wonder out of his voice. “It’s finally over.”
“Yeah,” Eddie agreed, smiling at him.
If the rifts closing hadn’t been a huge giveaway, there was something in the air as well. It was as if a weight had been lifted. Maybe a psychic one had been.
“You’re still bleeding though,” Eddie pointed out.
The wounds were oozing a little thanks to all the vigorous movement, but it wasn’t much, as far as Steve could tell.
“Can I kiss you,” was what he decided to respond, gazing into Eddie’s eyes, and watching them go wide and shocked, “please,” he added.
Finding Eddie wandering around the evacuated trailer park in a fugue state had felt like a miracle at the time. His reaction to it had given Steve a clue that he had become more attached to the metalhead than he had admitted to himself before that. Then helping nurse Eddie back to health and to his old self had only deepened the fledgling feelings.
They’d all been focused on only one thing though: defeating Vecna, so he’d put all those things on the back burner. Even when he was pretty sure he’d seen Eddie looking at him the same way, he had pushed them down because there was too much to do.
There wasn’t any more.
“Yes,” Eddie said, and now it was him who sounded like he couldn’t quite believe it.
Steve leaned in, just lightly touching his lips to Eddie’s. It was Eddie that grabbed him by the straps on his combat jacket and pulled him in for a much deeper kiss. Steve revelled in it. They both tasted of ash, but he didn’t care. He never wanted to stop kissing Eddie if he could help it. It was only when a groan was forced from his mouth, and not in a sexy way, when he made a move that had his leg complaining loudly that Eddie drew back.
“More later,” Eddie said and took the walkie from his hand, pulling the strap over his head. “This is Team 3, over.”
“Central here, over,” Dustin’s replied instantly.
“Could do with a pickup,” Eddie said, “Steve’s hurt. Bikes are a no go, over.”
They hadn’t wanted to be seen on the way in, so they’d biked to their entry point.
“Bad?” Dustin came back, completely forgetting the ‘over’.
“No worse than usual,” Eddie replied. “He had to make sure he has some more badass scars, of course, over.”
“This is Team 1,” came over the walkie from Hopper. “Can swing by and pick you up once I’ve dropped off my lot. How urgent is it? Over.”
Steve took the walkie back.
“I’m fine,” he said, giving Eddie a look for worrying everyone, “I just can’t pedal. Over.”
“Got it,” Hopper returned. “Sit tight, I’ll be with you soon. Over.”
“Will do, over and out,” Steve responded.
“This whole kissing thing better not be due to blood loss,” Eddie said as Steve put the walkie down.
“Nope,” he replied, “that just made me brave. Want to kiss some more?”
“Sweetheart, I’ll kiss you forever if I can,” Eddie replied.
“I’ll keep you to that,” he said with a smile, leaning back in, but making sure he didn’t do anything stupid with his leg this time.
All My Other Stranger Things Fic
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infinityerlingx · 2 years
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Cigarettes and Sunshine
pairing- eddie munson x (fem)reader
plot- lazy mornings with eddie in his trailer
genre- fluff
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Mornings spent with Eddie in his trailer were always your favourite. Them days where you didnt have to be at school. The lazy mornings spent cuddled up in his bed as the morning sunlight filtered through the thin curtains.
Today was no different, you woke up early, Eddie still asleep. His arms lazily around your waist, pulling your back flush against his bare chest.
You stayed in the bed for a few minutes longer, Eddie’s gentle snores behind you. You managed to pull yourself away from him, he stirred slightly, however quickly drifting off again. You stood next to your side of the bed, looking down at your boyfriend, his curly hair laid on the pillow, his usual ring clad fingers, bare, his rings sitting on the table next to him. The only accessory he was wearing was the watch, the one he never took off.
You admired your sleeping boyfriend for a few moments, before heading towards the small living area.You passed the fridge, grabbing yourself a bottle of water before going towards the couch. Grabbing yourself a book you had been reading from the table, sitting yourself down. Getting comfy on the chair. Your legs sprawled out, your back resting against the arm of the chair. You quickly tied your hair up into a messy bun, grabbing your reading glasses off the table as well.
Eddie woke up half an hour later, his hand searching around his bed for you, his eyes opened, however they scrunched up in confusion when he noticed your side of the bed was empty. However his confusion quickly dissipated as he heard the soft sounds of music playing through the trailer. You bought Eddie a record player a few months back, he had always wanted one, just could never afford it. So you took it upon yourself to get him one for his birthday. He was shocked to say the least, but his love for you just grew even more.
He rubbed at his eyes and got himself out of bed, pulling a pair of jeans on. He placed his rings back onto his fingers before leaving the bedroom to come find you.
You were too engrossed in your book to hear the bedroom door open. He paced over to where you were sat, his heart bursting when he saw you. You were wearing his hellfire shirt and a pair of shorts underneath. Seeing you in Eddie’s clothes, made his heart warm.
“There you are” Eddie smiled down at you, your gaze lifting from the book to meet his own. A smile growing on your face. He leant down over your frame, pecking a small kiss to your lips, before turning around and heading to the kitchen.
You got straight back to your book, rereading over the words you had just read. You heard the click of Eddie’s lighter, you turned your head. A cigarette hanging out his lips, the small flame in front of it, lighting the end.
Before Eddie, you hated cigarettes, the smell of them used to knock you sick. However since being with him, you actually quite liked it. You attempted to smoke one a few weeks back, but it just wasn’t for you.
He wandered back over to you, lifting your legs up from the seat, sitting down and letting you rest your legs on top of his lap.
Your gaze wandered from your book to Eddie, mentally tracing up his shirtless upper half. The tattoos that were placed on his chest and arms. The small scars that only you had ever noticed. Freckles that littered his chest. You adored every little bit of him. You didn’t even realise Eddie staring back at you.
“You can’t concentrate on reading if you can’t take your eyes off me sweetheart” He spoke, making heat rise to your cheeks.
“Can’t help it” You mumbled, folding the page of your book over and placing it on the table behind you along with your glasses. “Isn’t my fault, you’re too pretty”
Eddie flicked the last of his cigarette into the ash tray, putting it out and leaving the tray on the table.
“You’re the pretty one darling” He replied, twisting his body to face you. You opened your arms, signalling for him to come cuddle you.
He lay down on the small sofa next to you, an arm around your shoulder, his large hand covering your skin. You lay on your side, leg draped over his waist. Your head rested on his chest, leaving small kisses to his skin. Your hand resting on his stomach. Lifting your head, Eddie’s eyes were already on you. He leant down, pressing a longing kiss to your lips. You moved yours with his.
“Good morning darling” Eddie spoke in between kisses.
“Good morning pretty boy”
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kararisa · 1 year
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forged by fire
— from the ashes, i have been reborn
— scaramouche/the wanderer x gn!reader
— cw: blood, you call him Kuni
— author's notes: happy birthday scara my beloved <3 i've been thinking about his trailer a lot so this was inspired by that as well as Arsonist's Lullaby by Hozier. enjoy!
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Scaramouche has spent his life wandering, searching, yearning. In all his five hundred years of roaming this accursed earth, his candle has burned dim – seeking something, anything, to fuel his spark.
So he wanders, looking for something just beyond his reach.
A heart. A purpose.
Stillness was what he felt when he first opened his eyes, and like a spark without fuel, he sought to find anything to sustain himself. A golden feather adorns his neck – a symbol of the protection granted to him by the Almighty Shogun, a stark reminder of how he was so easily discarded.
A man finds him soon enough; Katsuragi was his name, and shortly afterward he was introduced to Niwa. Scaramouche settles down, and for the first time, he smiles. The candle in him burns brighter until it becomes a fire – a small, delicate flame, but a fire nonetheless
One can only wonder how a mere flickering fire would fare against a storm.
Corruption ravages Tatarasuna mere days later. Scaramouche had returned from Tenshukaku alone, his pleas for help left unanswered.
He was handed a device, a simple box, and tasked to purge the core of Tatarasuna. So Scaramouche takes the box and ventures into the heart of the tempest.
He stared into the corruption that raged at the heart of Tatarasuna and smiled. He had people to save, he could finally be of use!
But what use is a puppet if all that he cherishes has perished?
In all his five hundred years of roaming this wretched earth, nothing could prepare him for the withered heart in the box that shielded him from the corruption. It was the very fuel he needed, but not the fuel he wanted. A lie, a trick, he wanted to scream.
Laughter echoes in his ears as he drops the beating heart in horror. Blood coats his hands, the scent of iron filling the air as it drips onto the sand.
As he runs away, he swears he can still hear its heartbeat.
In all his five hundred years of roaming this cruel earth, fire has followed him. Consumed him. Ravaged him.
Scaramouche didn’t need air, but he felt like he was choking on smoke. Like a weight on his chest held him in place as he watched the house go up in flames. When does a candle become a blaze? How much can a fire withstand before it becomes an inferno?
What line does a puppet have to cross before he's called a monster?
With the story of the toy soldier fresh on his mind, he picked up the boy’s doll, the heat embracing him as he sat amongst the flames to let them eat at his flesh. Was a real heart what the people found in the toy soldier’s wake, or was it simply ashes in the shape of a heart? Heat spreads through his god-made joints and he’s never felt so at peace staring death in the face, scathing his skin and setting his world aglow with orange hues.
“What a joke,” he laid his head against the wall behind him. He lets his inferno consume him, hoping that whoever investigates the smoldering remains will find a heart, his heart, among the ashes.
Even if it were ashes in the shape of a heart.
“It’s just ashes. Nothing left but ashes,” he closes his eyes and waits for the flames to reach him.
Until he hears a familiar voice, your voice.
"Kuni…?"
His eyes jolted open.
As his eyes adjust to the darkness of the room, he sees the look of concern on your face. Ah, he was shaking.
You take his hand and slowly intertwine your fingers, “I got you, Kuni. I got you.”
Scaramouche scoots closer to you and places his head on your chest. He squeezes your hand as a shaky sigh escapes him. Your heartbeat, a steady beat amidst his chaotic thoughts, helps ground him.
“Do you want me to hold you closer?” you ask.
He nods, not trusting his voice. The two of you scoot closer and you start to run your fingers through his hair.
"I love you. I love you so much," Scaramouche’s voice is unsteady as he looks up at you, "You know that, right?"
"Yes," you place your hand on his cheek and he leans into your warmth, "I love you too."
In all his five hundred years of roaming this earth, all he had was his fire. The fire that once consumed him and burned away his sinful flesh now sustains him. You tore down his walls and threw them into the fire, leaving behind nothing but ashes in his wake.
His vision – his heart – glows on the bedside table, a golden feather adorning it. You, in his arms.
Scaramouche has passed through fire, and amidst the ashes, he has finally found a purpose. He’s found you. His world, his everything.
And that’s more than enough for him.
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agent-cupcake · 1 year
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Dramaturgy
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Ah yes, another commission to fund my gamer lifestyle from the incredibly lovely and patient @novcaine (thank you <;3)
Pairing: Vampire! Claude von Riegan x f!Reader
Synopsis: Trying to cope with the sudden death of your eccentric father, you fall down a rabbit hole of conspiracy, curses, and your very strange (and very tragic) family history, leading you to the small town of Old Derdriu—and its darkest secret.
Warnings: explicit smut, dub/noncon, kidnap, drugged sex
Tags: horror elements, urban fantasy, blood kink, very unhealthy romantic dynamic, overstimulation, "orgasms make your blood sweeter" trope
Word Count: 27.3k
Notes: I read a few horror stories in an attempt to get the tone right for this one which, as I'm sure you'll notice, heavily influenced me while writing. I really got caught up in lore crafting for this one as well, although the real fun was matching up the serious stuff with Claude's personality.
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Act 1
“Thither, full fraught with mischievous revenge, 
Accursed, and in a cursed hour, he hies.”
I.
9th day of Verdant Moon 
As long as I can remember, it’s been just us two. Me and dad against the world. Explorers, adventurers, wanderers. Rogues who chase the horizon to keep the sun close, that’s what he says. Said. There’s always been somewhere new to go, we never stayed anywhere long enough to cast too long of a shadow. 
That’s, more or less, what I said over his ashes. Not that there was anyone around to hear it. A eulogy for nobody. But it was true. It is true. 
Once upon a time (that’s what people say, right?), it must have been when we spent a summer in Arundel living out of a camper trailer because we didn’t have an air conditioner and spent most of the time outside, I asked him why. I don’t know why I remember it so well, but the air smelled like bug spray and pine and campfire smoke. Not ours though, we hardly ever have fires. Dad claims it’s ‘reasonable’ caution. Claimed. 
That night, I don’t know what compelled me to ask, but I did. I asked, “Why do we move so much?” 
He said to listen carefully, and I did, because he never sounded so serious. He said that we have bad luck. He said that it was like water, that it’d pool up around us like a puddle if we stayed still. And I asked why, of course, because that was a confusing thing for him to say. 
And he said, and I’ll never ever forget this, “it’s in your blood.”
I think. Back then, the distinction between ‘your’ and ‘our’ was virtually nonexistent. And maybe, just maybe, my memory is faulty, and he didn’t switch from a collective pronoun to a singular one. I could be seeing ghosts that aren’t there, convincing myself of untruths to explain some of this. It could have been ‘your’, and it could have been ‘our’, but the point is the same no matter how I split it apart. 
I’ve got bad luck. It’s in my blood. I try not to think about that because I don’t want it to be my fault somehow, I don’t even know what I would do if it was. 
But I have to know.
II.
“Excuse me, are you Cheryll Bates?” you asked hopefully, standing at the side of a table where an older woman in a bright pink cardigan sat. Nose crinkled and mouth slightly open in the way only people of a certain age could mimic, she adjusted her blocky red glasses higher to peer up at you. The lenses magnified her small, dark eyes like a bug, not helping the discomfort you felt beneath her unwavering gaze as she scanned you from head to toe. 
“You’re the Macbeth girl?” she finally asked. It took you a moment to realize what she meant. Macbeth, your mother’s last name—a name you only learned of, along with the woman herself, a month previous.
“Uhm, yeah, that’s me,” you said, hoping you didn’t sound as immediately unsettled as you felt. “May I sit?” 
“Be a waste of time if you didn’t,” she said with a slight tinge of an accent, gesturing to the opposite seat with a plump hand. It was the wooden kind with a quilted cushion and long skirt, matching the borderline stifling cozy atmosphere of the cafe. The kind ripe with this musty, dusty, patchouli and tea leaf smell you associated with old women and antiques.
“Thank you for meeting with me,” you said as you sat down, anxiety making your movements awkward. Although Cheryll Bates wasn’t your blood relative, knowing you were related at all was surreal. Throughout your entire life, you’d never heard a single mention of family, of a mom or uncle or grandparents or even a stray cousin twice removed. You should have felt excited, and a part of you was, but you couldn’t stop messing with the cardboard sleeve on your tea, your eyes flitting around the small cafe every few seconds. 
The answers that had gotten you this far had only served to unravel the very fabric of your existence, but you sought them all the same. You had to. Dad used to say that knowing was often uncomfortable, but ignorance was an agony like no other. He said all sorts of wise things, although you learned recently that the truth was not one of them.  
Cheryll’s mouth worked like she was sucking on something, fine lines fanning out around her lips. The sluggishly swaying Tiffany lamp above cast her in an odd, unflattering light, her dark eyes that much more unnerving beneath the shadows. 
“I liked your mama, she was a sweet girl. How much did Indy tell you about her?” 
Indy, as in, your dad. The man who raised you, who cared for you. It was a nickname he had earned in school, apparently, after the titular adventurer and archeologist from an old movie.
“My dad never told me a single thing,” you said, trying not to sound too affected. If you thought about this all as some sort of research project, it was easier. If it wasn’t your life, you could view it dispassionately. So that’s what you tried to do. “I am… aware of what she did though.” 
“It was a terrible thing,” Cheryll said gravely. “Of course she’d already left you in Enbarr with Indy at that point, came home crying that she had a baby girl, that she couldn’t trust herself to even hold you. Nobody had any idea of why she was so upset, we thought she had lost her mind. And then your daddy came to try and bring her back and… well. I can’t imagine how a person could do such a thing.”
Something within you twisted in sympathy of that statement. Even reading an abstract report made your stomach churn. Self immolation as a means of murder suicide wasn’t very common, mostly because it wasn’t practical. The report had no answers for the hows and the whys, only dry facts.
“Do you think it was postpartum depression?” 
Again, Cheryll stared at you with that sour purse of her lips, almost like she was sizing you up. “It was that family of hers,” she said. “I’ll tell you straight, the Macbeths weren’t quite right. Not to say it was their fault, what happened to them, but I won’t glorify the dead, neither. I don’t believe in it. I never wanted my Liv to marry that boy, I knew only bad things would come of it.”
“What do you mean?” you asked. 
“Didn’t you read about what happened to them?” Cheryll asked, an edge of indignation in her voice. “One after another…” She didn’t finish that statement, closing her eyes to visibly, even theatrically, shudder. Then again, having seen the string of death certificates, you didn’t exactly blame her. “I went to a psychic when Liv told me she was getting married to that Macbeth boy, and do you know what they said? Don’t let it happen. But I did. I let her marry into that family, and I’ve had to live with that every day since.”  
“But none of it was on purpose, was it?” you asked cautiously. “The fire was an accident.” 
“An accident,” Cheryll scoffed. “An ‘accident’ that happened right after the two of them had a baby girl. Just like the ‘accident’ that killed your mama’s baby sister. Do you think what happened with your mama was an accident?”
“I thought,” you said slowly, trying to remain calm, wiping that thought from your head and your palms on your jean-clad thighs, “that my mother committed suicide.” 
“All that girl ever wanted was to be a mama. I’m telling you, there was something wrong with the Macbeths and she realized it too late. They were cursed, all of them and especially the girls.” Cheryll paused, contemplating her tea. “That’s why your parents met in the first place. Indy was doing research into the families involved with that tragedy in Derdriu and they were the only two he could find.” Cheryll took a sip, frowned, then continued in an even softer voice. “I s’pose your daddy must have been just as cursed as your mama, but I didn’t know him very well.”
“What tragedy?” you asked.
“The Rain of Blood, they call it.”
“I’ve never heard of that,” you said, getting out your diary to write it down. 
“Reign, not rain,” Cheryll said, peering at your notepad. “Like a king, reign.” 
You erased the word, rewriting it. “Is it a story, or something that happened?” 
“It happened,” Cheryll said. “He and your mama always had a laugh about that, said it was why they had such rotten luck.”
“Rotten luck,” you repeated under your breath, more to yourself than to her.
“They thought it was real funny,” Cheryll said, pulling you from your thoughts. “Indy scorned all the ghost stories, he said that it was a matter of history waiting to be uncovered. It seems like he changed his tune as soon as he saw what happened to them.” 
You thought about your dad who got itchy when you stayed in one place too long, looking over his shoulder like he was being chased by something you couldn’t see. You thought about the puddles of bad luck forming beneath your feet. 
“He might have,” you said, not wanting to think too hard about that. “Do you remember what he said happened? In this Reign of Blood, I mean.” 
Cheryll impatiently waved her hand. “You’d have to find a book or something, I couldn’t tell you other than that. The town burned down after. That’s why you’ve got Derdriu and Old Derdriu. They were connected before the incident, but Old Derdriu had to be completely rebuilt later.”
“So Old Derdriu is newer than Derdriu,” you said, unsure if you were understanding her correctly. 
“Oh, except for the ruins, they kept those,” she said, her head tilting as she remembered. “The castle from way back when Leicester had Kings and Dukes and the like. But I couldn’t tell you any more than that, I’ve never been.”
You wrote that down too, tapping the eraser against your lip as you contemplated all of this new information. Cheryll was drinking her tea, obviously wanting to finish this up. 
“Thank you so much for meeting with me, I really appreciate it,” you said. “Is there anything else you can think of about my dad or…?”
“I’m going to tell you what I wish I had told my daughter,” Cheryll said, looking at you head on. “Leave, now. Go spend the summer on a beach in Enbarr with other kids your age. There’s nothing for you here.”
You swallowed hard, nodding. “Yeah, I… Yeah. I’ll think about it, thank you.”  
III.
21st day of Verdant Moon
Being alone is worse than I thought it would be. Having to do everything by myself, figure out how to buy tickets and schedule stuff and all of that, it’s exhausting. But if I think about that too much I’ll cry and if I cry I won’t stop so all I can do is try to figure out what the hell any of this means. It has to mean something, doesn’t it? Or it’s all just insane nonsense and I’m the unfortunate product of a long line of nonsensical insanity, left to drift through this world with nothing but a payout from a trucking company and ghost stories from an old widow and some undiagnosed madness that was never treated because I had no idea I had a family history of mental illness because I was lied to, over and over again.  
I can’t think like that. 
Earlier, after I left that cafe, I remembered something. It’s weird to have all of these little memories popping up now, things that seemed so insignificant at the time. Maybe they are and I’m just trying to backfill information to explain all of the crazy things I’m learning about my dad and my family. I don’t know. I was just thinking about how during my first year of high school, my dad had a brief stint as a mechanic northwest in Elidure before working through the various little towns scattered around the old border between Adrestia and Faerghus as a construction worker—he even let me borrow the Indech branded pickup truck he’d gotten as a property manager on Lake Teutates to drive to my junior prom. The same truck where I got my first kiss playing spin the bottle with some people I was sort of friends with. I can’t even remember his name. It’s funny, almost. I remember that he tasted like the shitty booze we were all drinking and got way too slobbery and wore a purple tie and that I could see the Big Dipper right above his head but I don’t remember his name. Moving around so much, I guess, I never really bothered to remember things like that. After I graduated, dad and I left it all behind to spend a year on the Rhodos Coast. I liked it there. It was charming. But I always knew we wouldn’t be there long, dad got these twitchy sorts of tics when we stayed anywhere too long.
Anyway, the point is, I mentioned wanting to go east, to Gloucester or something because I heard they had mild summers, and he said no in a completely flat voice, nothing like I had ever heard from him. He didn’t even look me in the eye, just said no. We went to Gwenhwyvar pretty soon after that, and I didn’t bring it up again. Again, it could all be innocuous. It could all mean absolutely nothing. But I wonder.  What if it did? What if there was a reason he wouldn’t take me here? A real, true reason that didn’t have to do with the horrible things that happened to my family? If he seriously thought I was cursed, why didn’t he tell me? What was he hiding? Well, I’ll never know that.
I looked up the Reign of Blood and barely found anything, it’s all some witchy weird occult stuff and ghost stories. The castle itself is called El Dorado, and it’s this sort of icon of superstition, but especially the Reign of Blood which is used as an explanation for why so many people disappeared in the fire. People debate if it happened more than they discuss what might have actually taken place. A part of me thinks that Cheryll was just messing with me, or lying. I don’t know why she would, but it makes more sense than the alternative. Who am I to believe that somehow I’m involved with this huge conspiracy? People who are hurting make up all sorts of weird things to try and come to terms with their pain, I’m just feeding into that. 
I should leave. If dad didn’t think it was a good idea to be here, maybe it’s not. I should move on, that’s what he’d want, right? Keep on moving, never look back, chase the horizon. 
I’ll leave. There’s no point in any of this, it’ll just keep hurting. I’ll leave. Tomorrow. 
IV.
Before you left the city, destination TBD—but that was a lie, wasn’t it? You knew exactly where you were going, you just didn’t admit it because you knew it was stupid and the mark was the last person to admit they’d been conned—you stopped at your mother’s childhood home. It was a white farmhouse style place on the very edge of what used to be a suburban neighborhood but was now quickly giving into the urban sprawl. The Macbeths hadn’t lived there for over twenty years. You could see each of those years weathered onto the house. It was where your aunt died as a young girl. How? You weren’t so sure. Cheryll mentioned illness, but the official record only gave the date of her passing. That was a few years before your grandparents followed. 
If you expected to feel something upon seeing the place, you were disappointed. Not even a twinge of disquiet that’d come with seeing a place possibly haunted by the dead. 
You felt nothing other than a vague curiosity, a pang of regret, or melancholy. Never, not once in your entire life, had you lived in an actual house. The longest you had ever stayed in one place was Enbarr, where most of your earliest memories took place. And then there were a few years in Mozghuz where your dad taught history, and another few in a small Varley town where he worked as a consultant for a local museum. But those were apartments and townhouses and just you and him. No family, few friends. A life of transience, of existing ephemerally, always in a state of maybe or going or somewhere else.
A tingling sense of unease settled through you right then, although not because of the entirely benign house with which you were having an intense stare down. Why were you here? Not only at this long abandoned home, but in Leicester, in Edgaria. What were you searching for other than ghosts? Were you seriously going to believe in the superstition of an old woman who went to psychics and still grieved for her daughter? Bad things happened, sure, but that was true in a lot of families. That didn’t mean anything, you just wanted to assign meaning retroactively because of your pain.
And it did hurt. It always hurt. You lived in a state of in-between and those gaps were yours to fill all by yourself, overflowing with the pain you pretended you didn’t feel. Staring at the old house, you were acutely aware of the in-between. If you closed your eyes, you could imagine him standing next to you, filling up that empty space. 
“Are you lost, Mr. Jones?” you would tease. “I doubt you’ll find the Lost Ark all the way out here.” 
He would groan and ask who told you about that embarrassing nickname, and you would tell him that it was-
Well, you wouldn’t. Because if he hadn’t died, you would never know Mrs. Bates or that you weren’t actually his daughter or that his friends called him Indy. 
The sound of rattling plastic on concrete startled you out of your increasingly dangerous thoughts. The next door neighbor was dragging in his trash bins. He was an older man, his face wrinkled and tan like leather, his posture a little hunched. 
“Excuse me,” you called, trotting over to him. It was a long shot, but better than nothing.
“Huh?” he asked, looking at you with his thick, bushy eyebrows furrowed. 
“Sorry to bother you,” you said. “I was just wondering how long you’ve lived here?”
“How long?” he clarified, his big eyebrows shooting up. “Huh. Gotta be fifty years, give or take.” He laughed, a dry, crinkly sound. “Too long, I say.”
“Did you know the family that lived here about twenty-five or so years ago?” you asked, gesturing to the big white house. “The Macbeths.” 
As soon as you said the name, he tensed up, his friendly demeanor freezing. “Why do you want to know?” 
You raised your hands innocently, surprised by the instant reaction. “I’m their… their granddaughter,” you told him. “I don’t mean to trouble you at all, I’m only curious.” 
His cheeks puffed before he let out a big breath, that defensive posture shifting. “I hate to say that I can’t tell you much. They were always a real private family, kept to themselves mostly. It caused one heck of a scandal, the way everything ended. Don’t s’pose it sat right with anyone, not after-” He cut himself off, thin lips drawing inwards. “No, it’s not my business.”    
“Please, I just want to know,” you said, still placating. “Anything you can tell me, I’d appreciate.” 
He nodded, but his eyes were still cautious. “I’ll tell you this, the missus was very unwell,” he said. “When the youngest daughter died, people spread all kinds of nasty rumors about her involvement. Completely outrageous, what they said. But towards the end, she wasn’t quite right in the head, always talking about some curse. It was no thing ‘sides the agony of a grieving parent, but people took it as an admission of guilt.” 
“It was all an accident though, wasn’t it?” you asked. “Nobody was at fault.” 
“Exactly. If you want my honest opinion, the family had bad luck. There’s nothing more to be said, what with all those little ‘uns involved.” 
Bad luck. The sun beat down on your skin, sweat beading up on your spine and hairline, but you shivered, casting a sidelong glance at the house as if it was somehow watching you, as if talking about these things was dangerous in any way, as if there was a looming manifestation of a bad luck over your shoulder, drooling in anticipation of getting you now that you were the last Macbeth left. 
“I see,” you said, forcing a smile for the man. “Thank you so much for your time and honesty, I really appreciate it.” 
“Of course, have a good day, miss.” 
Act 2
“Who now is plotting how he may seduce Thee also from obedience, that with him, Bereav’d of happiness, thou may’st partake His punishment, eternal misery”
I.
Essar, Hanneman, “Final Look at El Dorado.” 
Excerpt from National Geographic, Vol. 162 
September, 1991
“It was with great honor that I accepted the final invitation to visit El Dorado, the famed yet forgotten home of Leicester’s Duke, and eventual king, Claude von Riegan. The massive, not to mention opulent, castle sits in the cradle between Riegan and Albrecht, kept safe by the steep basalt wall to the south and acres of privately owned forest. For all of its grandeur and majesty, these gilded halls hide dark secrets, secrets that may never be truly known. Historians quibble over the voracity surrounding the chilling Reign of Blood. Was it, as many say, a tragic plague sweeping the population? Could it have been a cult formed following a period of famine? Or, as some fear, does this golden fortress hide a terrifying past of human sacrifice and Faustian bargains? These secrets are what has led to the permanent closure of El Dorado and…
“…For my tour, and indeed, the last ever tour of El Dorado, I was given a set of very specific instructions for the sake of my safety and the conservation of the historic site. The first demanded I stay close to my guide. The second instructed me to only enter rooms filled with natural sunlight. This, I was told, was the surest method of determining which rooms were safe. Truly, health concerns are as much a part of the closure as anything else, it is simply too risky to maintain. I was…
“...Despite the stories of prowling monsters and dangerous curses, nothing came of the tour, save for these beautiful photos I was able to capture in the hopes of memorializing what was once a golden beacon of wealth, nobility, and power. As of today, El Dorado is entirely inaccessible. Trespassers will not only be gambling with their own safety should they wish to enter, they also risk severe jail time and steep fines. As I…”
II.
The Sagittarius Express left Edgaria at nine the morning, and it would arrive in Derdriu around eight that night. Named after the starry archer, it was a fairly straight shot connecting the two major cities. It would be shorter in a car, but you couldn’t bring yourself to get in one of those. After spending the night in Derdriu proper, you would take the gondola up to Old Derdriu.
Settled into your compartment with only two other people—and one of them had been passed out cold ever since you boarded—you continued your research. In general, you were poorly versed in Leicester history. You knew there had been something going on with one of their dukes wresting power away from the nobles to consolidate power and drive out the domineering Church of Seiros, going so far as to annex some of Faerghus’ land, but not necessarily any details beyond that. 
When you looked into the Reign of Blood and Old Derdriu, the castle El Dorado showed as the first result. It was the only structure that remained when the rest of Old Derdriu was razed to the ground. Those were the ruins Cheryll mentioned, the home of Claude von Riegan, duke turned king. Information about the event was sparse. Even when you did find information about El Dorado or the Reign of Blood, to say there was discourse surrounding it was an understatement. And that was assuming you could find historical facts rather than ghost stories. None of this was helped by the fact that, a hundred or so years before the Reign of Blood, King Claude von Riegan mysteriously disappeared. Such a tantalizing yet inexplicable vanishing act gave rise to stories about his occult dealings. Some people said he was cursed by the goddess Sothis for his vendetta against the Church of Seiros. Since El Dorado was his home, his story muddied the waters when it came to researching the Reign of Blood.
As the train pulled out of the station, you pulled up one of the more promising sources you had found: a Xerox of an old Life magazine article penned by some old guy named Hanneman Essar. The quality was terrible, compressed and squeezed dry of detail, but looking at the photos of the once grand castle made you more certain than ever that it was important. Something about the place drew you in, even as you glanced over your shoulder for the cold claws of whatever bad luck your father warned you of. There was no point in asking yourself why, or if you should or shouldn’t—you already knew you shouldn’t—because your course was set in stone. Carved out long before you arrived in Leicester. 
Those sorts of thoughts, the ones that toyed with the idea of fate or destiny, were entertained in the back of your head, the place where you pushed every other unpleasant or undesirable or stupid thought. 
It was better to focus on facts. 
“Are you interested in El Dorado, young lady?” the man sitting next to you asked. You slowly lowered your tablet, looking up at the speaker. A mustached blond man with blue eyes, his eyebrow quirked curiously. “It’s rare to see someone your age taking an interest in history.” 
That bristled you a bit, both his pompous tone and the implication. Even when your father worked other jobs, his fascination with history never waned, and it was the only area of your education that never faltered from constantly moving schools.  
“It’s an interesting place, don’t you think?” you asked in a measured voice. 
“Yes, it most certainly is,” he agreed. “A place most ripe with curiosity and fiction, a paradise for the easily fooled tourists they usher in.”
“What do you mean?” you asked. 
“I should think my meaning is clear. The people in Old Derdriu spread ridiculous stories about El Dorado to stimulate their tourism, all for a place that they have shut off to the public,” he said. “As for the source of my interest, I am Acheron Phlegethon. I don’t doubt you’ve heard of me. I’ve debunked several famous hoaxes across Fodlan, including the fiction of Shambhala’s subterranean civilization. Now I have set my sights upon the legendary vampires of El Dorado.”
“Vampires?” you asked, your eyes widening. 
Acheron squinted at you suspiciously. “I thought you said you had done your research.”
“I only just started,” you said, shrugging in an attempt to hide your ignorance. “I guess that explains why it’s called the Reign of Blood.” 
“Bah, a fiction,” Acheron said, waving his hand. “There is no evidence of the cult they claim existed, let alone of the vampire they insist was the leader. Tell me, if the town or its people were truly cursed, why did retribution stop with a single fire that could easily be attributed to a natural cause? The deaths are the same, nothing more than a result of the violent beasts that are known to prowl that area. As I said, they sell these stories to bring tourists into their town. It really is the most insidious scheme, one that I will not tolerate. My next book will be the most comprehensive look at this scam to date, it’s sure to be a hit.”
“How do you know?” you asked. “Do you have any evidence that it’s a lie?” 
“Evidence?” he asked, baffled. “Why, common sense. There is no such thing as vampires or curses, need I any better evidence than that?”
“Yes.”   
Acheron’s eyes narrowed further, his mustache twitching. “It seems you are too young to be sensible. I recommend you continue to study historical facts instead of believing in superstitious bunk.” He paused, his head tilting. “If you give me your email address, I can add you to the preorder list for my next book. I’ve no doubt that you would find it most edifying.”  
“No, thank you,” you told him. 
“Hm, very well. I shan’t disturb you further,” Acheron said, pulling a pillow around his neck and a set of headphones from his bag. “Oh, and good luck with your research, young lady.” 
“Thanks, you too,” you told him, although he was already pulling on an eye mask and probably couldn’t hear you. 
You turned away from the man to look out the window, your thoughts whirling. If you believed that your family could be cursed, couldn’t you also believe in vampires? The logical side of your brain said no, emphatically rejecting the notion because it was ridiculous. Utterly insane. 
Something in your gut said otherwise. The tight lead ball of anxiety burning in your stomach, the thing drawing you towards Old Derdriu despite everything that screamed at you to stay away. You looked again at the distorted photos of El Dorado, trying to imagine it in its prime. It must have been a sight to behold, unlike anything you had ever seen before. 
It didn’t matter what you did or did not believe. It was just like you told Acheron, you needed evidence first. Rubbing a hand over your face, you returned to your reading. 
III.
24th day of Verdant Moon
I had a dream last night. Sometimes I get these wicked nightmares which I guess makes sense considering what happened but last night it wasn’t a nightmare which almost makes it worse because when I woke up crying, it wasn’t just because I was alone, but because I feel so alone that it hurts, it hurts bad. People aren’t made to be alone. I don’t know how to be anything else than a set, a pair. It was always just me and him and now that he’s gone I have a gaping hole in my chest and I think that if I chase down answers it’ll mean something but I know it won’t, I’ll wake up just as alone as I did this morning. 
My brain conjured this idea of a man just to taunt me, I think. A beautiful man who looked at me like he knew me, and I knew him even though I don’t. I woke up the second before our hands touched and just like that we (we, us) were out in the nothing of Fodlan’s great empty flatlands and there was a high wind warning and a great big semi-truck with Ernest Shipping painted on the side and a “rate my driving” sticker on the back. And then there were squealing tires and creaking metal and crunching glass and so much noise from all sides as the world closed in around me, the cab of dad’s vintage SUV giving way to make room for something else crudely forcing itself through. The wind was screaming, and so was I. But dad wasn’t, he didn’t make any noise as his body got crushed. Dead on impact, the first responders said. And yet, after I wriggled out of the mangled mess of what must have been a car—moments before it caught fire—I was relatively unharmed. A miracle, they said. Lucky, they told me. If dad hadn’t swerved the way he did, it would have been me who died. And it’s not even like I’m traumatized, right? I can write about this all I want, I told it to the police and the lawyer and everyone about it and it’s all fine, I’m perfectly fine, I’m well adjusted and alone and accursed, and I want to scream and be angry and cry until I’m all dried up but nothing, nothing is going to make it stop, all I can do is chase down this fantasy and shove all of this down because if this is what sanity feels like, I don’t want to be crazy. 
In that dream, the man I saw had beautiful eyes. Blue green, like a sea breeze or something else equally poetic and reckless, surrounded by these thick, dark eyelashes. Now that I’m awake, all I can do is ascribe meaning to the meaningless, but it was like he was inviting me to him. I’ll be in Old Derdriu tomorrow and I’m probably just losing it but I keep thinking that it's where I need to be. 
IV.
Old Derdriu was more or less what you expected. Small, quaint, and beautiful. It had the unique mixture of mountainous charm and oceanic appeal, giving the fresh air a green, salty weight. You spent the first day getting a measure of the place, glad for the mild weather. There was some displeasure when you realized one Mr. Phlegethon had checked into a room right next door to your own the day before—he even attempted to catch you in another conversation before you excused yourself—but you were quickly absorbed into your preliminary attempts at researching the small town.  
Although all of it was only a prelude to, or maybe a distraction from, what you truly wanted. After lunch, you rented a pretty metallic bicycle at a place on main street. It fit the scenery, looking a little dated with its tall handlebars and a basket. An uncomfortable reference considering why you were here. All the same, hi-yo silver away, you left town to follow the northeast highway as per the directions on the map you bought earlier. Unfortunately, you quickly realized what you had already known to be true. El Dorado was exactly as inaccessible as Mr. Hanneman explained in his old article. The dirt road turn off was gated and locked, the rusty fence adorned with a large, angry “PRIVATE PROPERTY” sign. Even the famous golden tower could not be seen through the overwhelming barricade of trees.
Standing there on the empty road, the bike propped between your legs and dust and the thick scent of pine filling your lungs, unease worked through you. It came upon you slowly, and then all at once. The world was telling you to leave. Winds quieted, birds hushed, even the sunlight dimmed a shade. But something else beckoned you, calling out so vividly you felt yourself lurch forward a step, the bicycle wheels turning a notch. A wild and insane part of your mind was prepared to abandon it right there and break past the intimidating tree line, damn the consequences or legality. You even thought you could probably find El Dorado yourself, no matter how deeply it was buried, that its call would lead you directly to it. Blood following blood, an innate tracker buried in your DNA that had gotten you this far.
To spite the heavy silence, you laughed at how ridiculous that thought was. A wild, uncomfortable laugh. The trees swallowed the sound whole. 
Turning around, you rode back into town. Only a part of you truly understood the choice you made while standing there in the stillness of the forest, although you knew absolutely that it was the only possible ending. 
V.
28th day of Verdant Moon
I looked it up. People can create false memories, it’s a symptom of trauma or mental illness, our brains are suggestable and weak and we just make stuff up by mixing real things with other information. Other information, like all of this weird shit I’ve been reading about El Dorado and Old Derdriu and the original Lady Macbeth and everything. Witch, wiccan, whatever. Vampires aren’t enough, curses aren’t enough, why not just add in a witch? Why the hell not. 
The dreams I’ve been having, I think it’s something like that. Constructed memories of El Dorado and that same guy, the one with the pretty eyes. It’s weird though, maybe normal, they’re not bad dreams. Just about the castle, and him. It’s a break from feeling like I’m going to suffocate on all of this. They don’t feel real, exactly, just…
I don’t know, there’s no point in dwelling on it, I’m probably doing more damage by thinking about it so hard because then I just remember how alone I am and start tearing up and it’s so stupid. This journal is going to be used as a case study one day. People go wild for crazy women, right? There’s a whole cast of them flowing through my veins.   
VI.
Acheron’s premise that the people in Old Derdriu hoped to make money off of the notoriety of their past was ridiculous. Questions regarding El Dorado were answered bluntly, but icily. Most people seemed like they wanted nothing to do with the dark history, especially not to make a profit off of it. You could say that you understood and respected it, but your frustration only mounted the more you realized how inaccessible the truth was. Your entire life had been built on convenient ignorance of unsavory history, and here you were.
Again.   
That was fine. Your dad faced all sorts of difficulty in his historical research, you remembered him complaining about it on more than one occasion. So you did the thing that wasn’t committing felony trespass and went to the library to gather information. Research. 
The library in Old Derdriu was easy to track down, within a short ride from the inn. What you didn’t expect was what you would find. In the front, it was fairly typical. The reading area and magazine shelves and receptionist desk, even a few computers along the wall. But, behind the front desk was what you could only describe as a tower of bookshelves. The unconventional arrangement had you craning your neck to look up, shocked at how the shelves expanded upwards for what looked like three floors with twisting stairs and platforms providing access to the collection. Every place that could store a book, had a book. You couldn’t even begin to imagine how they were organized.  
A lone girl sat behind the desk in front of the tower of books, the only other person in the front. Her name plate read Flayn, and she twirled one of her long curls around her finger as she idly flipped through a magazine. When you approached, she looked up with a big smile.
“Hello!”
“This is… the library?” you asked. 
“Yes, it is. Welcome,” Flayn responded sweetly. “If you need assistance finding anything, I would be more than happy to help.” 
“I would really appreciate that,” you said, tearing your eyes from the tower of books to look at her directly. “I’m looking for books about the history of this town, specifically El Dorado. I’m not particular, whatever seems the most informative.” 
She blinked, her smile lapsing somewhat. “Of course,” she finally said, standing up. “If you take a seat at a table over there, I will see what I can find.” 
“Thank you so much,” you said with a nod. Slowly, admiring the scope of the library, you walked over to one of the tables and sat down. While you waited, you pulled out your tablet to continue flipping through websites that had mention of El Dorado. This one was old, the kind with a black background and dark red cursive font. There was very little to actually be learned, it was a ghost story that told a risque tale of blood sacrifices and a sex cult.
It was all ridiculous, of course, but one line gave you trouble, made your stomach turn uneasily.
Why was it fire? The author wrote. Not, I think, to rid the town of some undead threat. After all, the vampire was hiding away in El Dorado. No, they chose fire to burn the witches.
“Excuse me,” somebody said, calling your attention away from the unsettling words and up to the narrowed green eyes of an older man.
“Yes?” you asked, trying not to look guilty beneath his piercing glare. You hadn’t done anything, but something about him made you feel as if you had, you just didn’t know what it was yet.  
“From your request, I can only assume you are researching El Dorado,” he said, his voice as stiff and stony as his demeanor. 
“I am.”
“And what, may I ask, is your reason for conducting such research?” 
You floundered for a moment, caught off guard and confused. Finally, you shook your head and shrugged. “Curiosity, I guess,” you said.
“Are you in any way associated with a man who calls himself Acheron Phlegethon?”
“What?” you asked, confusion replacing the discomfort. “No, not at all.” 
“Are you sure?” he pushed.
“Well, I’ve met him. He tried to sell me his books,” you said, frowning. 
“Are you sure that’s all?” 
You realized pretty quickly what this man was actually asking, what he wanted to hear. “I’m here for… personal reasons,” you explained. “This place has meaning to me. Er, it had meaning to… someone very important to me.” 
“I see,” the man said. You could practically see the calculations going on behind his stare, your words reduced down to ones and zeroes as he analyzed them.  
“Is that okay?” you asked. 
“Yes, of course. I would never withhold knowledge from the genuinely curious. I suggest you start with this one,” he told you, setting down a large book bound in green. “It offers the most comprehensive history of Old Derdriu. These,” he set down two more books, “are supplementary material. While I cannot vouch for their factual integrity, they provide further insight as to what researchers have discovered about Old Derdriu.” 
“Thank you,” you said, pulling the books towards yourself, almost afraid he would take them away. There was that feeling, that possessive need. A craving, even.  
His lips thinned out as he considered you, his icy expression locked in place. “I ask that you do not cause any trouble while you’re here. The people who live here have suffered enough harassment.”
“I understand, honestly,” you said emphatically, although his warning made your stomach clench and you weren’t lying, but was it really the truth that you weren’t going to ‘cause trouble’? Did you mean that? Could you? 
VII.
[The following text are segments taken from letters found in the attic of a Derdriu home with other antiques. Forensic analysis can date them as being contemporaneous with the burning of Old Derdriu, however much of the contents have suffered such severe decay that entire sentences and paragraphs are illegible. Due to this, it is impossible to determine the author or glean any further context. Notes have been added in an attempt to clarify certain points, but without support, all researchers can offer is speculation.]
“My dear sister...discovery, but I fear I will not…seems that my death is inevitable, all I can do is…she offered me a chance, a slim hope that is buried beneath the earth…” 
“...sister… bad news… if something good came of it, does that make it right?... better left buried lest we… believe in such stories?... truly be Claude? [this is possibly a reference to Claude von Riegan. The mysterious circumstances surrounding his disappearance have long been a point of interest for those interested in the occult—See page 127 for further information]... put my trust in legend, or… risk my soul for… shall sleep, tomorrow we will return to the site and search for…”
“…I know nothing of the truth, it is obscured by… can trust, she claims… of the Agarthans [The “Agarthans'' are another popular yet unproven occult group based upon an ancient civilization. Artifacts supposedly associated with them were found in El Dorado]... and Lady Macbeth hopes to… blood and soul, I…” 
“...forgive me… of my selfishness and hubris. I am frightened… a blight upon us… she will suffer the curse of Seiros [The goddess of the Church of Seiros, who has historically been used as an occult figure following the purge of faith from Liecester]... and yet it is too late…” 
“He is awake. The Reign of Blood has begun.” 
[This line is one of the most contested within these letters. Since it is on its own page, with this single preserved sentence written in a shaky hand, there are those who argue it was included in order to bolster the cult and supernatural narrative surrounding El Dorado and the burning of Old Derdriu. If these letters are accurate, it is the last communication documented from any of the 257 people who disappeared, likely perished in the fire that reduced the town to ash.]      
VIII.
“Hold on a moment, young lady,” a familiar voice called. You paused, turning to face Acheron as he hurried down the hall, stopping you from entering your room. 
“Yes?” you asked, more than a little suspicious. With the key in the lock to your room, at least you had a swift method of escape. 
Acheron came to a stop, dramatically swiping at his shiny forehead. “I have a proposition for you.”
Your jaw dropped a little at the blunt statement. “I-I don’t think-”
“We have the same goal here, no?” Acheron asked, steamrolling over your obvious conclusion without the slightest shred of self awareness. “To discover the truth behind the infamous El Dorado. And yet we are waylaid by these pesky townsfolk at every turn. I have had enough of it, I say. It’s time to take action.” 
“What do you mean?” you asked hesitantly. 
He looked around the empty hallway before leaning forward, lowering his voice conspiratorially. “I have it on good authority that the castle’s security is not as good as they would have us believe. If one knows how to circumvent it, that is.” 
You considered him for a long moment, chewing on your lip and refusing to openly indulge your immediate excitement. “What are you saying?” 
“Isn’t it obvious?” Acheron asked. “I would see the famed El Dorado for myself.” 
“It’s dangerous to go inside, people get sick,” you said.
“Bah. The stories about any sort of lingering sickness within its walls are wildly exaggerated. The local youths brag about having visited as a rite of passage. If those scamps can make it in and out, I see no reason to believe I should be capable of anything less. I, of course, am extending the offer to you only out of courtesy. You hunger for the truth as desperately as I, do you not?” 
You considered him for a long moment, wondering if this was some sort of setup. 
“When do you intend to go?” you finally asked.
“Tomorrow night,” Acheron told you. “I would quit this dismal town as quickly as possible. All I need is good footage and photographs of the inside.” 
“Do you have the right gear?” 
“Gear?” he asked, frowning. 
Of course it would have been too much to think that a man like him would think this through. “Yes, gear. Flashlights, a map, the right kind of clothes—”
“Is all that really necessary?” he asked, cutting you off. 
“Have you ever done something like this?” you asked, omitting the fact that you hadn’t. But, unlike Acheron, you had common sense and some experience with night hiking. “You can’t just rush in unprepared, you’ll get hurt.” 
“Hm.” Acheron’s mustache twitched and you could tell he was thinking up some way to argue with you. But, eventually, reason won out. “Very well, I shall procure whatever is necessary tomorrow.” 
“If you buy this stuff town, they’ll know what you’re planning.” 
Acheron’s eyebrows furrowed. “Then I shall make a trip into Derdriu and return in the evening, we can meet at the road leading to El Dorado upon my return.” 
You wanted to argue, to deny your interest on the basis of not wanting to break the law. The risk factor was far too high, you were a fool to go along with it.
“I found a book today that has the plans for the inside, I’ll find a way to make a copy of them,” you said, anxiety and anticipation going wild in your gut because you knew how wrong this was, but you also knew that it was what was bound to happen from the start, something you couldn’t change or control. “Let me give you money, I’ll make a list of what we’ll need.” 
Act 3
"The monstrous sight
Strook them with horror backward but far worse
Urged them behind: headlong themselves they threw
Down from the verge of Heav'n" 
I.
31st day of Verdant Moon
This will only end in the hallowed halls of El Dorado, an owed price for the folly of Lady Macbeth, damning her bloodline, bringing a curse to us all. 
Yeah. Like this is some sort of fucking movie or something. I wonder if insanity is a legal defense for criminal trespass. I don’t think I’m insane, but isn’t that what crazy people all say? Yes officer, I only broke into this blocked off historical site because I had a dream where a beautiful man told me to. Also, incidentally, I had to figure out if I’m cursed or not so I can decide if I’m the cause of my dad’s death. Oh, and you might be interested to know that my great great great great whatever grandmother was a witch and vampires might be real.
It’s foolproof. 
II.
Acheron was right that sneaking into El Dorado was easy. Too easy. Disturbingly easy. After you got past the gate, there was only a security booth to creep past which should have forced you into the view of security cameras, but a convenient hole in the fence circumvented that obstacle. If you were even slightly more worried about getting caught, or maybe slightly less desperate to see inside, you would have given up right then and there on the grounds that breaking and entering shouldn’t have been as simple as ducking through some trees and making a tense, but relatively short, trek through the woods.
All sense left you when you broke the clearing into what used to be the grand lawn of El Dorado, the vague threat of getting caught by angry landowners falling far to the wayside as you stood in front of the grand majesty of King Claude von Riegan’s personal castle, staring down the centuries old castle with equal parts trepidation and excitement. 
Other than the cicadas and frogs and slight wind, the night was very quiet. Acheron fiddled with his camera, getting ready to take footage of the inside. All you had to potentially take photos with was your phone, although you weren’t inclined to gather evidence of your crime. It was enough to watch, to look, to commit this sight to memory. 
And what a sight it was. Nothing like you had ever seen, except in dreams that were not dreams but you didn’t dare call memories. Overgrown with thick, possessive greenery and fallen into a state of dull disrepair, the castle was truly a breathtaking spectacle, the years of ruin only added to the sense of tragic mystery. It was nothing like the stout fortresses of the west, or the elaborate Imperial complexes in the south. Terrible with its jagged maw of an entrance, the intimidating golden tower looming above. Beautiful, the result of long lost artistry. Foreboding and alluring. 
No longer were you looking over your shoulder out of paranoia, but staring down each window and shadow of the castle’s aged, inscrutable countenance for some sign of the life you could practically feel thrumming from within. But, even suffering from the hyperactive state of distress, you knew you couldn’t leave. It wasn’t interest or curiosity, it was a fixation, an urge, a compulsion. 
You had to go inside. 
You had to get away.
“Wait, before I forget-” You pulled out the set of walkie talkies you had brought. They were the ones you and your dad used when you went hiking. You didn’t want to think of that. “Testing, testing, one two three.” Your voice, crinkling through the static, exited the other walkie talkie. 
“What is that?” Acheron asked, raising a thin eyebrow. 
“Walkie talkies,” you said, handing him the second. “In case we get separated somehow. There’s no cell service out here.” 
“Do you intend on making a private excursion?” he asked.
“No, but…” you looked at El Dorado, uneasiness once again sinking through your gut. It was as if the castle itself was watching you, the eyeless windows winking in the moonlight. “Just in case.” 
“Hm.” Acheron clipped the walkie talkie onto his belt, and so you did you. It was too bulky for your little sling bag. “Well then, after you.” 
“What?”
“You have had more time to familiarize yourself with the layout, it’s only natural that you should lead the way.” 
You wondered if Acheron was scared. It was difficult to tell if he was any more pale than usual, and he wore the same blustery confidence as usual. It didn’t matter. If he got scared and bolted, you would do this alone. You were getting used to that, right?  
“Okay,” you said. You weren’t scared. Maybe you felt a little nervous. But you weren’t scared. 
Staying vigilant for any strange movement or sounds, you ascended the cracked, overgrown steps, telling yourself over and over that you were not afraid. There were no such things as vampires, ghosts, or curses. And if there were, you would know for yourself. Answers. You would get answers. 
The large door was mostly intact, but it was stuck in a perpetual state of half-open. Almost like an invitation. A horror cliche. There was a pinch in your bladder and your heart thudded too heavily in your chest and the animal part of your brain didn’t want to breach the shadows and go inside. You were propelled not of your own free will, but of some existential force that tugged you forward. Step by step by step until you were inside the breezeway, the central entrance hall of El Dorado. 
The general plan that the two of you had discussed before sneaking into the private estate was to get into the Golden Hall, the three story vaulted ballroom off of the northern wing. It had been the jewel of the gilded paradise of El Dorado, but nobody had seen it for decades because of the infection that supposedly filled the inside of the castle. The path there would take you through the breezeway, the atrium, the courtyard, the pleasure plaza, and the dining room. Not into the heart of El Dorado, but deep into its rotted guts. 
A very quiet, but incredibly persistent, part of your mind pushed you there with the hushed notion that it was where your dreams took place. You had to confirm for yourself that it was completely different in real life, that your mind was making things up. Even if you gleaned no further insight from this misguided exertion, settling that fact would go a long way in convincing you once and for all that you weren’t cursed, just a little mad. At least one of those problems could be solved with medication.  
Broken glass littered the breezeway, hidden like little jewels within piles of leaves and refuse and the broken bits of castle that had wilted to the ground. You tried to imagine El Dorado’s beauty in its prime, shining gold and inviting, sunshine filtering in through the dome ceiling and high windows, wind playfully teasing the long curtains. But you couldn’t, it was too dark. Darker than you might have thought, darker than the thickest section of the woods, so dark that the places outside of the range of your ThruNite seemed to be physically encroaching shadows rather than void of light. 
Hanneman had been told to only go into rooms where the light touched, that it was the only way to stay safe, but that didn’t seem factually sound, did it? Surely that wasn’t the most accurate method of determining which areas were safe. The only thing that actually feared sunlight, if myths and legends were to be believed, were vampires. There was no sunlight now, and you doubted vampires feared LED’s. 
Gripping your light in a sweaty fist, you forced yourself forward, the ground crunching beneath your boots. The terrible, heavy dread got worse with each step. It sat like a weight right behind your sternum, beating behind your eye. The other part of the feeling, the insidious part, was the familiarity. 
Bad. Bad. Bad. 
You wanted to explain the feeling as nothing more than animalistic paranoia and some malignant fear of the dark, but it made the fine hairs on the back of your neck stand on end, your breathing picking up. All across the breezeway—throughout most of the castle, really—balconies lined the halls and rooms. You couldn’t see what was above, there was no light coming in, not even diffused moonlight. Somebody could have been watching from above and you’d never know. 
Keep going. It was fine. Everything was fine. 
“I told you that this place was safe,” Acheron said, startling you. “If it weren’t, this level of upkeep would be impossible. I have little doubt that they hire people to ensure the roof doesn’t cave in for occasions just like this.”
 You exhaled, looking around with that thought in mind. He had a point, the place did seem a little too well maintained for the number of years that had passed. Then again, maybe it was just good construction. Or maybe something that still lived here. Something ancient, something immortal.  
The two of you left the breezeway, entering the main atrium hall. Hanneman had featured many many photos of this room in his article; he had been fascinated by the intricately carved stonework. It was too dark to see much of that now. In fact, you very badly wanted to get out of the atrium as soon as you entered it because of how unnervingly dark it was. Two tiers of balcony circled around the ground floor, shadows lurking ominously right behind what was left of the railing. Every little sound echoed, rippling through the motionless air. High above, a chandelier caught the shine of your flashlights, moving with some breeze you couldn’t feel.  
Something made a sound, a scuffling. To your right, on the stairs. You flicked your flashlight to it quickly, your hands shaking with adrenaline. 
“Did you hear that?” you asked breathlessly, nervously holding the light on the steps as if to keep them from moving. But there was nothing, just the large stone staircase and decaying walls and long-abandoned artistry memorialized and forgotten in some old Life magazine article.   
“Hear what?” Acheron asked. 
You exhaled harshly, looking away from the empty stairs and kicking yourself for being so jumpy. It could just be a stray animal. That’s what you told yourself. Rats, racoons, birds, any number of things could have made El Dorado their new home. 
“Nothing.” 
There was some relief when you entered the courtyard, even if the scent of overbearing foliage and vivid green rot was nearly suffocating. At least there was more air, and you could see the stars twinkling above. Full, or almost full, the moon draped the open space in silvery light. Ignoring the overgrown shrubbery, flowers, and grass, you looked around at the balconies wrapping around the second floor. The construction of El Dorado was almost made for someone wanting to spy on guests. Or intruders. Acheron was talking to the camera but you weren’t really listening, too busy focusing to hear any sign of movement, trying to find what was making you so uneasy.
Vampires in El Dorado. Lurking in the dark, in the moonlight, waiting for ignorant fools to wander in. A missing king, a goddess’s curse, a burning witch. The Reign of Blood. You could almost smell it, the tangy iron of blood and the thick smoke of a town burning to the ground.
“Are you coming?” Acheron called. 
You shook your head in an attempt to cast out those thoughts before scurrying to catch up, passing the large stone fountain that had once been the featured centerpiece of the courtyard before the ripe overgrowth took over. The standout piece was a large, intricately carved deer. Once, it must have been a magnificent beast, but now its head was cracked in half, the prongs of one set of antlers sticking out of a murky film covering the stagnant water settled in the basin. Something dark grew over the broken statue, starting on its fragmented head and dripping down to give the gruesome illusion of blood. It watched you pass with the remaining stone eye, forever frozen in a proud, alert stance.
A breeze trembled throughout the courtyard. The castle taking in a breath. You shivered, pointedly forcing your gaze forward.  
Acheron lagged behind to force you to take the lead under the pretense of messing with his camera, leaving you to enter the so-called pleasure plaza first. Careful to not get caught by the jagged row of broken glass and wooden teeth attempting to bar your entrance, you stepped into the decaying mouth of El Dorado’s recreation wing. This was the place where Leicester’s elite once came to enjoy themselves, a yawning space that time had seen to shambles. Because of the many doorways and hiding spots, this room was even more unnerving than the atrium. You would have to cross it to get where you needed to go. 
If you were being entirely honest, you weren’t sure you had any desire to see the Golden Hall anymore. Rather, you weren’t sure it was worth the stress of getting there. Considering the unreasonable fear you felt going through areas you knew to be safe, you worried what you might find in a place nobody had seen for so long, worried about what secrets were better left to die. And that pulsing, pounding, beating of familiarity just kept getting worse, harder, closer. Louder. 
You needed to get out.
You needed to know. 
Inhaling the sweet scent of rot and age, you continued onward, your footsteps hollow against the sinking floor. Each sweep of your flashlight caused the shadows to move, to crawl away from you as if to hide. It hit each object without any subtlety, erasing details and making the darkness that much darker.
You forced yourself to carry on. Carefully, cautiously, unafraid. That’s what you kept telling yourself. Show no fear and all that. Although, that began with the presumption that there was something around to see your fear. 
Your skin erupted in painful prickling chills almost as soon as that thought came to you. And then, in the same moment or before or after or so close you couldn’t tell the difference, you saw movement out of the corner of your eye. You flashed your light quickly around the room, hoping to catch a glimpse of a rat or some other disgusting but inoffensive animal to reassure yourself that you were safe because you still had hope that this was all innocent, that you were the crazy one for believing in ridiculous stories of the supernatural. 
Something retreated behind the doorway. 
Your stomach sank with freezing cold ice and panic. That was no rat. 
A person? It certainly seemed human sized. Those were footsteps too, weren’t they? Disguised beneath the sound of your own? And if it were somebody with authority, somebody who wanted you to leave because you were trespassing, they wouldn’t be lurking around watching you. So that meant it was somebody doing the same thing that you were. But, somehow, you didn’t feel as if it were another trespassing explorer. You felt it in your gut.
“Acheron, hold on,” you said quietly, stopping. 
“Yes? What is it?” he asked loudly. Too loud, bumbling around with his footsteps echoing against the walls as he turned to face you. You winced, holding up a hand to shade your eyes from the glare of his light. 
“We need to leave,” you told him, speaking softly and calmly. “Now.” 
“But we’ve hardly seen anything,” he said. You couldn’t see his frown, but you could hear it. 
“I’m telling you, we need to leave,” you said softly, desperately trying to remain calm. “We’re not alone.” 
“Someone is here?” he asked loudly, shining his light in a large circle, catching it all on camera. “Show yourself!”
“Acheron!” you hissed. 
“Don’t you want a head start?” an unfamiliar voice asked. No. Not unfamiliar. Jarring though, because you didn’t recognize why you would know it. What memory was attached to that disembodied sound. 
Acheron let out a high pitched sound of terror which scared you nearly as bad as the voice, almost causing you to fall over.
“Who is that? Show yourself!” he demanded. No answer. Of course there was no answer. No sound, not even the faint echo of footsteps. 
“We have to leave,” you murmured, more to yourself than to Acheron, your voice an octave too high with stress. “We have to get out of here.”
“It’s nothing. I told you that the local youths often come here, did I not?” he asked, maintaining that feigned sense of control. “I demand you show yourself!” 
“Acheron, please,” you begged, tugging at his jacket. He kept his camera fixed on where the voice had come from. It was from the hall branching off of the entrance out of the pleasure plaza and into the courtyard, essentially barring your most direct route of escape.
“You really ought to listen to the lady,” the voice said, just as casual, just as playful, just as recognizable. You hadn’t really been aware of a distinct echo beforehand, but the room was large enough to cause the voice to bounce around, to obscure the speaker’s location. Not only disembodied, omniscient. And you were stupid and crazy but you were acutely aware of how dangerous this was, it was a primal instinct to recognize danger. 
Freeze finally ran its course, returning some semblance of sensation to your numb limbs to take flight. You didn’t think, you ran, turning away from the voice to bolt in the opposite direction. Right then, you didn’t care whether or not Acheron decided to follow. Since you couldn’t leave the way you came in, you picked the nearest door. Terror thundered in your chest, a compliment to the sound of your footsteps on the rotting floor. You, with Acheron right on your heels, entered into a music room or another sitting room, or some other area where the wealthy and powerful whiled away their hours of excess. You shouldn’t have looked behind yourself, but you did and you could see, silhouetted in the moonlight from the courtyard, the unmistakable form of another person. And then you were pushing Acheron further into the dark with a fistful of his jacket, driven only by the need to get away. The door was intact enough for you to throw it closed behind you, and the sound rattled through the air.
The scent of wet rot was stronger back here, but you didn’t even think about stopping. The door didn’t open as you both scrambled through the room and into the hall, but you knew from the plans that there were other ways in and out of most rooms in the castle. If not directly, then from above, or even from below. 
“This is the wrong way,” Acheron told you crossly, although his control was fraying with his labored breathing. 
“Just run,” you told him, pushing at his back. You could have let go and run past him, but you were too scared of being alone, of having to navigate this dark, creepy place by yourself. 
He didn’t argue. Or maybe he did, you didn’t even know, couldn’t hear anything over the pounding of your heart and harsh breathing, your body synthesizing musty air into iron-tanged rasps that cut up in the inside of your throat. You had no idea where the hallway you ran into led, but it didn’t really matter. Away, that was what mattered. The hallway was narrow and stank of humid rot, entirely dark save for your flashlights, but the room at the end had windows, filling it with blessed moonlight. Slamming the door behind yourself again, you continued forward, stumbling to keep up with Acheron. 
Until you were yelping in surprise, the floor giving out beneath your feet. There was a brief moment where gravity hooked beneath your bellybutton and yanked, and then the floor hit, and it hit hard. Although you instinctively tried to fall in a slightly upright position, the momentum dragged you into an awkward roll, your body curling so as to protect your head. For a miniature eternity, there was no air, there was no thought in your head, there was no light save for the blinding radiance as impact blazed white hot agony through your head. Gasping, writhing on the cold, hard floor, you blinked teary eyes, staring at the hole that had just eaten you with some vague idea that you were dreaming, that this was all a made up fantasy. It was unreal, and it was painful.  
A moment later, a beam of light hit your face. So bright, like a little sun. You sucked in a lungful of air, tasting blood. Then, almost unconsciously, you jerked sideways and lurched around onto your knees. The pain enveloped you in a mad rush all once, your empty body dry heaving with nausea. Only, there wasn’t enough air to expel the sour bile in your stomach, leaving you to choke and suffocate on nothing instead. That tapered off into a few pathetic coughs a moment later, your entire body shaking and clammy. 
“Oh dear,” Acheron said, his voice thin with fear. “Are you hurt?”
All you could manage in response was a groan, and then a broken sob. But fear was a good motivator to get moving, and adrenaline shocked your system enough to force you upright. Now that you could remember, more or less, how to breathe, the worst of the damage was where you had initially landed on your hip, your shoulder hitting nearly as hard a second later. It sent violent, lurid pain straight down your arm and leg, the entire left side of your body alight as if from a branding iron.
“I’m fine,” you croaked out, not knowing if it was true but knowing that it needed to be true. 
“Thank goodness,” Acheron said, his voice heavy with relief. “I don’t suppose you see any way to climb back up?” 
You couldn’t see anything outside of the hot spotlight from above, your ThruNite had gone dark and skittered away somewhere into the shadows. At first, you only felt panic at the realization, terror that you were stuck in the darkness. It took you a long moment to think past the pain and the dark and the fear to remember that you had a backup light. After a few tries of fumbling with the zipper on your sling bag, you got your sweaty fingers around the yellow plastic base of your second flashlight. It was nothing so good as the hefty ThruNite, emitting a buttery yellow glow, but it was something. You waved it around, although you knew it was a lost cause before looking. The hole you had fallen into was rotted all the way through, leaving a few jagged boards around the edges, some of which you had brought with you on the way down, and parts of which were embedded in your hands and knees. There was no way back up. 
“No,” you said, painfully staggering to your feet and brushing yourself off as best you could. “I’ll have to find the stairs, I think… I think there’s some in the southern wing. Meet me there and we can—” 
“And stay here?” he demanded. “Are you mad? No, no, I simply cannot. I shall… I shall run and send help. Yes, that is the best course of action.”
You squinted against the blinding beam of his flashlight, mute with confused shock for a long, silent moment. 
“Acheron, you can’t do that,” you said softly, more bewildered than afraid. 
“You cannot expect me to retrieve you myself,” he said defensively. 
“No, no. You can’t just… just leave me here,” you said weakly, panic closing in around your heart, ice fizzling out like bubbles in your head. 
“I will not put myself at risk for your own carelessness,” he told you harshly. “If you remain there, the rescuers should find you quickly.” 
And that was it. His light disappeared, leaving you blind and blinking up at the hole in the desperate hopes of seeing his face, of seeing some sign that you weren’t actually alone. 
“Acheron,” you called, unable to keep your ragged voice soft. “Please don’t leave me here.” Nothing. You called out again, and nothing. No footsteps, not even the sound of doors opening or closing, although the violent rush of blood could have covered noises like that. And then there was only your heavy breathing and the sour bite of vomit in your throat and the creaking sound of the castle’s breathing in time with your own. 
With shaking hands, you got out the walkie talkie. It took you two tries to find the button, and then the sound of static. “Acheron?” you asked. “Do you copy, Acheron?”  
You didn’t get an answer. At least, not from the walkie talkie. You heard something. From far away, up above, you heard this howling, like an animal, but very distinctly human. Your guts lurched, a shiver slithering down your sweaty back, all the way through your body. 
You quickly pressed the button down again. “Ah-Acheron?” you asked, looking around the empty room. The shadows of decaying furniture followed your yellowy light, almost mockingly avoiding it. “Acheron, are you alright?” 
The speaker let out a little burst of static, startling you. “Sorry, he’s pretty busy right now,” a crinkled voice on the other side said. “Can I take a message?” 
You paused, your chest clenching. “Who is this?” But you knew. You knew very well, you just didn’t know. 
“Your guilty conscience. Trespassing is a serious crime.” 
“Where is Acheron?” you asked. “What did you do to him?” 
“Do to him?” the man asked, sounding like he was offended by the question. “Nothing. He ran off as soon as he saw me, so now we’re playing a little game of hide and seek. Sorry, no girls allowed this round. You and I can have a match when I win, okay? Okay, so you’d better start looking for a really good spot.”
Your mouth was open, gaping with no sound coming out. You felt nearly as winded by this as you did from the fall, unable to think, to formulate any rational reaction. “I-I don’t understand.”
“You’ve never played hide and seek? Oof, your childhood must have been a real bummer. The point of the game is that you hide and I seek. Simple, right?” 
“I’m not… not playing,” you said. “I just want to leave. Please… Whatever this is, I… Please stop.”
“Come on, where’s your sense of sportsmanship? Even this coward is giving it a chance.” He paused, and then raised his voice, calling out to someone else. “Isn’t that right? Why don’t you tell her what a good time we’re having?”
“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to... We’re sorry, so please don’t… don’t hurt him,” you begged, your voice wobbling with tears and panic.  
“I’m not sure I get why you’d defend a guy who was willing to abandon you here. I mean, who knows what could happen to a girl like you in a scary place like this. It’s practically falling apart. Not to mention all of the creepy and dangerous things that could be lurking around.” 
You shook your head, blinking back tears. “Please,” you said, although you weren’t sure what you were pleading for. 
“I’m in a good mood tonight, so I’ll give you some advice. First of all, the basement is no good. There aren’t very many escape routes, you’ll definitely get cornered. And, I don’t know if this is true or not, but I’ve heard that it's haunted.” 
“Please stop,” you begged. “I’ll leave, I’ll leave and-”
“Hey, hey, don’t panic,” he said soothingly. “You’ll need to save up all that energy for running. Oh, and you might wanna ditch the walkie talkie, it’s a dead giveaway.” 
All this time, you had worried about vampires. But it made more sense that some lunatic would use this place as hunting grounds. Preying on the stupid and reckless and your delusions that you were somehow cursed and connected to this place. You were cursed alright. It was the worst curse of all—blind naivety. 
“Please stop,” you begged again. It wasn’t that you wanted to talk more with the potential lunatic, but hearing his voice was better than not hearing it because at least it meant you weren’t entirely alone down here in the dark. But there was no answer, just some static. “Hello?” You asked, your voice even weaker. “Hello?”
No answer, over. Over and out. Ten-four. 
You stood there for a long moment, sore and sweaty and trembling, your body all at once wrung out and over energized, your heart beating way too fast. The light didn’t reach far enough, it was like the shadows were gnawing at the edges of it, attempting to retake their territory. A little part of your brain understood that you weren’t capable of thinking rationally, the part that recognized the insanity of all of the actions that led you here. But knowing that and overcoming blind, animal panic were two different beasts entirely. 
Escape. That was all you could do. At first you thought about searching for your fallen ThruNite, but you were afraid to linger in here too long. You had no idea where it had ended up, there were too many places in the room it could have been hiding. That left you with the weaker incandescent light and, if that failed, your phone’s flashlight. 
Your past self was a lot smarter than your current one, thinking to bring some water. That cured the rancid tang of metal in your mouth, settling you somewhat as you considered your options. Rather than abandon the walkie talkie, you shut it off. It was stupid, but you couldn’t just abandon your sole source of connection to any living beings. You checked your phone as well, but the same NO SERVICE bar sat at the top. 
There was no other way than forward. The room that you fell into didn’t have doors, only dark, decaying holes where doors might have once been. The one on your left was the source of the dank, rotting scent. It was completely flooded, the water covered with an inky, oily film, your light reflecting off of it unnervingly. When you steeled yourself to venture forward, you realized that the hall was slightly flooded as well. Not more than an inch or so, but enough to make your boots wet, and enough to make each footstep splash and squish, rendering stealth impossible. Then again, the light made that impossible anyway. Shining your light both ways, you debated which way to go, trying to remember the castle plans. The trouble was that you had no idea where you might have fallen. Everything was dark and creepy and awful and you just wanted to be somewhere else, anywhere else. To close your eyes and imagine your way out of the situation, to stay right there without ever moving and escape. 
After a second of despair and terrified self pity, you went right. 
If you followed the hallway, you would find a way upstairs. That made sense, there had to be some practicality to the design of this forsaken place. Or, that was all you could hope for. In reality, the dark and uncertainty threatened to turn your guts inside out, vomit biting your throat as you skirted along the wall. It was so quiet, unnaturally so. In the silence in the absolute void of light, your mind conjured noises. Extra footsteps, the sound of breathing. Echoes where there shouldn’t have been. 
You were afraid to blink, that when you opened your eyes something would appear in the beam of your flashlight. But you didn’t want to see anything, either, it would be better to face death ignorant to its face. You wanted to shield yourself from whatever horrors might exist. 
Staying in place was a death sentence, going any further was uncertain terror. The man said the basement was haunted. By what? Ghosts? Witches? Vampires? Murderers? 
Did it even matter?
Each open doorway you passed came with the anticipation that something would jump out at you. Or, worse, that you’d look in and see the dark silhouette of something inside. Somehow, that thought was almost as terrifying as being assaulted. Animals attacked on sight, true predators were the ones who were patient enough to lurk, to wait, to watch, to toy with the fear of their prey. And that’s what you were. Prey.  
On and on. Down the deep dark hall, your footsteps squelching on the damp floor, down down down to the corner where you turned, your light terrifyingly weak, nothing more than a pathetic glow against the all consuming darkness. The moment you saw a set of stairs, you could have wept with relief. Maybe it was stupid because it wasn’t as if they would lead you anywhere good, but those stairs were the best thing you’d ever seen. You gave into the spine tingling fear and ignored the pain of your body to run to them, splashing out of the water and taking the steps two at a time. 
There was no door at the top, just a sharp bend leading into a wider hall, the stairs tucked away and likely used by the servants. You didn’t care. This hallway wasn’t flooded, and the scent of death and decay wasn’t nearly as strong. It left you with the same problem though. Where did you go from here? Where were you? 
Relief soured into dread. Now that you were upstairs, the game had begun. 
It would have been smarter to shut off your light, but without any source of ambient illumination, you would be completely surrounded by the darkness. You stayed very, very still, straining your ears in an attempt to hear any stray sound, anything out of the ordinary. But there was nothing. The castle creaked and groaned, and your heart raced, and your ears rung faintly. 
Indecision and fear nearly paralyzed you. Like drowning, you had no idea of which way was up, you were merely thrashing in the blind darkness, hastening your own demise in your desperation to live. 
You found yourself walking without thinking about it, clinging to the wall with some idea that it would protect you. Just keep going. There was a sharp turn and then you realized that there was a light ahead. At first you thought it was a trick of your imagination, but you switched off your flashlight and blinked fast to adjust to the darkness, eventually making out that it was light. Soft, pale moonlight. That meant outside, that meant escape. 
Continuing to cling to the wall, you hurried towards the opening, eventually turning to the corner and finding yourself within your originally stated destination. At least you knew where you were. Nowhere near the exit. 
What rotten, twisted irony. You could almost laugh if you weren’t so close to tears. The Golden Hall, now flooded with thin silver moonlight, was exactly as beautiful as the name suggested. You knew it not from the second hand descriptions—they didn’t even begin to accurately describe the sweeping, luxurious ballroom—but because you had seen it before.
Far above, the cold moon observed you through panes of broken glass. So close, yet impossibly far. Taunting, tempting, representing an unreachable whisper of freedom. Your knees almost buckled, giving into the pain and exhaustion as you considered having to brave even more of the castle if you were ever going to get out alive. The Golden Hall echoed your own personal despair, a decaying corpse of what it once was, its profoundly decadent construction fallen to ruin. But you could imagine—remember, it was a memory, constructed or otherwise—how it looked in its prime. Shining, lustrous gold. And a man, one with entrancing eyes and a sly smile. His hands had been cold but the feeling was so warm, your own heat igniting you both. 
“The point of the game is to hide, you know,” someone said from behind you. In your despairing trance, you had gone further into the ballroom. Now you whirled around, clutching your chest in terror. “Although I am impressed you found your way up. Even I get the creeps going down there. Somebody really ought to do something about the flooding.” 
Shaking hard, you flicked your flashlight on, illuminating the man in its weak, yellow glow. He didn’t shy away, looking at you head on. His footsteps were slow and measured, impossibly graceful. Yes, yes of course. So obvious, so brutally, painfully blatantly obvious that it would be him. In the dim glow of your light, the most you could make out was the gold wink of his earring, but you knew without seeing that his eyes were that lovely shade of green, tinged with the romantic oceanic blue, so striking against his tan skin and black eyelashes. You knew that as surely as you knew the creases of your palm, or the constellations in the sky. 
“I admit,” he said, breezing past your silence, “I do have a slight advantage. You hurt yourself when you fell, right? I could smell your blood all the way from the catwalk. I’ll let you know if it tastes as good as it smells.”
“Stay away from me,” you demanded, surprised at how clear the words sounded despite the saliva pooling on your tongue. 
“I mean it, you smell really good,” he said, ignoring you and continuing forward. “Hey, why don’t you make this easy for me and put down that light? Nobody likes a sore loser.” 
“I told you-”
“Yeah, yeah, stay away,” he said flippantly. But he did stop, tilting his head in consideration. “You’re not going to make this easy, are you? Fine. If you’re going to run,” he gestured behind himself at the exit into the dark hall, “now’s your chance.”  
You didn’t think about the cheeky smile he wore, or the mocking tenor of the offer, or the reason he might let you run in the first place. You just did it, just ran, not looking back. There was blood in your throat and your entire body ached and you weren’t entirely sure you knew where you were going, but you didn’t pause. 
Step after pounding step, your heart racing, your breath coming out in sharp little gasps. Through the hall, which spanned miles and miles and miles, into the dining hall with its dust and cobwebs and ruined finery. You hit your bruised hip on the doorway which nearly sent you tumbling onto the ground. The red hot pain was so intense you had to stop and lean on the wall, your body physically refusing to go forward. 
Could you hear him? Were those his footsteps coming down the hall or your own telltale heart with its madness inducing beat? 
There was no time for your pain. If you couldn’t get away from here, you would die. That was a fact. Rubbing your sweaty palm on your hip as if to soothe it and sobbing dryly with all the pitiful disgrace of a child, you took off again. 
When you burst out into the pleasure plaza, the place of that first confrontation, hope reignited in your heart. It didn’t matter that there was still a significant dash to the exit, at least you knew where you were. Ignoring all else, you retraced your original ill-fated steps out into the courtyard. The moon was hidden behind the golden tower, peering into the front of the castle and leaving the courtyard nearly as dark as the halls. It didn’t matter. You raced across, blindly passing the one eyed deer in his long night vigil.
Until your toe caught on a loose rock, and you launched forward onto your elbows and knees, skittering forward across the ground. Once more, your flashlight was flung from your grip and landed somewhere ahead in the dense foliage. A harsh yelp left your mouth and you collapsed, completely boneless and exhausted and in genuine, insistent agony. Everything ached and the terror was relentless, pain consuming every panicked thought and infecting every inch of your body. You were doomed. Damned. Dead. 
Footsteps approached from behind. Easy, casual, measured. You flipped onto your back, wincing at the weight it put on your bruised hip. Your pursuer didn’t look dangerous. The outline of his messy curls gave him an innocent silhouette, and his hands were empty of any weapon. 
“Ouch, that must have hurt,” he said. “You should be careful, you could injure yourself if you don’t watch where you’re going.” 
“Stay away from me,” you got out between gasping breaths. 
“I bet you’re tired from all that running, huh? That’s fine, I think we’ve had enough fun for the night.” Without pausing, he dropped down onto his knees, one between your legs and the other astride your hip. You cried out in protest, getting your trembling arms beneath yourself to crawl backwards, but he caught you by the strap of your sling bag, and then with a fistful of your shirt to keep you in place, caging you in with his body. You couldn’t see the color of his eyes, they were only dark as he leaned down over you. 
“Stop it, please,” you begged, weak and trembling, tears sliding down your flushed cheeks, mixing with the sweat. “Just let me go, please.” 
“I’m sure you get this all the time, but you smell unbelievably delicious,” he said, his nose brushing your sweaty neck. You could feel your pulse jump against the thin skin there and you held completely still, a million thoughts slamming into each other all at once in your head. Vampires, murderers, insanity—anything and everything but most of all was just the mindless, irrational terror and despair. You were going to die. In a final spasm of rebellion, your back arched and legs kicked, but your body was caught between the jagged ground beneath and the firm press of his body above, pinned flat. And your hands weakly pushed at his chest, but it was a lost cause, and he wasn’t listening to your constant mumbling pleas to stop. 
Another pathetic sob hiccupped in your chest. You wanted your dad, you missed him. You needed him. And then you went limp because, now and forevermore, you were alone. 
“Come on, you don’t need to cry,” he murmured sweetly, a smile in his voice. You didn’t respond, staring up at the starry sky above. They were cold and without shape or form. Indifferent to your pain. 
The touch of his lips on your neck was shockingly cool, you almost wouldn’t have believed it was a mouth until you felt the needle-like puncture of fangs. That made you jump, squealing, but he held you in place which was probably a good thing because he was biting your neck and that could get dangerous fast. The pain sharply worked down through the rest of your body, the unnatural intrusion of something beneath the skin sending you right back into high alert. And then his lips closed around the created wound to suck.
A little whimper left your mouth, almost confused because even with the unambiguous pain of being bitten, there was something more. The wet release of sensation that followed the bite bloomed out from the point where his fangs pierced your neck in a flizzling wave. He sucked hard for a moment, but then went stiff against you, pulling back with a sharp intake of breath to stare into your eyes. 
He looked shocked, almost innocent if it weren’t for your blood smeared across his mouth. “You’re…” He breathed out that word faintly, reverently. There was meaning there, a meaning that you understood. Letting out a little laugh, a bubble of genuine exuberance, he released your shirt so that hand could delve into your hair, so he could pull you into a kiss. 
His skin was impossibly cold, unalive, and you could taste your own blood as he licked between your lips to part them. While his eyes were squeezed shut, dark eyelashes resting on his cheekbones, yours were wide open.
The kiss wasn’t violent, it was amorous. And familiar. He held you, practically cradled you against him. He felt it too, he understood what you had known from the moment you saw him.  
There was no way to escape the violently seated weight of your own body, of every sensation and feeling he inspired within you. Although, in another situation, the kiss might have seemed sensual, it was only grotesque and terrible. A display of affection in a moment of horror. You didn’t want it, your body thrummed with fear and pain, but you also felt yourself giving into the overwhelming wave of defeat. Even with all that was unnatural and terrible, this man’s kiss was imbued with some sort of cosmic sense of belonging. 
If the pain weren’t so sharp, you probably would have relented. 
Instead, you used it as an opening, as your final chance to reject this twisted insanity. Your hand scrambled out to the side, blunt nails scraping the ground and open wounds packing with dirt. But you found what you were looking for. Stray rubble, forced up and broken by the relentless roots of new growth, nature overcoming manmade structure. You wrapped your bloodied fingers around the chunk of displaced stone and swung at his head, thrashing against his grip at the same moment. 
It was enough to displace his body from on top of yours, maybe out of surprise because you certainly didn’t feel any human give of flesh and bone beneath the weight of the rock. You didn’t stop to consider that, or anything. He grabbed the strap of your sling bag as you scrambled away and you unclipped it without thought, refusing to let it catch you, to keep you trapped. It didn’t matter, you didn’t need it. You needed to escape. You were little more than a wild animal, the taste of your own blood on your lips, blood dripping down your neck, fear infecting every cell of your being. 
“Wait a second,” he called. Disgruntled, not pained. 
The first few steps, you were practically crawling, your back hunched like a beast as you used pure momentum to carry you into the atrium. And from the atrium to the breezeway, your back painfully straightening out, hip screaming in agony. You didn’t think about it, you just continued forward. Ran out into the night, ran through the woods, sticks and foliage catching your clothes and skin, ran down the dirt path to the road. There wasn’t a single thought in your head to get help, just to get away. And then you were flying through the night on your silver bike, your body pushed past the point of weary, into some territory where you weren’t even sure you were actually alive anymore, just acting because you had to act. Although it seemed to take hours of cycling down the dark road, there was this vague impression that no time at all passed before you were coming up to the inn, the bicycle’s wheels crunching across the gravel alley before you ditched it. 
Your room’s window was still open, the way you left it so you didn’t have to sneak in and out the front. The lights were on and they were warm and bright, inviting. You scrambled in, bloody and filthy and sweaty and shaking, and slammed the glass pane shut so hard it rattled, pulling the blinds shut to protect you from the night. 
And then you wept, and you retched, and you waited for sunrise.  
Act 4
“Die he or justice must; unless for him Some other able, and as willing, pay The rigid satisfaction, death for death.”
I.
1st day of Horsebow Moon
It’s all real. There is something living in El Dorado. He got Acheron, I waited all night and he never came back and they’re saying that he left yesterday but I know he didn’t. I left him there. I abandoned him there. I’m so sorry. It’s all my fault. 
If you find this, it means he came for me too. 
II.
A woman sat in the waiting room of the police station when you entered, her legs crossed as she casually read the paper. There was nobody else around, not even at the desk. A lazy fan swiveled in the corner, whirring loudly but not doing anything to cool the room so much as it just pushed around the warm air. It made the high necked shirt you were wearing that much more uncomfortable. Trying very hard to hide your limp—your hip wasn’t seriously injured, but you’d have a hell of a bruise for weeks—you walked up to the desk, peering into the back to check if anyone was there. No luck. It was almost eerily quiet. 
“Are you here to talk to the police?” the woman asked, looking at you over the top of her paper. 
You opened your mouth to respond before settling on nodding instead. 
She turned to the next page, her attention drawn back down. “What about?”
You hesitated, not knowing how to answer, or even if you should. Before leaving the inn, you hadn’t thought very hard about how you would present your story. The only evidence you had was your sore body, but you had to do something for Acheron. Even if he was annoying and rude and unpleasant, that didn’t mean he deserved to be dead and forgotten. 
“I know all of the folks on the force,” she explained. “I’m sure I could help you out.”  
“I… I’m here to give a statement, that's all,” you told her, aware of how hoarse your voice was. You sounded and looked rough, there was no hiding it.  
“Well, they’re at lunch right now,” she said. “Why don’t you sit down and wait with me?”
You looked at the empty desk, and then at her, and then sat down, once again trying not to wince at the way your hip complained. Really, your entire body complained. You used practically half a bottle of Bactine trying to clean up the mess of shredded skin on your hands, elbows, and knees. Not to mention the bruising. 
“I’m Judith, by the way,” she said.
“It’s nice to meet you,” you said. 
“I take it you don’t know who I am,” Judith said, a hint of amusement in her eyes. That perked you up, just a bit. Not in a good way. So lost in your own miserable anxiety and fear, you hadn’t really considered how off putting her demeanor was before now. 
“Should I?” you asked. 
“You might be interested, at least. I’m the owner of El Dorado and the surrounding property.”  
You felt the blood fade from your face, your empty stomach twisting with guilt and fear, the sore muscles clenching uncomfortably.
“Don’t make that face,” she said, folding up her paper. “I’m not here to report you.”
“I-”
“That’s not to say I couldn’t,” she said, cutting you off, “but I figured I’d give you a chance to do the smart thing first. It’ll save both of us a lot of trouble if we agree that nothing happened last night and move on with our lives.” 
You froze. “I don’t know what you mean.” 
“Do you know the punishment for felony trespass?” she asked. 
“Acheron’s still in there,” you whispered, adjusting your high necked shirt again. “They have to save him. Somebody has to do something.”
“I heard your friend left town,” Judith said. 
“No, I saw him. He was real, and he got Acheron,” you insisted, tears welling up in your eyes. The words didn’t make any sense, even you weren’t entirely sure how much of it you meant. What you thought, what you felt, what you believed. Your head pounded with a violent headache, your entire body sore and clammy. 
“I don’t know what you think you saw, but hallucinations are a side effect of things like black mold,” Judith said, her eyebrow arching. “It’s dangerous. There’s a reason that place stays locked up.” 
You opened your mouth to argue, then closed it. Could that be true? Maybe Acheron had left after all, you weren’t exactly in the clearest of mental states. He could have escaped, it was what he intended. And the rest of it, the man who stalked, taunted, and attacked you, maybe there was some other explanation for that. Maybe you really were losing it.
“You can go ahead and make a report, if you want,” Judith said. “It won’t matter. All of the evidence points to your friend packing up and leaving. Without a body, the only crime here is yours. They’ll bury you in whatever charges they can make stick.” She paused, giving you a sideways glance to make sure you were listening. “None of that has to happen. No report, no paperwork, no crime. You go back to your inn, pack your bags, and leave town. Everybody’s happy.” 
A couple of answers came to mind, and then a couple of complaints. Eventually, you just nodded. 
“See? I knew we could handle this peacefully.”
“I’m scared,” you said softly, the pitiful admission leaving your mouth without thought. 
Judith sighed, looking at you with a disapproving mixture of compassion and pity. “Don’t worry. Even if there was something there, I promise you that it’s not getting out any time soon,” she said, a flicker of understanding in her eyes. That passed quickly and Judith stood up, tucking her paper under her arm. “I have to go. It was nice meeting you. I’d say that I hope to see you later, but-”
“I’m leaving soon. Tonight if I can,” you said quickly, getting to your feet as well. 
“I thought that might be the case. Well, then. Have a safe trip.” 
III.
1st day of Horsebow Moon
I took a nap earlier, while the sun was still out, and dreamed of him. He wants me to go back. Maybe I should, maybe it’d be better if I did. When he kissed me I… I don’t know. I think about it and I’m not scared, I just want to cry. My heart hurts. Why? 
I wish it had been me too. I really do. We could have gone out together in a blaze of glory, us rogues. At least I wouldn’t be alone, I wouldn’t be thinking that when he touched me, I didn’t want anyone or anything else, and I felt-
I can’t think like that. 
The past is written in ink and stone and blood and ash.  
I’m leaving tomorrow morning, it was the earliest time I could find to get out of here. I’ll have to get back in a car. Thinking about it makes me sick, but there’s no choice. She says it’s not real and I know that’s a lie. The bite on my neck is real, I couldn’t have made that up. She’s lying. They’re all covering up for this, that’s all I can think.  Earlier when I ordered food, the delivery guy acted so strange, like he knew. It’s insane to think, but I swear, everybody in this awful little town is in on it. 
I put the note from earlier under my mattress, just in case something happens tonight. For some reason, I keep thinking that it will, jumping at every little sound. The walkie talkie keeps bursting out static, like it’s connected to the other one, but that’s impossible because Acheron had the other one and the range isn’t that long. I could have sworn I heard a voice from it while I showered too. Maybe it’s connected to another channel. Maybe I’m insane. Maybe I’m going to die. Maybe he’ll come for me. 
Death doesn’t scare me, not really, but I don’t want to die alone.
Act 5
"And should I at your harmless innocence
Melt, as I do" 
I.
Fiercely clawing your way out of the heavy shackles of sleep, you shouted yourself fully awake, thrashing in an attempt to escape an unknown threat, sickness churning violently in your stomach. Being awake hurt. Why had you been asleep? Everything hurt. Fear was more potent than pain and you forced yourself to breathe, to focus on your confusion and make sense of the world around you. Unfamiliar, although that in and of itself wasn’t dangerous. You had always existed in a state of ever-shifting unfamiliarity. What was wrong, what was dangerous, was that you knew where you were. Rather, you had a feeling. 
“Woah, woah, easy,” he said, backing away with his hands up. You blinked rapidly, panting, trying to fight your way out of the haze. The tide of unconsciousness threatened to consume you once more, lapping at your heavy head, urging you back down. It was nearly more than you could take to keep your eyes open, but you fought it. Something was wrong, you needed to be awake. As your vision brightened bit by bit, you met a pair of green eyes, and your blood turned to ice.
“It’s you,” you said, your voice soft and close to breaking, mushy in your mouth. Nearly inaudible. Everything was sore and stiff and painful, and it was so unbelievably hard to keep yourself from drifting again. It had to be a drug in your system, but you couldn’t think properly to know how or why. “You… You’re-”
“I usually go by Claude,” he told you with a winning grin. And it was a smile you knew. Intimately, honestly, a smile so familiar you ached. 
You blinked hard, shaking your dizzy, heavy head in frustration, unable to accept what you were seeing and hearing. No matter how hard you tried, you couldn’t remember the last thing you’d been doing before you woke up here, the squishy bit of brain behind your eyes pounded at the effort. And that name. You knew it, you had long attached it to the man in your dreams no matter how little sense it really made.
Or maybe it all made perfect sense, and that was why you were so scared. Claude von Riegan, resident vampire of El Dorado. 
“I… What happened?” you asked weakly, tearfully. “Why do I…? Dizzy…” 
“Don’t worry, that’s from the little concoction I slipped into your food before that kid dropped it off,” Claude said. “It’s not poisonous or anything and, trust me, I would normally never use such underhanded tactics, but I couldn’t have you ruining things by making a big fuss. It’ll wear off soon.”
“No no no,” you muttered, your words bordering on incomprehensible with the effort they took to get out, “this can’t be happening. This can’t…” 
“Would you feel any better if I told you it wasn’t?” he asked nonchalantly, sitting on the sofa across from the bed, his arms spanning the back in a casual position. 
With blurry vision, your eyes took in the room around you. It seemed normal enough, if lavish. Big bed, large furniture. The smell though, that was distinct. Not rot, but old. Aged. 
“You have been having an awful lot of weird dreams lately,” he continued thoughtfully. 
You exhaled harshly, going still. Then, slowly, you met those playful green-blue eyes. They danced with candlelight and mirth. Enticing, exactly like in your dreams.
“I hope you don’t mind, I got bored while you were asleep and had a little peek at your diary,” he told you. “I’d love to hear more about that strange, beautiful man who haunts you in the night. He sounds intriguing.”  
Had you written about those dreams? You couldn’t remember what you might have put down, usually you just went in and dumped as many thoughts onto the page as possible. The invasion of privacy was like a knife to the bone, but you couldn’t think of what you should do about it, the world was too abrasively heavy to know what to do with anything. Tears gathered in the corner of your eyes. Tears! Like you were going to cry! It seemed impossible to fight, like you were just as helpless to yourself as you were to what was going on.  
“It was fascinating to see how much you pieced together. I’m glad you’re smart, I really am. It’ll make this a lot more fun.”
You shook your head again, which didn’t help the dizziness. “I want to leave,” you said, “I don't want to be here, I can't…" Your voice slurred a little, like you weren’t in complete control of your body. Your thoughts too, they kept getting away from you, slipping out from your grasp. 
"Out of curiosity, where would you go?" Claude asked. 
You sniffed pathetically, your thoughts falling to an abrupt halt against the question. "What?"
"If you left town right now,” he said, “where would you go?"
You stared at him, unable to figure out what he meant. 
"You don't know, do you?" Claude asked, but his tone was all-knowing and smug. "I thought as much."
"I do, I just…" you said. But you didn't. You had no idea about anything. What you would do, what you were doing, everything was a confused mess and you just needed to get out of here, get away. Your breathing was picking up, your heavy head spinning with it. 
“Shh, calm down,” Claude said gently, switching from the couch to the bed. It dipped with his weight and you didn’t think to move away, just stayed where you were and looked at him, attempting strength but only managing desperation as you tried not to break down completely. “I can tell you’re scared, but I’m not going to hurt you.” He paused, smiling non-threateningly. “And, you know, I wouldn’t have had to do any of this if you didn’t play hard to get last night. So why don’t we agree we were both in the wrong and move on? Forgive and forget, no harm done.” 
“I-I want to-to leave,” you insisted, taking inventory of yourself to figure out if you were even capable. Everything was so foggy, disoriented, your body unbelievably heavy. It was getting better, but slowly. You weren’t sure you could leave the room, let alone escape. 
"Sorry, but that's not gonna happen," Claude said, and it wasn’t a threat but the casual way he spoke made the statement that much worse. He was simply telling you something that was. A fact, a forgone conclusion. 
"Someone will… will come looking for me," you said with more confidence than you actually felt, grasping at straws to make your case because you didn't have anything else. 
"I wouldn't be too sure about that," Claude said. "They still think that I'm too weak to leave, seeing as the Macbeth bloodline has completely died out and all." He smiled at that, meeting your eye knowingly, unflinchingly. "Without the blood that roused me from my accursed slumber, there's no way I'd have the strength to steal somebody all the way from town and back."
Pieces began to shift into place. Slowly moving, scraping together as your fogged brain did its best to comprehend what he was telling you. The vague outline existed, but you couldn't quite pin it down, couldn't quite see the whole. 
"My blood…" you mumbled, pressing your hand to the puncture wounds on your neck.
"But," Claude continued, ignoring you, "let's say that they know you're here. It's not impossible. Are you really going to place a bet on complete strangers risking their lives for you when they can't even be sure you're still alive? Personally, I wouldn't."
Your breathing, already unsteady, was only getting more out of hand the longer this conversation went on, the pressure behind your eyes mixing a headache with the threat of tears. A hot flush worked its way through your body, a sure sign of genuine panic, some potent mixture of terror and the effect of whatever drug he'd given you. 
“Hey, calm down. I'm not trying to scare you,” Claude said, “but I'm not gonna lie to you either. So let’s get to know each other a little. I’m sure I’ll surprise you.” 
Surprise you? The enormity of what was happening finally settled somewhat. He had kidnapped you, presumably by drugging you. He had killed somebody. Many people, maybe.
“Are you going to kill me?” you asked, your voice trembling and small.
Claude huffed, slight irritation wrinkling his brow. “No,” he said. “Frankly, I’m offended you’d even ask.”
“You’re crazy,” you said. “You… you killed Acheron, you…” You put a hand to your neck again. The needle-like punctures had bruised, the skin tender and sore. 
“Okay, okay,” Claude said, trying to placate you. “I know I might have gone too far, and I’m sorry. I promise I won’t do that again. I was just a little excited, you know? I’ve been stuck in this place for centuries all on my own, too weak to leave and haunted by the ghost of my terrible, yet sympathetically tragic past.” 
He paused, eyebrows up as if expecting you to say something, prompting you to say something. How could you possibly respond to that? He spoke so fluidly that you could almost miss the way he casually threw around the word ‘centuries’ as if it were normal, as if it made perfect sense.
“Doesn’t that make you sad?” Claude pushed. “Doesn’t your heart just ache for the pain I must have been feeling all this time?”
“You’re crazy…” you whispered again, unsteadily sitting up against the headboard, drawing your legs closer to yourself to put as much distance between the two of you as possible. You couldn’t ignore the evidence that there was something weird going on here, but you couldn’t ignore reason either. A crazy guy with razor sharp teeth living in a castle famous for its vampiric and occult ties hunting and killing trespassers was more reasonable than the alternative, wasn't it? You couldn’t just give up and submit to the fantasy, not entirely. You needed to make this make sense, to find a valid explanation other than the impossible. 
“You already tried that one,” Claude told you. “And, for the record, I’m not crazy. If you think about it, and I know you have, this is meant to be. Who are we to deny fate?"
“Fate?” you repeated. “No, that’s…” Crazy. It was crazy. Everything about this was insane.
“Then why are you here?” Claude asked, raising an eyebrow. “Ah, actually, don’t answer that. I already know. Oh! Speaking of which…” He stood up to find something, pawing through the mess haphazardly left on one of the tables before straightening up with a phone in hand. 
“That’s mine,” you said, tensing up.  
“Yeah, you left it here. Aren’t you glad I took care of it for you?” he asked, waving it around as if to taunt you into lunging for it. 
“Give it back.” 
“What’s the magic word?” 
“Give it back.”
“Ooo, how very charming,” Claude said, oozing sarcasm. But he gave it to you anyway, tossing it onto your lap casually before sitting back down. “You know, if you’re going to break into creepy forbidden castles, you probably shouldn’t take something so important. Especially the thing that has all of the information about where you’re staying, what you’re doing, who might care if you go missing suddenly… Or, actually? You should do that, it makes things easier for me.” 
You clicked the home button, greeted with your familiar background, a flower your dad found for you on the lake. That was last year. Not so long ago, but it felt like a lifetime. You weren’t sure what you were looking for as you swiped the screen to unlock it. There was no service here, you already knew that. The phone may as well have been an expensive brick for all the good it did you. 
“I’m astonished by how much information can be crammed into such a tiny little device,” Claude said. “Although, in your case, there wasn’t very much to find. No friends, no family, no home… I’m sorry about your dad, by the way.” His voice lacked all levity when he said that, almost like he meant it. 
“Don’t,” you said, stiffening. But it was a weak kind of anger. Whatever he had used to drug you sent your emotions way out of whack, fear and anger and sadness getting all knotted up and leaving a lump in your throat.
“Nobody to worry that you’ve gone missing. Nobody for you to miss,” Claude continued to muse. “Nothing for you to leave behind. If I didn’t know any better, I’d wonder if you weren’t waiting for this exact thing.” 
“That’s… You’re wrong.” 
“Of course, I do know better,” Claude said, ignoring you, “I know why you risked life, limb, and the law to break into my humble abode. Rather, I know why you think you did. You want to know why you’re cursed, and why all of these terrible things happened to you. You think that when the truth is laid bare, it won’t hurt anymore. Once everything makes sense, you won’t feel so alone and scared. You and I are pretty much the same in that regard. I can’t stand not knowing things.” 
You shook your head quickly, refusing to hear his words. He wasn’t right anyway, he was just assuming, just pretending like he knew you for the sake of some twisted power trip. Then again, he was right, wasn’t he? Your brain wasn’t so focused that you could simply deny the truth, deny that you thought answers would make the pain stop. 
“Amateur prose aside, you’re right about almost everything—the curse, Lady Macbeth, Old Derdriu, me. You are cursed, Lady Macbeth was a witch, I am a vampire, and so on and so forth,” he said flippantly, disregarding the supernatural as if they were matters of tired fact. “But I have to say ‘almost’ because you’ve misunderstood something very important. Honestly, your little tirades border on willful ignorance sometimes. I can’t tell if you’re intentionally missing the point or if you’re just that obtuse… Er, no offense. You know what I’m talking about, right?”
“No,” you said. 
Claude huffed, frowning. “You’re probably the only girl in the world to come face to face with the literal man of her dreams and still insist that you don’t believe in fate. I’m actually a little amazed right now.” 
“You’re lying,” you said. “You’re lying so I… Because I’m…” 
“You’re not insane, if that’s what you’re going to say,” he told you bluntly. “You’re not weak either. No, you just want a way out, don’t you? There’s nothing for you out there, you know that. You’ve been searching desperately for someone to swoop in and give you direction again.” 
“No,” you said again, refusing to hear those words or to believe them.
“Careful,” he said, “if you lie too much, I might just feel compelled to do something about it.” 
Your breath caught, your body freezing in place. “You’re crazy,” you whispered, tears burning your eyes. 
“Aaaand back to square one,” Claude said, rolling his eyes. “Okay, I see we’re not going to get anywhere like this. Time to move on to Plan B.” He twisted up onto his knees, like he was going to crawl towards you.
“Don’t come near me,” you said with wide eyes, clumsily scooting away, covering your neck defensively. Your body wasn’t moving correctly, your limbs awkward and ungainly. Although, if you were honest, he didn’t look that intimidating in the warm light. No, he looked beautiful. That was the point, wasn’t it? Those green eyes, the soft hair with one little curl flopped over his forehead, the pretty face, the little gold earring, all of it was meant to entice. Vampires were beautiful on purpose, they were both bait and trap. 
“I told you, I’m not gonna hurt you. All I want is to get to know you a little better,” Claude said innocently. “Thing is, I’m a hands-on kind of learner.” 
“Stay away from me,” you told him as firmly as you could manage, watching him distrustfully with this terrible tingling sense of anticipation. Like you wanted him to do something.
“I mean it. Fear and pain makes your blood all sour. Pleasure, on the other hand…” He trailed off with a grin, letting the implication speak for itself. “Well, we’ll get there.”
“No,” you said, winding up your arm to throw your phone at him. It was hard to keep your arm lifted, the muscles were so heavy that they trembled with the strain. Claude’s eyes widened, and then narrowed, his irritation obvious. 
“Oh, come on. There’s no need for that.”
“Stay away from me,” you said again, your voice coming out more like a whine. At this point, your thighs were clamped so tightly together that the muscles ached, your arm wavering from the weight of your phone. Claude reached for your wrist, but you dropped the phone before he could do anything, deciding to make your escape instead. 
There was no surprise that you, unsteady and dizzy and drugged, nearly fell off of the bed when you tried to jump onto the floor. You definitely would have face-planted if a set of cold hands didn’t catch you.  
“I know this is happening pretty fast,” Claude said, gently pulling you against him. You couldn’t do much to stop him, your head spinning, your mind on the fraying edge of sense from the sudden shake up of blood. He was inhumanly cold, but the fabric of his buttoned shirt was soft. The smell was wonderful, clove and orange and something lower, masculine. “Believe me, if I could give you more time, I would. But we have to make do with what we’ve got, right? And I’m…” His arms tightened around you, not that you were at risk of escaping. When you nervously peered up at him, Claude caught your eye hungrily. His throat worked hard as he swallowed. “Honestly, I’m starving.”
“Stop,” was the most you could offer, slurring the word. You realized that there was no heartbeat in his chest. Of course there wasn’t, he wasn’t alive. His cold hand slipped beneath the hem of your shirt, tracing along the warm, sensitive flesh of your back, to your ribs. “No,” you protested, squirming. His body was unyielding and firm against your own in the most intimate of ways. You had never been this physically close with another person, not like this. 
“It’s okay,” he told you, his nose brushing the crown of your head. 
“It’s not.” 
“It is,” Claude affirmed, unendingly gentle. He was tracing little patterns on your back that made you shiver. You should have been fighting to get away, but the scent of him was intoxicating, and you felt… Not peaceful, there was too much about all of this that was uncomfortable and scary to be peaceful, but you didn’t feel displaced. “You don’t want to be alone anymore, do you?”
Your composure finally collapsed, tears welling up in your eyes. You hid them against Claude’s cold, empty chest, clinging to him because you had nothing else. 
“It’s okay to let it all go,” Claude told you, continuing to pet your skin sweetly. “I’ll make you forget, at least for a while. I don’t want to brag, but I’m the best you’ll ever have. I’ve had a few years of practice to really hone my technique, you know? You won’t remember a thing by the time I’m done with you.” 
Your heart pounded heavy and hard once, twice. 
“What do you mean?” you finally asked, mumbling the words against him to hide your red face because you had a feeling you knew what he meant, the price he’d demand to cure your loneliness. In a way, it made sense. Another piece of a puzzle that would fit in just as it was meant to, as it had been destined to. 
“Wait…” Claude pried you away from his chest, gripping your chin to force you to meet his eye. You tried to avert your gaze, but there really wasn’t anywhere else to go, anywhere to hide. “What do you think I mean?” 
Your thighs squeezed together, heat rising to your face.
“I dunno,” you said, trying to squirm away, overly aware not only that you were in his arms, but practically cradled in his lap. 
“I can’t tell if you’re being coy or not,” he said. “I guess it doesn’t matter either way.” 
“What doesn’t?” you asked. 
“I’m talking matters of the heart,” Claude said, letting go of your face to wrap an arm around your waist, his grip impossible to fight even if you weren’t still dizzy and leaden from the drug. “And matters of the body. More specifically, your body.” His other hand delved down, slipping beneath the elastic waistband of your sweatpants to press against you through your panties. You hissed out through your teeth, thighs clamping down around his hand like a vice. Claude only groaned, his palm grinding against you. “I’ve gotta say, it’s awfully cute. You’re so warm and soft.” 
“Stop,” you protested, your voice thin and your face hotter than ever. 
“Pleasure makes your blood sweeter,” he said, the air of his words brushing against your ear. “The more, the better.” 
You shook your head, hiding your face against his chest. “I… I don’t…” 
“It’s a fair deal, don’t you think?” Claude asked, his fingers teasing you through the thin fabric, curling to press between your folds, skimming over the sensitive flesh beneath. You squirmed, your hands weakly tugging at his wrist. “We both get something out of it.”
“I… don’t…” you stammered out again, not sure where you were going with it. 
“And it’s much more respectable than a messy quickie out in the courtyard. Blood as precious as yours deserves to be savored in its finest form,” Claude said, dragging his finger over your clit, the extra friction of the fabric adding to the sensation. You shuddered hard, heat sinking low in your gut. “I think we’ll start with three and go from there.” 
“Three?” you asked breathlessly, your head spinning so hard you had to rest it against his chest.  
“Yeah, I’m going to make you come three times,” Claude said, his tone more than a little indulgently condescending. “To start with, at least. You know, to sweeten you up. It’ll soothe your nerves too. As for what happens from there…” He shrugged, the movement impeded by the way he was cradling you. “I like the spontaneity of figuring it out as I go. It’s more romantic, don’t you think?” 
“Nn…no…” you said, your stomach sinking, sickness and something else—something that was decidedly interested in the proposal—swirling dangerously low within you. Claude hadn’t stopped teasing you through your panties, and you weren’t really pulling at his wrist anymore so much as just holding on.  
“What, are you thinking more along the lines of four? Five?” he teased. “We’ve got more than enough time to kill.” 
“That’s not…” You whimpered, holding tighter against him when he wedged the fabric between your pussy’s outer lips to grind even harder against your clit. It bordered on too rough, but it was working as intended, your clit swelling hot and needy, your hips jumping forward in an unintentional chase for more. “I can’t… do that.” 
“Did I mention how good I am at this?” Claude asked. “Not that I get the impression you’ll be too terribly difficult.” 
You whined in objection, squirming in a half-hearted attempt to escape. 
“That’s not a bad thing. The opposite, actually. Like I said, the more, the better,” Claude said, his other arm wrapping around your waist to adjust you, to make it easier for his other hand to work between your legs. You were too sensitive and you didn’t know how much of it was natural and how much of it was from the drug, only that pleasure was pooling up quickly in your core. 
You swallowed against the excess saliva pooling on your tongue, past the lump in your throat. “I… I don’t…” 
“What?” he asked. “You don’t… something. Sorry, I didn’t catch the last bit.” 
“I…” 
“You weren’t going to lie and say you don’t want this, were you?” Claude asked, his cold lips brushing the shell of your ear. Your hips jerked, your mouth falling open. You could feel the way your body was coiling up tense, desperate to come. It would be a quick flash of pleasure, hidden and tight beneath your clothes, but it was still pleasure, it was still good. 
“I’m—mmm…” You pressed your lips together to stifle yourself, holding even tighter against him. The wave of heat was building too fast, too frantically. Exhaustion, drugs, your general mental degradation, you could pin the blame on any number of external factors so you didn’t have to take responsibility for what you felt. The result was the same though, and it was you and you alone who chased the tantalizing build of pleasure.
“Do you feel that? That’s the sweet, sweet feeling of me being right yet again,” Claude said, saccharine and smug. “Feels good, doesn’t it, sweetheart?”  
It was the pet name that really did it. Nobody had ever said something like that to you, and the heavy weight of it in his voice pushed you over the edge with an anxious little jerk of pleasure and a choked noise in the back of your throat, with a hot flash that made your clothes feel too tight, that made your clit pulse beneath his touch, rubbed raw with the friction of fabric. It was awkward and cramped and thin and it was everything, you clung onto him as the fizzles of heat sparkled out, your muscles contracting, your mouth open and silent. 
When it was over, when Claude quit rubbing those evil little patterns over your sensitive clit, you let out a shuddering breath, trying to calm yourself down. Without the distraction of pleasure keeping you on edge, you felt the bite of nausea in your throat. The recognition that this was wrong, and that you had no idea what to do to fix it, or even if that was possible. 
“The thing is that when you come, your body releases all sorts of hormones. It’s a fun little cocktail that behaves in basically the same way as sugar. For me, at least,” Claude explained, unceremoniously dumping you onto your back in a boneless splay. “A couple of orgasms is… It’s like the difference between gnawing on a day-old biscuit and savoring a cinnamon bun with icing.”
“What are you doing?” you asked. You tried to hold onto him, but Claude easily knocked your arms away so he could pull your sweatpants off. They were cast somewhere to the side before he hooked a cold hand under your knee, lowering himself between your legs. “What-”
“I’ve got a bit of a sweet tooth,” Claude explained, looking up at you with bright eyes. He looked so innocent, so sweet. So mischievous. “You don’t mind, right?” 
“Mind what?” you asked, trying to close your legs, to hide yourself from him. The panties you were wearing were old and plain, far from anything even approaching sexy. But the idea of removing them was worse, you couldn’t stand thinking of him looking so forwardly at your bare pussy. The humiliation would kill you. “Please stop,” you said, your voice pinched and small. 
“Oh, wow, would you look at that?” Claude asked, his finger tracing the wet spot soaking through your panties. Your hips twitched, the muscles in your thighs tensing. “It looks like you don’t want me to stop.”
“Don’t look,” you said, squirming in an attempt to get free. 
“Don’t look?” Claude repeated, feigning guilelessness. “So it’s okay if I touch, but only so long as I keep my eyes closed? Good to know.” 
“No, that’s not-” 
He cut you off, his tongue replacing his fingers, dragging over the wet spot with a depraved sort of intensity. And his eyes, as he said, were closed. Already, the sane thoughts of sickness and doubt were beginning to scatter anew, your body responding to the promise of new pleasure. Claude exploited that, continuing to lickyou through the damp fabric of your panties while you squirmed, settling for covering your face in place of fighting him off. Not that he was looking. 
“You’ve been alone for a long time, haven’t you?” Claude asked, hooking his fingers beneath your panties to slowly peel them off. You fought that, but it wasn’t hard for him to wrench the cotton from your grasp, the elastic tearing before he got them all the way down and off. When he ghosted his cool fingertips over the bruise on your hip, you shivered. “I’ve barely done anything and you already came once. Every time I touch you, it makes you twitch. I thought you were just discrete, not writing about any boys in your diary, but the truth is that you’ve had nothing to write about, right? Well, until now, that is.” 
“What are you doing?” you hissed down at him, finally panicking enough to grab his hair, trying to pull his head out from between your legs, shame raging a horrible storm within you. Claude groaned, flashing a grin up at you as he casually tossed one of your bare thighs over his shoulder. 
“Yeah, you can pull my hair all you want. I don’t mind,” he said, his cold lips brushing your inner thigh. You thought of his fangs and how easily they had pierced your neck, falling still as he passed the artery there. But that wasn’t his destination, you realized. Claude separated your outer lips, staring at your bare pussy for a long moment before his head dropped forward. 
You yelped when his cold tongue began to draw relentless patterns over your swollen clit. His fingers kept you spread open for him and you couldn’t breathe, every single muscle in your body pulled taut in preparation for the orgasm you were being enticed into. Disgust and humiliation remained constant, sure, but it wasn’t enough to dissuade your body from the pleasure. 
Even when your thighs closed around his head, certainly suffocating him, Claude didn’t falter. Even when you pulled at his hair, even when your hips jumped against his face, he just groaned, doubling down. He had to have been putting on a performance, considering how loud he was, eating you out as sloppily as possible so you had no choice but to revel in the depraved noises. The rest of it was all you. Your moaning, your whimpering, your gasping. Your body didn’t belong to you, you couldn’t force yourself to stay still, couldn’t stop the noises from leaving your mouth, couldn’t stop the hot coil of pleasure from building and building and building. 
“I c-can’t,” you got out breathlessly, “I-I… I can’t.” 
“Just keep telling yourself that,” Claude said, looking up at you from beneath thick, dark eyelashes. “It’ll make this a fun surprise. For you.” 
Forcing your hips flat against the bed, his wicked tongue continued to push you even closer to the precipice. You whimpered, tossing your head back because there was nothing else you could do. It was embarrassing and awful and you hated it, but you knew you weren’t far off. Heat ballooned up in your core, all of your blood seemingly rising to the surface and making your entire body too hot, too tight, too tense. 
Claude’s lips closed around your clit and sucked and you came with a helpless cry straight out of some trashy porno, your entire body tensing and shuddering and completely overcome with nothing except for the raw sensation of pleasure. By the time you were spent, your fingers were twitching, the rest of your body limp and sweaty. 
“See what a difference a can-do attitude makes?” Claude asked, looking up at you with a big smile. You shook your head, breathing too hard, too fast. Unable to meet his eye. “As in, I can make you do anything I want. Funny how that works out.”
“I-I need… a moment.” 
“No you don’t,” Claude said. Messily, hungrily, he moved up from between your legs, his lips tracing your abdomen, your stomach, your ribs, pushing your shirt up to gain access to more and more of your bare flesh. When you realized he was trying to remove your shirt and bra, you fought it, desperate to retain some modesty. 
“I don’t want-” 
“Ah, ah, ah,” Claude scolded. “Remember what I said?” 
With his supposed can-do attitude, it wasn’t difficult for him to get your shirt and bra up and off, shoved past your shoulders and arms until the knotted wad of fabric dropped onto the floor. You tried to cover your bare tits, but Claude barely paused, simply slapping your arms away so he could map your chest with his mouth too. Palming one breast, pinching the aching nipple between cold fingers, he wrapped his lips around the other. 
“Claude, I don’t-”
He effectively shut you up by biting your nipple. Not with his fangs, and not hard, just enough to make you squirm, writhe against him like you had last night, stuck between his unyielding body and the mattress. Sweaty and hot and desperate, but now for completely different reasons. 
You made another sound that was intended to be his name but didn’t come out that way, it was barely language, and far from comprehensible. 
Claude groaned, the fingers of his other hand pushing into your pussy at the same moment, driving right past the tense muscles of your entrance and deep into you. The weight was enough to make you really moan, the feeling of him stretching out your inner walls electrifying your entire body. You could hear how wet you were for him, feel how easily his fingers curled and scissored inside of you, reigniting the little ember of need low in your core. His mouth switched to your other nipple, leaving the first red and aching, and all you could do was hide your face, one hand threaded through his hair as if looking for an anchor point. You thought you needed a break, but already you were back in it, already wanting to come again.
His fingers fucked into you with a sloppy sound. In and out, curling and scissoring and not at all gentle. Not that it mattered. Your body was entirely pliant, moving with him. More than that, responding to each swipe gleefully, needfully, pulsing around his cold fingers and sucking them deeper, your back arching to press your chest harder against his mouth, your thighs squeezing his hand to keep him in place.  
“You’re tight,” Claude said, pulling off your nipple with a slick pop. “Is it possible that you’ve been saving yourself for that special someone?”
You shook your head, more than a little aware of the way his taunt made you tighten around his fingers. So close. Just a little more and you were going to come for him, the heat having gone from a smolder to hellfire beneath your blushing skin, your entire body wound up.
“Do you mean to tell me that you haven’t been suffering all by yourself, waiting for your prince to show up and take care of you?” Claude asked, making his point with each hard thrust. “Cause, I’ll be honest, that’s what this feels like to me. Sensitive, tight, needy… Those are all classic symptoms of neglect.”
It was difficult to breathe. Difficult to think.  
“Please,” you breathed out and you weren’t sure how he heard you, you could barely hear yourself over the crushing thrum of blood in your ears, but Claude responded with a groan. 
“By the way, that is the magic word,” he said. Despite the quip, he fingerfucked you roughly and carelessly. His mouth on your tits was beyond pleasurable. It was exquisite, terrible. You came again, your entire mind clearing out as pleasure shuddered through you, stoked by each thrust of his fingers. They kept on curling, teasing, grinding against your g-spot, going as deep as they could each time. Your orgasm felt like it lasted too long, leaving you wrung out, shaking and almost confused. Maybe that was just because of how hard you were breathing, your brain wasn’t getting enough oxygen.  
Sweat slicked your skin and tears had dripped down your cheeks into your hair and everything glowed when you managed to blink your eyes open.
“You don’t mind, right?” Claude asked, his mouth moving up from your sore nipple to your neck. His hand hadn’t stopped moving, fucking into you. He pulled his fingers out only to add a third, to add that much more impact to each thrust. 
And he. Didn’t. Stop. Claude didn’t so much as pause when he bit into your neck, pushing you past numb overstimulation, past the discomfort, and right back into the cruel build of yet another orgasm. Unlike last night, the piercing sting of his fangs into your flesh was only good, hazy bright red and sharp, followed by the sweet, cool release of his mouth fixing around the wound to suck. It hurt, but the pain was only an aspect of pleasure. And when Claude groaned happily, his tongue lapping at your blood with the same desperation you felt beneath the assault of his fingers, you moaned openly. 
You came again when he bit into your neck a second time, his fangs digging into your flesh mercilessly. The needling sting made you writhe, but his fingertips curled at the same time to press against your g-spot and you couldn’t help it. At this point you were so wet it was dripping past his fingers, slicking your thighs and the bed. Claude sucked even harder at your neck, enough to make you lightheaded. 
Whining, you pulled halfheartedly at his hair. Not for him to stop, but because you wanted him to fuck you. Actually fuck you. At this point you probably were insane, but you didn’t care, all you could imagine was how full you’d feel, pierced by both his fangs and his cock. 
“You want another?” Claude asked, pulling away from your neck. When he pulled back, his lips were wet with your blood, his green eyes alight. “Some girls would be begging for a break right about now.”
“I…” 
“No, no. It’s okay to be a little greedy sometimes,” he said, grinning, the picture of poise and control despite the lunacy swirling within his gaze. 
“Nn-no, I want you-you to—” You let out a high pitched mewl when his other hand dropped to touch your clit in time with his fingers inside of you, writhing desperately, helplessly. This wasn’t what you wanted, you didn’t think, but already sense had flown from your mind, replaced by the intense dread and need that had reduced you to a babbling, mindless thing.  
He had to have known what he was doing to you, how far your mind had degraded, but that didn’t seem to matter to Claude at all. Torturing you with the dual assault of his fingers, he moved back down your body, muttering for you to hold still before his fangs punctured your inner thigh. Biting the sensitive, giving skin hurt in a different way than your neck, but you were already on your way to coming against and when he sucked hard on the wound, you just whined, gripping his hair in a desperate attempt to stop yourself from falling apart completely.  
Claude moaned, sucking hard as you sobbed and moaned and trembled through another orgasm, dripping and squeezing his fingers, twitching with overstimulation and pain and pleasure and the raw rush of ecstasy. He finally let up when you whined, his mouth releasing your thigh and pulling his fingers out of you with a final little press against your g-spot that made your legs jerk. What little sense you might have had before was long gone. 
“Now… What was it you wanted me to do?” asked as he sat back. “You were mumbling, I couldn’t quite understand.”
You turned your face away from him in embarrassment, still trying just to breathe, let alone speak. Claude laughed indulgently. Warm, sweet, even affectionate. He leaned over you to press a kiss to your neck, lapping at the beads of blood that had welled up. Even as you burned, he was cold.
“Look at me,” Claude told you softly, sweetly. 
And you did, meeting his eyes again because you were beyond refusing. What you didn’t expect was for him to take advantage of the way you were gasping for air and shove his fingers in your mouth. They tasted like you and maybe a distant part of your mind was disgusted by that, but it was so much easier to do what came naturally and suck on them, your tongue cleaning his skin of your wet arousal. The reaction seemed to amuse him, and, curiously, he pushed his fingers a little deeper. Predictably, you choked. Claude pulled them out with a spill of saliva. Filthy, but everything was already so wet, the added mess made little difference. 
“Oop, sorry,” he said without the slightest shred of repentance, sitting up and unbuttoning his shirt, tossing it aside. You could barely remember what had happened to your own clothes. “I’d hate to put words into your mouth, so why don’t you tell me what it is you want.” 
You shook your head, closing your eyes in an attempt to collect yourself. More than ever, reality loomed as a detached concept, floating above you and below you but not quite stable. There were reasons that was probably dangerous, but you couldn’t think hard enough to know. Every time you tried, it was just the heavy thump thump thump of your heart, and sweat, and your heavy, heavy head. 
“How about I tell you what I want, and you can let me know if it's agreeable to Her Highness?” Claude asked playfully. You peeked at him from beneath your eyelashes, barely coherent enough to be surprised that he was naked. Beautiful, the warm tan of his skin belying the bloodless cold beneath. Vampire biology, as it turned out, was comparable enough to human biology. “I want to see how many times I can make you come on my cock before you either beg me to stop or pass out. Preferably while enjoying a little more of your blood.” 
You blinked, some sense returning to your head as your eyes followed the trail of dark hair down his abdomen to his cock. A bit of fear because the sight of his hand stroking it made you very aware of what was about to happen, and then his words registered and you froze up entirely. 
“Oh, don’t make that face, that was a joke,” Claude said, scooping you up. The world rolled, your head heavy and limbs limp. “I won’t let you pass out, you’d miss all the fun.” 
“Dizzy,” you muttered, trying to hold onto him for stability, everything he just said fleeing your head as the reality rolled and twisted and shifted incomprehensibly. You couldn’t be afraid of what was happening when you didn’t even know what was happening, although that was distressing in and of itself. 
“You’re okay,” Claude said sweetly, brushing a lock of hair from your face, capturing your attention back onto him. Something to hold onto. “I’ve got you. Just relax, let me take care of you.” 
Amidst the blurry, disorienting world, his eyes were familiar and clear. Beautiful. You must have muttered something in the affirmative because it made him laugh, the sound rumbling in his bare chest. Claude kissed your lips, your cheek. Then you were turned around and falling forward. It was difficult to balance on your hands and knees. He had to settle for your knees and elbows, your arms were trembling too much to hold you. 
“You really are gorgeous, you know that?” Claude said, his hands tracing over your waist, down your hips. He didn’t put any pressure on the hurt one, simply tracing the very tips of his fingers across the ugly bruise. With how sensitive the skin was, it actually felt good, tugging a harsh shiver down your spine. “I’m serious. I mean… Look at you. Not that you can. I guess you’ll have to take my word for it.”
Shame made a brief reappearance as Claude groped your ass, playing with your body a moment before spreading your cheeks, exposing you enough to run the tip of his cock through your slick folds. That made you shiver even harder, your body tensing up, your pussy squeezing around nothing, dripping a little more in anticipation. 
“A meaner man would make you beg,” Claude said, nudging the blunt head against your hole. You exhaled shakily, desperate and nervous and filled with red hot lust. 
“Claude,” you said.
“You’re lucky I’m so nice.” With that as your only warning, he nudged his hips forward. Once the head was in, you were more than wet enough for him to slide in smoothly. 
But Claude still took his time, holding you tightly against him to fill you with little rolling thrusts, his cock dragging against your fluttering inner walls bit by bit so you could feel everything. He held onto the headboard with one strong arm, the other holding your back flush against him which was good because, especially now that you were so full, you had no control over your body. In contrast to your feverish, sweaty skin, Claude was cold and smooth, his flesh unyielding and hollow. Your pussy worked around his cock, adjusting to his size. Any discomfort was easily smoothed out by how right it felt. How perfect.  
“Scratch that, you’re going to be lucky if I ever let you leave my bed,” Claude said, his voice a bit harsher, more affected, his arm tightening around you. 
You whimpered, your body unintentionally responding to what should have been a threat but only registered as a delicious promise. Claude still hadn’t moved. Every little movement made you tighten and flutter around him, a new reminder of how deep he went, how completely full you were. Claude groaned in turn, the sound muffled against your neck. 
When he bit you again, you could feel the way your cunt clamped down around him, your hips desperately twitching in an attempt to make him move. The piercing ache of his fangs spread through your skull, your spine, and then his lips latched onto the wound as if to soothe it. The sound of Claude sucking against your skin was beyond lewd, sloppy and wet and needful. 
“Please,” you whimpered. Not to make him stop, but to make him move, to fuck you properly. He pulled off of your neck with a slick pop. 
“I thought you’d want me to be gentle,” Claude teased, pulling out of you slowly. He didn’t take on the sensual tone of a lover, remaining playful despite what he was doing. “But that’s not true at all, is it? You want to be used. You want me to fuck you so hard you won’t be able to walk, let alone escape from my devious schemes. Then you’ll have no choice but to be a pretty little blood bag for the mean, mean vampire of El Dorado. Am I right, or am I right?”
The words made your cunt tighten despite yourself. “I-” When he thrust back into you, his hips smacking loudly against your ass, you could feel everything. Every ridge, every vein, it was rough and rocked you forward. Only, he held you in place, leaving you with no escape. 
“Exactly, I’m right,” Claude said, repeating the motion, making you cry out pathetically. “Of course, I almost always am. You’d think I’d get sick of it at some point and say something wrong just for a change of pace, but…”
You weren’t really listening to him. How could you? Each thrust was hard enough to practically throw you forward, but the cage of his arm kept you in place so he could keep up the rough pace, fucking into you like you were little more than a doll. You wanted to meet him halfway, wanted to participate, but you were too far gone to possibly keep up. Luckily, Claude didn’t seem to mind either way. 
His fangs buried into your neck directly on top of the wound from last night and it should have hurt horribly, but instead it threw you over the edge, your pussy tightening around his cock and your body trembling as you came. The sensation was hard and rough and completely physical, pleasure blooming out from the place where his cock slammed into you and spreading outwards in wonderfully sensitive sparks of heat. 
Claude growled. You could feel the vibrations in his chest, his throat. The iron tang of your blood mingled with the filthy scent of sex, and the sound of him slurping at the skin of your neck was nearly as lewd as when he ate you out, like the sex was the same as the blood drinking, the two acts intrinsically linked.
The inside part of your consciousness remained in the heavy, hot confines of your body, desperate for a break so you could come down from the orgasm but unable to deny some hot, painful desire for more. The outside part of your mind floated above, like a balloon, disconnected and distantly interested in what was happening, almost like this was a dream. The two parts warred. One mind focused only on Claude and the pure physicality of it all, the other in a state of disbelief that any of this was happening at all. 
Neither mattered, really. Within your chest, your heart raged in a double time beat, racing against the blood loss and the syrupy thick pressure of exertion. Superficial pleasure raced over your skin like electricity. Claude bit into your neck again, drinking even more of your sweetened blood with desperate fervor. You tensed up, realizing that you were going to come again with a twinge of panic. Your body rebelled at the idea, but it would be more painful to deny the pleasure, it would leave you shaking and wanting and desperate and it would hurt. 
“You just can’t get enough, can you?” Claude asked. You moaned wetly, pathetically. He licked a wide stripe up the side of your neck. Even now, his tongue was impossibly cool against the bleeding wounds. 
He let you fall down, pushing your torso into the mattress. You went without protest, boneless and limp. Claude held you up by the waist, his thrusts slowing down as he experimented a few times. You didn’t really realize the point until your body jerked with intense, almost aggressive, pleasure. 
“That’s it, right?” Claude asked, a smile in his voice. You weren’t sure why he asked in the first place, your body’s reaction to him hitting your g-spot was more than telling. It felt good, beyond good, but it was in an electrified, panicked sort of way because at this point you were overstimulated and dizzy and every time he fucked into you it was unbelievably pleasurable, so much that it hurt. It didn’t help that Claude was being so rough, his thrusts losing tempo. And you just took it, jerking each time, spasming around him, moaning helplessly, that coil of heat building with too much intensity, with too much raw-nerve pressure. 
“C-aa-n’t,” you gasped out between thrusts, your voice heavy and wet.  
“Can too,” Claude told you, twisting your hips a little, enough to add that little bit of extra sensation. You pressed your face against the sheets as you came, your moans coming out practically as sobs because of how utterly overstimulating it felt as your pussy unintentionally clamped down around Claude’s cock, forcing more pressure on your g-spot, cruelly dragging out your own orgasm. He was muttering something, praise maybe, but you couldn’t hear it above the roaring of blood in your ears. 
Pretty soon Claude moaned loudly, layering your name with the heavy sound of pleasure. You realized that he was coming too, slamming into you roughly before his hips stuttered, flush with your ass. You shook and gasped and whined, your pussy fluttering and squeezing him, accepting the torment. Inviting it even, dripping around him even as he buried himself too deep inside of you, finishing with a few heavy thrusts. 
Claude laughed lightly after a few moments, although it sounded more like a sound of exhilarated joy than humor. You hoped he wasn’t laughing at you, although you couldn’t do anything even if he was.
He kneaded your ass, spreading your cheeks to watch himself pull out of you with a rush of wetness. Shame had burrowed deep into your gut, but you felt enough to pull away, to press your thighs together as soon as you had the chance.  
“I may have gotten a teensy bit carried away,” Claude admitted. 
You didn’t open your eyes or respond, not even when he threw himself down onto his side and gathered you against him. He was cool and smooth, his flesh inhuman against your own. You were the feverishly sweaty one, although you realized as he held you how cold you felt on the inside. Cold and sore and empty. 
“I know you’re not asleep,” Claude said, nuzzling against the side of your neck, lapping up the blood before sucking lightly at the freshest wound, groaning at the taste. 
You didn’t move. If you did, if you acknowledged the cold or him or the discomfort or anything, you would have to deal with how awful you felt. Blood loss felt a bit like altitude sickness, at least insofar as it left you lightheaded and nauseous. The sore overstimulation was different, but you definitely didn’t want to deal with that. Mostly, you just wanted to stop existing and shirk the discomfort and pretend that none of this was real. 
Claude pulled away from your neck, smacking his lips contentedly. 
You continued not to move as he adjusted himself, his arm leaving your waist to reach for something off to the side. “Can you sit up a little?” Claude asked. Your head spun as he pulled you upward regardless of your answer, the world lurching. Your pussy leaked uncomfortably, coating your thighs and the damp sheets. Every inch of your body either ached or felt clammy and sour. Your head pounded with a headache. Your skin was too tight, sweat dripping into the scrapes and bitemarks. A straw appeared at your lips, urging you to finally open your eyes. “Here—drink this.” 
You looked at him from beneath fluttering eyelashes, meeting those pretty green-blue eyes before looking at the bottle he held. 
“Whassit?” you asked, your voice slurred and barely recognizable. Your stomach protested at the thought of taking anything, but your mouth was bone dry and tasted like blood. 
“Water,” Claude said, pushing the straw past your lips. You just accepted it. Maybe you shouldn’t have, he already admitted to drugging you, but you weren’t thinking clearly and it was easier to just do what he said. “Humans need a lot of water. Especially after losing so much fluid.” He paused, smiling playfully. “Do you always get that wet or am I special?”
You blinked at him, taking in a few more mouthfuls of water before dropping the straw. Claude set the cup aside, wiping the excess water from the corner of your lips, and then smoothing over your hair, pulling you against his chest happily. It was easiest to let it happen. He really did smell good, spice and citrus and musk and Claude. The man of your dreams, he called himself.   
“They thought they could trap me here forever. After their massacre and the fire, they…” Claude didn’t finish that thought, his voice troubled. There was no heartbeat in his hard, muscled chest, but you could feel the rumble of his voice. “She had family, sure, but her blood was cursed. No Macbeth woman would be able to release me from this place ever again. And then you came.” He paused, petting your hair again. “More than once, if I recall.” 
You groaned softly, eliciting a laugh from him. 
“Yeah, that was in poor taste. Unlike you, who tastes excellent,” Claude said affectionately. A moment later, he sighed, returning to a somewhat serious tone. “Anyway, the point is that, vampire or no, I’m man enough to admit that I needed saving just as badly as you. That’s enough, isn’t it? We really should stick together, us accursed outcasts.”
You didn’t say anything, you weren’t sure what you were meant to say. Your thoughts, still, were little more than confused slush. And, more than that, you weren’t sure that was the sort of thing that needed a response. 
Claude accepted your silence and kissed the top of your head. And then he just held you. Not like he was afraid you would leave him, but like he was afraid you would cease to exist altogether, his arms nearly desperately keeping you pressed against his chest, his hands brushing your back or nose ruffling your hair as he reminded himself that you were still there.
And maybe those thoughts were just projections, but you didn’t think they were. 
II.
1st Day of Ethereal Moon
Now it’s just us two. Me and Claude ruling the world. Explorers, adventurers, wanderers. Rogues who hide behind the horizon to keep the night close. I told him that the other day and it made Claude laugh. It didn’t hurt even a bit to say, either. Dad would like him, I think. Claude likes discovering things and chasing mysteries and all that too. There’s always somewhere new to go, we never stay anywhere long enough for people to notice our shadow. It can be hard sometimes, but I’m not alone. It’s as good an ending as any. 
Happily ever after. 
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eyesofshinigami · 29 days
Text
Screaming in Tune
Rating: T
Pairing: Steddie
Tags: Pre-Steddie, Came back wrong, mentions of Eddie's death, sort of unreliable narrator
Written for the daily drabble challenge over on the STWG: prompt was "Wanderlust"
This was heavily inspired by The Amazing Devil's Farewell Wanderlust which... well. Here it is.
-*-
Steve can feel it growing, inside of him. The itching need under his skin that he can’t figure out how to put a name to it. He just knows it’s tugging him, hooking underneath his navel, and making him long to be somewhere, find something.
He hasn’t said anything. Things are still tense, even weeks after their town split like a cored apple. At night, he can see the red glow against the darkness, and it calls to him. Maybe it’s from the wounds the demobats gave him, or just the poison of the Upside Down that has sunk into his bones. He doesn’t know, tries not to give too much thought to it. But it makes it really hard to concentrate when they’re gathered to plan out what they’re going to, how they’re going to take Vecna out for once and for all.
It gets worse when he lets his mind wander. Thoughts of getting up and walking out underneath the ash-filled skies until his feet crack and bleed are intrusive, constant. He thinks he can hear the whisper of something, a voice that tells him all kinds of things.
Come find me.
I’m here, waiting.
I’m waiting for you.
“Steve?”
He comes back to himself, looking between Nancy’s frown and Robin’s concerned eyes and Dustin’s fearful stare and it makes guilt gnaw at his insides. “Sorry, was lost in thought.
“Thought you got Vecna-ed,” Dustin murmurs, clinging to him. He’s been that way since… since…
Well, Steve can’t really blame him. Just like he’s sure they wouldn’t blame him for the itch in his bones, the need to find whatever is calling him that is slowly starting to consume his every single thought. “Nope, just spacey, you know that. One too many knocks to the head.” He presses his knuckles against Dustin’s temple just to make him laugh, even as he feels it creeping over him again.
Soft, like a lover. Demanding, like a child.
Come find me. Just walk away and come find me. I’m waiting for you.
That night, laying in his bed at home, he tosses and turns against the feeling burning inside his ribcage, making his legs tingle with the need to move. It’s calling again, that aching need inside of him that feels like an impossible siren song.
Steve is helpless to obey. He gets to his feet and starts to follow it, like an invisible trail of breadcrumbs that has been left just for him.
The feeling grows stronger with each step he takes, not sure where it’s going to take him. He follows along and lets the pull guide him, winding him through the trees and away from the town with hellfire creeping up and over the streets like demons trying to escape. It’s probably not too far off, considering what creatures of the Upside Down he’s seen.
His feet take him to Forest Hills and it isn’t until he sees the broken wood of the sign that it dawns on him. The pull is coming from the gate, the pulsing red center that sits where Eddie’s trailer used to be. The others lay like bones in a graveyard, old and dusty and abandoned now that most of the town has fled. Everything is faded black against that bright red spill of light.
He should turn around. He should call someone. He should forget that he even bothered to follow the call in the first place.
So many things he should do, but Steve knows exactly what he’s going to do.
He walks to the edge, right where the jagged edges of the gate has forced their way into this reality. It pulses and brightens when he gets close, like it recognizes him as an old friend. He reaches out, touches it and it feels warm and inviting. It wants him here, has been calling him for so long.
Steve barely has a moment to consider before a pale, black-clawed hand shoots out from the membrane of the gate, locking around his t-shirt and pulling him inside. No time to scream, no time to fight, just yanked through like he weighs nothing at all.
For the first time, he is afraid. Clearly this has been a trap, something lured him here to finish the job that the demobats started. Maybe it’s Vecna, maybe it’s something else.
When he’s through the gate, he falls to his knees, hard against the black dirt of the Upside Down. Everything is bathed in deep red and Steve shivers in the unnatural air. So, so stupid, he tells himself. Now he will die here and no one will know, he’ll never see Robin again and Dustin will be devastated, knowing he lost Steve too, and-
The same, black-clawed hand cups him under the chin, delicately, like he is something precious and worthwhile. Where he was expecting pain, he gets only gentleness. His head is tipped up and Steve forced himself to open his eyes against the soot and must of the Upside Down.
Eddie’s face stares back at him, grinning wide with too many teeth. Leathery black wings unfurl behind him, and the deep, black set of his eyes reminds Steve of the pieces of onyx Dustin showed him from his collection. It’s unnatural, sure, but the look on Eddie’s face is comforting in its familiarity. Steve can still see where the bats devoured him, jagged scars gray against the shock-white of Eddie’s skin. And yet, here he is, not human but not quite a monster either.
“Hey there, big boy. Did you miss me?”
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chestharrington · 2 years
Note
Ok smutty concept for Steve and Eddie (and maybe even Robin?) with afab reader:
Getting stoned in Eddie’s trailer and playing truth or dare and uhhhhh long story short it all gets a lil very fruity and I’m blushing just thinking abt it so you can take it from here
Girl help i wrote a whole ass mini fic for this and it disappeared. :( i’m gonna rewrite it here!
~~~
“Truth or dare?” Eddie leaned forward, dark eyes watching you intently. You rolled your eyes, mouth poised to say ‘really? A kids game?’ But he was having none of it. “C’mon, don’t be a pussy. Truth… or dare?”
You looked at him pointedly as you took a pull from the joint you shared with Steve. “I don’t like that word, Eddie,” you said pointedly. “But dare.”
He grinned, and you knew immediately that he had something up his sleeve. “I dare you to take your top off.”
“You’re a perv, Munson,” Steve piped up, but he didn’t seem to mind. Frankly, you didn’t either.
You started to pull your top off, relishing in their gazes locked on your body, then paused, furrowing your brows in a show of confusion. “Top, or top and bra?”
“Dealer’s choice,” Eddie said, smiling like he was the most benevolent person to have ever lived.
Their eyes were glued on you as you pulled your top over your head, pausing to throw your shirt onto Eddie’s dismal looking carpet. As soon as it hit the floor, you were unclasping your bra and letting it fall onto the bed between you and them.
The room was suddenly silent as they both stared at you through half-lidded eyes. Sheepish at the sudden attention, you crossed your arms over your chest. “Alright, Steve,” you said, breaking the silence. “Truth or dare?”
He blew out smoke slowly, so it hung in the air around him. “Hmmm… truth. I don’t trust you perverts.”
You grinned, leaning forward. “Who in this room have you had sexual fantasies about?”
His eyes went wide, cheeks turning a bright pink. “That’s… I haven’t—“ He sighed, taking another pull off of his joint. “Both. But it’s not like they really count.”
You smiled. “Aw… your turn Stevie.”
He rolled his eyes, ashing his joint in an ugly brown ashtray. “Munson. Truth or dare?”
Eddie turned on his side to face him. “C’mon, Steve, if you wanna know if I like you back you don’t need to play a stupid game.” Steve made a face, still blushing like mad. Eddie sighed. “Alright, dare.”
“I dare you to make out with each other.” Steve looked annoyingly smug about this, even as you rolled your eyes. It was like middle school all over again. “If you both can be perverts, I can be too.”
You crawled over to Eddie, settling in his lap. It was annoying how turned on you were just from smoking and playing a stupid game with your two friends. “Was this what you fantasized about Steve?” You asked, leaning in to lick Eddie’s lips teasingly.
“What?” Steve asked, affronted. “No, I’m not, like, fantasizing about you two that would be so weird.” He took another hit from his joint before sighing. “Fuck. Maybe.”
You grinned, turning back to Eddie. “What do you think, Eddie? Should we entertain his perverted fantasy?” Your fingers tangled in his long hair, tugging slightly. He grinned up at you, and you captured his lips in a sloppy, open-mouthed kiss, moaning at the taste of him. His hands traveled up your bare back, making you shiver. You could feel the icy sting of his rings on your warm skin.
It could have lasted minutes or hours. You were so wrapped up in the feeling of his mouth on yours, of his wandering hands. A moan escaped you as his hands settled on your tits, but your mouths swallowed the sound. You broke apart, a string of spit connecting your lips to his. You turned, laughing sheepishly at the sight of Steve— eyes wide, mouth slackened.
“Aww… feeling left out Stevie?” You asked. “C’mere, then.”
He was beside you before you even had time to react, his lips on your throat as Eddie moved his mouth to yours again. It was the best type of heaven— two of the most perfect people you knew with their hands on you. “Steve,” you gasped, leaning back. He looked up at you, pretty eyes wide. “Don’t just give me all the attention. I’m sure Eddie would love to know how your pretty lips feel on his.”
He stammered nervously, only silenced by Eddie pulling him in for a hungry kiss. You relished in the sight— how desperately Steve kissed back, the sight of hands tangled into hair. Eddie’s free hand never left your body, groping at your tits while he let his tongue explore Steve’s mouth. You grinned and leaned in, peppering soft kisses along Steve’s throat.
God, it was going to be a good night.
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kedreeva · 2 years
Text
(Not All) Those Who Wander Are Lost
Wherein Eddie wakes up alone in the Upside Down and while wandering to find a way home, finds instead that he has the ability to bond with monsters like Vecna had done; and that not all monsters are strangers.
------
In the street stands a massive monster unlike any Eddie’s seen so far, bigger than the demogorgon even. It resembles some kind of stocky deer, with thin legs and a thick body and neck, crowned in a spray of sharp antlers. Instead of hooves, its forelimbs end in hands like a demogorgon’s, messy and sharp but not clawed like Lars’. It swishes a long tail idly behind it, something akin to a lion’s except for the webbing that runs the length of it. There’s no fur on it, just as there’s no fur on anything in the Upside Down, but its snout is to the pavement as if it is grazing rather than absorbing the ash falling all around them.
He puts a hand down to stop Lars from going past him out the door. Lars voices irritation in the hot touch of an oven-warm pan, and Eddie snatches his hand away with a hiss even though he knows the sensation is only in his mind.
The beast in the street rears its head up at the noise, turning its face to where they are, and it hasn’t got eyes either. It hasn’t got a face, Eddie thinks with more than a little dread; where red, flayed flesh should have covered its face, there is a bone plate that almost looks like a skull but not quite.
He descends the front step and as soon as his feet touch ground, the monster before him turns to face him fully. Its face splits open to the cheek in a way a deer’s does not, revealing a long jaw full of predatory teeth. Eddie freezes again when he feels the violent wash of static, accompanied by a scream not unlike that of a jackal. A warning, if he’d ever heard one, and he covers his ears to block it out.
“I’m not going to hurt you,” he says, when it falls quiet.
He takes another step forward, and the beast rears its head back, towering over him now, but it doesn’t attack. Something protrudes around its throat, a collar of flesh or perhaps a vine, two bones hooked around one another at its center where tags might have hung on a dog. He takes the final step and falls still, his heart trying to beat right through his ribcage, his head light with the adrenaline of terror.
He holds his ground and his hands out, and waits.
Static crackles over his mind and skin, tickling the way the lights had done so long ago now, and the monster tips its head, looking sidelong down at him. At the front of its chest, before the collar, he can see slits tremble open and closed with the expansion of its sides; it is breathing there rather than through the smooth bone-plate on its face, or its mouth.
He waits, and slowly the creature lowers its head, and places the tip of its snout into his open palms.
Light flickers into his mind, images of the broken landscape he’d traveled recently, of not-Hawkins, views from the sky he can’t make sense of, and… and more familiar memories, of the high school, and the trailer park, and the insides of cars and classrooms and homes. The wave of the bond smooths out in his mind, settling into calm waters, and he opens his eyes to look at her properly for the first time.
Eddie? she says, the single word a bucket of cold water down his back on a blazing summer afternoon.
“Max?”
(Read the story on AO3!)
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demifiendrsa · 2 years
Video
youtube
Final Fantasy XVI - “Ambition” trailer
youtube
Japanese version (with subtitles)
Final Fantasy XVI will launch for PlayStation 5 in Summer 2023.
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“Ambition” trailer stills
Latest details
■ Trailer Description
Who shall claim their fading light? From a single spark, will the land ignite A new shadow rises to fall upon the Dominants, painting their destinies black as night.
It has been fifteen hundred years since the fall of our forebears, and Valisthea has been slowly dying ever since. Darkness spreads as day gives way to twilight, the Mothers’ flame now all but a flicker. And as the fringes fade, the people flock to the Mothercrystals.
■ Messages from the Producer and Director
Message from Producer Naoki Yoshida
“Greetings everyone!
“I’m happy to announce that our newest trailer—Ambition—is now live. Rather than focusing on action as we did in our last reveal, this time we wanted to give the world a more in-depth look at Final Fantasy XVI‘s lore and its rich cast of characters—with the Dominants front and center.
“The flames of war spread as Valisthea enters an age of twilight. Where will fate lead the Dominants and what future awaits the realm at the end of this bitter conflict? There are still many more questions to be answered, many more truths to be uncovered.
“With regards to development, the team has turned the corner and entered the home stretch, and is currently concentrating its efforts on debugging, tweaking, polishing, and optimization. As for promotion, over the next few weeks, myself, main director Hiroshi Takai, creative director Kazutoyo Maehiro, and localization director Michael-Christopher Koji Fox will be taking part in interviews with multiple media outlets from across the globe to bring you even more information, so make sure you keep your eyes out for those out as well!”
Final Fantasy XVI Producer Naoki Yoshida
Message from Director Hiroshi Takai
“Hello!
“Our third trailer is finally here and jam-packed with exciting new information that provides a better picture of how the game’s setting, lore, and characters tie in with our compelling narrative. Hopefully it was worth the wait!
“As the game edges closer to completion, the team has turned its full attention to debugging and final adjustments. Now that things are starting to come together, the game is sizing up to be something truly special.
“We know you are all hungry to see more, but for now we hope that this little peek into the world of Final Fantasy XVI is enough to keep you both satisfied and (of course) speculating until our next big reveal.”
Final Fantasy XVI Director Hiroshi Takai
■ New Characters
Dion Lesage
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Crown prince of the Holy Empire of Sanbreque and leader of its noblest and most feared order of knights—the dragoons. Dion is loved and respected by both his people and his troops, not least for the many times he has turned the tide of battle in their favor. Indeed, songs of the heroism of the warrior prince and his Eikon Bahamut, King of Dragons, are never far from the lips and lutes of Sanbrequois bards. But all is not well in the empire, and the gathering shadows may yet be enough to quell Bahamut’s light…
Barnabas Tharmr
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Arriving on the shores of Ash as a landless and titleless wanderer, it was Barnabas’s skill with a blade that won him a kingdom. And though the local beastmen were to rise in revolt against his rule, Barnabas called on the power of his Eikon, Odin, to quell their rebellions nigh single-handedly, bringing the entirety of the eastern continent under the Waloeder banner. Now he has an army and navy that rival any in Valisthea at his disposal, yet still the king is drawn to where the fighting is thickest—riding into battle atop his spectral steed and sundering foes with his fabled black blade, or merely observing the unfolding chaos from the sidelines, a grisly gleam of fascination ever in his eyes.
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Text
Ash Williams Masterlist
This is a masterlist of my posts about Ash Williams (Evil Dead series). This list will include: Headcanons, analysis, shower thoughts, non-crossover shipping thoughts, etc.
---Z---
Headcanons:
Trans Ash + Surgery (sfw): Link
Ash's relationship with intimacy (sfw): Link
Ash + Evil Ash Gender (sfw): Link
Ash sleeps with a nightlight (sfw): Link
Trans Ash + Cheryl sibling relationship (sfw): Link
What Ash Does Alone in the Trailer (nsfw): Link
Song headcanons for AvED!Ash: Link
Analysis:
Talk on the misconception of Ash's personality/Character (sfw): Link
Ash's relationship with music (sfw): Link
Talk of Lillian's abuse towards Ash (technically sfw?): Link
Ash's relationship with sex and his canon sexual trauma (nsfw, additional warnings inside): Link
Shower Thoughts:
Thoughts on trans Ash being a dad (sfw): Link
Ash is canonly not a top (nsfw): Link
Shipping thoughts:
My thoughts on Sheila and her relationship with Ash (sfw): Link
Evil Ash is extremely gay for Ash (sfw): Link
I believe in Ash/Linda/Chet (nsfw): Link
Ship Headcanons for Evil Ash/Ash (nsfw): Link
Amanda would top Ash (nsfw): Link
Fanfiction (Based in Evil Dead the Game universe):
AoD!Ash + Annie Knowby friendship (sfw): Link
Woe for Tomorrow (Evil Ash/Ash, Evil Ash trades safety for sex): - Intro (An exhausted Ash and Evil Ash meet up) (sfw): Link - Bedroom Excerpt (Ash and Evil Ash are in bed, Ash's mind starts to wander) (technically sfw, possibly low nsfw): Link
Scenarios (Little Scenes I Think About):
Various Scenarios of Ash being intimate (Various Ships - NSFW): Link
Ash and Chet before Ash leaves town (nsfw): Link
Evil Ash bullying young ash to flirt with AoD!Ash: Link
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damien-mlm · 1 year
Text
Red - Part 2
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Warnings: none that I can think of, Red being Red, Darrell is at Ambrose so Red is feeling lonely, Skulk is mentioned
Darrell belongs to @bluecoolr
Skulk belongs to @probably-a-plant-thing
"I'll be thinking of you every second anyway"
Darrell was one sappy man, and Red loved every second of it. Even in the heat of the kitchen, his face felt hotter by just reading the text message.
"SHUT up! You're making me blush at work"
Darrell was going to spend thanksgiving over at Ambrose with some friends of his, he was offered to come with, but ultimately decided to stay, Skulk couldn't handle the hogs by himself. And boy was he regretting staying already.
He was more quiet than usual, his mind wandering to the blue haired giant. Safe to say he burnt a few pancakes while spacing out. 
It's not like Darrell would be here with him anyway. He's at work, Darrell would be at the station. They'd be chatting over text just like they are right now. 
The difference being, once he gets out of work, he won't be able to visit Darrell. And even if that time hasn't come yet, the knowledge that he's away is enough to eat away at his heart.
The day had gone by way slower than usual, for a moment he was reminded of the time before he arrived at Devil's Peak. How many years has it been? He doesn't even remember. He had been wandering from town to town, looking for a place where he could settle discreetly. A place where everything worked with cash, no questions asked.
He decided to skip the usual Friday Night at the bar, he'd just drink a few beers by himself this time. 
On top of Darrell's trailer that is.
Red climbed to the flat top of the mobile home, 6-pack of beer in one hand. The air was cold and humid, he could see his own breath under the moonlight. 
He opened his phone and typed a message for Darrell.
"Hey Blue, how was your day? I miss you"
delete
"What u up to? Wish you were here"
UGH
delete
"Hope u don't mind me sleeping on ur trailer tonight cuz that's what I'm doing"
…. Good enough
send
ding!~
That was fast…
"Don't you mean 'in'?" He let out a chuckle.
"I said what I said"
He put down the phone and cracked open a beer, this will be a long night.
This was the second week in which he was drunk and missing him. Only this time there was no way of seeing him. He felt stupid, he never imagined he'd catch feelings for Darrell, or anyone, for that matter.
Most of his life after death he spent it alone, relying on fights and hookups for human contact. And for a while it was fine.
He was young, making himself to be the man he always knew he was. Turns out bribing nurses into giving him T injections was easier than he thought. Now, surgery, that was the issue.
The money he had taken from his father was plenty, but he needed a safe place to go for recovery "I read on the paper there's a small cabin in Devil's Prick for sale" said the nurse while injecting him. 
The place definitely needed some TLC, but it was a home, it was secluded, safe and his. 
It was only after he had made a full recovery that he realized he was running low on funds.
Luckily, the diner needed help.
"Welcome to the team, kid" said the old man, patting him on the back. 
Out of the corner of his eye he noticed a big hulking figure, a man with ash blue hair, which was tied on a low bun.
Oh, he's cute…
He was carrying big sacks of potatoes into the walk-in fridge from a truck outside, one sack on his shoulder, another hanging from his hand.
Oh, he's strong…
He waited for his break to go talk to the man, saw him leaning against the wall near the back door, smoking.
"Can I bum one out ?" the big man seemed taken aback, was he blushing? That's adorable.
"Yeah, here…" he said, holding out a pack of cigs at Red. He gladly took one with a smile, placing the smoke between his lips before signaling the taller man to get closer.
He fell right into the trap.
Once he was close enough, Red grabbed his shoulder and pulled him close enough to have the lit cigarette touch his own, and kept him there until the second smoke started going. His red face looks even cuter up close, he thought.
He let go of the man and leaned back on the wall, taking a long drag before blowing out the smoke that accumulated in his lungs.
"Thanks, I didn't catch your name?" the poor man seemed flustered out of his mind.
"I'm Darrell, you're the new guy, right?" 
"Yeah, 's nice to meet ya, Darrell." he said, holding his hand out, "Call me Red"
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Taglist: @rottent33th @slaasherslut @the-pinstriped-hood @allthingsblood @texaschainsawslvt @angxlslasher @kalid-raven @ajarofpickledtears
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cha0ticspacebi · 1 year
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You're An Image Caught in Time: Chapter 21
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You got your soulmark when you were very young. You knew who you hoped had left their mark but since they never said anything to you, you resigned yourself to a life of bitter unrequited love. As much as you wanted to meet your soulmate you knew after all these years they must not want to meet you. Though the mark never faded some days you wished it would. Especially after meeting Billy.
☆ You can find me over on A03 as Cha0ticBi ☆ Master list link!
Childhood Friends! Eddie Munson X Reader
Tags: 18+ NSFW MDNI, slowish burn soulmate AU, reader is in an abusive relationship with Billy Hargrove, Dark! Billy, Eddie is a sweetheart but bad at feelings, hurt/comfort, eventual smut, eventual happy ending
Warnings: rape/non con elements, emotional and physical abuse, graphic depictions of violence, suicidal thoughts
Chapter 21/28 Previous chapter → Next chapter
Birds chirped outside the window of your shared bedroom as you slowly blinked your eyes open. You got up, careful not to wake Eddie as you snuck to the window and looked out at the forest behind the trailer. The trees were shaking off the last remnants of winter. Tiny buds were beginning to sprout along their branches. You heard the front door open and Wayne moving around in the kitchen. Eddie was still asleep  so you put on some pants and then tiptoed over to the side of the bed. You leaned over and touched your lips to his forehead before going out into the kitchen. 
Wayne looked up from his coffee cup as you walked in, continuing to pour the dark liquid from the pot, “Mornin’ kiddo, how ya feeling?”
“I’m good, never been better actually,” he handed you a cup, “Thanks.”
The two of you sat at the small table listening to the sounds of the birds still singing outside, “Wayne? I just wanted to say thank you.”
He smiled and tried to tell you there was no need but you kept talking, “When I was a kid and I’d wander over here at all hours of the night when those assholes were screaming at each other, you never made me feel unwelcome. Your door was always open for me and now you’re letting me live here, so I just want you to know how much I appreciate you.”
He sipped the steaming cup and reached across the table to pat your wrist, “I should be thanking you. Before you came along he was having a real tough time. When his dad got locked up he took it hard but the day he met you, he came home and couldn’t stop talking about his new friend.”
You squeezed your teddy bear as you slipped out from the backseat of the car. You watched your mom crush her cigarette in the car’s ashtray. Finally after hours of driving you arrived at your new home, the Forest Hills Trailer Park. They were quiet as they started moving bags out. Somehow when they were quiet it was worse than when they were yelling, yelling meant you knew they were upset. Quiet was uncertain. 
You looked around the place that you’d be living in from now on. One of the residents had a fire going outside their trailer. You watched in the evening air as the glowing embers fluttered up to the sky before disappearing. The smell of ash and smoke filled your nose. The adults all stood around the fire talking. One of them waved at your stepdad as he and your mom finished unpacking.
“Let’s go!” your mom yelled for you to grab your stuff. You grabbed your small bag and shuffled off into the house.  
Later that night after your mom helped you put some of your stuff away. When you were done, you looked out the window at the trailer across the street. The lights were on and sitting on the front porch was a boy. He had short brown hair and his puffy green vest was covered in dirt. He was drawing shapes into the ground with a stick. Someone must have called him because he looked up toward the door and dropped the stick. He looked just a little older than you but, somewhere in your head you wondered if maybe you could be friends. That night you felt like a real family as the three of you sat down to dinner. They even surprised you with cupcakes! It didn’t last long though.
The next day you awoke to familiar yelling and the loud sound of glass shattering. Your brain couldn’t comprehend what was going on but you were used to it. When they would yell you knew to hide. But this place was new, you hadn’t found the good hiding spots yet so you grabbed your teddy and snuck through the house and went outside.
It was quiet. The place you’d moved from was always so loud, during the day and at night. This new place was very different. You could see the sun coming up over the trees that surrounded your new home. You looked over across the street where you’d seen the boy last night. The trailer was dark. Wandering around you didn’t see anyone else outside until you reached the edge of the lot, an old lady was out gardening. She smiled at you.
“Good morning dear, are you lost?” She wiped some dirt off her hands, “You must be new around here, did you just move in?” You nodded your head, “Your parents must be worried about you, do you need help getting back home?”
You shook your head no, a mousy voice answered as you pointed back the way you came towards your trailer, “No, I’m ok thank you.”
Her lips curled in surprise, “Wow you’re very polite. What’s your name?”
You smiled and told her your name. She was a nice lady you thought to yourself.
Just then you heard a rustling sound as a strong gust of wind blew through the trailer park. The old lady held onto her hat, “You’d better get home dear. Feels like a storm is on its way.”
You waved goodbye to her and turned back the way you came. As you walked slowly back along the dirt road, you noticed a break in the chain link fence on the edge of the forest. Curiosity and a desire to stay out of the house just a little longer pulled you towards the fence. You crawled through the opening and brushed yourself off, looking up through the trees you saw the morning dew shining on the leaves in the early sunlight rays that shone through the gaps in the branches. Clutching your teddy bear you walk through the forest until you come to a small stream. You walked along following the water until a loud rumble of thunder scared you. When you looked up, you were lost. Nothing looked familiar, every tree looked the same. You spun around in circles panic rising. 
A voice startled you.
“You should be careful, those rocks are slippery,” You looked up to see the boy from the stoop up in a tree. He crawled down and without another word he started walking along the edge of the water.  
Following behind him like a little lost puppy, you feel a weird tug in your chest. Just once he looks back to see if you are still following him before continuing to lead you all the way back to the fence. Just as he was about to slip through the wires you called out to him. 
“Thank you! What’s your name?”
He grabbed the chain link and turned back to face you with a smile, “Eddie.”
“Uh oh, am I in trouble?” Eddie had joined you and Wayne in the kitchen. His hair was messy and he had clearly rolled out of bed and thrown on the jeans from yesterday with his dirty hellfire shirt that you had to hide from him if you ever wanted it washed. 
You snickered into your coffee cup, “No, but we were just talking about you.”
He joined you at the table and kissed your hair, “All good things I hope.” 
“I was just asking if you kids had anything special planned for spring break,” Wayne changed the subject.
“Um, sleeping in and playing D&D?” Eddie laughed from his chest. A surge of joy flooded your heart as you felt his excitement. 
Ever since the night of Billy's trial, the connection you two share has only gotten stronger. It was easier for you to feel the others emotions and mood without even really trying. Your marks had definitely darkened too. Eddie’s was so dark now it almost looked like one of his tattoos. You had tried to do some research at school to figure out why it might be happening but your efforts came up empty. You couldn’t find a single reference to it in any book you checked.
The trial being over didn’t mean you suddenly had all this free time, you had been helping Eddie study and prepare for finals this year so that come the end of May he could finally walk that stage with you at the graduation ceremony. He’s joked quite a bit about getting held back on purpose just so he could walk with you. He had been working so hard that you wanted him to enjoy the time off.
“Sweetheart, will you call Harrington and tell him we are using his house for hellfire again tonight?”
You laughed, “Sure. Enjoy your shower.” His cheeks light up when you flash him a wink.
The past month you and Eddie have fallen into a routine. It felt so nice. Eddie and Wayne’s constant presence has given you a sense of safety and security that you’ve never felt in your entire life. Day to day life with your mother and stepdad was chaotic at best, always unpredictable and never really felt like a home. Life with Eddie by your side feels so right. 
Everyone who supported you had been right. Facing Billy was the best decision you ever made. You’ve continued seeing Ms. Kelly at school and Eddie has been encouraging you to get out there and do things with just you and your friends. After finishing your coffee, you went back to the bedroom to get ready for the day, smiling to yourself as you thought about the recent shopping trip you, Robin, and Steve took.
“Come on, you need to practice more if you’re going to go to college!” Robin rubbed your shoulders from the back seat of Steve’s BMW as you death gripped the steering wheel.
Sure, you had your driver’s license but you’ve never really needed it. Buying a car was out of the question in your current position, Billy had driven you everywhere, and now Eddie does. You’ve never really needed to drive yourself anywhere. Robin was right as usual though. This was just another step to regaining your independence and freedom. But why did it have to be with Steve’s expensive car? You had asked Eddie to let you practice in the van but he insisted that you practice with a more reliable car.
“What if I crash?”
They shook their heads. Steve was in the passenger seat and reassured you, “If you made it all the way here after that shit Billy did and you managed not to crash, you’ll be fine!”
They were right. You made it to the mall without destroying his car, they did have to tell you a few times to slow down but all in all, they were proud of you!
The three of you spent the whole afternoon window shopping, making Steve try on every weird hat just to see him try to defend his hair. You grabbed some food in the food court before heading home.
Robin sipped her drink, “So have you and Eddie had sex yet?”
Your eyes popped and you choked on the liquid from your cup, “Robin!” You looked around and stammered over your words, “Who just asks that out of nowhere?”
Steve shrugged, “I was actually curious too. You’ve been like a completely different person lately.”
Your shoulders dropped. Have you really changed that much? Robin spoke again having noticed the change in your demeanor, “Don’t listen to him. You’re not different, we just haven’t seen this you in a long time.”
You scoffed, “Yeah you can say that again. That bastard really fucked me up didn’t he?”
“Look at you though! Just by being out here right now you’re breaking the control he had over you! Have you once today thought that Eddie will be mad at you? Or that you are doing something you shouldn’t?”
You smiled thinking about Eddie, “No. Billy would never have let me come out with just the two of you.”
As your conversation continues you see Max and Lucas walk in together. They order some food and sit a few tables away from you. They look like they might be on a date. You try not to stare at them but you keep feeling your eyes lift in their direction. Max looks happy. She’s laughing and you’re pretty sure they are flirting with each other. At some point she catches you staring and smiles at you. 
“You never answered the question!” Robin broke your distraction, “Have you and Eddie,” she made a gesture with her hands, “You know? Yet?”
You shook your head, embarrassed, “You’re not going to let it go are you?”
Steve answered for her with a laugh, “No, you should know how stubborn she is!”
You laugh, “Fair point,” you let out a deep sigh, “We’ve fooled around a few times but no. He told me we should wait until I said I was ready. I’ve thought about it though. A lot if I’m being honest but,” you fidgeted with your fingers, “I think that’s going to be a wound that takes a little longer to heal. There were so many times that Billy wouldn’t stop when I asked him to. I wanted it in the beginning but then when he got rough, I wanted it to stop and he didn't.”
“Rape,” Robin clarified, “He raped you.”
Hearing it like that made your chest ache, “But I agreed to it at first. Sometimes I didn’t even say no. I just sort of waited for him to finish -” Steve cut you off.
“The moment you weren't enjoying yourself he should have stopped. End of story. You know Eddie wouldn’t do that though right? I see him when we all hang out together, he treats you like you're made of glass and you’ll break if he holds you too tight. Don’t tell him I said this or I’ll never hear the end of it but it’s actually really sweet how protective he is of you.”
“I know,” you smile and play with your food on the plastic spork, “He’s always so considerate. I feel bad still making him wait.”
“You aren’t making him do anything! Trust me, he would still love you even if you said you never wanted it again,” Robin offered.
You laughed, “Well let’s not go that far!”
“Hey,” Eddie’s voice called out to you, “You okay? You looked like you were on another planet.”
Your daydream broke and you looked up to see Eddie, shirtless with his wet hair still dripping small amounts of water onto his shoulders and down his chest. Heat covered your cheeks. Your eyes traveled along his torso, his red guitar pick necklace lay perfectly against his exposed chest. The towel wrapped around his waist sitting just a bit too low. You jumped up and tried to brush it off, “Oh I’m fine! Just got off the phone with Steve, he said we’re good for tonight. My turn!” You ran out of the room to take a cold shower. 
Later that evening you and Eddie made your way to Steve’s after Eddie tossed all his gear into a bag. Playing dungeons and dragons was never something you thought you’d enjoy but you were becoming quite a natural at it and it was surprisingly fun. Eddie even said you should try your hand at being the dungeon master one of these days! But for now that was his job.
You pulled into Steve’s driveway and headed inside the already bustling house. Robin, Dustin, Mike, Lucas, Garett, and Jeff were already there. You hear Steve and Dustin talking loudly from the kitchen.
“I thought you said you didn’t want to play with us anymore hm?” Steve sounded so cocky.
“It was a figure of speech,” Dustin tried to defend himself.
Steve laughed, “You just can’t admit you like hanging out with me. Even when it’s staring you in the face you still can’t admit it you little butthead.”
“I concur,” Eddie interrupted, “You Dustin Henderson are a total butthead!” Eddie grabbed him by the neck and tousled his hair.
You gave Robin a hug while the boys continued teasing Dustin. Eventually you came to his rescue, “Eddie?” You whined and batted your eyelashes at him, “Are we going to play? I’ve been thinking about what you have planned all day!”
He blushed but quickly regained his composure and flashed you a huge grin, “Oh really princess? Just can’t get me off your mind can you? Well who am I to keep a fair maiden waiting,” he grabbed your hand and led you to the table, “Adventure awaits us!”
“You enter the abandoned camp and look around,” Eddie’s eyes shifted over the table, “Any and all signs of life have vanished. The air moves slowly through the forest, silence is all you can hear. You see four tents arranged surrounding a fire pit. Still no sign of the townmaster you’ve been sent to look for. There’s three makeshift structures that look like they were constructed in a hurry for the logging operation, which you know to be the supposed purpose of the camp. However only one of them remains standing. The others are in shambles. What do you do?”
As the session begins Mike sets some ground rules obviously recalling the last time all of you played together, “Nobody move! We better look around first. Something is obviously amiss here and we need to be on guard.”
“I go over to the building that is still standing and knock on the door,” you didn’t listen to Mike. 
“The beautiful dwarven cleric takes initiative and goes to check for the townmaster. You bring your hand up to the old wood and knock,” he drags out his words. Building tension with every prolonged second. 
“No one’s home!”
You pout, curling your lip looking at the rest of the group, “Come on Dustin! Don’t give me that look, it was worth a shot.”
“Yeah a shot that could have ended up with you triggering a trap or unleashing some creature upon us,” he turned to Gareth and Jeff, “What do you think we should do?”
They both shrugged, “Perception checks?”
Everyone rolls and Eddie nods before divulging any more information, “As you explore you see signs that the camp was abandoned in a hurry and from the looks of it, fairly recently. The fire pits are still hot, the coals still smoking. There’s a boat docked in the lake with barrels of freshly caught fish. A few loose objects are scattered about the area near the tents. You find several papers that look like they fell from a sorcerer’s book, several half melted candles, and a small jar with hairs inside.”
“Ok so we are obviously dealing with some sort of cult,” Lucas says when Eddie finishes.
Steve and Robin have been talking, “While they are all looking at the tents we want to check out the boat.”
Eddie nods, “The two of you walk over and investigate the boat. It smells of fish and aside from the barrels there’s only a single wooden chest aboard.”
“Hey,” Steve gets in character, “We found a chest!”
“Do NOT touch that!” They all yell, “It’s a mimic!”
Steve’s brow raises, “What the hell is a mimic?” You and Robin both shrug. You look to Eddie for guidance, who you can see is struggling to hide his laughter.
“A mimic is a creature that has no form of its own, it takes over objects as its body. Common among these objects are empty treasure chests.”
Robin shook her head, “This isn’t a treasure chest! Maybe if we were in some haunted dungeon I’d buy it but it’s just a boring box aboard a shitty fishing boat in the middle of nowhere!”
They argue about this for so long you start to forget what you were supposed to be doing in the first place. Most of them aren’t paying attention so you lean over to Eddie and whisper, “While they're arguing, can I just go over and open it?”
Eddie smirks and licks his lips, “Absolutely! Watch this,” He cleared his throat, “Um can you all remind me of your passive perceptions again?”
The table became so silent you could hear a pin drop. He waves a hand from behind his screen, “No matter, sweetheart what did you get for stealth?”
“17.”
Eddie cackles as the rest of the table doesn’t dare speak a word, “While her companions are arguing the brilliant cleric sneaks aboard the ship and opens the chest!”
Dustin shouts, “No!”
“Oh but yes Henderson!” Feelings flood your soul telling you how elated Eddie is, “She expertly avoids your line of sight and,” everyone hangs off the edge of their seats. Eddie’s low, maniacal laughter sends chills through the room before he finally speaks, “It’s empty!”
After the mimic debate, you get back to the task at hand and eventually find the townmaster holed up in the office of the untouched building. As you explore you are attacked by a hoard of sand creatures that had been digging their way around beneath you. The battle is long and you’d been playing for hours! Finally only one sand creature remained.
“Your turn big boy!”
Steve rolled a hit and Eddie asked him for the damage. Steve groaned, “Ugh, We’ve been playing for so long I’m struggling to comprehend what a D6 is.”
Dustin rolled his eyes, failing to hide his frustrations, “That’s just a normal die!”
The monster’s turn was next. Eddie instructed Steve to take five damage. He looked at his paper, “What’s 33-5?”
“32!” Robin shouts.
Eddie smacks his book closed, “28! The correct answer is 28, and with that ladies and gentlemen I believe we should call it a night.”
As had become the norm after your dungeons and dragons nights, you spent a little longer just talking with Robin and Steve while Eddie, Jeff, and Gareth had been spending more time writing music together and trying to figure out a plan for getting their band off the ground. They must have been writing a lot tonight because Eddie came into the living room with his notebook at least four times asking for a word that rhymes with something else. Each time you smiled and did your best to help him. Eventually, well into the early morning hours, you and Eddie headed home. You yawned just after pulling away.
“Tired princess?”
You nod and close your eyes. You hadn’t realized how sleepy you were, the muscles in your face so tired they acted on reflex as a quiet giggle pushed through your lips. In your delirious state you stated talking, “Robin asked if we’ve had sex yet.”
Your eyes were still closed so you missed the drop in Eddie’s jaw, “Oh yeah?”
“Mhmm,” you felt yourself slipping into unconsciousness but you managed to get one more reply out, “Told her no. I still see his face sometimes, want to wait until all I can see is you.” 
Eddie looked over at you as you slept in his passenger seat. He smiled into the darkness and hoped that his whispers reached you, “I won’t stop until every last trace of him is gone love.” His grip tightened on the wheel, “It’s always been you, all I've ever seen is you.”
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madraleen · 1 year
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“what if... hearts can be born from ashes?”
HOW DARE YOU! HOW DARE YOU SAY SOMETHING SO DEEP AND POIGNANT HOW DARE YOU oh look i’m crying now is that what you wanted? HUH? IS THAT WHAT YOU WANTED?
(also a tin soldier reference was the last thing i expected to see in a wanderer trailer, but it does, in fact, make sense)
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Hats off to Scaramouche’s VA ‘cause I just watched the "Wanderer: Ashes" trailer and the emotion in his voice was just 👌🏽👌🏽👌🏽
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brokehorrorfan · 1 year
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Wheels of Fire and Raiders of the Sun have been released on Blu-ray together via Scream Factory. Limited to 1,500, the double feature is available for $29.98 exclusively from Shout Factory.
Wheels of Fire (also known as Vindicator and Desert Warrior) is a 1985 post-apocalyptic action movie directed by Cirio H. Santiago (TNT Jackson) and written by Frederick Bailey. Gary Watkins, Laura Banks, Lynda Wiesmeier, and Linda Grovenor star.
Raiders of the Sun is a 1992 post-apocalyptic action movie directed by Cirio H. Santiago and written by Frederick Bailey. Richard Norton, William Steis, Henry Strzalkowski, Nick Nicholson, Rick Dean, and Joseph Zucchero star.
Both movies are executive produced by Roger Corman. Raiders of the Sun has been newly scanned in 2K from the interpositive. Both films have 2.0 Mono DTS-HD Master Audio. Special features are listed below.
Wheels of Fire special features:
Interview with executive Producer Roger Corman
Interview with screenwriter Fred Bailey
Interview with second unit director Clark Henderson
Trailer
The Highway Warriors terrorize the last vestiges of humanity — and only the enigmatic wanderer known as Trace can stop their ruthless reign of terror.
Raiders of the Sun special features:
Alternate 80-minute cut of the film (full-screen standard definition)
Trailer
A precious source of gunpowder becomes the target of a brutal band of villains... and from the ashes of civilization, a new hero must rise up to restore order.
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