#Tw: acid burn
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Dick got his legs burned by acid!! And nearly!! Bled out!! Let's go!!
Batman/Superman: World's Finest #15
#dude this issue is making me fuckin nuts in the best way#dick saving supes and trying to carry him to safety#dick getting ACID on his fucking legs!!#dick yelling at metamorpho and then calling the titans for help#''don't you dare! don't you ever question my loyalty to batman or superman! do you hear me?''#dick being unable to turn the wheel of the batmobile as it careens straight for a brick wall#LET'S GOOOOO#damn it's been a long time since we've had some good whump#Dick Grayson#Batman/Superman: World's Finest 15#tuesday spoilers#tw: injury#tw: burns#tw: blood
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Our Savior: A Hello Neighbor Fanfic
By JJ
Summary: The Dove is their savior.
Nicky ran down the street in his white cult robe, desperate to get to Enzo before one of the Forest Protectors did.
He had to sneak away after their meeting with Maritza, where he had offered her a Golden Apple charm bracelet instead of threatening to kill her brother.
Now here he was, trying to find him.
Luckily, he found him running in an old construction site, and he hid behind a cover inside of a cage contraption.
He ran over to the cover and pulled it back, startling Enzo at first, but Nicky put a gentle hand up.
"I'm not here to hurt you, I'm here to help you escape.", he said in a soft voice. He took his hand and pulled him in his direction, "Come on. If we hurry, they -"
Just then, a black, sharp fingered hand grabbed Enzo's arm and pulled him in its direction. The cult member peeked through the cover, and was about to grab Enzo, but Enzo screamed so loud, it miraculously made the whole entire contraption collapse.
Thankfully, Nicky pulled Enzo out of the way just in time.
"Are you okay?", he asked Enzo, Enzo nodded, trying to catch his breath. Nicky stood up and dusted himself off, "Listen, you have to run. Go find your sister and run home."
Enzo didn't even think twice before he ran away at the sight of a cult member standing behind Nicky. Nicky turned around to see the cultist, and he recognized that it was Gerda, she always was a little tall and buff for a lady, so it was kind of hard not to recognize her.
Gerda didn't say anything, she just growled under her mask and ran in the opposite direction, leaving Nicky to himself.
With Nicky to himself, he ran in the other direction and ran straight to the woods.
He saved Enzo, now he had to save Delroy and Ivan.
He kept running and running and running, desperate to find Delroy. Sure, he may not have been friends with him, and he didn't even like him very much, but that didn't mean he wanted him dead.
Nicky was so lost in thought, he nearly tripped over the long cliff. When he heard a scream, he immediately recognized who it came from and where it came from.
Delroy fell down the waterfall.
He turned around to see the other cultists at the other side of the cliff, and he immediately sprinted down the hill and followed Delroy as he drifted down the stream, and he stepped into the water and pulled him out.
As they walked back to shore, Nicky let Delroy dry himself off with his cloak.
"Are you okay?", he asked. "I've definitely been better.", said Delroy as he muffled through the cloak he dried himself off with.
When he was done, Nicky caught a glimpse of his cheek, a red scar made a fine line on it.
"Oh my goodness, your cheek.", he whispered. Delroy reached a hand to touch it, and jerked it back when it stung.
"You don't happen to have any bandaids or something, do you?", he asked.
Nicky sighed and tore off a piece of his cloak, gently pressing it against Delroy's cheek. Despite the stinging pain, Delroy let his savior do what he was doing.
"Listen to me, you have to get out of these woods. Right now.", he said, "Leave, don't come back."
"What? But -"
"Please.", Nicky begged, "I don't want them to hurt you."
As he spoke, he saw that there was a cultist standing behind Delroy. As if he senses his shock, Delroy turned around and shoved Nicky out of the way as he ran for his life.
"Thanks for the bandage! Bye!"
Nicky quickly picked himself off the ground and ran out of the woods, making his way to Raven Brooks Middle School.
When he got there, he tried to open the door, but it was locked. Thankfully, he was lucky to be carrying a couple of his lockpicks with him. So he took them out and desperately jabbed them into the keyhole and pushed the door open.
He scanned the halls for Ivan, and his heart nearly dropped when he saw a group of cultists making their way to Mr. Murtaugh's classroom.
"Please don't let Ivan be in there.", he thought, running to the classroom, sliding into the room as the door closed behind him.
He hid behind Mayor Tavish as Principal Abanate stalked towards his science teacher, Mr. Murtaugh...
And Ivan...
"Who are you?", asked Mr. Murtaugh, looking confused. "W-What are you doing here?"
No one answered, Principal Abanate just walked closer to the two, and the science teacher backed away, shielding Ivan behind his arm. He turned around and grabbed a tube filled with a yellow liquid.
"Stay back.", he warned, "These viles are filled with acid."
No one made a move, not until Principal Abanate grabbed a sheet covering a machine and yanked it off...
Ivan's can lid launcher...
Nicky felt his heart stop.
"Run!", said the science teacher, "Go, Ivan!"
But Ivan didn't move, he just stood there, frozen with fear.
"Run! Run!"
Ivan was hesitant, but when Mr. Murtaugh pushed him away from him, he wasted no time in running to the door and out of the classroom.
Mr. Murtaugh stood in front of the door, and Nicky stood to him, holding his hands up as a signal of peace.
"Sir, please put the acid down. We -"
"You leave my student alone!", said Mr. Murtaugh, not letting Nicky finish. "If you think you can intimidate me with those ridiculous out-"
Then, out of nowhere, Principal Abanate pulled the switch that triggered the machine.
Sensing the impending danger, Nicky held his arm in front of Mr. Murtaugh, shielding him from the blade, but the blade cut its way through his own arm. Nicky screamed, his voice modulator making an unholy noise that made Mr. Murtaugh accidentally drop the acid in his hand and onto Nicky's bleeding arm.
Nicky screamed again, and Mr. Murtaugh ran out of the room, grabbing Ivan by the arm as he ran out of the school.
Meanwhile, Nicky screamed and cried as he held his arm, covered in blood and acidic scalds. Tears rolled down his face and onto his arm, worsening the burn, but Nicky was too hurt to feel any more pain.
Mayor Tavish grabbed Nicky by the shoulder and pulled him up, hoisting him over his shoulder and carrying him out of the classroom.
Back in the tunnels, Crowface wiped cold water and wrapped bandages around Nicky's burning and bleeding arm. Nicky was still crying, but he muffled his cries with his other hand.
Despite not saying anything, despite not even looking at him, Nicky could tell that he was disappointed in him.
But he wished that Crowface understood that he was only trying to save his friends. He knew he shouldn't have, mainly because of the deal he made, but he only wanted revenge, he didn't want anyone to die.
Crowface finished wrapping Nicky's arm and gently laid it down on the boy's lap, "It's done.", he said. Then he got up and walked away from him, "You go get some rest. We'll talk about your behavior when you've composed yourself.", he said before disappearing into the shadows.
Leaving Nicky to himself, trying to steady himself and stop himself from crying.
Meanwhile, the gang met in Trinity's room. Trinity, Enzo, Maritza, Ivan, and Delroy.
"Crowface, there's more than one.", said Enzo, "And this white cloaked raven guy saved me from getting killed by one of them.
"Same, bro.", said Delroy. "Exactly the same."
Trinity looked at her friends, worry in her eyes. "I'm so glad you're all okay.", she said. Maritza shrugged, "It was all thanks to that white raven."
"How did he know where we'd all be?", asked Delroy.
"He's everywhere.", said Enzo, then he grabbed his cheeks in worry. "He probably knows we're here right now!"
As they rambled on about how the white raven saved them all from death, Trinity looked out her window, taking deep breaths and looking back and forth down the street of Friendly Court.
"Whoever you are, white raven...", she whispered to herself, "Thank you for saving my friends."
#hello neighbor#welcome to raven brooks#nicky roth#enzo esposito#maritza esposito#ivan#delroy#my fics#hello neighbor fanfic#the guest#forest protectors#principal abanante#gerda#mayor tavish#mr murtaugh#tw blood#tw acid burns#hurt/comfort#dove au
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*throws holy water on you*
*bursts into tears*
#ooc: Fun fact!! the cult would throw “holy water” on her that was a dilluted acid. enough to burn her skin but leave no lasting damage#tw: child abuse#tw: religious trauma#aranza speaks#mutant rp#mutmblr#xaviers student union#xmen rp#mutantblr#xaviers institute#mutant tumblr#x men#x men rp
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me after falling into a comically large vat of acid (oopsie daisies)
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(From the @taskforcedistortion account)
Please be careful Scoundrel- don't lose control- we don't know how strong you acid can get-
-Shadow
[text to speech: on]
FUCK OFF SHADOW I'LL BE FINE IT FUCKING HURTS BUT I'LL DEAL WITH IT I DON'T NEED YOU LOOKING OVER ME OH FOR FUCK'S SAKE WHY DOES IT HURT SO MUCH WHY AM I LIKE THIS
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Burns+Scars x Defiant Whumpee
Based on my last two polls, this is what we've got! TW: Swearing
Caretaker dreamt of Whumpee at night. The witty comebacks to any insult hurled their way, the constant sarcasm, the flirty attitude towards them... They were the fiesty fire to their calm waters, the ray of sunshine that brightened their life. God, Caretaker lived them.
As Caretaker made their way down the hall, they could still see Whumpee as they lifted the debris from the explosion off them, the way they ignored the pain of the fire eating away at their hands for them. Caretaker needed to save them, if only to thank them. If only to tell them how they felt...
They opened the door to the cell, eyes immediately drawn to where Whumpee sat in the corner, head buried in their knees. "Whumper, I told you, if you touch me again, I swear to fucking God, I will break your fucking hand and shove it up your ass."
Caretaker smiled weakly. "Whumpee, it's me."
Whumpee lifted their head, a blindfold covering most of their face. They smiled, a fresh cut still bleeding on their bottom lip. "Caretaker, you're okay!"
Caretaker laughed. "Yeah, thanks to you and Medic. I still can't believe that was all so Whumper could get their hands on you."
Whumpee held up their cuffed wrists. "You got a key?"
"A lockpick." Caretaker headed over to Whumpee, crouching before them. They fussed with the lock, sighing as the cuffs fell to the ground. Whumpee held their irritated wrist in their hand as Caretaker pulled the blindfol from their face...
Whumpee's smile faded. "Caretaker, what's wrong?"
Fresh scars crossed over one another, probably from some sort of acid from the looks of it. Whumpee's eyes stared blankly in front of them, even as Whumpee cocked their head to the side. "Caretaker, did you take the blindfold off yet? What's wrong? You're being awfully quiet, even for you."
Caretaker struggled for words. "Whumpee, I took the blindfold off already."
#whump drabble#whump prompt#whump#tw: trauma#tw: torture#tw: acid burns#tw: acid#tw: chemical burn#tw: fire#tw: injury#tw: blindness#tw: explosion#tw: capture#tw: rescue#whumpee#defiant whumpee#whumpee x caretaker#stoic caretaker#caretaker#tw: swearing
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Vigor couldn't forget. Their journey moved forward, but he still found himself drawn back to that night in the cabin everytime he looked at Sirius. He tried not to keep too close an eye on him, least he feel watched, but what he'd seen had shaken him. Even though Sirius seemed safe, keeping himself close to the other companions and with no sign of any fresh injuries, Vigor knew there was still trouble hidden beneath a calm surface. He wanted desperately to talk about it, and maybe tell the others, in case the tiefling had another episode; safety was more important than privacy, and having not spoken with him about that night only made Vigor worry more.
His gaze lingers, before heavy eyes dart away. Nothing had been simple since the crash, and Sirius was just one person he worried about. Still, what he said that night made his blood run cold. Vigor decides to retire to his tent, having kept his vigil on the others all day and now in dire need of respite.
His tent is humble, just big enough for him to sleep in with books and a lantern by his pillow, along with a few extra blankets that he hoped to expand into a collection. However, on the potion station just outside his tent, Vigor spots a curious parcel perched upon his desk. He examines it, noting its size, or any clues at to who might have left it there. Wrapped in brown parchment and string and smaller than a book. A trinket, perhaps? Maybe some leftover food, or potion ingredients. He approaches it carefully, but notes nothing strange about it. He pulls the string and the parchment unfurls into black smoke as writhing tentacles pour out of the void within.
In an instant, Vigor is engulfed in darkness. Blinded and freezing, ensnared in a vortex of dark whispering voices. He tries to escape, blindly moving in any direction but his leg is caught in a tightening vice that writhes up his thigh and burns into his flesh as he struggles against it. The darkness is boundless and Vigor can't hear his friends amongst the whispering voices. Though one voice in particular calls out to him, familiar and inviting. ❝I've missed you, brother. Why don't you visit anymore? I'll see you soon.❞
Closed starter for @musezieren
#self harm mention#burned flesh tw#burnt flesh tw#(acid damage specifically - non graphic mention)#musezieren#sirius
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Idea: Batman AU where the Batman is a hero, the A list villains are also heroes, and the B, C, and D listers are nightmares to deal with.
Like imagine Bats and Joker doing combat comedy, with Batsy as the straight man. Or an alternate heroic Harvey Dent under the vigilante name Janus, who has a theme of duality going and whose acid burns (hidden under the mask) are the result of an attack on the courtroom by Condiment King, who uses his acidic condiments for a lot worse than just melting into bank vaults in this AU
#batman#batman au#condiment king#harvey dent#joker#good joker#dc#dc comics#tw acid burns#mothman is the absolute worst in this au
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Anyways, Lost Ronin Prologue snippet
Probably not a good idea to share a snippet when the prologue is already short as is, but eh, also tw for chemical burn description?
He swallows his nerves as the pain worsens by the second. Now it feels like his body is being torn apart, the acidic burns now healing and reforming new skin—tugging and ripping at his muscles.
Every single nerve under his skin is screaming at him to escape—to do anything. He can feel his skin bursting, tearing and something else he can’t explain. Like something is starting to emerge from his skin—as desperate to escape his body as he is to get out of this false ocean.
He feels sick, he feels gross. He just wants this pain to end.
Context? I have none for you. Pain? Plenty of it—I’m kidding, I didn’t write much for it because acid burns hurt like a bitch (I have willingly put my hand in chemicals before, context will not be provided) and I don’t like thinking about it
#lost ronin#rottmnt#rise of the teenage mutant ninja turtles#rottmnt fanfiction#rottmnt future raph#tw burns#tw acid/chemical burn#future raph au
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I need to weigh 190 I need to lose these last 20 pounds and be a normal weight. Being over 200 is psychologically damaging me.
#🌱.txt#TW ed#I’ve lost 5lbs this past week just eating cheese and pita chips#and drinking only water and diet drinks#most of the time thinking about food makes me nauseous#at least for now#I’m sure I’ll cycle back into craving all foods#my stomach and throat burns every morning from the acid reflux#and my breath smells like death from starving#I’m so miserable#and don’t come for me for saying under 200 is normal#this is my eating disorder and I make the rules
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honestly I think that might be the way you're "supposed to" eat them. The skin is edible*
*honestly I do not support eating any part of a fucking kiwi. all of you are on your own with those things
my sister eats kiwis like a plum. she just bites in with the skin on them
#to be fair i think I'm allergic to them though#i can't remember if they make my mouth burn like pineapples or if i just find them flavorless other than the taste of ascorbic acid#and the outside is covered with bristle like no thanks sir maybe you could instead use it to clean your shoes#and the seeds are crunchy in a way that should be nice but. isn't#it's like not enough crunch to be enjoyable and too much crunch to ignore#idk it's been a very long time since i bothered to try a kiwi though#also yes i do enjoy being overly opinionated about things that do not matter thanks#it's this and Carol of the Bells#but in opposite ways#wall of words#food tw
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[ Dream or a Nightmare? ] tw: torture, acidic burns, drugging, cut throat
@the-entity-child asked: to endure the ritualistic suffering of Junko victims (basically cult sacrifices)
The poisoned wine still stained his lip where it poured out of his mouth when he was forced to drink it. Weakened and experiencing vertigo Bass could do nothing to free his arms. He was currently on his knees, held by his arms by two masked men. And whatever Junko was saying became incoherent rambling a long time ago. Perhaps she was speaking some other language. Perhaps the drugs in his system were making it impossible to understand plain English.
Another cut was formed along the length of his forearm. A twin to the first formed on his left arm. Each cut was slow and deliberate, as if she tried to make sure the line was perfect. Drops of acidic blood poured down his flesh and onto the carved floor below. He wasn't certain what the symbol was and frankly he did not care. All he cared about was how weak he was feeling. How difficult it was to even throw his body in the hold of the clearly mortal men.
But he didn't try to talk his way out of this. Even if he could form words, he knew there was no way to use logic against Junko. Whatever purpose this ritual served, she would see it to the end. It was clearly important to her. Even if the captured Entity had no clear understanding of what she would gain from this.
And that was when Junko stepped in front of him. A clear smile on her face as her finger dragged over the black staining the knife. She did not seem to mind the way the Entity's blood sizzled into her flesh. Perhaps she even took some pleasure at knowing she made him bleed. But more pain would be forced upon the Bastard. A rough hand taking hold of his hair and pulling his head back.
One final cut...
A deep gash formed across his throat. Perhaps now he tried to speak, but nothing but gurgling came out. The blood that should've stayed within his veins now burning at his chest, neck, mouth... He could feel it entirely consuming his shell. And soon there would be nothing left to protect his defenceless form.
#the bastard [ ic ]#fog walkers [ asks ]#[ dream or nightmare ]#the entity child [ Junko ]#tw: torture#tw: blood#tw: acid burns#tw: cut throat#tw: drugging
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Guy who is Unaware of the Consequences: ouh a cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh another cherry tomato :3 ouh an
#the consequence is acid reflux and heart burn btw#acid reflux#heart burn#heartburn#cherry tomato#cherry tomatoes#tomato#tomatoes#food#food tw#dog speaks
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BIRD DOG - JAILBIRD PART TWO
Part One
Description: Simon’s determined to retrieve his jailbird.
Word count: 4.5k
TW: Parolee! Reader (guys we’ve graduated to parole), stalking, reader is kept as vague as possible, sexual favors in exchange for money, groping, Ghost is a creep (graduated from perv lmao), p in v, oral (m! receiving), p in v, mention of breeding kink, creampie, possessiveness, dub-con, somewhat edited.
Notes: It’s finally done! This took longer than I anticipated since I deviated from the OG plan and was a bit of a stinker to write but it's done. I hope everyone enjoys it! I’ve absolutely loved reading all the comments, asks, and reblogs. Such positive feedback is what led me to posting part two honestly. I'm currently working on the last part of JB so expect that soon💖. Feedback is always appreciated but never expected. Let me know if I missed any tags. Enjoy :)
Also I've never done a tag list before so apologies if it didn't work or I missed anyone😭. Please let me know if the link to part one doesn't work either, this is the first time I'm using Tumblr on my laptop I usually use my phone.
You got used to the slight tremor in your hands, the parting kiss alcoholism left with you, but the violent shaking as you attempted to click the lock of the hotel door closed was difficult for even you to handle. You longed to feel that familiar burn of self-destruction but the only place that would have you end up is back in prison. Parole violation. It was too soon to resort to such dramatic measures, instead you quietly paced your small room, double checking that you clicked the deadbolt shut, closing the curtains as tight as they could go, anything to try and soothe your rising anxiety.
Talking yourself away from the edge again and again until you could finally sit down on the stiff mattress. Every time you managed to calm your heart you blinked and saw that room again. You saw those pictures again.
He-Simon.
You swallowed, forcing yourself to take deep, slow, breaths.
After sleeping together, after discovering the skeleton in his closet, you swallowed the bile in your throat and kissed his jaw. He made dinner which you smiled over and forced into your mouth, every bite downed with a sip of water. The two of you went to bed, your eyes darting to that door, now left open enough you could see a glimpse of his homemade wallpaper. He kept an arm draped over you and fell asleep.
Then you left.
Barefoot, not knowing where your shoes had been placed in your need to-
Jesus Christ you had slept with the man.
You barely made it to the bathroom, puking mostly water and yellowed acid up. It made your eyes water and nose run, blowing it in a piece of toilet paper, flushing it down. There was little comfort to be found in the distance you put between you and him.
Going on foot wasn’t the brightest idea, but risking stealing Simon’s car and having him call the cops on you was foolish even for you. That and you didn’t want the man any angrier at you than you expected he was going to be. You only got so far before you found yourself on the wrong side of town. You had never been in the area before, but you knew the type. Women posted on every corner, bars on the windows, broken glass and sticky residue staining the sidewalks. It didn’t take you long to find the kind of man you needed. Trading a handjob for a bus fare, a blowjob for a new pair of shoes, and a pitiful two minutes of dry thrusting for a hotel room.
Back to your ways. Different city, different time, same person. A bird incapable of changing its tune.
You needed a real job. A record stood in your way of that, but surely there had to be something, anything, that would pay enough for you to keep a roof over your head without having to sell more of yourself.
You needed a job, but you needed space more. As much as you could get. Immigration was out, no one wanted to host a felon, and you were limited to a certain area before your parole officer got testy with you. Fuck. A big cage, that’s what you were trapped in. One you could never get free from.
Your family. Your past. Your cell. Your city. Your whole fucking life, one cage after another. Freedom a concept rather than a reality. Simon could use it against you. He knew of your limits, hell, you fucking told him yourself over a phone call before you got released. Outlined every fucking sentence of where you could and couldn’t go. He knew all of it.
Taking another deep breath you forced your body to lie on the bed, you needed to calm down. You needed to think clearly and come up with a plan. Simon was still asleep in bed, he didn’t know where you were, you were fine.
You were fine.
A good night’s sleep. That’s what you needed. Not likely with how wound tight you were. But you had to try. Anything to escape the panic squeezing your lungs.
___
It took four hours of staring blankly at a dark ceiling, on the edge of a panic attack the entire time, before your body gave in and let you sleep. It was light, but it was enough of a break in your consciousness. The sun was what woke you, shining on your eyes and causing you to squint. Your anxiety a gentle heart palpitation rather than the full blown panic it was last night, exhaustion dulling its edge.
The first thing you did was go business to business looking for a place that was hiring. Most required a resume, those you didn’t even give a second glance (as they no doubt did background checks). It took all of the day before you found a shitty pub that only asked if you were old enough to drink. With a nod of your head an apron was shoved into your hands, and you were bussing for your first shift.
The owner, a balding man who smelled like cigarettes and wore a sweat-stained wife beater, paid you cash. Enough that you were able to buy another night to cover your hotel room and not much else. You walked back to your temporary home, eyes darting to every tall man who crossed the street. For once, you were grateful Simon was such a large man. It would make him easier to spot in a crowd, the orange of a tiger’s fur stark against a green jungle.
When you returned back to your room, it was easy to explain the movement of your things. Hotels had housekeepers. You wouldn’t have even noticed it if it weren’t for your paranoid state. It wasn’t until you went to the bathroom, eager to wash away the grease and grime of the pub, that you noticed a small picture sitting face-down on the bathroom counter. Flipping it over revealed you. You, asleep in your shitty hotel bed, close-up, taken from inside.
You were barely able to flip the toilet lid up before you lost your stomach contents. Vile burning the back of your throat was nothing in comparison to the panic that burned through your veins.
He was inside your hotel room. He was inside your hotel room last night with you.
You barely managed to stand, legs shaking, leaving the bathroom you noticed other signs of his arrival. Dirty tracks that were much too large. The blinds wide-open even though you were sure you closed them before you went to sleep. A single dog tag resting underneath your pillow. It’s owner’s name mocking you.
Riley.
___
He left you more presents. Vestiges of him ever present in your life. It didn’t matter where you went, how many hotels you hopped, how many jobs you changed, he always found you. Truthfully, the both of you knew this song and dance could only go on for so long. You were low on cash and stuck orbiting around the same small area. Days bled into weeks bled into months. Fear gave way to anger. Anger that he wouldn’t leave you alone. Anger that he wouldn’t let you delude yourself into thinking you had found a safe space that he could not intrude on.
On your nth hotel, you decided you were staying. Simon be damned. He obviously had no intentions of killing you just yet, content in tormentation. That and there were only so many jobs willing to pay under-the-table. You needed to save up enough cash to prove that you had a steady place to live, a recommendation from your parole officer. This flightiness made the law suspicious at best and nervous at worst.
You found your way back to the pub, who upgraded you to server. On the wrong side of town its patrons weren’t the best. But they tipped decent enough and if they got too handsy the owner always stepped in. A few pinches on the ass were worth a steady income. You’ve given a lot more of yourself for less.
Perhaps, that was your mistake, you got too comfortable with a wild animal. So sure that your exotic pet would not bite.
The first time you saw him, you thought it was a mistake. Despite his size Simon was able to go about your life as he pleased without you catching even a glimpse of him. Hell, you knew he could stalk you without you being aware of him at all (your prison stint was proof enough of that), he just chose not to. You shouldn’t have been surprised that his behavior would escalate.
You were standing, dead on your feet after your shift working on three hours of sleep, waiting for the bus. And there he was. Across the street, large frame leaning against a wall, arms crossed. When you did a double glance, you were able to make out the tell-tale scars across his face. Then the bus came. It was a coin toss, boarding the bus. A part of you wanted to flee, figuring he could easily cross the street and board the same bus as you, but the alternative was worse. Let it pass and walk home alone. In the dark. With a predator at your heels.
No.
Better to have people around you. Safety in numbers and all that.
The next day, he did it again. And again. And again. Each time coming closer and closer. Until one day you saw his large frame coming up the steps of the bus. You practically vibrated from anxiety in your seat, unshed tears blurring your vision as you stared straight ahead. The black blur of his jacket, the soft squeak of his boots as he moved closer and closer, until he took the seat right behind you.
You didn’t move. Frozen. Fight or flight. Fight or flight. Fight or flight. Or,
Fright.
Fright.
Fright.
Until the bus moved and the decision was made for you. Only you couldn’t convince your muscles to move, stuck staring dead ahead. Willing the bus driving to glance in the mirror back at you. Willing the other passengers to notice how close the man behind you was sitting (close enough to feel his breath against your ear, close enough to smell the tobacco on his breath). But this was the last bus and everyone was too tired to notice. A herd of diurnal prey vs a nocturnal predator. It was clear who had the advantage.
You missed your stop. And the one after that. It wasn’t until you felt a violent shake on your shoulder that you jolted out of your trance, eyes darting up… to the bus driver.
“Las’ stop miss. Gotta’ get off.” His voice firm. How long had he been calling out to you?
Giving a jerky nod you looked behind you, but Simon was gone.
___
It didn't stop there. Not that you expected it would, but fucking forgive you for having a little hope in life. Simon took to following a few steps behind you wherever you went. Sitting behind you on the bus. Sitting in the back of the pub, nursing beer after beer. Sometimes he had another man with him. But mostly he was alone. His eyes never left you. For weeks it went on. For weeks you felt his constant presence.
The presents never stopped either. Photos of you, gifts for you (lingerie and cigarettes, the same shade of nail polish he gave you while you were in prison), things of his. He never relented. You never shook that feeling of being watched. You never could get rid of that pit of anxiety in your stomach. Exhaustion was starting to settle heavy in your bones. Give up. Give in. Give yourself to him.
The temptation was intense. You just wanted to be done with it all. Let him do what he wanted with you. At this point, even death would be better than another day of constant anxiety. (Pursuit predator exhausting his prey, closing in).
And then he was gone.
His absence was glaringly obvious on the first day, enough so that you thought for sure that you were going to die soon. Simon had reached some kind of breaking point. But you didn’t. And you didn’t see Simon.
There were no presents left for you. No signs of his stalking. No evidence that he was ever in your life at all. It was such a sudden and stark change that if it weren’t for his dog tag you would have thought you dreamed the whole thing. But he was gone.
A day passed.
Then another.
And another.
The knot in your stomach slowly unworked itself. The tension ever present in your shoulders finally loosened. Weeks passed by. Then months. A part of you still worried. In prison there were times where Simon would go silent for months, but he always came back. And he always made sure to make up for lost times. More gifts, more phone calls, longer visits. It seemed that your anxiety was slowly chipped away, yet it was also slowly building itself back up again.
But Simon stayed gone. More importantly, a date had been set for you to become a truly free woman. No parole. No restrictions. A chance to leave the country. A chance to truly be free.
A chance to slip away from Simon.
___
When a police officer knocked on your door, you had to fight back the panic.
You haven’t done anything wrong.
It wasn’t until you were sitting across from your lawyer did you truly began to realize the situation you were in. His words sounded so far away, so garbled. As if you were trapped underwater, in a fishbowl, letting the world happen around you as you tapped at the glass.
“...Do you understand the situation you’re in?...Enough drugs to get an intent to distribute…a passport…tickets to another country…”
How did you get here?
“Are you listening to me?”
You snapped back to reality, the familiar cold cuffs biting into your wrists.
“Do they have to keep these on me?”
Your lawyer let out a sigh. “Don’t worry about the damn cuffs right now.”
Easy for him to say, he wasn’t the one wearing the damn cuffs.
“They’re distracting.”
He ignored you. “They have you on video buying a plane ticket out of the country.”
You nodded. He didn’t mention the fact that your parole would’ve been up by then. Nothing wrong. You didn’t do anything wrong.
“They found enough cocaine in your hotel room to get intent to sell. With the plane ticket, and your erratic behavior after you got out of prison, things don’t look good for you.”
“It’s not mine I-” Your voice cracked and you cleared your throat, talking so quietly, trying to hold back tears. “I swear.”
Your lawyer didn’t look convinced. “That defense won’t hold up in court.”
He ran his hands through his hair. “Look, I was able to cut a deal for you. It’s better than prison. They’ll tag you-”
Dog tags flickered in your mind. “Huh?”
“House arrest.”
“Oh.”
“You won’t be able to use a hotel, you’ll have to go back to the original residence you reported when you got out of prison.”
"What?” Alarm bells rang through your sluggish thoughts.
Your lawyer sick of you interrupting him, bulldozed on. “Listen to me. I don’t know why they’re offering this to you, but you won’t get a second chance at this. Confess your crime. They’ll confine you to your house for three years and serve parole in tandem. You’ll only serve a year of parole once you’re out.”
Three years. Three years stuck at Simon’s house. Three years with Simon.
“What happens if I don’t take it.”
“You’ll go back to prison. Given you’ve already been, they'll try for maximum. You could be looking at twenty years, ten if you’re lucky. Life on parole.”
Walk into the tiger’s den or let him continue the chase.
How did you get here?
___
They put the ankle monitor on at Simon’s house, now your house you suppose. A part of you had wanted to tell them to take you back to prison instead. But you knew the reality of your situation. Simon would just do the same thing he did before. Get videos of you, pictures of you, he could still watch you in your cell. He would still visit you. And that’s just what he would do while you were in prison, what would happen when you were released again? You were never going to be able to escape him. At least this way you would be more comfortable.
A gilded cage.
Simon talked to the officers, but he seemed to make even them nervous, as they all but ran out of the house. You watched as they shut the door behind them, alone in a room with Simon for the first time in a long time.
How did you get here?
Simon put his hand on the back of your neck, before gliding it upwards jerking your head back. Your eyes met his, and he was smiling.
“Hello, bird.”
“Simon.”
He shuddered when you called his name.
“Missed you.”
“Don’t know how, you never left me.”
He grinned, boyish and proud of himself, “Never.”
Simon kissed you then, feeling far more familiar than he should’ve for a man you’ve only had sex with once. You turned, hoping to relieve some of the pressure in your neck, Simon’s hand stayed instead wrapping around your throat. He gave an experimental squeeze, making you whimper, before he released you.
“Gonna’ be good’ fer me?” He rasped.
You thought about it for a moment, and he let you, time frozen mid-air. But you had been running for so long. And you were so tired. Fight or flight. Fight or flight. Fight or flight. Or,
Surrender.
You had to stand on the tips of your toes to press your lips against his, white flag given. That’s all it took for the dam to break. Simon let out a growl and slammed you into the nearest wall, cradling your head so it didn’t bang against the wall with the force. His body caged you in as he deepened the kiss. You had forgotten just how intense it was to be so close to Simon.
He filled your senses. You breathed him in, you tasted him, you heard his soft grunts against your lips, felt the rough edge of his jeans as he ground himself against you, watched as his blonde eyelashes fluttered open until he was staring at you. Always watching. Even in these moments.
Simon’s hand gripped your ass, grinding you harder against him, moaning from the friction.
“You owe’ me somethin’ birdie. Made your fiance wait so long. Such a fuckin’ tease.” He growled in your ear before fisting your shirt in two hands, ripping it with ease. Hands squeezing your bare tits so tight you expected to find bruises tomorrow.
Confusion knitted your brows together before he shoved you to your knees and you came face to face with his crotch.
How did you get here?
Your hands shook as you undid the button on his jeans, the zipper loud in between Simon and your panting. He helped you pull his jeans down his thighs, his cock dropping out, hard and angry.
Fuck.
You had forgotten just how big the man was down below. Time distorting the memory enough you had convinced yourself that he was average and you were just desperate that night. You were wrong of course. The man was hung as a fucking horse.
It had been awhile since you gave a blowjob. The steady pay the pub provided, the tips you made, pawning a few of Simon’s gifts and you had earned enough to not necessitate them. Not that it would help in this situation. Simon was big enough that all your previous tricks were rather useless. You weren’t even sure if you could open your mouth wide enough to take him, let alone take him down your throat. Your poor poor throat.
Tentatively, you leaned forward and gave the head a gentle kiss, glancing up and meeting Simon’s eyes. Your gaze left his, feeling suddenly shy despite the situation you were in. Pre dribbled and you used the chance to rub it along his sensitive head with your thumb. You gathered as much spit on your tongue licking the underside of his cock, pushing it all the way up until it pressed against his stomach. He groaned, hand resting on the back of your head.
With his dick out of the way, you used your other hand to caress his balls before pressing soft kisses to them. You replaced your hand with your mouth, sucking and swirling your tongue, using your hands to work his cock while you gave your attention elsewhere. His balls were much easier to fit in your mouth, but you could only delay the inevitable so long.
You pulled away fully, his cock falling under the weight of itself. The easy part done, now it was time for the hard part. Your gag reflex was not going to be happy. Bracing your hands against his thick thighs, feeling his muscles flex underneath your fingertips, you pressed your lips against the tip of his cock again, parting the seam of your mouth and letting him slowly slip in. Your tongue lying flat as he invaded your mouth.
Inch by overwhelming inch.
Before you had thought he was overwhelming, it was nowhere near as overwhelming as having his dick in your mouth. Gone were the lingering scents of tobacco and liquor. The outside world stripped away until just the man was left. Until only Simon’s musk filled your nose, wrinkling it as you took him a little deeper. Your jaw already ached from how wide you were stretching it.
Tired of your pace, Simon began to use your head as leverage as he pushed you further down, nails pressing crescents into his skin as you forced your body to relax. You quickly moved your hands back to the base of his length, stopping him from pushing you any further. Twisting your wrists to placate him enough to let you keep them there. Sucking to increase the pressure.
Simon moaned, hands going from gripping your head, to resting. Letting you work.
You took a deep breath through your nose as you began to work him in earnest. Swirling your tongue over the head of his cocked you began to bob faster and faster, unable to stop the lewd gurgling noises as the back of him hit your throat. His hands were at your head again, pushing himself further down your throat and back again. Setting his pace.
This wasn’t a blowjob he was fucking your throat. Using you. His dick twitched in his mouth before he pulled out, as you took in huge gulps of breath. Body hunching in on itself. You felt vulnerable like this. Kneeling in front of him, the top half of you completely nude.
You didn’t get much time to collect yourself before you were pulled to your feet, turned so that your back was pressed against his front, hands bracing against the wall.
Simon kissed your neck, hooking his hands on your pants and jerking them down. They caught on your ankle monitor but he just tore them off, seams ripping. Your underwear was torn with a satisfying rip, before you felt the tip of his bare cock pressing against your hole. He thrusted against your slit, gathering your own slick before he reached a hand down, dragging his dick back before it caught on your hole.
You couldn’t help but whine at the stretch of him, un-prepped. He didn’t stop until his hips met yours, large hands bruising. He paused, leaning his weight onto you, sighing. As if being buried to the hilt in your cunt was the reprieve he had been looking for all his life.
“Missed her’ too. Did she mis’ me?” His voice was hoarse against your ear.
���Huh?”
He removed one hand from your hip bringing it to your clit, brushing one large knuckle against it, causing your knees to buckle. Simon chuckled, easily holding your weight against him.
“Don’ worry, won’ ever leave you for this long again Birdie.”
Simon licked your cheek causing you to try and jerk away from him, before the rough pad of his finger began to circle your clit, your pussy clenching around him almost painfully, grinding his hips into yours as if trying to fuck you deeper somehow. He pulled out before snapping into you. Again and again, hand never leaving your clit.
“Simon! Simon please! Don’t stop!” You couldn’t help but cry, bucking back against him as you felt an orgasm build quickly, faster than one had ever built before.
He growled into your ear. “Ain’t ever gonna run again Bird.”
You nodded your head, trying to do everything in your power to appease him to keep doing what he was doing. To keep thrusting. To keep his hand on your clit. To lick you again. Anything. Everything. You wanted him to consume you wholly.
“Ain’t gonna run no’ more. Ain’t gonna leave the house till everyon’ knows you’re mine.”
His hand left your clit, causing you to whine in protest, cradling your stomach.
“Say it. Tell the whole fuckin’ world who you belong too.”
“You Simon! YoU! Simon! Simon please…plea-” You were babbling, until finally his hand went back to your clit.
“Don’t forget it.”
You came, cunt desperately clutching his cock, squealing as Simon didn’t even slow his thrusts. He pushed you through one orgasm onto the edge of overstimulation as he finally came with a grunt inside of you. He didn’t pull out, keeping his seed nuzzled safely near your womb.
You slumped against his arms, panting softly as the reality of your situation began to wash over you, naked except for the ankle monitor.
How did you get here?
It didn’t matter, because all roads led to Simon.
Tag list: @Sweetlike-sugarplum, @thatpersonamedrook, @aphinthestars, @misscaller06, @shushyoudontknowme, @youknowits-derea, @succubusvalentine, @sundaescreamcheese
#simon riley x reader#ghost x reader#ghost#ghost x you#simon ghost riley x reader#Simon is such a meanie#He's gonna give reader an ulcer fr
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Geto Suguru
♡ TW: some nsfw, dubcon/noncon, yandere, kidnapping, captive reader
♡ part two
♡ gn reader
Geto hates humans without cursed energy but keeps you in his bed.
There’s no point in fighting back or trying to leave—you found that out quickly. There’s a sentient guarding the door—a large mold-skinned monster. You hadn’t seen it at first—couldn’t back then. It was only after you tried running away that it became visible—all but throwing you back into the room, a wobbly distorted word leaving its toothy mouth, “Ss-taaay.”
You’d crawled and curled yourself up into the farthest corner—shaking and crying—only peeking at the monster every other minute to confirm what you’d seen.
Watching the monster obey Geto made you realize how you were different. What he mumbles about makes more sense after that—always on about monkeys and curses and sorcerers and whatnot, most of which still goes right over your head. But one thing is made clear, he’s a sorcerer and you’re a monkey—and that difference is very important to Geto.
He makes you apologize for it as he fucks you. You don’t really understand though how it’s your fault, yet you know that the more you say sorry, the higher the chance he goes a little easier on you.
It doesn’t take long before curses of your own start manifesting around you. Small leach-like creatures that suck the blood from where he’s left bruises on you. A bigger one chokes you in your sleep and licks the insides of your ear—like he usually does when he’s feeling extra pent-up.
It’s a strange development. Not what he'd expect. He’d rather have thought all your anger and hatred towards him would result in curses inclined to attack him, not yourself. But while a swarm of your own curses smothers you, there’s only one weak curse sliding over to him. Zero hostility, yet the tears dribbling down its face burn through the bed like acid. “Ple-pleaaaase kill meee.”
His ideals should have him inclined to leave them all to further torture you, and yet... He doesn’t know why, but he absorbs them all instead. Suppose… the only curse he feels you should have hanging over you is himself.
♡ GETO SUGURU masterlist ♡ JUJUTSU KAISEN masterlist
#yandere jjk#yandere jujutsu kaisen#yandere#jujutsu kaisen#gojo#yandere geto#yandere geto suguru#yandere suguru#geto suguru#geto x reader#jjk geto#geto smut#suguru smut#jjk suguru#geto x you#geto x y/n#suguru#jjk imagines#jjk#jjk x reader
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in which you are trapped in a haunting pact with Caleb, bound by the pomegranates you unwittingly took. Caleb x fem. reader. mdni.
Part two here
tw: kidnapping. dubious consent/non-con. choking. manipulation. forced arrangement. coercion. scaring. panic attacks. nightmares. threatening of loved ones.
wc: 10.7k
The pomegranate orchard sprawled like a cursed labyrinth, its gnarled trees clawing at the ashen sky, their twisted branches skeletal and accusing. The bitter clouds churned above, heavy and oppressive, a leaden canopy suffocating the air with an unnatural stillness. The light barely penetrated the gloom, casting long, distorted shadows that seemed to shift and writhe, as though the orchard itself were alive and watching.
Hanging like swollen wounds, their dark crimson skins mottled and bruised, glistening faintly in the little sunlight presented. Some had burst open, spilling their putrid seeds onto the blackened soil, a grotesque mockery of spilled blood. The ground was slick and sticky, as if the land itself bled in a silent protest. Bitter winds slice through the orchard, the howl a whispered warning, carrying the faint, acidic tang of decay. The rustling of the brittle leaves sounded almost human, like the dry whispers of unseen figures lurking just beyond sight. In the distance, a crow’s cry pierced the silence, sharp and grating, cutting through the thick atmosphere like a blade. The sound didn’t fade; instead, it seemed to linger, twisting unnaturally, echoing back and forth between the crooked trees.
Heavy footsteps crunched the brittle leaves below, their sharp sounds splintering the fragile silence like broken glass. His sandals, worn and cracked, struck the earth with a deliberate cadence, their weight unforgiving in their wait for departure. Each step left behind a faint imprint, quickly swallowed by the restless soil as if the orchard sought to erase his presence.
The ends of his robe dragged through the dirt, gathering its stain—dark, earthy smudges seeping into the white threads that might have once been pure. The fabric clung and twisted, weighted by the dampness of the soil, as though tethering him to the cursed ground.
Above, the crow’s cry came again, louder now, a guttural warning that seemed to reverberate through the trees. The sound merged with the eerie rustling of the leaves, their whispers sharpening into something intelligible yet incomprehensible, a chorus of voices too faint to follow but too distinct to ignore.
And yet...
His eyes lingered on a single leaf that had defied the rot and ruin surrounding it. Its green shimmered faintly in the muted light, an unnatural vibrancy that seemed out of place amidst the decay. It quivered slightly, though no wind stirred, as if beckoning him closer. Beneath it hung a fruit, untouched by the blight that marred its siblings, its skin smooth and taut, glowing a deep crimson that bordered on otherworldly.
How did this happen?
He was sure he had killed them all. Every last one. The orchard had been his domain, its life snuffed out by his own hand. The trees, once vibrant, now stood as withered husks, their fruit rotting where it fell, their roots choking in soil poisoned by his will. There was no room for life here—he had made sure of it. And yet...
That single leaf, green and defiant, mocked him. It was small, insignificant, but its existence burned in his chest like a splinter lodged too deep to remove. His fingers curled into a fist as he stepped back, the weight of realization settling over him. The leaf shouldn’t be there, and neither should the fruit it sheltered.
A smile almost rose to his face. Almost. But his lips hesitated, caught in the tension between amusement and unease. He could almost admire its resilience, the audacity of this life that refused to die, as though it had been waiting—challenging him.
A laugh bubbled in his chest, rising unbidden, loud and boisterous, yet devoid of humor. It spilled out of him, echoing through the lifeless orchard like a cruel specter. The sound was harsh, jagged, and wrong, as though the land itself recoiled at its presence.
“Defiant to the last,” he muttered, his voice low and sharp, as if addressing the fruit itself. The defiance only fueled his resolve.
Without hesitation, he reached out and tore the pomegranate from its branch, his grip crushing the delicate stem with a brutal finality. For a moment, he held it in his hand, the fruit’s weight heavier than it had any right to be, almost as though it resisted his grasp.
With a vicious twist of his hands, he split it open. The rind cracked like brittle bone, its blood-red juice spilling over his fingers, staining them with its vivid essence. The stark white flesh inside was veined with crimson, its beauty grotesque and unsettling. The seeds, glistening like rubies, tumbled free, falling to the earth like droplets of freshly spilled blood.
The air thickened as the orchard seemed to shudder, the ground beneath him trembling faintly. A sharp, metallic tang filled his nostrils, and the hum, once faint, now roared in his ears, a relentless rhythm that seemed to emanate from the fruit itself.
His laughter died in his throat as his smiled shifted, stifling itself into a chuckle.
“The seed of vengeance is sown, and the promise is broken.”
The shadows around him deepened, crawling closer as if drawn to the fruit’s destruction. The ground beneath his feet cracked, a network of fissures spreading outward.
***
Your bed was unusually cold, but not so; winter had long since approached, and the snows were well into place, their heavy flakes falling in absurd elegance, a reunion with the earth that was both beautiful and terrifying in its silence. The chill settled into your bones, seeping beneath the blankets, but it was nothing new.
No, the cold wasn't what bothered you.
It was the dreams.
Each night they came, vivid and suffocating, like they were not dreams at all, but memories dredged up from some other place, some other life. They had started innocently enough—fleeting glimpses of darkened forests, whispers on the wind, strange figures lurking just beyond the light. But now, they were growing more real, more unsettling, the edges blurring with your waking moments.
You had stopped sleeping soundly weeks ago.
In your dreams, you walked through an orchard—a pomegranate orchard. The trees, gnarled and twisted, loomed overhead, their branches reaching down like the fingers of some forgotten god. The air was thick with the scent of decay, yet the fruit—pomegranates, gleaming blood red—hung from every tree, too heavy for the branches that bore them.
The dreams always ended the same way.
You would reach for the fruit, compelled by something you couldn't name, your fingers brushing its smooth surface, only for it to burst open in your hands, the seeds spilling out like blood from a wound. The voice would come then, whispering in a language you couldn't understand, its tone low, almost mocking.
Each time you awoke, you were left with a lingering taste of iron in your mouth, and the sensation that something had shifted, something had changed, though you couldn't say what. The coldness, yes, but also the weight of the dreams pressing down on you, growing heavier with each passing night.
You’d seen a priest. Three of them, in fact. And an oracle. None of them had anything useful to say.
Sure, the priests had been polite, their hands steady as they muttered prayers over you, their voices low and soothing. They spoke of purification, of light and darkness, of the spirits that roamed the earth- the usual stuff. But their words felt empty- like they were reciting from a script they’d memorized just for this kind of thing. Their incense did nothing to clear the air, and the talismans they’d brought you did little. They were a token, nothing more.
The oracle, however, had been…strange. She’d stare at you with eyes that seemed to pierce through you, as if peeling back you skin, tissues, and muscles, down to the bones and deeper. She spoke in riddles you didn’t care to try an figure out for more than a day, words twisting in ways that made the hairs on the back of your neck and on your arms stand up.
But you did remember one thing.
How her gaze was almost pitiful, and the last line before she ultimately went silent.
“The pomegranate seeds have been spilled. They will find you.”
You tried to understand, you really did. The words clung to you, spinning in your mind, but they felt as if they were wrapped in shadows, half-formed and out of reach. Pomegranate seeds? What did that have to do with anything? Aside from the dreams at least. And besides, no pomegranate would grow here; it was far too plush a land- too vibrant and thriving. Pomegranates only grew in hot, dry places. The soil was rich, the air thick with moisture, and the trees were lush and green. At least, it was that way in the summer and spring. Now it was late winter.
Never mind that.
Swinging your legs over the side of the bed, the cold wood pressed uncomfortably against your skin, sending a shiver up your spine. The chill wasn’t anything you weren’t used to- it always got like this in winter.
You glance at the fireplace, untouched since the last time you managed to stoke a fire. You’d have to light it again- soon, when you had time. Eh, it could wait for now.
The farm was waiting for you, and with it, your work. The chickens needed to be fed, the barn doors needed fixing, and the well was still frozen over.
With a heavy sigh, you rise to your feet, feeling the weight of your body against the cool air. You step carefully, avoiding the floorboards that creak underfoot, and cross the room to the window. Snowflakes continue their relentless descent outside, drifting in and out of view as the wind picks up, swirling around the empty landscape.
Grabbing your coat and gloves, you sluggishly tug them on, the motions stiff and uncoordinated from the lingering cold in your joints. You hold the sleeves of your nightgown tight against your wrists, trying to keep them in place as you slip your arms into the thick wool coat. It doesn’t quite work. The fabric bunches awkwardly beneath the layers, twisting and pressing against your skin, the discomfort a small, irksome distraction in an otherwise bleak morning.
Your fingers fumble with the buttons, the chill making them clumsy, and you tug your gloves on with the same sluggish effort. The leather is stiff and worn, the seams stretched from years of use, but it’s enough to keep the worst of the cold at bay.
You exhale sharply, your breath misting in the icy air of the room, and glance toward the door. The world beyond it waits, indifferent and unchanging. The tasks ahead loom large, heavy in your mind, but there’s no avoiding them.
With a final tug to straighten your coat, you steel yourself and step forward, boots scuffing against the wooden floor as you make your way to the door. The cold greets you like an old adversary the moment you open it, biting at your face and creeping past the gaps in your layers. But you push through. You always do.
Outside, the snow continues to fall, the landscape quiet and heavy beneath its weight.
***
The chickens squawked and flapped in a frenzy as you tossed the feed onto the frozen ground, scattering it with a hurried motion to keep the snow from clinging to your coat and gloves. Their frantic clucking rose in a chorus, a cacophony that only deepened your irritation.
"God—hey—no! That’s all you’re getting, you freeloaders," you snapped, shaking the nearly empty bag at them for emphasis. One particularly bold hen pecked at your boot, and you glared down at her.
Flipping them off with a gloved hand, you added, "I’m gonna turn you into a soup just for that. Matter of fact, who’s got eggs?"
Your voice echoed in the cold air as you scanned the coop with a narrowed gaze. Most of the chickens scattered at the sound, pecking furiously at the feed as though they hadn’t eaten in days, while a few stayed huddled together near the corner, unbothered by your threats.
Grumbling under your breath, you made your way to the nest boxes, brushing a layer of frost from the wooden edges. Carefully, you reached inside, your fingers brushing against something warm. A small victory, you thought, as you pulled out a freshly laid egg.
"One of you finally decided to be useful," you muttered, holding the egg up as if showing it to the flock. The hens clucked indifferently, entirely ungrateful for your ongoing tolerance.
You shook your head, pocketing the egg in the folds of your coat, and moved to check the other boxes. "Soup," you repeated under your breath, the word a half-hearted promise. "Mark my words. Soup."
"She laid an egg?" Josephine’s voice called out from the window, muffled slightly by the frost-covered panes. She peered out, her gray hair tucked under a knit cap, the lines on her face softened by the faint light streaming through.
You turned, clutching the egg carefully in your hand, and squinted back at her through the falling snow.
"Yeah, one of them decided to be useful for once," you said, holding the egg up for her to see. "The rest of them are freeloading."
Josephine chuckled, a dry, raspy sound that carried a warmth the cold couldn’t touch. "Don’t be too hard on them. It’s a miracle any of them are laying at all in this weather. Poor things probably feel like they’re in the Arctic."
"They’re fine," you replied, brushing snow off your sleeve. "I feed them, don’t I? Besides, they’re tough little things."
Josephine leaned further against the sill, her joints too stiff and fragile to be out in the biting cold. "Well, don’t break that egg before you bring it in. We might need it for supper."
"You think I don’t know how to handle an egg?" you shot back with a mock glare.
"Not with those gloves on," she teased, grinning despite herself.
You rolled your eyes and turned back to the coop, muttering under your breath. "I’ll bring it in safe. Not like we have a whole flock waiting to replace it or anything."
Josephine’s laughter followed you, soft and fleeting, as you went back to your work. It wasn’t much, but even her small remarks made the cold day feel just a little warmer.
Not even a second passes before you hear it: a faint, wet crack. Your heart sinks as you freeze, slowly looking down at your hand.
"Gods..." you mutter under your breath.
Sure enough, the egg is broken, its yellow yolk oozing between your gloved fingers and dripping onto the snow below.
"Cursed chickens," you hiss, shaking your hand instinctively, though it only makes the mess worse. The yolk clings to the wool of your glove, smearing like a bad omen. You curse again, louder this time, kicking at a nearby patch of snow in frustration.
You wipe the yolk off your gloves quickly, making sure Josephine doesn’t catch sight of it—she'd never let you hear the end of it. You brush the remaining mess onto the snow, hoping it’s out of view before she can see the disaster.
"Grandmother?" you call, turning back toward the house. "I'm, uh—I'm gonna go to the market. The horses are good, right?"
Your voice comes out a bit more strained than you intended, but it's enough to keep her from asking too many questions. The market is a short walk, but it’ll take you most of the day. And truth be told, you don't relish the thought of another day with only the chickens and the endless chores for company.
Inside, you hear a faint groan from the other room before Josephine responds. "Yes, yes, they’re fine. Just make sure you get back before dark."
"Of course," you reply, trying to sound more confident than you feel.
You hesitate for a moment, then glance back at the coop. You can’t help but wish for just one more egg, a small consolation for the misfortune of the morning. But you know it’s pointless. You’re not going to get any more today, no matter how hard you try.
"Fuck," you mutter under your breath, glancing down at your now-eggless hands. "Guess I’ll just have to buy them."
You head back inside quickly, pulling your coat tighter around you, and grab your purse from the hook by the door. The cold is starting to seep through your layers again, and you can already feel the chill nipping at your fingers.
Still, despite the morning’s mess, a small part of you is eager for the trip. Eggs are a rarity these days, and you haven't had a decent meal in weeks. The market might be a small reprieve—at least for a little while.
***
The market was...gross. Gross, crowded, wet. Mud clung to every surface, pooling in the uneven cobblestones and splattering onto hems and boots alike. The air was thick with the scent of damp wool, unwashed bodies, and the acrid tang of smoke from hastily lit fires.
The man didn’t like it—not that he was a fan of humanity to begin with. They moved like insects, a swarm of noise and chaos, bartering and shouting, their voices clashing in a discordant symphony. He towered over them slightly, his presence noticeable but not quite commanding.
His clothing was woefully out of place for such weather. The himation draped over his figure was far too thin, the edges soaked and clinging to him as if mocking his indifference to the cold. Snow clung to his sandals, his feet chilled but steadfast against the biting frost.
The crowd parted instinctively as he walked, some murmuring complaints at his carelessness as his steps splashed muddy water onto their garments. He ignored them. He always did.
His eyes scanned the bustling market with vague disinterest, a predator among scavengers. Stalls lined the streets, overflowing with goods: baskets of wilted vegetables, carts of salted fish, bolts of cheap fabric in dull, washed-out colors.
And yet, as he moved through the throng, his attention drifted—not to the wares, but to something far more elusive. Something that lingered at the edges of his awareness, like a scent carried on the wind, or the faint echo of a memory just out of reach.
He stopped suddenly, his gaze narrowing on a stall piled with winter fruit. Among the pale oranges and frostbitten apples, a single crimson pomegranate sat, its skin glistening unnaturally in the dim light.
His lips curved into a faint, humorless smile.
"Well," he muttered to himself, his voice low and rough, "isn't that something?"
"Excuse me!"
The voice startled him—not the sound itself, but the sheer audacity of it directed his way.
You stumbled past him, nearly colliding, your basket of produce wobbling precariously in your hands. One of the eggs inside cracked, a faint, sticky wetness starting to seep through the cloth lining, though you hadn’t noticed.
His eyes followed you, narrowing slightly.
You didn’t look back. Your focus was entirely on the fruit stall ahead, where the winter fruits were piled high. He watched as you approached, your fingers brushing over frostbitten apples and oranges with practiced ease, checking for firmness, for ripeness.
Curious.
You paused at the pomegranate, the same crimson fruit that had caught his attention. For a moment, his breath stilled, waiting.
But you didn’t take it.
Your hand hovered, then moved on, picking up an apple instead.
The man’s gaze lingered, his curiosity piqued despite himself. You left the fruit untouched, walking away as though it meant nothing at all.
His fingers twitched at his side. Strange. Most would have taken it, drawn by its unnatural allure, even if they didn’t know why. But you? You walked past, oblivious.
His gaze sharpened as realization dawned. No, not oblivious—wary.
You had seen the fruit. He was certain of it now. The way your hand had hovered, hesitated, before choosing something else—it wasn’t chance, nor indifference. It was deliberate.
His fingers flexed at his side as he watched you, taking note of the subtle tension in your shoulders, the way your eyes darted briefly toward the pomegranate and then away, as though avoiding something dangerous.
You knew.
Not in the way others might. Not with clarity or understanding. But something within you had recognized it for what it was—or, perhaps, what it wasn’t. And instead of succumbing to its allure, you had chosen to move past it.
The man’s smile grew, faint but unmistakably sharp, curling at the edges like smoke. This was unexpected. Most people stumbled through life blind to such things, ignorant of the strange and the unnatural, even when it was placed right before them.
But you? You saw it. And you chose to walk away.
He tilted his head, considering you as you handed a coin to the vendor and turned to leave, your basket shifting with the weight of your purchases. Snow clung to the edges of your boots as you moved with purposeful steps, casting one final, fleeting glance back at the stall—and, inadvertently, at him.
That fleeting glance. Wary. Appraising.
His smile vanished, replaced by a flicker of something darker.
And so, he followed.
Silently at first, blending into the crowd, a shadow among the many. He kept his distance, his footsteps measured, not too fast, not too slow—just enough to remain unnoticed. His eyes never left you as you wove through the market, your pace quickening as you made your way toward the edge of the town.
He watched as you passed by stalls, the vendors' shouts fading into the background, the market’s noise muffled under the steady rhythm of his own heartbeat. Your unease was palpable, your steps purposeful, as though you knew you were being watched, yet you refused to acknowledge it directly.
He admired that about you. Most would have fidgeted, glanced over their shoulder, or given in to the primal fear that comes with being hunted. But not you. You walked with the sort of quiet determination that made him all the more curious.
Through the alleys and narrow paths, you moved with a sense of knowing, a sense of urgency that tugged at him.
There was something in your movements—something sharp, something instinctual—that made him feel as though you weren’t just trying to escape, but were leading him.
And so, he kept his distance. Close enough to see you, but far enough to remain just a presence in the background.
The market’s noise faded as the streets narrowed. He could feel the chill creeping in with the wind, but it wasn’t the cold that had his attention now. No, it was you—wary, sharp, unknowingly playing a game with him.
"Let’s see where you go," he whispered under his breath, the words barely audible.
As he passed the fruit vendor, the farmer at the stand smiled. “Sir, would you like a pomegranate? It’s the last of this season.”
He looked at the farmer, at how he leaned over the stall, holding the pomegranate out to him. It gleamed in his hands, its skin rich and flawless.
The last of the season, huh?
"No," he replied quietly, his voice cold and precise. "Not today."
"Granny? Granny, I'm home!"
***
Your boots crunched in the snow, the sound sharp and clear against the muffled backdrop of the winter day. The path beneath you shifted from the soft powder to the slush of the thawing ground, then to the thick, stubborn mud of the dirt road that hadn’t frozen over yet. It clung to your boots, stubborn and sticky, each step making the journey feel slower, more deliberate.
The words spilled from your mouth, half-relieved, half-frustrated, as you made your way toward the warmth of the house. Your voice cut through the cold air, but there was something strange in the way it echoed—almost too still, too empty, like it was bouncing off walls that shouldn’t be there.
You pushed the door open, the familiar creak of the hinges greeting you, but something felt off. The warmth from the hearth didn’t reach you, the air inside too still, too quiet.
The house seemed empty.
"Granny?" you called again, stepping further inside. Your eyes swept the room, landing on the empty chair by the fire where she should’ve been, knitting or reading or simply gazing into the flames. But there was nothing there—nothing but the faint, cold smell of the earth creeping in through the door, the faintest trace of something… wrong.
The kitchen was untouched, the table bare, and the silence was thick, almost oppressive.
Your heartbeat quickened as the feeling in the pit of your stomach began to rise. You knew the house was old, but it had always felt alive, warm with the presence of your grandmother. Now, it felt... hollow.
A strange shiver crawled down your spine, as though the house was holding its breath, waiting for something. Or someone.
"Welcome home."
The words sliced through the heavy silence like a knife. You whipped your head around, your heart skipping a beat as you saw him standing there, just inside the door. The man from the market.
His smile was too warm, too wide. His eyes gleamed with an amusement as he closed the door behind him with a soft click, shutting you in.
You took an instinctual step back, your hand tightening around the handle of the door you’d just entered through, but it was no use. It was already too late.
He was too close now.
"Your coat?" he asked, extending a hand, his smile lingering, unbothered by the tension that crackled in the air.
You froze, staring at the hand he offered, as if it were a venomous snake. Every nerve in your body screamed to refuse him, to turn and run—but there was no escape. The cold, oppressive feeling from earlier intensified, filling the room, the walls suddenly closing in.
"Get out." Your voice was firm, but your body felt rooted in place. You tried to gather your bearings, but the unsettling calmness of the moment was too suffocating.
His smile didn’t falter. He stepped closer, the warmth of his body too near, too intrusive.
"Not yet," he murmured softly, his eyes never leaving yours. His hand remained outstretched, waiting. "You and I have much to discuss."
“Where’s my grandmother?”
The door was behind you, but the air in front of you seemed to thicken.
Your breath catches at his words. "Where's my grandmother?" you demand again, a trembling edge creeping into your voice. Your fists clench involuntarily at your sides, desperate to hold onto something solid, something that might keep you anchored in this strange, unsettling moment.
He tilts his head slightly, a smirk curling at the corner of his lips. "You mean Josephine? She's fine, I promise you."
But the way he says it—the way his eyes gleam—makes your skin crawl. The lack of any real warmth, the forced calm in his voice, sends a shiver down your spine.
Before you can react, before you even have time to process his words, he’s already taken your coat from your shoulders, his fingers brushing against your skin as he pulls it from you. You freeze, the realization that you hadn’t even felt him move causing your heart to race.
"No..." you mutter, shaking your head. "No, where is she?"
Your voice rises, cracking with the tension building in your chest.
But his smile only widens, almost pitying. "Don't worry," he says, his voice low, smooth, as though trying to calm you with his false assurance. "She's not far. Not far at all."
You can’t tell if he’s mocking you or telling the truth, and that uncertainty claws at you, drowning out the rest of your thoughts. The room feels too small now, and every corner is crowded with his presence, his waiting.
"What do you want with me?" you finally force out, your voice barely a whisper.
His words hung in the air like a dark cloud. "Like I said. We have things to discuss."
He gestures toward a chair—your chair, or at least, it should have been. But it wasn’t. It was far too fine, far too pristine for the rest of the crumbling shack. The wood gleamed like freshly polished mahogany, the fabric soft and deep in color, too extravagant to belong in a place like this. It was as though he had placed his own stamp on your home, turning the room into something that didn’t feel right.
It wasn’t his chair.
But that was exactly how he acted. Like he belonged here. Like this was his space.
You hesitate. The room is too heavy, too thick with his presence. Every instinct screams for you to run, to bolt for the door, but your legs feel like lead, your body unwilling to move.
Your gaze flicks from the chair to him, and for a moment, you see something in his eyes—something dangerous. Something that wants you to sit. Wants you to comply.
The smile on his face is patient, too patient.
"Take a seat?" he repeats, his tone smooth but carrying an underlying edge.
Your pulse quickens, but you force yourself to breathe. You know he’s trying to manipulate you, to force you into submission, but you won’t give him that satisfaction.
"No," you reply, voice firmer than you feel. You take a step back, trying to create distance between you and the chair, between you and him.
The air in the room seems to darken with his response. His smile never wavers, but the coldness in his eyes sharpens, as if he were enjoying your defiance.
"You misunderstand," he murmurs, his voice low and almost amused. "This isn’t a choice, love. Take a seat. I insist."
The words are like an invisible force, pressing against you, pulling at your very core. You can feel something—gravity?—something heavier than air itself, pushing you down, urging you toward the chair. Your muscles scream in protest, your mind races, but your body moves against your will.
You clench your teeth, the sharpness of the motion grounding you against the force that threatens to break you. You sit, but it’s not voluntary, not a choice. The chair feels foreign beneath you, the fabric too soft, the arms too well-formed. It's his chair now, and you hate it.
As you settle, the man steps closer, the air thickening with each movement. His smile stretches wider, an unsettling satisfaction behind it. His eyes gleam with something predatory, though it’s hidden beneath that calm, almost bored exterior.
He doesn’t answer immediately, his gaze flicking over you, almost like he's savoring the moment. Then, slowly, he steps back, his expression thoughtful.
"What do you want with me?"
"Everything," he says, his tone deceptively gentle, as if speaking to a child. "I want everything you have."
His fingers are cold as they grip your chin, turning your face toward him with an unsettling gentleness. You can feel his gaze weighing down on you, as if he's studying you, dissecting every reaction, every twitch of your body. The question is a strange one, unsettling in its simplicity:
"You didn't take the pomegranate. Why?"
Your breath hitches, but you force yourself to remain still, your eyes meeting his despite the overwhelming desire to look away. The way he speaks, the way he presses into your space—it’s like he’s daring you to defy him, but the weight of his touch, of his presence, is too much.
You swallow hard, your throat dry. You didn’t take the pomegranate, yes, but the reason feels almost insignificant now. It’s not about the fruit anymore. It’s about him. The way he’s here, in your home, making demands, insisting on control.
The silence stretches, thick with tension, as his thumb runs lightly over your skin, a strange, almost affectionate gesture that makes your stomach churn.
His eyes never leave yours, waiting. Expecting.
You know the answer should be simple, that you should give him something that satisfies him, but you don’t want to play his game. You can’t play it.
The cold touch of his fingers presses harder, forcing your jaw to tighten in an involuntary response.
"Answer me," he says, his voice turning slightly darker. "Why didn't you take it?"
“I didn’t want it. Not enough coin.” A pitiful excuse. But, a half-truth. You bought eggs.
The grip on your chin tightens, and your breath catches in your throat as his fingers dig into your skin, cold and unyielding. "Lies." His voice is a low growl, soft but cutting through the air like a knife.
You wince, your jaw aching under the pressure, but you refuse to look away. You fight the urge to squirm, to pull away, to lie your way out of this. The coldness in his eyes, though, leaves no room for hesitation, no space for escape.
"I didn’t want it," you repeat, forcing the words out despite the sting of his touch. "I have enough already."
But his face twists in disbelief, the smile fading entirely, replaced by a cold, calculating intensity. His thumb brushes across your skin again, but it no longer feels gentle—it feels as though he’s searching for something beneath the surface.
"You don't get to lie to me." His voice is quieter now, dangerous in its softness. "Why didn’t you take it?"
A heavy silence settles between you, thick with something you can’t name—an urgency, a power dynamic shifting with every breath. The weight of his presence is suffocating, pressing down on you, and the realization that he isn’t going to let you leave until you comply makes your heart race in your chest.
He knows you’re holding something back. He’s not asking because he wants an answer; he’s asking because he wants to break you.
His fingers, ice-cold and unrelenting, drift across your jawline, and you instinctively flinch at the touch, the intimacy of his proximity overwhelming. His other arm braces against the chair, closing the distance between you, and his breath brushes against your skin, the sound of his words a low whisper, too close.
"I'm familiar to you, hmm?" His voice is thick with something darker, almost possessive. "Caleb."
The name hits you like a punch to the gut. Caleb. You blink, trying to make sense of the words, but the sound of your name from his lips sends a jolt of recognition through you. You’ve heard it before—somewhere deep in the recesses of your mind, in a place you can’t quite place.
"What?" You force the word out, disbelief crashing over you like a tidal wave. You don't want to understand. You can't.
"My name." His voice is cold now, almost amused at your confusion. "My name is Caleb. And you broke our promise."
The world seems to tilt on its axis, your breath freezing in your chest. Promise? What promise?
A thousand memories flash—disjointed fragments of a time long past, faces that don’t quite fit, voices that are just out of reach.
But none of it makes sense.
The way he says it, the way his eyes darken, hints at something deeper, something long buried beneath the surface.
"Promise?" you repeat, your voice barely a whisper. You don’t know what he means. You can’t know what he means.
He leans closer, the heat of his breath on your neck sending another wave of discomfort through your body. "You promised me you wouldn’t forget."
Forget? What was he talking about? Your heart pounds in your chest, and suddenly the room feels smaller, the walls pressing in on you.
The only thing you’re sure of is that whatever this promise was, it’s something you never agreed to. Something you never even knew you had made.
Your breath catches in your throat, and before you can even process the shift in his movement, his lips are on yours, cold and forceful. The shock of it seizes your body—an electric jolt of surprise, of horror. The pressure of his kiss is suffocating, overwhelming, and you feel trapped under the weight of it.
You try to pull away, to break the contact, but his grip on you is unyielding, his hands keeping you firmly in place, as if locking you into the moment. Your heart races in your chest, pounding against the cage of your ribs. Every instinct in your body screams at you to fight, to push him away, but the force of his kiss disorients you, blurs your thoughts.
Everything in you fights against it. You don’t want this—you never wanted this.
The coldness of his lips, the sharpness of his fingers gripping your jaw, the way he dominates the space between you—it all feels wrong, like a violation of something you can’t quite define.
His tongue brushes against your lips, demanding entry, and the part of you that still has control tenses in resistance. Your breath quickens, heart thundering in your ears, as you turn your head, the strain of your muscles pulling against his hold.
But he’s relentless, insistent, as though this was always the endgame.
And it’s then, in the midst of the storm of confusion and anger, that it hits you: He’s not just Caleb. Not the Caleb you thought you knew.
This... this is a different man entirely.
The world around you blurs, your senses drowning in the sharp pressure of his lips, the roughness of his hold on you. One moment, you're sitting—frozen, fighting, overwhelmed—and the next, your back hits something soft and plush. The bed creaks beneath you, and you realize, too late, that you've been moved. You don't know when it happened, but now you're lying there, the softness of the bedding contrasting with the harshness of his body pressing against yours.
Your chest tightens as his kiss returns, insistent and suffocating. His presence feels like a weight, pressing down on you from all sides, a physical force that you can’t escape. His hands roam with a practiced familiarity, like he’s done this before, like he knows how to break you, how to keep you in this moment. Your heart pounds in your chest, and every instinct screams at you to push him away, to run, but your body betrays you, frozen in place, unable to muster the strength to move.
It’s like he’s taken control of everything—your thoughts, your body, the space around you—and you can feel yourself slipping into a fog, disoriented, trapped in this strange reality where nothing makes sense anymore. The soft sheets beneath you feel wrong, a dissonance with the terror swirling in your chest.
His lips move from yours, but it’s not relief. His breath is hot against your skin as he traces a path down your neck, his grip tightening, and you can’t shake the feeling that everything you thought you understood, everything you thought you knew about him—about you—is slipping away, piece by piece.
“Do you understand now?” he whispers against your skin, his voice low, almost mocking. “Do you remember?”
But you don’t. You can’t.
“If you can’t remember, why did you take them?”
Your eyes only held confusion. Frustrated, he asks again.
“The pomegranates were supposed to be dead,” he all but hisses, his hand moving to your throat, squeezing. “But you brought one back. How?”
The pressure on your throat tightens, sharp and relentless, and your body tenses as you gasp for breath. His words are barely audible, but the venom in his voice cuts through the fog in your mind, and suddenly, everything is clearer. The question—How?—echoes in your head, your pulse hammering against his fingers as if to answer him, but your throat betrays you, unable to form the words.
His eyes, dark and furious, bore into you, and the weight of his gaze feels like a brand on your soul. There’s an urgency in his touch, like he’s desperate for an answer that you don’t have. His grip on your throat tightens further, and you can barely think, only feeling the constriction in your airways, the frantic beat of your heart.
"Pomegranates..." you manage to whisper through clenched teeth, barely able to speak, your voice rasping in the thick tension of the moment.
He doesn’t release his hold, not even a little. The threat in his touch is clear, and something deep inside you knows he's not just angry—he’s frantic.
"How did you bring them back?!" His voice is a low growl now, filled with a chilling sense of desperation. "You had no right."
You choke on your breath, the weight of his question landing like a hammer. You know the pomegranates he’s talking about—how they weren’t supposed to be here, how they were dead. You never should’ve found one, never should’ve brought it back. But it’s not the how that you can’t answer.
It’s the why. Why is he so invested in them? And why are you suddenly the one in danger over them?
The world spins, but his hands on your throat ground you in place, trapping you in a moment where the answer is just out of reach.
“Did you think I wouldn’t notice? I walk through that hellish field every day. And every day, they are all dead. So what did you do?”
The cold grip around your throat tightens again, and your breath becomes shallow, each inhale a struggle. The urgency in his voice, the desperation, the fury—it's almost enough to send you into a panic. He’s so close now, his breath mixing with yours as he presses into you, demanding answers, demanding something from you that you don't even understand.
The mention of the hellish field sends a shiver through you. You know exactly where he means—the barren stretch of earth where the pomegranates are supposed to lie dormant, rotting, where no fruit should grow. It had been a place of silence, of dead leaves and dust. The pomegranates had always been gone, and you thought nothing of it when you found one that had somehow survived.
But now, he is asking about it, and something in his words tells you that this is more than just a passing curiosity. He’s not asking because he’s wondering how the fruit is growing. He’s asking because he knows. He knows it shouldn’t be possible, and somehow, you’ve made it so.
“I didn’t…” you gasp, your voice weak, struggling against the pressure of his hand. “I didn’t mean—”
“You didn’t mean?” he interrupts, his fingers digging into your skin, forcing you to look him in the eyes. “Do you think I care about your good intentions? Do you know what this means? What you’ve done?”
You try to focus, but his eyes are too intense, and you can feel the world around you closing in, everything blurring except the sharpness of his words, of his grip.
He knows. He knows, and that makes you realize you’ve stepped into something far beyond your understanding.
“You... you were the one... who killed them...” Your words come out haltingly, the pieces falling into place—his anger, his fury, the strange obsession with the pomegranates. “You—You’re the one who made them die.”
The realization hits you like a bolt of lightning. This isn’t about the fruit. This isn’t about something that grew in the wrong soil. This is about something much darker, something he’s tied to, something you can’t comprehend.
And yet, as the words leave your mouth, you wonder—how could you have known? How could you have guessed?
The pressure on your throat burns, every second stretching into an eternity as you feel yourself slowly suffocating under his gaze. His eyes, dark and furious, make you feel small, insignificant, like nothing more than a mere insect beneath his heel. His grip tightens further, the reality of his anger closing in like a vice around your neck.
Your thoughts are clouded, your body trembling, desperate for air, for release from this moment that feels like it might swallow you whole. The world around you blurs, and the edges of your vision darken, but you can't afford to lose consciousness—not now, not when everything feels like it's slipping through your fingers.
The field, the pomegranates, the months since you wandered through that cursed stretch of earth—they all seem like distant memories now, as irrelevant as the flutter of a bird's wings in the storm of your present. What did it matter? You never meant for any of this to happen.
Months? Yes, it had been months since you came across the field, since that moment of discovery. The fruit had been so alluring, so strange. But now, it doesn’t matter. It doesn't matter at all.
All that matters is this: the suffocating weight of his hand on your throat, the rage in his eyes, the sense of power he holds over you in this very moment. It’s not about the pomegranates anymore, or the field, or anything else you’ve done. It's about survival, about whether you can stay conscious long enough to find a way out.
"You have no idea what you’ve done," he hisses through clenched teeth, his voice low and venomous. His fingers dig into your skin, making it feel as though your very breath is being stolen from you. You can feel the blood rushing to your head, the pressure mounting, and for a moment, you wonder if this is how it all ends.
It’s hard to focus, hard to think. And then-
The realization hits you like a cold slap to the face. Your breath catches in your throat, the air refusing to fill your lungs, even as his grip loosens just a fraction, as if sensing your sudden understanding. The seeds. Those damned seeds. You had taken them, thinking nothing of it. Just a curious moment, a strange instinct to keep something from that cursed field. They hadn’t grown, though—at least, you’d thought they hadn’t.
But one of them had.
The cold weight of it settles in the pit of your stomach. You must have dropped one, somewhere between your hurried walk and the spill of your water satchel. Perhaps on the way home, or somewhere in the market. It could have fallen unnoticed, but it had taken root. And now… now, you know exactly what that means.
It wasn't just the fruit that was alive—it was the seed itself, brought back from the dead, blooming in a place it shouldn’t. In the wrong soil. Under the wrong conditions. And he must have sensed it, felt the change, the unnatural resurrection of something that was supposed to stay buried.
It wasn’t just a seed anymore. It was something else. Something that had no place in this world, and definitely no place in your hands.
Your pulse spikes, your breath still strained but clearer now. You can’t let him know you’ve figured it out. Not yet. Not until you can find a way to make this right—or at least survive the next few moments.
"I didn’t… I didn’t mean to," you rasp, the words stumbling out, barely audible. "I thought they were dead... I thought I was doing no harm."
His eyes narrow, a sharp flicker of something darker passing through them. He doesn’t speak at first, his fingers still lightly brushing your skin, but there's no mistaking the shift in the atmosphere. The air thickens, tension pulling tighter, and the room itself seems to darken in his presence.
"You didn’t mean to?" His voice is dangerously low, but there’s an edge of disbelief in it. "You thought they were dead?"
The mockery in his tone is almost worse than his rage, as if everything you’ve done—everything you thought was inconsequential—has led to this. The pomegranate, the seed, the field… this has been waiting for you. Waiting for someone to make the mistake of finding it, of bringing it back.
"I didn’t know," you whisper, your eyes darting to the edge of the room, anywhere but his burning gaze. "Please... I didn’t know."
For a moment, there’s silence—heavy, suffocating silence. And in that silence, you realize just how much danger you’re really in. This isn’t just about the seeds. It’s about what you’ve awakened. What you’ve released.
And he’s not done with you yet.
“That doesn’t matter. You owe me. You owe me everything. The pomegranates are a contract. How many seeds did you take?”
His grip on your throat has tightened again, though not as much as before. He’s holding you in place, forcing you to face him, to answer him, to acknowledge what you’ve done.
Your pulse quickens, fear seeping into your veins. He’s right. You owe him, but what he doesn’t know is that you hadn’t taken them for any grand purpose. You’d been foolish, reckless even, thinking that the seeds were just something to keep, something harmless. But now, his words cut through you like a blade—those seeds were never meant to be collected, never meant to be used. They weren’t just fruit, they were a binding, a covenant, a contract you hadn’t understood.
You swallow hard, trying to focus, trying to keep your voice steady. "I—I only took a few... just a handful," you whisper, your words hoarse as they tumble from your mouth. "I didn’t think they’d… grow. I didn’t think it meant anything."
Which hand? The right or the left? It’s such a simple thing, such a small detail, but you can feel the gravity of it. He’s making a game of it. Toying with you. You wonder if this is his way of breaking you down, piece by piece.
“A handful, huh? So I should decide how many then?”
“No!”
“So how many?” Caleb’s voice is almost playful in its mockery. “Actually. I’ve decided. Which hand did you take them with?”
Your breath catches in your throat, a lump of dread settling in your stomach. You can barely think, your mind reeling from the weight of his question, his control, his power over you.
A lie wouldn’t do you any good. He’d know. He always knows. The truth is the only way out, even if it feels like a betrayal of your very self.
You try to steady your breath, your hands trembling at your sides as you force yourself to speak, though your voice is barely a whisper. "The right," you manage, the words feeling like acid as they leave your mouth.
“So should I take it? Or break it?” His voice is laced with amusement, yet the question itself is far from playful. There’s a menace in his tone, a quiet assurance that whatever choice you make will only lead to more pain, more consequence.
Your right hand trembles at your side, feeling like a weight you can’t escape. It’s as though he’s already decided your fate, and the moment you answer, it will be sealed. The choice—take it or break it—feels like the very foundation of your existence teetering on the edge. One wrong move, and you’re shattered.
It’s not just your hand he’s talking about. It’s everything. The lies. The theft. The contract. And you have to make a choice.
"Well?" He presses, his smile widening slightly, his patience wearing thin.
His grip tightens around your mouth, pressing down hard enough to stifle your breath. The weight of his hand is suffocating, and your thoughts are scrambling to make sense of everything. His words from earlier echo in your mind: You can thrive with no hands.
Calebs gaze shifts.
“Nevermind that.” he takes your right hand, kissing it. “You can thrive even with no hands, I’m sure, so that would be pointless.”
You try to push through the panic rising in your chest, but it only gets worse when one thought cuts through everything—Josephine.
Your grandmother. Where is she? What has he done to her?
You open your mouth to ask, but his hand clamps over it with more force, cutting off your words, your breath. You struggle, your pulse thundering in your neck, the terror building with every passing second. You can’t think of anything else but Josephine, and the fear of what might have happened to her.
"Shhh," he says softly, almost patronizingly. His voice is too calm, too cold. "No need to speak right now. We'll get to that later."
“Caleb-”
“You took a few. It doesn’t matter. Your hands will know how many it was, even if you forgot. And your tongue will know how many you’ve eaten.”
"Six," he repeats, his voice cold as he watches your hands, as if counting them. The weight of the word presses down on your chest like a heavy stone, and your throat tightens. Six. The number echoes in your mind, a cruel reminder of what you've done, of the mistake that’s now spiraling out of control.
"Please-" his hold goes to your hands, and his eyes close. you struggle to break free, try to kick at him, but he's firm.
"Six."
Dread fills you.
"Six?"
"Six seeds. You ate six seeds."
You struggle against him, your breath quick and uneven as you fight to break free, but his grip is ironclad. His hands are everywhere—on your wrists, your throat, your arms—and no matter how hard you kick or twist, you can’t escape. He’s too strong.
"Please..." you gasp, the word slipping out in a broken whisper, but it’s more out of desperation than anything else. You can feel the weight of the seeds in your gut, the aftermath of your recklessness settling like a poison in your veins.
"Six," he repeats again, the word dragging out in a way that makes it sound almost like a verdict, as though he's already decided what will happen because of it. The dread in your chest deepens, and the air around you feels thick, heavy with an impending sense of doom.
His eyes close for a moment, like he’s savoring the knowledge of your mistake, the fact that you’ve already crossed a line you didn’t even understand until now. When he opens them again, they’re sharper, more piercing than before.
"You don’t understand the consequences," he says softly, almost too calmly. "But you will."
You try to steady your breath, to gather yourself, but everything inside of you is shaking, fear and confusion clouding your thoughts. What did it all mean? Six. Six seeds, and now you're trapped, tangled in a contract you barely remember signing, but which he is now holding you to.
"Six," he repeats one last time, his eyes scanning you like a predator eyeing its prey. The word is both a warning and a promise.
His voice is a low, chilling whisper, a cold wind sweeping through your mind with every word.
"Six seeds in the winter. Six months. Every year."
The weight of his words sinks in slowly, painfully. Six months? Every year? A feeling of dread floods your body, a cold sweat breaking out across your skin as the meaning starts to claw its way to the surface. The pomegranates. The seeds.
The finality in his words cuts through the air, sending a cold shiver down your spine. His hand remains on your jaw, pressing down, his eyes never leaving yours. He leans in, his presence suffocating, his breath hot against your skin.
"You... you will be bound to me. Me. Every year."
The implication of his words settles over you like a weight too heavy to bear. Each year, you’ll have to answer to him, every winter, every cycle, every six months, until... until what? The uncertainty gnaws at you, but the truth is undeniable: you’ve made a pact. And now, you are bound, tethered to him in ways you don’t fully understand yet.
The reality of what he's saying—what it means—sinks in like ice, creeping through your veins. Your breath catches in your chest, and the urge to run, to escape, is overwhelming. But you know better now. You know you can’t escape him. You’ve already given too much away, unknowingly, thoughtlessly.
"You won’t be free," he continues, his voice a low, venomous promise. "Not for as long as you live. Every year, you will return to me. And you will serve your purpose." His thumb traces your lower lip, slow and deliberate, as if savoring the taste of your fear.
"Every year." The words ring in your ears, a constant reminder of the contract you’ve unknowingly entered.
You open your mouth to protest, to plead, but nothing comes out. What could you say? How could you explain that you never meant for this to happen, that you had no idea the consequences would be so... severe?
His eyes gleam with something darker now. Something almost... triumphant.
"You’ll learn the price of what you’ve done," Caleb murmurs, his grip tightening around your wrist, holding you firmly in place. "And when you do, you’ll understand why you belong to me."
His lips crash against yours, urgent and hungry, as if trying to consume you whole, each kiss more fervent than the last. But in that brief, fleeting moment, as his hands grip at your body, you see it. The truth in the shadows of his touch.
His fingers, stained with something dark. Black and red. It’s not just dirt. Not just the earth.
Juice.
The realization hits you in an instant—what you thought was just a product of the field, of his rough nature, was something far worse. Something tied to the very fruit that had been the cause of this entire twisted encounter. His hands, stained with the dark liquid of the pomegranates, blood and juice entwined together. You could smell it faintly—a sweet, acrid scent that clings to him like a curse. It coats his palms, dripping as he touches you, as if his hands were forever stained by the fruit’s sacrifice.
A chill runs through your spine as his touch lingers, his grip tightening. The pomegranates, the seeds—he’s been part of this too. His very essence is tied to them. He’s not just a man, not just some random stranger from the market. He’s part of the cycle, just like you. He’s no god, hes a curse! A snake!
You try to jerk away from his touch, but the force of his hands holds you firmly in place. The stains on his skin are like a brand, marking him, marking you. It’s as though the blood of those fruits courses through him now, and through you.
The softness of the bed feels foreign against your body, like you’re sinking deeper into a pit you can't escape. Your nightgown clings to you, the fabric damp and uncomfortable against your skin. You can’t remember when your boots came off, but the cold from the snow on your clothes lingers, biting at your skin as if it’s refusing to let go. It’s a strange contrast—how you feel trapped in this bed of softness, yet every part of you is screaming for escape.
Caleb’s presence is overwhelming, suffocating. He follows you, his weight pressing down, his breath hot against your skin. His hands are still stained, dark and red, as though the pomegranates’ curse has been embedded in his very touch. Each time his skin brushes yours, it's like you can feel that stain transferring—marking you, binding you further to him.
You try to shift, to find any escape, but his hold is unyielding. Your heart races, your mind scrambling for any way out. But everything feels wrong—like this is the inevitable result of a choice you didn’t even consciously make. The blood on his hands is no longer just the pomegranate juice; it feels like it’s becoming your blood too, intertwining your fates.
"Stay still," Caleb's voice murmurs in your ear, his tone low, almost soothing in its malicious calm. "You’ve already done enough. Now, you just have to accept it."
The weight of his words settles heavily on you, the reality of it all pressing in, making it harder to breathe. You close your eyes, trying to block him out, but you can’t escape the feeling of being completely consumed. He is everywhere—his hands, his touch, his scent.
And you are trapped.
He opens his mouth to bite, and there, you see it- fangs. Horrible, horrible fangs, like a snake. And when he bites-
Your breath is erratic, each inhale sharp and frantic, as your chest heaves with the remnants of the nightmare. The warmth of your bed clings to you like an unwanted weight, your body still tense from the terrifying images that danced in your mind. You blink rapidly, trying to focus, the disorienting haze of sleep still clinging to your thoughts.
It wasn’t real. It couldn’t have been.
But as you scramble out of bed, panic surging through your veins, your legs barely hold you up. You stumble, almost falling as you rush through the dim hallway toward Josephine’s room. Your heart pounds in your ears, and your hands tremble, brushing against the walls to steady yourself. Every step feels like it takes forever.
You reach her door, your breath caught in your throat. You hesitate for just a moment, but the terror, the urgent need to see her safe, pushes you forward. You twist the handle and burst into the room.
"Granny?" you call out, your voice trembling. The room is dark, the shadows in the corners unnerving, but the familiar smell of Josephine’s comforting herbs fills the air. You can hear her slow, steady breathing from the bed, the soft rustling of blankets as she shifts in her sleep.
For a second, you just stand there, listening. Waiting.
Relief washes over you as you realize she’s still there, still alive. The nightmare, the horrible fangs, seem to retreat into the dark corners of your mind as the reality of the moment settles in. Your mind fights to differentiate dream from reality, the lines so blurred, you almost can’t tell where one ends and the other begins.
You collapse onto the edge of her bed, your hands trembling as you reach out to brush a lock of gray hair from her face.
She stirs slightly but doesn’t wake.
Your heart stops. The basket, innocently placed beside Josephine’s sleeping form, feels like a jolt of ice through your veins. Pomegranates. Red, ripe, gleaming under the dim light filtering through the cracks in the curtains. You blink, your vision swimming for a moment as you try to steady yourself, but there they are—those cursed fruits, as if mocking your worst fears.
The world seems to tilt as the realization sinks in. You hadn't brought them inside, had you? The dream... had it been a dream? Your eyes dart from the basket to Josephine, your breath catching in your throat. Her soft, even breathing remains unchanged, oblivious to the dangerous gift that sits at her side.
You step closer, as if by instinct, as your fingers tremble at the edges of the basket. Each pomegranate gleams like a secret, an omen you can’t understand, yet it feels all too real.
You stumble away from Josephine’s side, the unease gnawing at your gut. The sight of the basket, so innocently placed, is now burned into your mind. But the chill is not just in your bones; it’s in your very skin.
Racing to the mirror, you meet your own reflection. At first, the face staring back is foreign—disheveled, pale from the cold, with eyes wide in panic. But as your gaze drifts downward, you freeze.
There, just below your jawline, is a mark. The skin is raw, bruised, angry red. It’s a bite. Caleb’s bite.
Your hand reaches up, touching the tender spot. The scar doesn’t just throb with the usual tenderness of a bruise; it burns.
What had been a dream now feels like a slow, suffocating reality that’s slowly tightening its grip around you. You feel his presence lingering like a shadow just outside, and you know deep down that he's watching you, even from a distance.
Outside, the first rays of sunlight are breaking through the clouds, spilling over the snow. You watch as it melts, revealing the earth beneath, yet it feels wrong. Almost like the sun, so pure and innocent, is powerless in this moment. The air feels thick with something you can't name, the stillness broken only by the slow, steady drip of melting ice.
Everything feels wrong. And with each passing second, it becomes clearer: you are no longer in control. The pomegranates have bound you to something you can't undo. The bite on your neck, the basket by Josephine's side, the promise... it’s all real.
And you have no idea how to stop it.
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