#Qwer Chodan
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QWER MAKES GIRLS QUEER âïž
Extremely hot body, sexy Chodan
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Stay Alive
The first part of heavy metal, and woo this is a doozy to start onâŠfuck you dino. Also happy new years. I hope you've been having fun with Daigo's holiday specials, because this is the last one for now
I just wanna thank @coldfanbou and @lustspren for writing cool stuff. No smut yet needed to world build hope thatâs okay.
âAh, come on, Daigo, itâll be fun! Picture this: a three-day music festival entirely dedicated to girl groups. Some of your favoritesâDreamcatcher, Twice, Eunbi, and so many more! How could you say no to that?â
Jonasâs enthusiasm was infectious, but I wasnât in the mood. I leaned back in my chair, rubbing the bridge of my nose. The chaos from recent riots at music festivals played on a loop in my mindâovercrowding, fights breaking out, people getting hurt. Iâd seen it up close before, and I wasnât eager to put myself in the middle of it again.
âI donât knowâŠâ I hesitated, glancing at the stack of bills on my counter that never seemed to shrink. âItâs justâwith all the violence lately, I donât think itâs a good idea.â
Jonas let out an exaggerated sigh on the other end of the line. âDaigo, youâre killing me here. Look, I need someone I can trust for this gig. Youâve got experience, youâre good under pressure, andâletâs be realâyouâre the biggest fangirl I know when it comes to these groups.â
I chuckled despite myself. âFangirl? Thatâs rich coming from the guy who cried when LOONA disbanded.â
âThat was different, and you know it!â Jonas shot back, feigning indignation. âTell you what, though. You help me out this one time, and Iâll sweeten the deal: Iâll get you backstage access for your top three groups. You can say hi, do the whole meet-and-greet thing, andââ he paused for dramatic effect, âIâll pay you double time.â
âDouble time and a meet-and-greet?â I raised an eyebrow, skeptical. âYou must be desperate.â
âDesperate doesnât even cover it,â Jonas admitted. âBut I know you, Daigo. Youâll do it. You just need a little incentive.â
I leaned forward, considering his offer. The idea of meeting Dreamcatcher, Twice, and Eunbi backstage was tempting. Hell, it was more than temptingâit was a dream come true. But I wasnât about to let him off easy.
âOkay,â I said, dragging the word out. âIâll do it. But on one condition: you pay me in advance for the regular eight-hour shifts. When overtime inevitably hitsâand we both know it willâyou can pay me after.â
I expected him to balk, to try to negotiate or talk me down. Instead, Jonas practically shouted into the phone. âFine! Deal!â
I sighed, shaking my head. âYouâre way too excited about this. Iâm gonna regret this, arenât I?â
âOnly if you donât bring something for your bias to sign!â Jonas teased, and before I could respond, he added, âIâll send you the details. And, Daigo? Thanks, man. I owe you big time.â
As I hung up, I stared at my phone, torn between dread and anticipation. The job might be chaos, sure, but the thought of meeting my idols backstage was enough to nudge me into action. Maybeâjust maybeâit wouldnât be so bad.
The first two days of the festival passed in a blur. I worked with Lightsum alongside a guy named Dinozen, a chill dude with a sharp sense of humor, and covered the super-secret IZ*ONE reunion stage with someone named Dexter, a no-nonsense guy who seemed to have everything under control. Unsurprisingly, the girls were all the sweetest. Chowon, Sakura, and Eunbi even signed my photocards, which was an experience Iâd never forget.
Hyewon, though, surprised me. She noticed my Night of the Living Dead phone case while I was setting up security near the backstage area.
âOh my God, is that Romeroâs Night of the Living Dead?â she asked, her eyes lighting up as she leaned in closer to get a better look.
âYeah,â I said, holding up the phone so she could see it better. âYouâre a fan?â
âAre you kidding? I love zombie movies. Do you like Train to Busan?â
âOf course! A classic,â I replied, and we spent a few minutes geeking out about the genre before she got whisked away for rehearsals.
The last day of the festival was intense, to say the least. The lineup was packed: IVE, LE SSERAFIM, QWER, GFRIEND (yes, Eunha and Lil Uzi Vert were there), KISS OF LIFE, Dreamcatcher, and finally, Twice.
For the first two stages, Sakura, Chaewon, Yujin, and Wonyoung spotted me lingering around during the early morning soundchecks.
âDid you even sleep last night?â Wonyoung called out, grinning mischievously as she approached with the others in tow.
âBarely,â I admitted, stifling a yawn.
âYouâre here earlier than us! Are you secretly a sasaeng?â Sakura teased, elbowing me lightly as the others burst into laughter.
âYeah, whatâs your bias list?â Chaewon added with mock suspicion, crossing her arms and squinting at me.
âOkay, first of all,â I said, holding up a finger, âIâm not a sasaeng. Second, Iâm here working. You know, security?â
âUh-huh. Thatâs what they all say,â Yujin quipped.
âDonât worry, oppa, weâll keep your secret,â Wonyoung said, winking.
âOppa?!â I exclaimed, rolling my eyes at their antics. âYouâre all impossible.â
Truth be told, I didnât mind. Their teasing broke the ice, and by the end of their set, they were thanking me profusely for keeping everything running smoothly.
Later, I found myself working security for GFRIEND. Eunha caught me lingering backstage and decided to strike up a conversation.
âYouâre awfully quiet for a security guy,â she said, tilting her head. âDo we intimidate you?â
âNot at all,â I said with a smirk. âIâm just professional. But since weâre chattingâbig fan, by the way.â
Eunha grinned, leaning in slightly. âOh? Do you have a favorite song?â
ââTime for the Moon Night.â No contest.â
âGood choice,â she said, clearly pleased. âYouâve got good taste. ButâŠâ She paused, her expression turning playful. âWhatâs your bias list for Twice?â
âYouâre not getting that out of me,â I said, laughing.
âOh, come on!â she said, punching my arm lightly before getting called away for rehearsal.
QWER was an entirely different vibe. From the moment they showed up, they were absolute chaos gremlins. Magenta spotted my Ultraman keychain dangling from my belt and let out a gasp loud enough to make heads turn.
âIs that Ultraman?!â she exclaimed, running over.
âYeah. You a fan?â
âAm I a fan?!â she said, practically bouncing on her heels. âUltraman Tiga is my favorite! What about you?â
We ended up on a massive tangent about tokusatsu, until Hina chimed in about Final Fantasy when I mentioned I love girls who can fight like Tifa from FFVII. âTifaâs the best, hands down,â she said, crossing her arms as if daring anyone to argue.
âAgreed,â I said, nodding. âWhatâs your go-to build for her?â
âOh, donât get her started,â Chodan cut in, laughing. âBut seriously, whatâs your take on League of Legends?â After hearing me say someone was inting in the previous conversation.
That led to another rabbit hole of nerd talk, with Chodan grilling me about champs and strategies while Magenta playfully teased her for his âtryhard vibes.â
After their performance, Magenta pulled me aside. âHey, if you want a job after this, come to Korea,â she said, a surprising seriousness in her tone. âIâm sure we can find a spot for you.â
I rolled my eyes, thinking it was just more teasing. âYeah, sure. Iâll get right on that.â
âNo, really,â she said, locking eyes with me. âThink about it. Youâd fit in.â
Her sincerity caught me off guard, but before I could respond, she was already running off to join the others.
Sure! Hereâs an expanded version of the scene with more dialogue and detail:
Dreamcatcherâs set was a whirlwind. They came in, stole the show with their energy and charisma, and left just as quickly. It was clear they were pros, used to the hectic schedule of being on tour. I barely had a chance to speak with them, but as I was walking backstage, Yoohyeon caught sight of my shirt peeking out from under my security uniform.
âWaitâis that a Kaiju No. 8 shirt?â she asked, pointing excitedly.
I froze, caught off guard. âUh, yeah. Big fan of the series.â
âSame here!â Yoohyeon said, her eyes lighting up. âDami got me into it. Isnât Kafkaâs transformation just the coolest?â
Dami, standing nearby, smirked. âYoohyeon keeps trying to get everyone in the group to read it.â
âItâs worth it!â Siyeon chimed in, adjusting her jacket. âBut, seriously, whereâd you get that shirt? Iâve been looking for merch everywhere.â
I laughed nervously. âOnline. Limited drop, though, so it might be hard to find now.â
âLucky,â Dami said, shaking her head. âAnyway, weâd better go. Tour scheduleâs tight.â
They waved as they hurried out, leaving me feeling both starstruck and a little bummed that I didnât have more time to talk to them.
As Dreamcatcherâs bus pulled away, Twice was arriving. Their energy was palpable even before they stepped out, fans screaming from behind the barricades as they made their way inside. I was checking the perimeter when I heard a familiar voice.
âYou were at our LA concert a few years ago.â
I turned to see Dahyun, smiling warmly as she approached. For a second, I was stunned.
âUh, yeah,â I stammered. âHow did you remember that?â
Dahyun tilted her head, still smiling. âWe donât have many fans that look likeâŠyou, so I always try to remember their faces. Plus, you brought that light-up ring instead of our Candybong.â
I laughed, embarrassed but also flattered. âYeah, the Candybong was sold out, so I improvised.â
âWell, it worked! We all thought it was cool.â
Before I could say anything else, the ground beneath us seemed to shift. setting everyone on edge.
âWhat was that?â someone whispered behind me.
And then the screams began.
From the crowd near the main stage, people started to thrash and convulse, their movements jerky and unnatural. Others began growling, their voices guttural and animalistic. The sight was surrealâlike something out of a horror movie.
âEveryone, move!â I yelled, springing into action.
I turned to Dahyun and the rest of Twice. âGet to the evacuation buses. Now!â
They didnât argue, following my lead as I herded them and the remaining girl groups backstage toward the buses. The screams and chaos grew louder as the infected began attacking others in the crowd, tearing into them with horrifying ferocity.
âKeep moving!â I shouted, adrenaline surging as I kept the idols together, forming a protective barrier between them and the chaos.
One by one, the groups boarded the buses. I stayed behind to make sure everyone was accounted for, scanning the area for any stragglers.
âDaigo, get on!â someone shouted from inside the last bus.
As I turned to board, a hand grabbed me, yanking me backward with incredible strength. The bus door shut just as I lost my footing.
The man who had grabbed me was no longer human. His eyes were bloodshot, black veins bulging across his face and neck like spiderwebs. He growled, the sound primal and terrifying, before lunging at me.
I struggled against him, barely managing to shove him off, but not before his teeth sank into my arm. Pain shot through me as I kicked him away, slamming a nearby door into his face before scrambling to my car.
Blood was dripping from my arm as I started the engine, my hands shaking. My phone buzzed with an emergency alert:
âEMERGENCY ALERT: FERAL RAGE VIRUS OUTBREAK IN LOS ANGELES. AVOID INFECTED INDIVIDUALS. IF BITTEN, SELF-ISOLATE IMMEDIATELY.â
A wave of dread washed over me as the words sank in. A zombie apocalypseâand Iâd been bitten.
By the time I got home, I was running on autopilot. I found a note from my family on the kitchen counter:
âWe evacuated. Stay safe. We love you.â
I smiled faintly, relieved that they had made it out, even as the reality of my situation settled in. I sat down on the couch, clutching my arm as I waitedâwaited for the inevitable.
But as the hours passed, nothing happened. No fever, no loss of control, no primal urge to attack. Just silence.
Something was wrongâor maybe something was right. Whatever it was, I wasnât turning. At least, not yet. 28 weeks later
California had been decimated by the undead in a matter of days. The infection spread faster than anyone could have predicted, turning the Golden State into a graveyard of abandoned cities and roaming hordes of the infected. Military barricades crumbled, evacuation plans failed, and those who were lucky got out while they could. Planes were packed with desperate refugees, cars clogged the highways leading east, and boats left the coastlines overcrowded with those willing to risk open waters.
For me, leaving wasnât an option.
I didnât have the luxury of escape, not because I couldnât find a way out, but because of the bite on my arm. By the time the infection reached its peak, there were no confirmed cases of immunity. A bite was a death sentenceâor worse, an eternity as one of the infected. The thought of being trapped in that kind of existence kept me grounded, unwilling to risk spreading the infection to anyone else.
But something strange happened.
I didnât turn.
Days turned into weeks, and then months. The black veins that had crawled up my arm after the attack faded away within hours, leaving only a faint scar where the infectedâs teeth had punctured my skin. I waited for the fever to come, for the primal urges, for the hallucinations people had described before losing themselves. None of it happened.
In fact, the only time I got remotely sick was from a bad batch of shrimp Iâd scavenged off an abandoned food truck near the Santa Monica pier.
At first, I thought maybe I was just a late bloomer, that the virus would eventually catch up to me and take over. I avoided people, avoided crowded safe zones, not wanting to risk spreading whatever was inside me. I spent most of my time moving quietly through the ruins of Los Angeles, scavenging supplies and avoiding the Zs as best I could.
The thing was, the Zs avoided me too.
It wasnât immediate, but over time, I started noticing that they didnât react to me the way they did to others. If I stayed still, they would stumble past as if I werenât even there. If I walked into a horde, they would part like a school of fish around a predator.
It was unsettling at first, terrifying even, but I couldnât deny the advantage it gave me. I became a ghost in the city, slipping through once-busy streets and long-abandoned suburbs. I didnât need to hide anymore.
Whatever was inside me, whatever had stopped the virus from taking hold, had made me different.
And in a world where survival was everything, being different wasnât necessarily a bad thing.
At first, surviving felt like an achievement. I kept moving, kept scavenging, and avoided any unnecessary risks. But as the weeks bled into months, that sense of urgency faded, replaced by something else: boredom.
The excitement of sneaking through an abandoned city, the thrill of dodging Zs, even the satisfaction of finding a can of beans in the back of an overturned truckâit all started to feel routine. The days blurred together.
Wake up. Scavenge. Avoid Zs. Sleep.
For a while, I wandered aimlessly. I retraced old memories, revisiting places Iâd once loved. The Santa Monica Pier, now eerily quiet except for the creak of its abandoned rides. Griffith Park, where the Hollywood sign still stood, a crumbling symbol of a bygone world. But eventually, even nostalgia wasnât enough to fill the emptiness.
So I headed south.
San Diego seemed as good a place as any to settle. The Zs were thinner here, the population having fled or been wiped out in the first waves of the outbreak. The weather was mild, the ocean breeze cutting through the silence, and the naval base offered plenty of resources for the taking if I could get past the wreckage.
I found an old house in a quiet suburb, tucked away behind overgrown trees and hedges. It was small but sturdy, with thick walls and a decent vantage point from the second floor. The backyard had a rusted swing set, a reminder of the family that had once lived here.
Over time, I turned it into my safe haven.
The front door was reinforced with scrap metal Iâd scavenged from a nearby junkyard. Windows were boarded up, and the second-floor balcony became my lookout point. I rigged up a crude rainwater collection system with a tarp and some old gutters and managed to get a small solar panel working, enough to power a single lightbulb and charge my radio.
I spent my days scavenging for supplies, fortifying the house, and exploring the surrounding neighborhoods. Grocery stores, gas stations, and even old military supply depots had been picked clean, but every once in a while, Iâd find something usefulâtools, canned food, medicine.
It was a life, I suppose.
But it was also mind-numbingly dull.
I tried to keep myself busy. Iâd read old books I found in abandoned houses, patch holes in my clothes, and even attempted to learn how to cook properly with the limited ingredients I had. But there were only so many ways to make canned beans and rice interesting, and only so many times I could read Dune before the words started to blur together.
The worst part was the silence.
I used to think I hated noiseâtraffic jams, crowded malls, loud neighbors. But now, I would have given anything to hear another human voice, even just in passing. The only sounds were the distant groans of Zs, the wind rattling through broken windows, and the occasional creak of the house settling under its own weight.
Sometimes, Iâd sit on the roof at night, staring at the stars and wondering if there was anyone else out there. Were there other people like me, survivors trying to rebuild? Or was I really the last one left, wandering through the ruins of the world?
Whatever the answer, one thing was clear: this life wasnât sustainable.
I needed a purpose. Something to do, somewhere to go. Anything to break the monotony.
But until then, I kept moving through the same routine, day after day, wondering how long I could keep going before the boredom consumed me entirely.
Life alone in San Diego wasnât just about surviving anymoreâit was about mastering survival. The boredom had driven me to find ways to fill my days, and in doing so, Iâd turned what was once a simple safe house into a fortress of modern conveniences.
The first breakthrough came with the solar panels. Iâd stumbled across a half-abandoned solar farm about a mile from my safe house. It had been overrun with Zs, but they didnât notice me as I worked my way through the facility, scavenging what I could. I started small, hauling back a single panel and an inverter to test if I could rig it up to charge my car battery. When that worked, I went back for more.
It took weeks of trial and error, piecing together wiring and jerry-rigging connections, but eventually, I had enough solar power to light my house, charge a working phone, and even run a small TV. The TV only played old DVDs I found in peopleâs basements or streaming content saved offline, but it was better than staring at the walls in silence.
Next, I tackled the water situation. Collecting rainwater was easy enough, but I wanted something more. I scavenged pipes, valves, and even an old water heater from a hardware store and figured out how to reroute collected water through the system. After several failed attemptsâand one near-disaster involving a busted valve and a flooded basementâI managed to create a working setup. Hot water was a luxury I never thought Iâd have again, but on cold nights, a hot shower made all the difference.
Siphoning gas was easier than I expected, though it came with risks. I learned to be fast and cautious, always checking my surroundings before sticking the hose into an abandoned car or truck. Over time, I built up a stockpile of fuel, which I stored in metal barrels I kept in the garage. The gas wasnât just for the occasional use of my car but also for running a small generator when the solar panels didnât get enough sunlight.
The freezers were my crowning achievement. I found a pair of them in a strip mall appliance store that had been untouchedâprobably because most people didnât think about long-term food storage during the chaos of an apocalypse. Getting them back to my safe house was a nightmare involving a borrowed pickup truck, a makeshift ramp, and more muscle than I thought I had. But once I hooked them up to the solar grid, they became indispensable.
One freezer was stocked with frozen food Iâd scavenged from long-abandoned grocery stores, still surprisingly edible thanks to the cold temperatures in the freezers Iâd found them in. The other I filled with supplies I processed myselfâvacuum-sealed meats, vegetables, and even some wild game I managed to hunt with a crossbow Iâd picked up along the way.
Over time, I built up reserves that would have made a doomsday prepper jealous: shelves lined with canned goods, jars of pickled vegetables, packets of instant coffee, and more tools and spare parts than Iâd probably ever need.
I even managed to get my hands on a working smartphone, though the lack of cell service meant it was little more than a glorified camera and notepad. Still, I found ways to make it useful, storing downloaded survival guides, maps of San Diego, and even the occasional audiobook.
It wasnât the life Iâd imagined for myself, but it was a life nonetheless.
Yet as I sat in my makeshift living room one evening, surrounded by the quiet hum of the solar-powered TV and the faint glow of LED lights, I couldnât help but feel the weight of the silence pressing down on me. I had everything I needed to survive and more, but I still felt the gnawing emptiness of isolation.
Iâd conquered boredom with ingenuity, but what I couldnât conquer was the longing for human connection. For someone to talk to, to laugh with, to share all these little victories with.
The sound of glass crunching underfoot woke me, followed by the unmistakable creak of the front door being pushed open. I sighed, sitting up and grabbing the mattock I kept leaned against my nightstand. Another break-in. It had been months since any zombies had even stumbled across my safe house, and Iâd started to think I was truly alone out here.
Guess not.
Descending the stairs quietly, I prepared for the worst. My muscles tensed as I reached the ground floor, but when I rounded the corner into the living room, I froze at the sight of the intruders. They were surprisingly not undead.
A group of about ten people stood huddled together, illuminated by the dim glow of my solar-powered lights. Among them were familiar faces that stopped me dead in my tracks: Loona alum Hyeju, Twiceâs Jeongyeon and Dahyun, Yunjin from Le Sserafim, Chodan from QWER, and Yena from IZ*ONE.
Their wide-eyed stares mirrored my own surprise, though for different reasons.
âYou know,â I said, breaking the silence and hefting the mattock onto my shoulder, âyou could have just knocked.â
The group flinched slightly, but Dahyun and Chodan were the first to recover.
âDaigo?â they said in unison, their voices filled with disbelief.
I nodded, leaning the mattock against the wall. âThe one and only. Now,â I said, gesturing toward the group, âhow can I help you survivors out?â
Dahyun stepped forward, her face a mix of relief and confusion. âWe didnât think⊠I mean, we heard rumors that someone was living out here, but we didnât expect it to be you.â
âWell, here I am,â I said, crossing my arms. âLooking exactly like I did last time you saw me, minus the security guard uniform.â
Chodan laughed, though it was more from nerves than humor. âLeave it to Daigo to survive the apocalypse and somehow look like heâs thriving.â
âIâve had some practice,â I replied, motioning toward the group. âNow, you all look like youâve been through hell. Sit down, and letâs figure out what you need.â
Hyeju finally spoke up, her voice quiet but firm. âWeâre out of options. Supplies are running low, and weâve been moving nonstop for weeks. We need food, shelterâanything you can spare.â
Yunjin, standing close to Hyeju, added, âWe didnât mean to break in. We thought this place was abandoned.â
I raised an eyebrow, glancing at the reinforced door now hanging slightly ajar. âDoes this look abandoned to you? The lights didnât give it away?â
Yena chimed in, her tone apologetic. âIn our defense, weâve seen plenty of powered-up places that were overrun. We didnât want to take any chances.â
âFair enough,â I said, letting out a breath. âLucky for you, Iâm feeling generous today. Follow me.â
I led the group into the dining room, which Iâd converted into a makeshift supply depot. Shelves lined the walls, stocked with canned goods, first aid supplies, and neatly folded clothes. Two freezers hummed quietly in the corner, a rare sound in the apocalypse.
âHoly crap,â Jeongyeon whispered, her eyes scanning the room. âYouâve got more here than most of the settlements weâve passed through.â
âLike I said,â I replied, opening one of the freezers to reveal vacuum-sealed packages of meat and frozen vegetables, âIâve had practice. Take what you need, but donât get greedy. This isnât a charity.â
The group quickly got to work organizing supplies, redistributing their belongings, and planning what they needed most. Meanwhile, Dahyun lingered near me, her expression unreadable.
âYou really made it out here on your own,â she said softly, her voice tinged with disbelief and something close to admiration. âI thought⊠I thought you mightâve been gone, like everyone else.â
âWouldâve been,â I replied with a small, wry smile, âbut I got bit. Bright side? Didnât turn.â
Her brows furrowed slightly as she digested that information. âYouâre immune?â
âGuess so. Though it wasnât a walk in the park,â I admitted. âBut what about you? Didnât expect to see you out here.â
Dahyun shrugged, her gaze dropping to the floor. âWeâve been running since day one. Some of us made it; others didnât. Itâs been⊠rough.â
I nodded, understanding more than I wanted to. âI can imagine. Well, youâre safe here for now. Take a breather. Youâve earned it.â
The tension in her shoulders eased slightly, and she gave me a small, grateful smile before joining the others.
For the first time in months, my house felt alive. Voices filled the air as the group settled in, sharing stories and laughter over the first real meal theyâd had in days. They were hesitant at first, like the silence of survival had been ingrained into their instincts. But as the night went on, the weight on their shoulders seemed to lift, even if only temporarily.
After everyone had eaten and showered, Chodan approached me, her sharp eyes scanning the room before settling on me.
âYou know,â she began, leaning casually against the kitchen counter, âyouâre living like a king here. You could easily take your talents to a settlement and help a lot of people.â
I sighed, setting my water bottle down and rolling up my sleeve to show her the faint remnants of my bite mark.
âIâm infected. Canât really risk being around people. I could turn at any moment.â
Chodan raised an eyebrow, her lips twitching into a smirk. âReally?â she said, before lifting her shirt just enough to reveal a faint scar near her side.
My brain short-circuited for a moment. It had been months since Iâd seen anyone this close, let alone someone this⊠distracting. I quickly looked away, feeling the heat rise in my face.
âRelax, caveman,â she teased, lowering her shirt. âJust showing you my bite mark. I got bit three weeks ago. The gestation period is supposed to be 48 hours max, and yet⊠here I am. Still human. So, either weâre both lucky, or weâre both immune. Oh, and by the way,â she added with a mischievous grin, âDahyun got bit too. Day before yesterday.â
âWait, what?â I blinked, looking over at Dahyun, who was now watching us with a sheepish expression.
âItâs true,â Dahyun admitted, stepping closer. âI was afraid to say anything at first, but⊠then I collapsed. As you can see i got better.â
I nodded slowly, piecing it together. âWell, I got bit 28 weeks agoâso I guess Iâm either immune or just incredibly unlucky.â
Chodanâs eyebrows shot up. âTwenty-eight weeks? Thatâs⊠day zero.â
I nodded again. âYeah. It happened during the initial outbreak.â
Her expression shifted, a mix of curiosity and intrigue. âDid you hear anything on the first day? There were reports of a high-pitched whine right before people started turning.â
I frowned, thinking back. âNope. Didnât hear a thing.â
Chodanâs eyes widened. âOh. Then youâre truly immune.â
I squinted at her, confused. âWhat do you mean?â
She leaned closer, lowering her voice as if delivering a secret. âThe virus canât infect you at all. If you didnât hear the sound, it means your body isnât affected by the signal it sends. You canât turn, period.â
âBut,â I interjected, âwhen I got bit, my veins turned black.â
âDid you have any other symptoms? Fever? Rage? Loss of consciousness?â she asked.
I shook my head. âNope. Nothing.â
âThatâs what I thought,â Chodan said, standing upright again. âYouâre not a regular immune, though. Youâre not a Slayer either.â
âWaitâSlayer?â I asked, now thoroughly confused.
Hyeju, who had been quietly observing, chimed in. âSlayers are people whoâve had the virus evolve them instead of killing or turning them. Weâre stronger, faster⊠better, basically.â
I glanced around at the group, now realizing the mix of reactions on their faces. âWaitâyouâre all Slayers?â
Chodan grinned. âMe, Hyeju, and Dahyun, yeah.â
âOh, thanks for explaining it so thoroughly, Hyeju,â I said, shooting her a grateful look.
Hyeju smiled sweetly. âYouâre welcome, Daigo. Oh, and thanks for the food.â
âYouâre very welcome,â I replied, shaking my head. Of course, my safe house had gone from a sanctuary to a den of superpowered survivors in less than a day.
After the group had cleaned themselves up and prepared to leave, I directed them to the vehicles scattered throughout the neighborhood.
âThey should still be working,â I explained, gesturing to the trucks and sedans.
The group looked at me in surprise. âWait, youâve been keeping all these in working condition?â Dahyun asked, her eyebrows raised.
I shook my head. âNot exactly. I havenât repaired them or anything major, but Iâve kept the batteries charged, fluids topped up, and tires inflated. Basic upkeep,â I said with a shrug.
A few of them smiled as they hopped into the trucks. The group packed quickly, clearly practiced in loading supplies efficiently, though their movements carried the exhaustion of constant survival.
As the last of the supplies were loaded, Chodan and Dahyun approached me. They exchanged a glance before Dahyun stepped forward, her voice almost pleading.
âPlease come with us,â she said.
Chodan chimed in, her tone more assertive. âWe kind of need someone like you.â
I raised an eyebrow, leaning casually on my mattock. âYou need a socially awkward hothead?â
Chodan laughed, but Dahyun shook her head, her expression serious. âNo. A leader.â
I blinked, caught off guard by her sincerity. My gut reaction was to brush it off, but something in her tone gave me pause. I mulled it over for a moment before sighing. âSure. Why not?â
The group let out a collective breath of relief, and I found myself helping them secure the last of their supplies before climbing into my car and following their convoy.
When we arrived at their settlement near the military base, my optimism took a nosedive. The place was barely holding together. Makeshift walls surrounded a cluster of tents and scavenged buildings. People wandered the grounds with hollow eyes, looking malnourished and weary.
âJeez,â I muttered under my breath. âThis is what youâre working with?â
As we parked, Eunha stood with a young man near the entrance. They were holding hands, their expressions tinged with equal parts hope and surprise as they saw the trucks pull in.
Yunjin jumped out of one of the vehicles, her voice ringing with triumph. âWe got food! And water!â
The settlement erupted into cheers, a wave of relief sweeping over the ragged residents.
I, however, was less than impressed. âWait, wait, wait,â I called out, holding up a hand. âYou have access to water, energy, and military-grade weapons, and yet you look like youâre on the brink of starvation?â
The young man was the first to respond, his voice heavy with frustration. âThe base proper is overrun. If youâre so eager to fix it, be my guest.â
I turned to the group, stunned. âSo youâre telling me you havenât even secured the base?â
The residents nodded sheepishly. I groaned, rubbing my temples. Without a word, I popped the trunk of my car and began pulling out weapons: a pair of customized gauntlets and boots Iâd tinkered with during my long months alone.
âWhat are you doing?â one of the settlers asked nervously.
I sighed, strapping on the gear. âMaking sure you all donât die,â I muttered.
Before I could head toward the base, Chodan and Dahyun stepped in front of me, blocking my path.
âYou canât go in there,â Chodan said firmly. âThere are rippers and changers inside.â
I froze, the names sparking a connection in my mind. Rippersâzombies with bladed arms capable of slicing through steelâand changersâfast, intelligent zombies that evolved in real time. Apex predators in a world of monsters.
âAre there whippers and spitters?â I asked, scanning the group for confirmation.
Everyone looked at me blankly. âWhat?â Chodan asked.
âBig zombies that spew acid, napalm, or spikes,â I clarified. âOr ones with long tongues that whip around like grappling hooks?â
Chodan and Dahyun exchanged a glance before shaking their heads. âNo. None of that,â Dahyun said.
I gave them a thumbs-up. âGreat. Then Iâm going in, pummeling anything that moves and isnât human, and weâll secure the base so we can all stop living in this mess.â
I started toward the base, but Chodan stepped closerâso close I could feel her breath on my chest. My heart stuttered for a moment, and I cursed my brain for its caveman reaction.
âDaigo,â she said, her voice low and urgent. âYou canât. Itâs too dangerous.â
I laughed softly, shaking my head. âFor how I fight? Not really. Besides, as long as I follow the first rule of zombie apocalypses, Iâll be fine.â
The group stared at me, confused. âWhatâs that?â Dahyun finally asked.
I grinned. âBe smart, not scared.â
Without another word, I climbed the fence.
Before I could take another step, Chodan effortlessly vaulted over the fence after me in a single, graceful bound. I looked at her and realized she could easily fend off whatever was in there.
Chodan smirked, falling into step beside me. âYouâre going to need me in there,â she said.
I glanced at her, then back at the base. âGuess weâll see.â
We walked in with weapons raised, every sense heightened as we approached the entrance to the base. The stench of rot and decay hit us like a wall, the ground littered with body parts and unidentifiable chunks of flesh. The once-pristine military structure was now a grotesque tableau of death. Every step squelched against blood-soaked concrete, a grim reminder of what waited for us inside.
The first zombie to spot us let out a guttural screech, its twisted body lurching forward at an unnatural speed. Its milky-white eyes locked onto me as it sprinted, claws outstretched. I snapped my fingers, and flames erupted from my gauntlets and boots, wrapping around them like living entities.
With a single step forward, I swung my fist. The punch connected with the zombie's head, obliterating it in an instant. The headless body collapsed to the floor in a heap, twitching violently before going still.
I glanced over at Chodan, who raised an eyebrow in surprise, a smirk tugging at the corner of her lips. âNot bad,â she said, her tone impressed but still teasing.
I shrugged, brushing off her compliment. âYou ainât seen nothing yet.â
Over the next few minutes, more zombies emerged from the shadows, drawn by the noise and the scent of fresh prey. Five of them charged at me in quick succession. I moved through them with a fiery ferocity, each punch igniting their decaying flesh. With every strike, I could feel the heat coursing through my body, the fire making short work of the infected.
Just as I finished off the last one, I turned to see Chodan spring into action. She unsheathed a short katanaâI think itâs called a wakizashi or something like thatâand moved with a lethal grace that was mesmerizing. Each slice of her blade was precise, every motion deliberate.
She ducked and spun, her strikes fluid and elegant as she danced through the undead. Her blade flashed in the dim light, leaving trails of crimson in the air. Within moments, the horde around her lay in pieces. It wasnât just impressiveâit was downright sexy. (What can I say? I like women who can fight, and after six months of isolation, watching Chodan in action was⊠distracting, to say the least.)
Together, we made our way deeper into the base, clearing out every corridor, room, and hallway we came across. Along the way, we gathered access cards and files, carefully choosing the ones that werenât completely soaked in blood or viscera. Mapping out the base was crucial if we wanted to make it a safe haven.
Two grueling hours later, we emerged from the base, our task for the day complete.
The camp was waiting for us when we returned. Their faces lit up in shock and awe at the sight of us alive andâwell, mostly intact. Thanks to the fiery nature of my weapons, I was relatively clean, save for a few smudges of soot. Chodan, on the other hand, looked like sheâd walked straight out of Kill Bill. Her clothes were drenched in blood, and her katana was dripping crimson.
The group stared for a moment before breaking into cheers. Their joy was infectious, and I found myself smiling despite the exhaustion.
Over the next two weeks, the slayers and I worked tirelessly to clear the rest of the base. The deeper sections were overrun, and each encounter with the infected felt like a battle against time and attrition. We couldnât risk leaving a single zombie behind, knowing even one could cause a mini-outbreak once the camp moved in.
During this time, we also worked to fully map out the base, identifying areas that could be repurposed for agriculture, water purification, and living quarters. One of the larger open-air courtyards became the designated zone for growing vegetables and fruits, a necessary counterbalance to the endless supply of fish weâd soon be consuming.
By the end of the second week, we had restored power to the base and set up a desalination system to provide fresh water. The once-derelict military base was beginning to transform into a functional, self-sufficient community. By the end of the month, we had fortified the perimeter, secured resources, and established a sustainable living environment that could endure the apocalypse indefinitely.
Yet, despite our progress, I couldnât shake the restless feeling gnawing at the back of my mind.
Sensing this, Yunjin and Hyeju decided to lift everyoneâs spirits by organizing a celebration. The party was small but lively, with music, laughter, and a rare sense of warmth filling the air. People danced and shared stories, the weight of survival temporarily forgotten.
For the first time in what felt like forever, I felt connectedâto them, to this place, and maybe even to something greater than myself.
The celebration was in full swing by the time I made my way to the center of the courtyard. Lanterns weâd scavenged from the base cast a warm glow over the party, and the air buzzed with a mix of laughter, music, and the clinking of makeshift cups. For the first time in months, the weight of the apocalypse seemed to lift, even if only temporarily.
I leaned against a crate of supplies, enjoying the scene as I nursed a glass of something Yunjin had proudly labeled âparty punch.â (It tasted like motor oil with a hint of lemon, but hey, it was the thought that counted.)
Out of the corner of my eye, I spotted Dahyun making her way toward me. Her smile was soft, and there was something unspoken in her eyes. âHey,â she said, holding up her cup as she leaned against the crate beside me.
âHey,â I replied, offering a small smile.
âI was just thinking,â she began, ânone of this wouldâve been possible without you. Clearing the base, organizing everythingâyouâve done more in a few weeks than weâve managed in months.â
I shrugged, trying to downplay it. âItâs not like I did it alone. You all worked just as hard.â
She shook her head, her expression earnest. âDonât sell yourself short, Daigo. You brought people together. Thatâs not something everyone can do.â
Before I could respond, Chodan appeared on my other side, seemingly out of nowhere. She slid in smoothly, her confident smirk firmly in place. âAre we talking about how great Daigo is? Because Iâve got a list.â
I blinked, caught off guard by her sudden arrival. Dahyun stiffened beside me, her relaxed posture shifting as her grip tightened on her cup.
âDidnât realize I had a fan club,â I joked, trying to ease the tension.
Chodan ignored me, her gaze focused on Dahyun. âYouâre right, though,â she said, her tone just a little too pointed. âDaigoâs been a real asset. Honestly, I donât know how we managed without him.â
âGuess youâll have to start getting used to it,â Dahyun replied, her smile polite but strained. âItâs not like heâs going anywhere.â
Chodan tilted her head, her smirk widening. âOh, I donât know. He might decide to come on a few missions with me. You know, something more exciting than farming and base maintenance.â
âFarming is exciting when itâs keeping people alive,â Dahyun shot back, her voice calm but firm. âNot everyone needs to play the hero to make a difference.â
I glanced between the two of them, sensing the subtle sparks flying. âUh, you guys okay?â I asked, trying to break the tension.
âPerfectly fine,â Dahyun said quickly, taking a sip of her drink.
âJust fine,â Chodan echoed, crossing her arms as she leaned closer to me. âSpeaking of heroes, Daigo, youâve got to tell me how you learned to fight like that. Iâve never seen anyone take on a group of zombies the way you did.â
Dahyun raised an eyebrow. âItâs not all about fighting. Heâs got other skills too, like keeping the base running and making sure we donât starve. Thatâs just as important.â
âOf course,â Chodan replied smoothly, her tone dripping with faux agreement. âBut letâs be realâthereâs no base to run if you canât keep it safe.â She turned to me, her expression playful but loaded. âRight, Daigo?â
I felt like a deer caught in headlights. âUh⊠I mean, both are important?â
Dahyun rolled her eyes, but there was a hint of amusement in her expression now. âNice save,â she said, bumping her shoulder lightly against mine.
Chodan laughed, the tension easing slightly. âGuess thatâs why heâs the leader, huh?â
The three of us stood there for a moment, the awkwardness lingering but not entirely unpleasant. As the party carried on around us, I couldnât help but feel a little flattered, even if the attention was overwhelming.
Yunjinâs voice cut through the noise, calling everyone to the center for a toast. I used the opportunity to excuse myself, slipping away from the growing crowd and finding a quieter corner to breathe.
As I leaned against the wall, I couldnât help but chuckle to myself. The apocalypse sure had a funny way of complicating things.
The camp had grown exponentially since we first cleared the base. Word spread fast, and survivors from across the region trickled in, desperate for safety and stability. Among the newcomers were two slayers: Hyewon, a quiet yet sharp-eyed scout from a decimated group, and Tsuki, a high-energy fighter with a knack for unconventional tactics.
Their arrival was a turning point.
I was inspecting the desalination system one morning when Hyewon approached me, her movements were measured but purposeful. She didnât say much at firstâjust hovered nearby, watching as I adjusted a valve. Finally, she spoke.
âYou really run this place?â she asked, her tone neutral but her eyes cautious.
âI guess so,â I replied with a shrug. âNot much of a title, but I try to keep things running smoothly.â
She nodded, her expression softening slightly. âYou treat slayers⊠differently.â
âDifferently how?â
âLike people,â she said simply. âMy last group didnât.â
Before I could respond, Tsuki bounded up, her energy a stark contrast to Hyewonâs reserved demeanor.
âThis place is amazing!â she exclaimed, practically bouncing on her heels. âFood, water, even showers! And no oneâs looking at us like weâre monsters.â She paused, giving me a wide grin. âYouâre the boss, right?â
âI wouldnât call myself that,â I said, standing up and wiping my hands on a rag. âBut I try to keep everyone alive.â
âWell, count me in!â Tsuki declared, sticking out her hand. âIâm not going anywhere.â
Hyewon, still standing a few feet away, added quietly, âMe neither.â
At first, their attachment was subtle. Hyewon would shadow me during supply runs, her sharp eyes scanning for threats. Tsuki, on the other hand, was more overt, always offering to help with repairs or sparring with other slayers under my supervision.
But as more survivors arrived, the campâs dynamics began to shift. With new faces came new opinionsâand new power struggles.
One evening, after a long day of clearing more space in the base for new arrivals, a meeting was called in the main hall. It was supposed to be a discussion about resource management, but it quickly spiraled into a debate over leadership.
âDaigoâs done a great job, but we need more structure,â a man named Mark, one of the newer arrivals, said. âWe canât just rely on one personâs decisions.â
âI agree,â chimed in Lisa, a former teacher whoâd quickly become a voice for the non-slayer survivors. âWe should have a council or something. Itâs too risky to have all the power in one personâs hands.â
âI donât think heâs been abusing it,â Dahyun countered, her voice calm but firm.
Mark shot her a look. âThatâs not the point. The campâs grown too big for one person to handle.â
Before I could speak, Tsuki jumped to her feet.
âAre you kidding me?â she said, her voice rising. âDaigoâs the reason this place isnât a pile of ash. If it werenât for him, half of you wouldnât even be here!â
Hyewon, still seated, added quietly but pointedly, âHe treats slayers like equals. Thatâs more than I can say for most of you.â
The room grew tense, the divide between slayers and non-slayers suddenly glaring.
âIâm not saying we donât appreciate him,â Mark said, his tone defensive. âBut this camp belongs to all of us, not just the slayers.â
âAnd yet youâre here because of us,â Chodan interjected, standing next to Dahyun. âYou think youâd survive a day out there without us?â
The argument grew louder, voices overlapping as the group fractured into factions. Some sided with Mark and Lisa, calling for more democratic leadership. Others, particularly the slayers, stood by me, pointing out the unique challenges we faced in keeping everyone alive.
I raised my hand, and slowly the room quieted.
âEnough,â I said, my voice firm but not angry. âThis isnât about me, or anyone else. Itâs about survival. We can figure out the leadership structure later. Right now, we focus on what matters: keeping this camp safe and functional.â
The room was silent for a moment, then Lisa spoke up. âFair enough. But this conversation isnât over.â
She and Mark left the hall, and slowly, others followed, leaving only the slayers and a few loyal survivors. Tsuki crossed her arms, glaring at the door.
âThey donât get it,â she muttered.
âTheyâre scared,â I said, leaning against the table. âCanât blame them for that.â
Hyewon stood, her gaze steady. âYouâre too nice, Daigo. But thatâs why we trust you.â
Chodan nodded, and even Dahyun offered a rare smile.
As the others filed out, I sat alone in the hall for a while, the weight of the growing camp pressing down on me. Leadership wasnât something Iâd ever asked for, but it seemed I didnât have much of a choice.
Later that night I found myself struggling to sleep. My quarters were as simple as it got: a small bed with a lumpy mattress, a desk buried under maps and scavenged files, and a single lamp casting just enough light to keep the darkness at bay. After the day Iâd had, all I wanted was to pass out. But sleep wasnât coming easily. Too many faces were swimming in my headâworried faces, hopeful faces, faces looking to me for answers.
I was lying there, staring at the ceiling, when a soft knock came at the door.
âItâs open,â I called, too tired to sit up.
The door creaked open, and I glanced over to see Chodan stepping inside. She looked calm, but I knew her well enough by now to notice the subtle tension in her posture.
âHey,â she said, closing the door behind her. âFigured youâd still be awake.â
âBarely,â I muttered, letting my head fall back onto the pillow. âWhatâs up?â
She didnât answer right away. Instead, she walked over to the bed and knelt down beside me. Before I could ask what she was doing, I felt her hands on my shoulders.
âWhat are youââ
âYouâre tense,â she interrupted, already working at the knots in my muscles. âLet me help.â
I opened my mouth to argue, but the words didnât come. Her hands were strong, and as much as I wanted to protest, I couldnât deny it felt good. So I just sighed and let her work, the tension slowly melting away.
âYouâve got your hands full,â she said after a while, her tone light. âEspecially with your little ducklings.â
âMy what now?â I asked, glancing at her out of the corner of my eye.
âHyewon and Tsuki,â she said with a smirk. âTheyâve imprinted on you like a couple of baby ducks.â
I groaned, rolling my eyes. âTheyâre not ducklings. Theyâre just⊠adjusting.â
âAdjusting to following you around like lost puppies?â she teased. âYou canât take two steps without one of them popping up to ask if you need anything.â
âTheyâre slayers,â I said defensively. âTheyâve been through hell. Of course theyâre going to stick close to someone who treats them with basic respect.â
Chodanâs smirk softened into something more thoughtful. âAnd thatâs exactly why they follow you, you know. Most people donât look at us the way you do.â
âThe way I do?â
âLike weâre just people,â she said quietly. âNot monsters. Not weapons. Just⊠people.â
I was silent for a moment, staring up at the ceiling. âBecause you are just people,â I said finally. âYou didnât ask for this any more than the rest of us asked for zombies. Youâre just trying to survive like everyone else.â
Chodanâs hands stilled on my shoulders, and when I looked over, her expression was softer than Iâd ever seen it.
âThatâs not how everyone sees it,â she said. âSince more survivors started showing up, Dahyun and I⊠weâve felt it. The whispers, the stares. Itâs like we donât belong here anymore. Like weâre dangerous.â
I sat up, brushing her hands aside so I could look her in the eye. âYou belong here,â I said firmly. âBoth of you. I donât care what anyone else thinks.â
She studied me for a long moment, then smiledâa small, genuine smile that made her look younger, almost vulnerable. âYouâre a strange guy, Daigo,â she said. âBut I think thatâs why people follow you. Even when they donât agree with you, they trust you.â
I chuckled, leaning back against the wall. âStrange, huh? Iâll take it.â
Chodan tilted her head, her smile turning sly again. âYou know, youâve done more than any of us. Youâre not a slayer, but youâve taken down more zombies than all of us combined. And youâre immune on top of that. Itâs like youâre something else entirely.â
âJust a guy with a lot of stubbornness and a decent punch,â I said with a shrug.
She shook her head. âNo, youâre more than that. Youâve earned a title.â
I raised an eyebrow. âA title?â
She nodded, a mischievous glint in her eye. âYeah. From now on, youâre âThe Vanquisher.ââ
I laughed, shaking my head. âThe Vanquisher? Thatâs a bit dramatic, donât you think?â
âMaybe,â she said with a grin. âBut it fits. Youâre the guy who doesnât back down, no matter whatâs in front of you. And youâve given all of us hope. You deserve it.â
For a moment, I didnât know what to say. Finally, I managed, âThanks, Chodan. That⊠means a lot.â
She stood, stretching and giving me one last playful look. âGet some rest, Vanquisher. Tomorrowâs another busy day.â
As she left the room, I lay back down, the weight on my chest feeling a little lighter. For the first time in weeks, I drifted off to sleep with a small smile on my face.
The door to my quarters closed softly behind Chodan, but her teasing smirk lingered in my mind as I lay back down. Her parting remark about my âlittle ducklingsâ had been a low blow. She wasnât wrong, though. Tsuki and Hyewon had latched onto me like lost kids, which wasnât a problemâuntil you factored in Chodan and Dahyun, who had both been⊠friendlier lately.
I didnât know what to make of it. They were strong, capable women, and maybe I was imagining things, but their lingering glances and playful jabs felt like more than camaraderie. It was something Iâd need to ask them about. Tomorrow, I decided.
Only tomorrow didnât start the way I planned.
The yelling pulled me from a restless sleep. I threw on my boots and stepped out into the chilly morning air to find Gil, Eunhaâs boyfriend, squaring off with one of Martinâs goons.
âYou left her to die!â Gil snarled, shoving the guy hard enough that he stumbled.
Martinâs man pushed back, and before things escalated further, I stepped between them. âWhatâs going on here?â
Gilâs chest was heaving, his hands clenched into fists. âEunhaâs out there, Daigo. Alone. She got bit because of them!â
Martin sauntered up, wearing his usual smug expression. âItâs simple,â he said, shrugging like this wasnât life and death. âShe wasnât cut out for supply runs. Not my problem.â
For a second, I was too stunned to respond. I glanced back at Gil, who looked ready to explode, and said the only thing I could. âLetâs go get her.â
The commotion had drawn a crowd. Lisaâs group, always eager for drama, arrived first. Mark wasnât far behind, his posse trailing like shadows.
âWhatâs going on?â Lisa asked, her tone sharp.
âThis crazy bastard is going to help that lovesick idiot find his zombie girlfriend,â Martin sneered.
I ignored him, turning instead to Chodan and Dahyun, who had pushed their way through the growing throng. I handed them the site keycards without a word. If something happened to me, theyâd keep the camp together.
Before I could leave, Tsuki and Hyewon appeared, weapons already strapped on.
âWeâre coming with you,â Tsuki said, her tone resolute.
I sighed but didnât argue. It wasnât worth the fight. The four of us set out, Gil fuming silently at my side while Hyewon and Tsuki kept pace behind us.
Once we were out of earshot of the camp, my frustration boiled over.
âThose idiots are going to get everyone killed,â I growled, my voice low but seething.
Gil, Tsuki, and Hyewon stopped in their tracks, stunned.
âTheyâre so caught up in their fear and egos that theyâre making stupid choices,â I continued, pacing now. âAnd when they screw up, people die. Or worse, they turn into slayers.â
Gil looked at me, shocked. âI⊠I didnât realizeâŠâ
I stopped and pinched the bridge of my nose, trying to keep my temper in check. âItâs not your fault, Gil. Youâre good. Theyâre the ones twisting everything. These supply runs? Theyâre not about survival. Theyâre about power. Credibility. Theyâre trying to build themselves up while tearing the rest of us down.â
The others didnât reply, their silence heavy. We reached the edge of the horde soon after. Eunha was there, fighting for her life, her movements erratic but fierce.
I whistled, drawing the zombiesâ attention away from her. âLetâs get her out of this mess.â
When we returned to the camp, Eunha was barely conscious. Her slayer transformation was starting, and it wasnât going to be pleasant. I sent Gil to the infirmary with her while I headed back toward the center of camp.
Thatâs when I saw themâa new group of survivors, all slayers. And among them, three familiar faces: Momo Hirai, Sana Minatozaki, and Mina Myoui.
Dahyunâs cry of joy echoed through the air as she ran to embrace her friends. The reunion was heartwarming, but it didnât last long. Lisa, Mark, and Martin arrived like clockwork, their expressions darkening the moment they spotted the new arrivals.
âWho are they?â Lisa demanded, her voice like a whip crack.
Sana stepped forward, her radiant smile disarming. âWeâre survivors, just like you. And weâre slayers. We can help.â
The word âslayersâ hit like a bomb. I watched as Lisaâs face twisted in disgust, while Mark and Martin exchanged uneasy glances.
âNo,â Lisa said, her voice dripping with venom. âWe have enough slayers already.â
Something inside me snapped.
I stepped forward, my presence enough to silence the crowd. âI am sick and tired of your bullshit,â I said, my voice low and measured, every word cutting like a blade.
The tension in the air was palpable as I continued, âWeâre all just trying to survive, and you three are doing the absolute most while somehow doing the least. You put people in danger, then leave them for dead. Why? For what? Por quĂ©? 돎ìŽ?â
Lisa, to her credit, didnât back down. âYou protect these freaks because two of them are your paramours,â she spat.
The camp went deathly quiet. My vision blurred at the edges as my anger surged. For a brief moment, I felt somethingâsomething primal, something darkâstir within me.
I stepped closer to Lisa, my voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. âDo you know what the Black Rage is?â
She hesitated, but her defiance didnât waver. âNo.â
I leaned in, my gaze locked on hers. âItâs from Warhammer 40k. Thereâs a militia cursed with it because their leader, Sanguinius, sacrificed himself to save the galaxy. Itâs a state of murderous blind rage that festers in the soul, brought out under massive stress. Your words, Lisa, are pushing me there.â
She paled but didnât respond.
I straightened, addressing the entire camp now. âIf you donât want slayers here, you can leave. But while Iâm leading this settlement, you will treat them with respect and dignity. Am I clear?â
The silence that followed was deafening. Finally, Lisa turned and stormed off, Mark and Martin trailing behind her.
As I looked back at the camp, my eyes met Sanaâs. She smiled softly, a look of gratitude and understanding that made the tension in my chest ease just a little.
Scene: âThe Breaking Pointâ (Revised Ending)
The silence was unbearable as Lisa stormed off, Mark and Martin following behind like shadows. I exhaled deeply, trying to steady my racing heart. The crowd began to disperse, though I could feel their eyes on meâsome wide with awe, others wary, as if theyâd seen something they couldnât quite explain.
My knuckles ached. I looked down and realized my fists were clenched so tightly theyâd gone white. Slowly, I loosened them, flexing my fingers as I willed the anger to fade.
Thatâs when I heard itâa whisper, faint but undeniable.
âDaigo?â
I turned to see Tsuki and Hyewon standing nearby, both looking more shaken than Iâd ever seen them. Tsukiâs usual bubbly demeanor was gone, replaced by an unease that didnât suit her. Hyewon seemed like she wanted to speak but couldnât find the words.
âWhat is it?â I asked, my voice rougher than I intended.
The two exchanged glances before Tsuki stepped forward hesitantly. âYour eyesâŠâ she began, her voice barely above a whisper.
âWhat about them?â I asked, frowning.
âThey⊠changed,â she said. âFor a second, they werenât⊠normal.â
Hyewon nodded, adding softly, âAnd we heard something.â
âWhat do you mean, something?â I asked, feeling a knot form in my stomach.
âIt was like⊠a crack,â Tsuki said, her hands gesturing as if she could grasp the sound. âNot outside. Inside you. Like something broke open.â
I stared at them, my mind racing. A part of me wanted to brush it off, to say they were imagining things. But the way they looked at meâhalf in awe, half in fearâtold me they werenât exaggerating.
âI donât know what you think you saw or heard,â I said finally, my voice steady despite the storm brewing inside me. âBut Iâm fine.â
Tsuki frowned, stepping closer. âAre you? Because I donât think anyone else could have stood up to Lisa like that. Or said what you did.â
Hyewon nodded again, her voice gaining strength. âYou didnât just talk to them, Daigo. You commanded them. It was⊠different.â
I sighed, running a hand through my hair. âIâm just tired of their crap, thatâs all.â
âBut itâs more than that,â Tsuki pressed. âYou donât act like the rest of us. You donât feel like the rest of us. Even the slayers hereânone of us have done what youâve done. Itâs likeâŠâ She hesitated, searching for the right words.
âLike what?â I asked, my patience wearing thin.
âLike youâre something else,â she said, meeting my eyes with a mixture of curiosity and reverence.
Hyewon nodded one last time, her expression solemn. âSomething more.â
The words hung in the air, heavy and undeniable. I didnât know how to respond, so I didnât. Instead, I turned and walked away, their voices echoing in my mind.
Scene: âSomething Moreâ (Expanded)
Something more.
The words lingered in my head like an echo, an itch I couldnât scratch. As I made my way back to my quarters, exhaustion hit me like a freight train. My legs gave out beneath me, and the world went dark.
When I came to, the sterile smell of the infirmary greeted me. My body ached in ways I couldnât describe. The faint hum of machinery filled the air, and the soft glow of fluorescent lights buzzed overhead.
A familiar voice pulled me back to reality. âWell, you did turn,â the nurse said, her smile a mix of wariness and curiosity.
I frowned, propping myself up on the thin cot. âIâm immune,â I replied, my voice gravelly.
The nurse raised an eyebrow, her lips quirking into an almost playful smirk. âDidnât say normal,â she retorted.
She moved to the counter and grabbed a set of charts and X-rays, holding them up for me to see. âTake a look at this.â
The first X-ray showed something alienâa massive growth in my chest, a twisted knot of tissue that seemed to intertwine with every major organ. My stomach churned just looking at it.
âWhat the hell is that?â I asked, the unease creeping into my voice.
âThat,â the nurse said, flipping to the next image, âwas in your chest.â
I blinked. The second X-ray was⊠different. The growth was gone. In its place was something just as bizarre: a second heart, perfectly formed and sitting comfortably next to the first.
I stared at the images, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. âHow?â was all I managed to say.
The nurse set the charts down and folded her arms. âWhen you were exposed to the necrophage virus, your body didnât react like a normal immune personâs. Instead of fighting it off or succumbing to it, your body⊠evolved. It built that growth to house the virus, to contain it. And then, over time, your body started to metabolize the virus, integrating it into your cells.â
I rubbed my temples, trying to keep up. âSo, what? I was a carrier?â
The nurse shook her head. âNot quite. The virus never spread from you like it would from a typical carrier. Instead, it stayed inside that structure. But yesterday, something changed. That growth cracked open. Your body finished⊠whatever it was doing.â
I felt a cold sweat forming. âWhat does that mean? Am I a slayer now?â
The nurse tilted her head, studying me like I was some rare specimen. âHonestly? I donât know what you are,â she admitted. âBut hereâs what I do know: your body has fully integrated the virus into its DNA. Youâve got new cellsâones Iâm calling D-cells, because, wellâŠâ She grinned. âYour nameâs Daigo. Thought it was fitting.â
I rolled my eyes, but her grin didnât falter.
âThese D-cells are doing things Iâve never seen before,â she continued. âTheyâre healing you, regulating you, enhancing you. And that second heart? Itâs not just an extra organ. Itâs part of the whole system now, like your bodyâs leveling up in ways I canât fully understand yet. Iâll need to do more tests, butâŠâ She hesitated.
âBut what?â I pressed.
She leaned in slightly, her tone turning serious. âDaigo, youâre not human anymore. Not entirely, anyway.â
The words hit me harder than I expected. I sat there, letting them sink in.
After a moment, I swung my legs off the cot and stood up, testing my balance. My body felt⊠different. Stronger. Lighter, even.
The nurse watched me carefully. âAlso,â she added with a sly smile, âdonât tell anyone about this. Iâm the only one who knows, and honestly? I like you in charge. My boyfriend is a slayer and you make us feel welcome. Donât want anyone getting ideas.â
I chuckled despite myself. âThanks for the vote of confidence.â
âJust donât go growing a third heart or sprouting wings, okay?â she teased, already jotting down notes on her clipboard.
I walked out of the infirmary, her words replaying in my mind. Not human anymore.
And yet, as unsettling as that was, a part of me couldnât help but wonder what that meant for the future.
I barely made it ten steps from the infirmary when I heard hurried footsteps behind me. I turned just as Dahyun came barreling toward me, her eyes wide and shimmering with emotion. Before I could say a word, her arms were around me, clutching me like I was about to disappear.
âThank you,â she whispered, her voice breaking slightly.
âFor what?â I asked, startled.
She pulled back just enough to look at me, her hands still gripping my jacket. âFor Momo, Sana, and Mina. For bringing them in, for standing up for them. For keeping them safe.â
I blinked, caught off guard by the intensity of her gratitude. âDahyun, theyâre survivors. Of course Iâm going to protect them.â
She shook her head fiercely. âNo, itâs more than that. You didnât just let them in; you defended them. You treated them like people. You donât know how rare that is for slayersâhow rare that is for us.â Her voice wavered on the last word, and I realized she was trembling.
I placed my hands on her shoulders, steadying her. âHey, itâs okay. Theyâre here now. You donât have to worry about them anymore.â
Her grip on my jacket tightened. âYou donât understand. Do you know what it felt like to see them again? To see their faces after thinking Iâd neverââ She stopped, her voice catching in her throat.
I waited, giving her the space to collect herself.
âThey were my family,â she continued softly. âBefore all of this, before the outbreak⊠we were together. We were everything to each other. And then I lost them. I thought Iâd never see them again.â
Her tears spilled over, but she didnât seem to care. âAnd now theyâre here, alive, because of you.â
I didnât know what to say. Words felt inadequate, so I did the only thing I could think of: I pulled her into a hug. She buried her face in my chest, her sobs muffled against me.
âYouâre safe now,â I said quietly. âAll of you.â
For a moment, we just stood there, the weight of everything unspoken between us.
When Dahyun finally pulled back, her expression had shifted. The tears were still there, but her gaze was steady, determined.
âYouâre more than just a leader, Daigo,â she said. âYouâre⊠youâre a protector. For all of us.â
I scratched the back of my neck, feeling a little uncomfortable with the intensity of her praise. âIâm just doing what needs to be done.â
She smiled, a mixture of sadness and warmth. âYou donât give yourself enough credit.â
Before I could respond, she leaned up and pressed a quick kiss to my cheek. It wasnât romanticâit was more like a gesture of gratitude, of trust.
âThank you,â she said again, her voice steady now. âFor everything.â
Scene: âTwo Heartbeatsâ
As Dahyun hugged me, her head pressed against my chest, I noticed her shift slightly. Her body stiffened, and she pulled back just enough to stare at me, her brow furrowed in confusion.
âWaitâŠâ she whispered, her hands pressing gently against my chest. âDaigoâŠâ
I froze. âWhat is it?â
Her gaze darted to my chest, then back to my face. âI⊠I felt two heartbeats.â
I tried to play it off, forcing a dry chuckle. âYou must be imagining things. Probably the adrenalineââ
âDonât lie to me,â she interrupted, her tone firm, her eyes narrowing. âDaigo, I know what I felt.â
For a moment, I debated what to say. The nurseâs words about keeping it secret echoed in my mind. I let out a slow breath, keeping my voice calm but firm.
âYou canât tell anyone about this,â I said, lowering my voice. âNot a soul. Promise me.â
Dahyunâs eyes widened, but she nodded. âI promise. But⊠Daigo, whatâs going on? Whatâs happening to you?â
I hesitated, knowing I owed her some explanation. âItâs⊠complicated. Iâll explain later, okay? Just trust me for now.â
She didnât look convinced, but she nodded slowly. âOkay. But Iâm not letting this go.â
âFair enough,â I said, offering her a faint smile to ease the tension. âJust⊠keep it between us.â
She nodded again, reluctantly letting the subject drop, but the concern in her eyes didnât fade as she walked away.
Scene: âConfrontationâ
Later that evening, I was back in my quarters, sprawled on my bed, trying to process everything. My body felt heavier than usual, like my own heartbeatâtheir rhythmâwas a constant reminder that I was no longer the same.
A knock on my door snapped me out of my thoughts. Before I could answer, the door creaked open, and Dahyun and Chodan stepped inside.
I sat up, my instincts telling me this wasnât a casual visit. âWhatâs up?â
Chodan folded her arms, her gaze sharp. âDonât âwhatâs upâ us, Daigo. Dahyun told me.â
I shot Dahyun a look, but she raised her hands defensively. âI didnât tell her everything! Just⊠enough. Weâre worried about you.â
Chodan stepped closer, her voice softer now. âShe said youâve got two heartbeats. Whatâs going on? Are you okay?â
I sighed, knowing there was no avoiding this. âClose the door,â I said.
Dahyun obeyed, and both of them sat down on the edge of the bed, their expressions a mix of concern and curiosity.
âI went to the infirmary earlier,â I began. âAfter I collapsed. The nurse ran some tests⊠and apparently, Iâm not human anymore.â
Both of their eyes widened.
âNot human?â Dahyun echoed.
Chodan leaned forward. âExplain.â
I rubbed the back of my neck, feeling the weight of their stares. âThe virus⊠the necrophage or whatever itâs called. It didnât infect me like it does everyone else. My body ignored it, adapted to it instead. It built this⊠structure in my chest to house the virus, and eventually, it merged with me on a cellular level.â
Dahyun looked horrified. âSo⊠youâre infected?â
âNo,â I said quickly. âNot like that. Iâm immune, but the virus evolved inside me. Itâs part of me now. My body has these new cellsâD-cells, the nurse called them. They heal me, regulate me, even enhance me a little. But when that structure in my chest broke open, it triggered something⊠different. Thatâs when the second heart formed.â
Chodan whistled low, sitting back. âDamn. Thatâs⊠a lot.â
âYou think?â I said dryly.
Dahyun looked at me, her voice trembling. âWhy didnât you tell us?â
âThe nurse told me to keep it secret,â I admitted. âIf people find out, it could cause chaos. They already look to me as a leader. If they knew I wasnât⊠normal, it could go either way. Theyâd either worship me like some kind of savior or fear me like a monster. Neither is good for the camp.â
Chodan nodded slowly, processing. âOkay, I get it. But Daigo, you canât keep this to yourself. If something happensââ
âNothingâs going to happen,â I cut her off, my tone firmer than I intended. âIâm fine. Better than fine, actually. And for now, the fewer people who know, the better.â
Dahyun hesitated, then reached out to place a hand on mine. âWe wonât tell anyone. But you have to promise us something.â
âWhat?â I asked.
Chodan leaned in, her tone serious. âIf anything changesâif you start feeling worse, or differentâyou come to us. No hiding, no tough-guy act. Deal?â
I looked between them, seeing the genuine concern in their eyes. I nodded. âDeal.â
Dahyun exhaled in relief, and Chodan gave me a faint smirk. âGood. Now get some rest, Vanquisher. Youâve got a camp full of idiots to deal with tomorrow.â
I chuckled despite myself. âThanks for the reminder.â
As the door clicked shut behind them, I hesitated for a moment before speaking.
âHey⊠can you two stay the night with me?â
Dahyun and Chodan both turned to me, their eyes widening in surprise. They exchanged a quick glance, silent communication passing between them, before Dahyun gave a small smile and nodded.
âOf course,â she said softly.
âSure thing, big guy,â Chodan added, her tone teasing but warm.
I felt a small wave of relief as they started settling in. At first, there was some debate about the sleeping arrangement.
âYouâre in the middle,â Chodan declared, pointing at me.
Dahyun laughed, shaking her head. âNo way. If heâs in the middle, heâll be too stiff to sleep. Iâll take the middle.â
Chodan raised an eyebrow. âYou sure about that?â
âPositive,â Dahyun replied, giving her a playful shove.
In the end, Dahyun ended up sandwiched between us. Somehow, it felt⊠right. Too right.
As we all lay there, I couldnât help but notice the way their warmth seeped into me, calming a part of my mind that was always on high alert. Their presence, their quiet breathing, the shared comfortâit was disgusting how good it felt.
I slept better that night than I had in years.
The morning light filtered through the cracked blinds, and I woke to find Dahyun already sitting up, her hair slightly mussed as she stretched. Chodan was still sprawled out, half-asleep, but her eyes opened when she noticed me stir.
âMorning,â Dahyun said with a smile, her voice soft and pleasant.
Chodan grinned lazily, propping herself up on an elbow. âYou look like you actually slept for once.â
I couldnât help but chuckle. âYeah, I did.â
As I sat up, I glanced between them, both looking so at ease, so⊠perfect in this moment. My chest tightened with something I couldnât quite name, and before I could stop myself, the words came out.
âOkay, itâs official. I love both of you.â
The room froze. Dahyunâs cheeks turned a deep red, her lips parting in surprise. Chodan, for once, looked genuinely caught off guard, her usual confidence replaced with wide eyes and a blush creeping up her neck.
âW-What?â Dahyun stammered, her voice barely above a whisper.
Chodan let out a nervous laugh, scratching the back of her head. âWell, uh⊠thatâs one hell of a way to start the morning.â
I ran a hand through my hair, suddenly feeling more exposed than I ever had in my life. But I pressed on, because if I didnât say it now, I might never.
âListen, I donât want to hurt either of you,â I said, my voice quieter now. âBut I also donât want to be alone anymore. I⊠I donât think I can handle choosing between you. I care about both of you too much.â
They both stared at me for a long moment, and for the first time in what felt like forever, I couldnât read the room.
Dahyun finally broke the silence, her voice trembling but sincere. âWe⊠we donât want to hurt you either, Daigo.â
Chodan nodded, her usual bravado replaced with something softer. âYeah. We get it.â
The tension eased slightly, and I gave them a small, grateful smile. âThank you. For understanding.â
I stood up, stretching and preparing myself for another day in the chaos outside. âLetâs just take things one step at a time, okay?â
As I headed for the door, I glanced back at them one last time. Dahyun was fiddling with the hem of her shirt, her blush still lingering, while Chodan gave me a look that was equal parts amused and thoughtful.
I stepped outside, the weight of the campâs problems settling back onto my shoulders. But for the first time in a long time, I didnât feel completely alone.
The morning air was crisp, the faint hum of the camp stirring to life all around me. But the moment I stepped into the central yard, I could feel the tension in the air like a cord stretched too tight. Mark, Lisa, and Martin were waiting for me near the supply tent, their expressions carefully neutral. Too carefully neutral.
âDaigo,â Lisa greeted, her voice dripping with faux warmth. âWe wanted to have a word with you about some⊠concerns.â
I stopped a few feet from them, crossing my arms. âConcerns about what?â
Martin stepped forward, hands clasped behind his back like some kind of self-appointed general. âLeadership. Weâve been talking, and weâre worried you might be⊠overburdened.â
The words were polite, but the tone was anything but.
âOverburdened,â I repeated, my eyes narrowing.
Mark, who had been quiet until now, leaned against a nearby crate, feigning nonchalance. âItâs not personal, Daigo. Itâs just⊠youâre young. This camp needs someone with experience, someone who knows how to make the hard calls.â
I felt a flicker of something at the edge of my visionâsomething imperceptible to anyone else but clear as day to me. My mind was racing, processing their every movement, every twitch, every glance they cast at each other. Their words didnât align with their bodies.
Lisaâs arms were crossed tightly, her fingers gripping her elbows like she was holding herself together. Her gaze darted between Mark and Martin when she spoke, looking for approval she didnât fully trust sheâd get.
Martinâs jaw was clenched, his shoulders slightly hunched, as if he were bracing for something. He avoided making eye contact with Mark altogether, his focus squarely on me.
Markâs relaxed posture was an act, his fingers tapping a subtle rhythm on the crateâs edge. The tapping stopped every time Lisa spoke, only to resume when Martin chimed in.
They werenât united. Not really.
They werenât a team; they were a loose coalition of distrust, bound together by their mutual disdain for Slayersâand for me.
âYou think Iâm ill-suited for leadership,â I said, cutting through whatever diplomatic phrasing they were about to throw at me.
Lisa hesitated, her lips parting as if to argue, but Martin stepped in quickly. âWe just think the camp might benefit from a more⊠collective approach.â
âRight,â I said slowly. âA collective approach where the three of you call the shots.â
Mark smirked, but it didnât reach his eyes. âWeâre not saying that. We just think youâve got a lot on your plate. Youâve been making some questionable calls, like bringing in more Slayers. Itâs upsetting people.â
I tilted my head, my mind still cataloging every twitch and glance. Lisa didnât agree with Markâs phrasing; her lips pressed into a thin line when he spoke. Martin didnât eitherâhis fingers flexed briefly, like he wanted to grab Mark by the collar and shut him up.
They werenât here for the camp. They were here for themselves.
âYou know what I think?â I said, my voice calm, almost conversational.
Lisa raised an eyebrow. âWhatâs that?â
âI think the three of you donât trust each other any more than you trust me,â I said bluntly. âAnd the only thing keeping you from tearing each other apart is your shared desire for power.â
Their reactions were immediate, though none of them spoke. Lisaâs arms uncrossed, her hands balling into fists. Martinâs shoulders squared, and his mouth opened as if to argue, but I cut him off.
âYou think because Iâm younger than you, you can manipulate me. Make me doubt myself. Convince me that Iâm not capable of leading this camp. But let me tell you something.â
I took a step closer, my voice low but firm.
âIâve seen what fear and desperation do to people. Iâve seen what happens when you let ambition cloud your judgment. This camp doesnât need more politicians. It needs people who are willing to get their hands dirty. People who put survival over ego.â
Lisa took a step back, her confidence faltering. Markâs smirk disappeared entirely, replaced by a tight-lipped glare. Martin, for all his posturing, looked like he wanted to be anywhere else.
âI donât trust you,â I said plainly. âNot because you disagree with me, but because I see through you. And if you think you can divide this camp, undermine me, or turn people against each other, let me make one thing clear: I wonât let that happen.â
The silence that followed was deafening.
âAre we done here?â I asked, my tone making it clear the conversation was over.
Lisa opened her mouth, then closed it, glaring at me like she wanted to say something but thought better of it. Mark and Martin exchanged a glance, their earlier bravado now replaced with unease.
âYeah,â Martin finally muttered, his voice lacking the confidence it had earlier. âWeâre done.â
They turned and walked away, their uneasy silence speaking louder than any argument could have.
Lustâs voice slid into my thoughts before I even saw her.
âBrooding doesnât suit you, Daigo.â
I turned and found her leaning against a pole, arms crossed, watching me like I was some puzzle sheâd already figured out. Lust always had this effortless confidence about her, like she knew exactly where she stood and where everyone else didnât.
âLust,â I said, keeping my tone neutral. âWhat do you want?â
She tilted her head, a small smirk tugging at the corner of her lips. âSaw you dealing with the Three Stooges over there. Figured Iâd save you before your brain melted from their bullshit.â
I huffed out a faint laugh despite myself. âThanks, but Iâm good. If youâve got something to say, say it.â
She pushed off the pole and took a slow step forward, her smirk fading into something more serious. âAlright, then. Letâs cut to the chase. We need to talk about the Slayersâ place in this camp.â
Her words hit me harder than I expected, but I kept my face blank. âGo on.â
She gestured around us with a sweep of her arm. âThis camp is crumbling, Daigo. You can feel it, canât you? The survivors are scared of us. Some of them outright hate us. And those three idiots you just dealt with? Theyâre not going to stop until they take control. They see us as a threatâsomething they canât predict, something they canât control.â
âTheyâre wrong,â I said firmly.
âOf course they are,â she shot back with a shrug. âBut what does that matter? What matters is perception. And right now, weâre the monsters under their beds, the things keeping them up at night.â
I folded my arms, trying to keep my frustration in check. âWhatâs your point?â
âMy point,â she said, stepping closer, âis that maybe itâs time for us to move on.â
Her words threw me off balance. âYouâre suggesting the Slayers leave the camp?â
âNot all of us,â she clarified. âBut yeah, most of us. Think about it, Daigo. Weâre stronger, faster, harder to kill. We donât need the same resources they do. Half of them are terrified every time we walk past. We could be more useful out thereâclearing zones, securing supplies, doing what we do bestâwithout dragging this camp deeper into its own mess.â
I clenched my jaw, my thoughts racing. She wasnât wrong. The tension between the Slayers and the regular survivors had been growing for weeks. Still, leaving? That felt like giving up.
âAnd what about the people here?â I asked. âThe ones who rely on us? The ones who see us as hope?â
Her expression softened, and for a moment, she dropped the smirk she always wore like armor. âYou think I donât care about them? I do. But you canât save everyone, Daigo. And if we stay here too long, weâre just going to make things worseâfor them and for us.â
Her words hit harder than I wanted to admit. I looked away, staring at the horizon as doubts churned in my mind. âAnd where would we go?â
âThatâs the thing about Slayers, isnât it?â she said, her voice quieter now. âWe donât belong anywhere. We carve out a place for ourselves, or we die trying.â
I let her words sink in, the weight of them pressing down on my shoulders. She wasnât wrong, but leaving wasnât a decision I could make lightly.
âYouâre not wrong,â I admitted, finally breaking the silence. âBut I canât make this decision on a whim.â
âI wouldnât expect you to,â she said, her tone softer now. âYouâre the leader. Itâs your call. But think about itâfor all our sakes.â
She turned to leave but paused and glanced back over her shoulder, a faint smile tugging at her lips. âYouâve got a good heart, Daigo. Even if youâve got two of them now.â
A few days later, I woke up to chaos. Shouting, pounding on my doorâit felt like a nightmare I couldnât wake up from. Still half-asleep, I fumbled for my gauntlets and boots, instinct kicking in. Before I could even ask what was happening, the door slammed open, and a tide of bodies surged into my quarters.
They were on me before I could process anything. Arms grabbed at me, forcing my weapons from my hands. I swung once, twice, but there were too many. Too many voices, too many hands pulling me down. My head was spinning, and the shouts all blurred together until they were just noise.
âTraitor.â âUnfit.â âYouâve failed us.â
I heard bits and pieces, but none of it made sense. The more I struggled, the tighter they held me, their grip like iron as they dragged me out into the open. The morning sun was too bright, and the cold bit into my skin as if punishing me for something I didnât even understand.
I tried to speak, but no one was listening. I stumbled as they pushed me forward, my boots scraping against the ground. The gauntlets weighed heavy on my wrists, my only connection to the strength I once thought I had.
They forced me past the campâs main gates. My camp. The place Iâd fought to protect. The people Iâd bled for. And now, I was being tossed out like I was nothing.
The crowd gathered, a sea of faces filled with contempt, distrust, and apathy. No one spoke for me. No one stood in my defense.
Mark stood at the front, smug as ever, his voice carrying over the noise like a judge pronouncing a sentence. âYou were a fool to think you could lead this place. You were never cut out for it. Now, get out.â
I clenched my fists, the leather of my gauntlets creaking under the strain. âYou think this will end well for you?â My voice sounded weak even to me, the weight of it all pressing down.
Mark just smirked. âItâs not about you anymore.â
With that, he shoved me hard, sending me stumbling into the dirt. Behind me, the gates slammed shut, the echo like a final punctuation to the betrayal.
For a moment, I didnât move. I couldnât. My chest felt hollow, like someone had reached in and pulled out whatever kept me standing all this time. My gauntlets and bootsâthe only things theyâd left meâfelt like relics of a life I no longer belonged to.
I got to my feet eventually, numb and directionless, and started walking. Each step away from the camp felt heavier than the last. The cold air stung my face, but I didnât bother wiping the tears that streaked my cheeks. They froze against my skin like scars.
By the time I reached my old safe house, I felt like a ghost, moving on autopilot. My motorcycle sat there, still as Iâd left it, a reminder of a time when I thought I was building something good. I climbed on, gripping the handlebars, and kicked it to life.
I drove for hours, the road stretching endlessly ahead of me. California disappeared in the rearview mirror, replaced by the barren landscapes of Arizona. At a checkpoint, a guard asked for my name and my race.
âDaigo,â I said, my voice dry. âAnd Iâm a Vanquisher.â
The guard laughed. âWell, youâre definitely not a zombie. Too funny for that.â
I forced a chuckle, but it felt hollow.
Eventually, I found myself in Colorado. The air was quiet there, too quiet. There were no zombies, no people, no purpose. Just me and my thoughts. I settled into a rhythm: work, eat, sleep. Repeat.
But the loneliness clawed at me. Nights were the worst. Iâd lie awake, staring at the ceiling, thinking of Dahyun, Chodan, my ducklings. The camp. Even the ones who betrayed me. I missed them all, and the ache never went away.
Twenty-eight days passed like that. I told myself I was healing, but really, I was just surviving. Then I heard the news: a new group of slayers was moving into the area. I didnât think much of it until I saw their vehicles rolling in.
The sight of familiar license plates made my chest tighten. I sat on my porch, sipping fruit punch, watching them unload. It was all too familiar. Too close to home.
Then I heard their voices. Two voices Iâd know anywhere.
âDo you hear that?â âYeah, it sounds like someone on this block has two hearts.â
I froze, my drink forgotten, and stood. When I saw themâChodan and Dahyunâmy heart felt like it might break all over again. They turned, and when they saw me, Chodanâs eyes welled up with tears as she rushed forward to hug me.
âHey, big guy,â Dahyun said, her voice soft but steady.
I tried to smile, but it faltered when I saw the two men behind them. Slayers, obviously, their postures protective as they approached. My heart sank as Chodan and Dahyun introduced themâboyfriends.
I nodded, polite and distant, the ache in my chest threatening to swallow me whole. âDaigo,â I said, offering a handshake. âJust an old friend.â
They smiled, the moment slipping through my fingers like sand, and left me standing there.
As I walked back into my empty house, I felt the weight of my exile all over again. Even now, even here, I was still on the outside looking in.
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áŽáŽáŽáŽÊáŽáŽáŽ: QᎥáŽÊ
manito
reblog if you save
â.ă.:*ă»Â°â.ă.:*ă»Â°â.ă.:*ă»Â°â.ă.:*ă»Â°â
#wallpapers#qwer#chodan#magenta#siyeon#hina#chodan qwer#qwer chodan#magenta qwer#qwer magenta#siyeon qwer#qwer siyeon#hina qwer#qwer hina#qwer manito#manito#qwer lockscreen#qwer lockscreens#qwer wallpaper#qwer wallpapers#kgirls#kgirlsnet#ggnet#ggnetwork#kband#kbandsnet#comeback#concept photo#kflops#nugunet
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씞짱! (â ïŒ â °â âœâ °â ïŒ â )đ
#my art#qwer#qwer band#qwer fanart#qwer chodan#chodan#illustration#shes so puppy coded#i will put her in my pocket#!!!
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youtube
song rec of the day: Crush! by xooos covered by chodan and siyeon of QWER
i also recommend the original although the mv is short âĄ
youtube
#qwer#qwer chodan#qwer siyeon#chodan#siyeon#crush!#xooos#kpop#music#sotd#song recs#uploads#goodnight!!#Youtube
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What website is best for gofundme
#qwoc selfies#qwoc couples#qwoc artist#qwer#qwerty#qwer siyeon#qwertee#q we are#magenta qwer#qwel#qweeniesworld#qwer chodan#qwen stacy#q#w#e#r#t#y#u#I#o#p#a#s#d#f#g#h#j
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ê° ËË â· qwer: comboââĄá” ê±
like/reblog | @prplocks
donât repost our work or claim it as yours
#mavi#qwer#chodan#chodan qwer#magenta#magenta qwer#siyeon#siyeon qwer#hina#hina qwer#qwer lockscreen#qwer lockscreens#qwer wallpaper#qwer wallpapers#kpop#kpop lockscreens#kpop wallpapers#kgirls#kgirlsnet#ggnet#ggnetwork#kgirlsquad
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đ đ ÖŽÖŽÖ¶Öž đđđŸđ : simple âż
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#qwer#qwer lockscreen#qwer wallpaper#qwer lockscreens#qwer wallpapers#qwer edits#kband#chodan#hong jihye#chodan lockscreens#magenta#magenta lockscreens#siyeon#lee siyeon#siyeon lockscreens#hina#jang nayoung#hina lockscreens#kpop lockscreens#kpop wallpaper#kpop edits#lockscreens
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QWER for DAZED KOREA
#kbandsnet#raylook#nugudolsedit#nugudomedit#kflops#kpopccc#rookienet#femaleidolsedit#underratedgirlsedit#qwer#qwer band#chodan#siyeon#magenta#hina#what if I tell you that I'm happy that I came back giffing them?#I missed them đ„ș#teresgifs
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The body n visuals on this perfect woman
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Chodan by Hinaki [Twitter/X] â»Illustration shared with permission from the artist. If you like this artwork please support the artist by visiting the source.
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QWER âHarmony from Discordâ Concept Photos ⥠Chodan
#chodan#qwer#femaleidolsedit#femaleidol#kgoddesses#ggnet#idolady#nugudomedit#underratedgirlsedit#e:harmony from discord#2023#by mau
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240506 | chuucandoit instagram post đ
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