#haunted house renovator
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Demo Day Tomorrow!
Hey, if you're interested in the following games and do not have time to play, cannot download, etc. - I got you! I'm playing the demos tomorrow!
Eden Crafters
Fruitbus
Haunted House Renovator
Farmer's Dynasty 2
Caravan Sandwitch
Pawn Planet
Emergency Cleanup Co.
Maybe even more than that if some of them are not for me. If the game isn't for me then it just isn't for me yet that doesn't mean that it's not for you.
#autism#actually autistic#disabled#disability#autistic#twitch#live streaming#twitch streamer#Game Demos#demos#demo#streaming demos#eden crafters#fruitbus#haunted house renovator#farmer's dynasty 2#caravan sandwitch#pawn planet#emergency cleanup co.
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Supernatural Interior Decorators Needed! “Haunted House Renovator” Demo Coming to Steam PC
Supernatural Interior Decorators Needed! “Haunted House Renovator” Demo Coming to Steam PC | #gaming #Steam #PCgaming #SteamNextFest #horror
Take a house to die for and turn it in to a home to live in. Polish game developer Image Power recently announced that Haunted House Renovator will receive a demo during Steam Next Fest from 10-17 June. Partially funded through crowdfunding, Haunted House Renovator is a unique game where players transform haunted houses into beautiful homes for the living. The game offers a blend of interior…
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I found the "Before" pics of this big 1875 Victorian in Gardner, MA that is "famed for its paranormal activity and globally recognized by ghost hunters, history buffs, and thrill-seekers alike." The infamous S.K. Pierce Mansion, ranked the 2nd most haunted home in New England and 9th in the U.S.! 9bds, 4ba, 6,988sqft, $1.2m (before it was renovated, it was listed for $684k). Take a look at the before & after photos.
They brightened it up, b/c it was dingy and creepy before. The home is featured in the books, "Haunted Massachusetts" by Thos. D'Agostino & "Bones in the Basement: Surviving the S.K. Pierce Haunted Victorian Mansion," written by Joni Mayhan.
I like how they lightened the wood and chose a contrasting navy blue flocked wallpaper.
Note how they had photos and articles on display in the original photos of the drab dining room.
The dining room has soft dusky purple wallpaper and wainscoting, plus the antique organ (I wonder if it plays by itself in the night).
The original photos look like they were taken by the homeowner- not very good.
The kitchen has a nice remodel- not overly modernized. Vintage drainboard sink, too.
The pantry stayed the same, except for the wood getting a new, lighter finish.
They made a lovely light sitting room in here.
The 2nd level got a bright makeover.
The only one of the 9 bedrooms they showed was this dark red one.
They've all been beautifully redone.
They showed an antique marble sink in one of the bedrooms.
And, it's still here.
This bedroom is done in a lighter red flocked wallpaper.
They show an old bath with a vintage tub and shower and the current listing shows this refurbished vintage bath.
The attic has been finished into a large space with extra bedrooms.
Plus, it looks like the basement is clean, light, and features newer heating, etc.
10,124sqft corner lot.
Old listing:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/4-West-Broadway-Gardner-MA-01440/57587523_zpid/
New listing:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/4-W-Broadway-Gardner-MA-01440/448917558_zpid/
#haunted victorians for sale#victorian homes#old house dreams#renovated victorians#houses#house tours#home tour
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My husband said he heard someone walking around upstairs over the weekend, and when he went to check I was asleep. I have also heard something similar but assumed I was having a stroke (ok not actually) so I ignored it. I have heard random noises that I originally thought were the cats too but have definitely heard them when they are on a different floor of the house....
#nonsims#text post#personal#maybe our house is haunted maybe its Maybelline#yes i stole this picture from the centuryhomes subreddit#hoping it's a friendly haunting and not them being horribly disappointed with my renovations and my choice of decor
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I won’t spoil the leaks, other than saying we get the real DAEMON TARGARYEN back tomorrow 🖤🔥
#it only took an entire season of being haunted#and renovating a leaky castle#but we are so back!!!#daemon targaryen#rhaenyra targaryen#house of the dragon#hotd#fire and blood
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September 7, 2024:
I think this author has invented a new genre. This book is marketed as horror, but there are very few scares, the entity that does eventually emerge is unique, and there's just all-around something unusual & different in the process, the purpose, and the outcome of this "haunting," for lack of a better word.
I want to call this subgenre "gentle horror."
Cause the horror is still there. There were a few tense "uh oh" moments that I would expect from the genre overall, and the book is not necessarily kind. It's more pragmatic and direct, like someone who's brutally honest. I feel like I've been parented on some level.
The "haunted reality show set" concept is my catnip, and I've read a lot of stories with that premise, and that being said: this one is the most unique.
8/10 #WhatsKenyaReading
#whatskenyareading#books#reading#library#horror#haunt sweet home#haunted#haunting#reality tv#ghost hunting#hgtv#home remodeling#home renovation#homeownership#new house#house#home#haunted house#ghost stories#artist#creative#tv#tv shows#tv series#apple orchard#trees#carving#sculpture#wood
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You know what could fix me? One of those big huge dollhouses from hobby lobby (or better, an antique big huge dollhouse) and one of every miniature furniture set and accessory in the dollhouse aisle.
#I've always ALWAYS wanted that#I want to rearrange the furniture and renovate the house every few months#I renovated an old dollhouse into a haunted house Halloween decoration for my aunt last year (just the walls and floors)#And it was like fulfilling a core need on that triangle diagram#bird likes to chirp
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Haunted House Renovator Demo / Gameplay#002 / Deutsch / Renovierung des...
#youtube#Mein neues Video vom Haunted House Renovator ist da! gamingvideos gameplay Gaming playway haunted renovator
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// owner: can't go into my bar, bar's haunted
me: that's really dumb. but, if you believe that, sell it instead of just going into debt?
host: you know what ghosts hate? crowds! Fill your bar, and the ghost will leave!
me: ...
me: you know, that's some sound logic there, gotta say.
#ooc#new ghost show concept: instead of green night vision guys whispering#we renovate your haunted house with neon lights and daft punk#we did it guys we solved everything
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Horror story plot that's like "your wealthy relative has died and left you this amazing mansion in the middle of nowhere, but only if you spend a single night within its halls!" and they do and experience ghost shit. This is the start of the story. Because it turns out that ghosts aren't real and what they have experienced is a falling-apart building full of mold and mildly poisonous gases that they aren't allowed to knock down for heritage reasons, and the main character runs away from their personal problems by vowing to fix the place up.
What follows is a haunted house/descent into madness story except all the horror is about home renovation. The stress of the money sink that is fixing up the old mansion, the trouble trying to get contractors out to the middle of nowhere, etc., 'drives the protagonist to madness'. They experience unholy sights which no human mind can comprehend (shitty wiring installed by the previous person who tried to flip the mansion). Sometimes supernatural things seem to be happening but it's always like. Badly installed plumbing, or sabotage from their teen kid who's pissed off at being dragged out into the middle of nowhere.
There are several chapters dedicated solely to budget balancing and home refinancing.
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How to Make Fictional Settings Real (Even If You’re Faking the Whole Thing)
➤ Real Estate Listings (Yes, Seriously)
Looking up local listings in a place similar to your fictional town or city gives you surprising insight—average home styles, neighborhood layouts, what “affordable” means in that region, even local slang in the listings. + Great for, grounding your setting in subtle realism without hitting readers over the head with exposition.
➤ Google Street View (Time to Creep Around Like a Setting Spy)
Drop into a random street in a town that resembles your fictional setting. Walk around virtually. Notice what's boring.Trash cans, streetlights, sidewalk cracks, old ads. + Great for: figuring out what makes a setting feel “normal” instead of movie-set polished.
➤ Local Newspapers or Small Town Reddit Threads
Want voice? Culture? Weird local drama? This is where it lives. What’s in the classifieds? What’s pissing people off at town hall? + Great for: authentic small-town flavor, conflict inspiration, and the kind of gossip that fuels subplot gold.
➤ Fantasy Map Generator Sites (Even for Contemporary Settings!)
Not just for epic quests. Generating a map, even a basic one, can help you stop mentally teleporting your characters between places without any sense of space or distance.+ Great for: figuring out how long it takes to get from the protagonist’s house to that cursed gas station.
➤ Music from or Inspired by the Region/Culture
Even fictional cities deserve a soundtrack. Listen to regional or cultural playlists and let the vibe soak into your setting. What kind of music would be playing in your character’s world? + Great for: writing atmospherically and getting in the right emotional headspace.
➤ Online Menus from Local Diners, Restaurants, or Cafés
You want a setting that tastes real? Look at what people are actually eating. + Great for: writing scenes with meals that aren’t just “some soup” or “generic coffee.” (Also, bonus points for fictionalizing weird specials: “Tuesday Fish Waffle Night” is canon now.)
➤ Yelp Reviews (Especially the One-Star Ones)
Looking for a spark of chaos? One-star Yelp reviews will tell you what your characters complain about and where the best petty drama lives. + Great for: worldbuilding quirks, local tensions, and giving your town character.
➤ Real Estate “Before/After” Renovation Blogs
You’ll find the bones of houses, historical details, and how people preserve or erase the past. + Great for: backstory-laced settings, haunted houses, or any structure that’s more than just a place, it’s a story.
➤ Old Travel Books or Tourism Brochures
Especially the outdated ones. What used to be considered “the pride of the town”? What’s still standing? What was erased? + Great for: layering a setting with history, especially for second-generation characters or stories rooted in change.
#writing#writer on tumblr#writing tips#writing advice#character development#writblr#writing help#writer tumblr#writerscommunity#writer#creative writing#female writers#fiction writing#writer community#writer stuff#writer things#writers life#writing community#writing inspiration
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P: Psycopath!Jungwon X Fem!Reader
Warnings: Dark Themes, Obsession, Mentioned Stalking, Psychological Manipulation, Yandere Behavior, Murder, Mental Instability, Dubious Content, Suggestive Content, Bondage.
Synopsis: You thought Jungwon was harmless, until people around you start vanishing. When you uncover the truth, it’s too late. He’s not just obsessed. He’s in love. And he’ll kill to prove it.
a/n: I pushed everything else away for this, but still feel its kinda rushed? (Requested by @chaerrysluv ) Reblogs and comments are highly valued!!
now playing: prom queen by insane clown posse | haunted by beyonce | two face by jake daniels | worship by ari abdul
A new start, that’s all you wanted.
Leaving behind the noise, the pressure, the mess you didn’t want to keep cleaning up. The small town you found was quiet, almost too quiet, but that’s what made it perfect. A place where no one knew your name, no one asked questions, and no one expected more than a smile and a polite nod.
Your house sat at the very edge of town, nestled near the woods and close enough to the lake that you could smell the water in the morning. It was old, with needed renovations and ivy climbing the porch railings, but it felt like something you could finally call your own. Peaceful. Private. Safe.
You enjoyed the silence that came with it, no more car horns, shouting neighbors, or blaring sirens. Just birdsong in the morning, wind brushing through the trees, and the occasional creak of the old house settling into itself. It was a kind of quiet that made you feel like you could finally breathe.
You had two neighbors, though you’d only officially met one—Minjae. Odd guy, always smelled like spices and coffee, but he was good at small talk, although he was an asshole. He’d mentioned your other neighbor once, in passing. Jungwon.
Apparently, Jungwon didn’t come out much during the day. Liked his solitude. Kept to himself.
Which explains why you hadn’t seen a hairstrand of him, and it had been over a week.
Minjae had laughed it off. Said something like, “He’s not the social type, don’t take it personally.”
You hadn’t thought much of it at the time. Some people just liked to be left alone.
But your curiosity still gnawed at you.
Jungwon’s house sat just a few trees away from your own, the rooftop visible through the gaps in the branches. And yet you never heard anything. Not the hum of a television. Not a door creaking open. Not even footsteps on the gravel path leading up to it.
It made you wonder if anyone even lived there at all.
There were no lights in the windows at night. The mailbox stayed empty, the yard overgrown but not quite wild. As if someone tended to it, just barely enough to keep up appearances.
Once or twice, you thought you saw movement behind the curtains, just a twitch, just a shift of shadow—but when you blinked, it was gone.
You tried to ignore it. Told yourself you were being dramatic.
After all, there had to be a reason Jungwon wasn’t so… well, social. Maybe he had anxiety, or health issues. Maybe he worked from home and liked his privacy. It wasn’t your business—people had their own lives, their own routines. Still, he’d have to leave the house eventually. For groceries, at least.
But every time you drove past his house on your way to the main road, the garage door was shut tight. The curtains stayed drawn. No porch lights flicked on, no signs of life behind the windows just stillness. As if the house had fallen asleep and never quite woken up again.
Sometimes you’d linger a second too long at the stop sign near his driveway, eyes scanning for movement.
Nothing.
and you tried not to think too hard about it.
Until… well, until you had to.
Because you saw him.
For the first time in a whole fucking month you caught sight of him.
It was late, the kind of late where the town felt like it didn’t exist. You couldn’t sleep, your head too full, so you decided on a walk to clear your mind. The air was cool, crisp, the scent of pine thick around you.
You hadn’t even looked toward his house at first. But something, some shift, some instinct made your eyes flick in that direction.
And there he was.
Standing just at the edge of his porch, his head was tilted slightly, like he was listening. Like he’d heard you coming. He wasn’t doing anything special. Just… standing. Watching with his eyes on you.
You froze.
For a second—less than that, really you wondered if he was sleepwalking. Or if he’d heard something outside. Maybe he’d just stepped out for air, like you.
But he didn’t move.
Didn’t wave. Didn’t speak.
Just stood there, staring like you were the unusual thing here. Like you were the one being observed.
Your heart picked up.
You gave a tight nod, a polite gesture, and turned your feet back toward your driveway.
You didn’t go on that walk.
After that night, things changed. You started seeing Jungwon more and more. Never during the day—never when others were around. Only in fleeting moments, when the world was still and the street lay empty under the quiet hush of twilight. Sometimes it was random. A glimpse of him at the edge of the trees when you stepped out to water the garden. His figure crossing behind a window as you passed by on your evening run. Always distant. Always brief. Other times… it felt timed. Too perfectly timed. Like the moment you’d open your front door to leave for work, and there he’d be, standing just outside his garage, as if he’d been waiting. Not doing anything, not even pretending to look busy. Just there. Eyes meeting yours for a fraction too long before he'd turn and vanish inside again.
Or the night you came home late, headlights sweeping across his driveway and caught him sitting on his porch steps in the dark, staring down the road. He didn’t flinch at the light. Didn’t look away. You locked your doors extra tight that night. You told yourself it was coincidence. A weird neighbor with a weird schedule. Nothing more. But the sightings kept happening. And soon, you realized—you weren’t just noticing him. He was watching you notice him. And not once, not ever, did he smile.
It got harder to pretend it was just coincidence.
Especially when it kept happening. When your door creaked open for the mail and he was suddenly at his window. When you went to take out the trash and heard footsteps stop like someone had been walking and suddenly paused.
And it was always just too late to catch him in the act.
Until the night it wasn’t.
You’d been out late, visiting the small 24-hour market on the edge of town, grabbing tea and snacks to distract yourself from the way your nerves had been crawling lately. The streets were empty on your walk back, save for the steady crunch of gravel under your shoes.
You turned the corner to your street and nearly dropped the bag.
Jungwon was standing in front of your house.
Not near it. Not passing by.
In front of it.
Facing your door. Like he’d been knocking. Or about to.
But he didn’t flinch when he saw you. Didn’t seem startled at all. Instead, he turned to face you slowly, as if he’d known you were coming all along. And then, he smiled.
Not a small smile. Not a polite one.
A wide, bright grin that split his face in a way that was so perfect, with dimples creasing both cheeks so deep it made him look innocent.
That was the first thing you noticed—his dimples.
The second was how his eyes looked. Catlike. Slanted and sharp, like he was amused by something only he understood. His nose scrunched slightly as he spoke, voice light and pleasant.
“Sorry to bother you,” he said, holding out a medium-sized box. “This was left on my porch this morning. Must’ve been delivered to the wrong house.”
You blinked, caught completely off guard. His tone was so casual. So normal.
“I figured I’d give it to you myself. Didn’t want it to get wet or anything,” he said, flashing another grin.
And just like that everything you’d suspected about him, the unease and the quiet dread… it all slipped quietly out the window.
Because how could someone with a smile like that be dangerous?
“Thank you,” you said quietly, reaching out to take the box from his hands.
Your fingers brushed his.
And for a second, you paused.
He wasn’t cold exactly, not like ice but there was a definite chill to him. Like he’d been standing outside far longer than you’d thought. Or.. like the warmth just didn’t quite reach his skin the way it should.
Still, he didn’t seem to notice. Or maybe he did and just didn’t care.
“You always keep your lights on late,” he said, his voice softer now, like he was sharing a secret. “It makes the street look… nicer. Brighter.” His eyes flicked to your porch light, then back to you. “Makes it feel less lonely out here.”
You gave a small smile, unsure of what to say. Trying to steer the conversation somewhere more neutral, you asked, “Have you lived here long?”
He nodded. “Long enough,” he said easily. “I know this town like the back of my hand. Every street. Every shortcut. Every sound the woods make when the wind picks up.” Then, with another smile—this one smaller, more thoughtful he added, “I think I was here before most people on this block.”
There was something in the way he said it. Not proud. Just… certain.
Like this place was his long before it had ever been yours.
You held the box a little tighter to your chest, not out of fear, but instinct. There was something about Jungwon that kept you suspended between comfort and unease, it was like he balanced delicately on a wire stretched between charming and unknowable.
He didn’t move right away. Just stood there, eyes flicking between you and the soft glow coming from your windows. “I’m glad you moved here,” he said suddenly, voice lower this time, like it wasn’t meant to be heard too loudly. “It’s nice having someone new on the street.”
You offered a tight smile, nodding slightly. “Yeah… it’s been nice so far. Quiet.”
He hummed at that. “It’s always quiet. That’s why I like it.”
A pause.
Then, he took a single step back, giving you space.
“Well,” he said, dimples flashing again, “I’ll let you get back inside. Long day, I’m guessing.”
You gave a quiet “yeah,” not entirely trusting your voice.
He nodded once more, then walked towards his house without another word. He didn’t rush. Didn’t even glance back.
But you watched him the entire time until his figure disappeared into his house, where the lights seemingly never seemed to turn on.
As soon as the door clicked shut behind him, Jungwon let out a slow breath and leaned back against it, eyes fluttering shut.
So pretty. So flawless. Smells good. So lovely. So unmarked. Can’t stop wanting. Need. Desire. I need. All mine.
The thoughts circled like vultures, silent and persistent, scratching at the corners of his mind. They’d come on strong the second your fingers brushed his, just one small touch, but it had burned into his skin like a brand. A delicate moment, but to him, it felt like the world tipping off its axis.
He dragged his hands down his face and clenched his fists tightly at his sides, nails digging crescents into his palms.
Resist.
His breath shuddered.
Don’t want to.
You were just so... warm. So real. The light from your door still echoed behind his eyes, the shape of your smile hauntingly clear.
He had to bite the inside of his cheek to keep grounded. Had to remind himself not to get carried away. But even then, the restraint was paper-thin.
Need. Must have.
He opened his eyes slowly.
Then rubbed his face with both hands, dragging them down with a muffled groan before tossing his head back to look up at the ceiling. “God,” he breathed, a strained laugh curling at the edge of his voice. “This is ridiculous.”
He groaned again, this time quieter, as if giving in to something he’d been fighting for too long. The thoughts were too loud tonight. Too vivid. You had been right there. Smiling. Talking. Trusting.
He let his hands fall to his sides, fingers twitching.
And then… he smiled.
Not from joy.
From surrender.
Because it was over now, any hope of pretending he didn’t want you. Of pretending this was something he could control.
You were close. Too close.
And that was all he needed.
Because in his mind, you belonged here. With him.
You weren’t much of a morning person. Waking up was always a slow, miserable process, each second before your alarm spent burrowed under warm covers, clinging to the last traces of sleep.
Although recently… sleep hadn’t been so kind.
You’d been plagued by dreams. Vivid ones. The kind that jolted you awake in the early hours, chest heaving, skin clammy, heart pounding like you’d sprinted through a nightmare, but they weren’t nightmares. Not exactly.
Because every time, it was the same.
Jungwon.
His face. Too close. Too clear. Smiling like he knew something you didn’t. Eyes dark and unreadable. His voice softer than usual, lower, like a whisper curling against your ear, warm and invasive, sending shivers down your spine. His hands… you didn’t even want to think about his hands. But you did.
Even now, you could feel the phantom sensation of them trailing along your arm, brushing your waist, resting against your throat like a promise.
And every time you closed your eyes, you saw it all again.
You hated how real it felt. Hated how your body reacted. Most of all… you hated how it left you wide awake, every damn night, staring at the ceiling in silence.
And you didn’t even know why you reacted like this.
You’d only had one real conversation with him—one—but your mind and body refused to let it go. It looped endlessly, the smile he gave you, the way his fingers brushed yours, the soft timbre of his voice as he spoke your name like he’d practiced it before. It wasn’t normal. None of this was normal.
But maybe that was on you.
Maybe it was your own fault for always falling for the morally grey characters in books and movies. For crushing on the charming villains. For feeling your heart skip a beat when the dangerous ones smirked from across the screen. You liked characters with sharp edges. Broken things. The ones that looked at the world like it was something they wanted to hold and tear apart all at once.
And Jungwon… well. He had that look.
The kind that made you wonder what he was thinking. What he wanted.
Even if he gave off a strange, unsettling vibe sometimes.
You really tried to put distance between yourself and Jungwon. It should’ve been easy right? After all, the guy was practically a ghost. Barely ever seen outside his house, silent as the shadows that clung to the edges of the street. You thought avoiding him would be simple. You told yourself it was just your imagination running wild, that the strange pull you felt wasn’t real.
But it wasn’t that simple.
Somehow, in the span of just a few days, you’d become a light and Jungwon the firefly, constantly drawn to you. The harder you tried to keep your distance, the closer he seemed to come. It was like the universe had conspired to make you the one person who could pull him out of the shadows.
You weren’t sure if it was just curiosity that kept making you look, kept making you wait just a little longer for the next chance encounter.
And no matter how much you told yourself to look away, to keep moving, you couldn’t shake the feeling that he was exactly where he wanted to be, lingering just at the edge of your life, waiting for you to let him in.
You weren’t the only one who had noticed Jungwon’s strange behavior—or rather, his rare appearances. One afternoon, as you were closing the gate to your little house, Minjae’s car pulled up smoothly beside you. He rolled down the window with a friendly grin, starting up a conversation like he always did. It was lighthearted, normal chatter about the weather and how quiet the neighborhood had been lately.
Then, without warning, Minjae lifted his hand and waved toward something behind you. You turned around instinctively, following the direction of his motion, and your eyes locked onto a figure standing on the porch of the house next door.
Jungwon.
He was just standing there, still as a statue, but his eyes were fixed entirely on you. Not just glancing or casually watching, but staring, like he was trying to memorize every detail of your face. Your heart skipped a beat, and you found, almost against your will, that you couldn’t tear your gaze away from him.
It was Minjae’s voice that pulled you back to reality. “You know,” he said with a half-laugh, “you’re a miracle worker.”
You blinked, puzzled. “What?”
He nodded toward Jungwon again, still watching you from his porch. “I mean, look at him. He barely leaves the house, right? And now here he is, actually outside, and you’re the reason. You’ve somehow brought Jungwon out of his shell.”
You chuckled nervously, feeling the heat rise to your cheeks. “I don’t know about that. I’m just living my life.”
Minjae smirked, obviously not convinced. “Come on, tell me your secret. What did you do to make the impossible happen?”
You shrugged, trying to play it off, but Minjae was insistent. Then, with a casual ease that made you pause, he said, “Honestly, only someone as pretty as you could make that kind of miracle happen.”
The words hung in the air, but something about them felt… off.
It wasn’t like when Jungwon would call you pretty. That compliment was different, almost shy, like it came from a place of quiet admiration. The way he said it made you feel seen in a way that was almost tender.
Minjae’s words, on the other hand, felt like a label. Like an objectifying gaze, rather than genuine praise. It was as if he saw you as a prize or a tool, a way to coax Jungwon out, rather than a person in your own right.
You forced a smile, but inside, a little knot of discomfort tightened.
With Jungwon, you often found yourself wondering why he isolated himself from the world. When he was with you, he was warm, engaging even charming in that quiet way of his. He made you laugh, made you feel seen. There were times when you completely forgot he was ever the reclusive neighbor you’d only heard about from a distance. Around you, he seemed normal. Happy, even.
And maybe that was what made the contrast so jarring when you tried to leave.
It started small.
“Stay a little longer,” he’d say, voice quiet, hopeful. “Just until the rain lets up.” Even when there was barely a drizzle.
Or, “I made coffee. Your favorite,” even though you never actually told him what that was.
Little things. Little excuses. And the more time you spent with him, the more you began to realize that he didn’t want you to leave him.
He’d linger at your gate, walking you out only to hold onto your sleeve as you turned to go. His fingers would brush your wrist and he’d offer one more reason. “It gets so quiet when you’re gone.”
You didn’t know how to respond to that.
There was a neediness to it—not desperate, or dramatic but quietly intense. Like he wasn’t just fond of you, but dependent on your presence to stay grounded. You noticed how his shoulders drooped when you said goodbye, how his gaze followed you all the way until you disappeared from sight. How sometimes, when you didn’t come by, he’d appear at your door with some vague excuse, or a “hey, just checking in.”
He never said the words, but you could feel them lingering between you...
Please stay. Don’t go.
But you would never admit the fact that you kind of… liked the feeling. There was something about the way Jungwon looked at you, like you were the center of his universe. Like your presence alone kept his world spinning. He was a yearning man—and you were into it. Maybe it was a little twisted. Maybe it should’ve creeped you out. But it didn’t.
It made you feel wanted. Needed. Chosen.
And that quiet hunger in his eyes? It was hard to ignore. Harder not to feel a little thrill every time you caught it.
You were, in fact, so distracted by Jungwon the past week, your thoughts wrapped in the way he said your name, the way he smiled when you laughed that you hadn’t even noticed something else. Something small. Something strange.
You hadn’t seen Minjae.
Not once.
No casual waves as he passed by in his sportscar. No afternoon chit-chat over the fence. No light in his front window. The last time you remembered speaking to him was that day outside your gate. When Minjae had joked that you were a miracle worker for dragging Jungwon out of hiding. When he’d called you pretty.
That compliment still sat uncomfortably in your mind. Not because it was unwelcome, but because it felt... off. Too direct. Too aware of something you hadn’t even admitted to yourself yet. Something that made your skin itch under the surface.
You shook the thought off again.
Minjae was probably just busy. Or out of town. People had lives. You shouldn’t overthink it.
Still, you felt it was suspicious.
Minjae was the kind of neighbor who always made his presence known. Whether it was a wave from his porch, a casual comment over the fence, or him pulling up just to chat—he was there. Almost too often, sometimes. So for him to just vanish without so much as a goodbye? No lights on at night. No deliveries left on his doorstep. No sound from his side of the street.
It didn’t sit right with you.
You told yourself not to spiral, not to start imagining worst-case scenarios. You weren’t in a movie, and Minjae was probably just on vacation. People disappeared for a few days all the time. But something about the stillness around his house made your gut twist.
So when you finally gathered the courage to ask Jungwon—half-laughing, trying to keep it casual “Hey, have you seen Minjae around lately?”
He didn’t laugh with you.
He just looked at you for a moment too long, head tilting ever so slightly. Then that same soft smile returned to his face, and he said, “People like him tend to drift off when they’re not needed anymore.”
You blinked at him, unsure if you’d heard right. “What do you mean by that?” you asked, trying to sound casual. Curious, not alarmed. But there was an edge to your voice even you couldn’t mask.
Jungwon didn’t answer right away. He just kept smiling. That same soft, calm expression that had started to feel more and more like a mask. Like something carefully placed.
Finally, he shrugged lightly, looking off toward the trees lining the back of your neighborhood. “Some people... they like being in everyone’s business. Always asking questions. Watching. They forget their place.” He looked back at you then. “Eventually, they get bored. Or they bother the wrong person. And then they leave.”
His words were still gentle. His tone kind. But something about them felt heavy. Measured. Too intentional to be offhanded.
You laughed, nervous. “You say that like it happens often.”
Jungwon leaned a little closer, eyes gleaming like he knew something you didn’t. “In small towns,” he said, voice barely above a whisper, “it happens more than you’d think.” Then he straightened again, brushing invisible dust from his sweater like nothing had happened. “Anyway,” he added brightly, “you’ll be fine. You’re not like him.”
You forced a tight smile. “Yeah?”
Jungwon nodded slowly, but his gaze shifted over your shoulder before he could answer. His eyes narrowed just a little, then lit up, like he’d spotted something that genuinely delighted him. “Oh—” he said suddenly, voice perking up. “You got new flowers for your porch!”
You blinked, caught off guard by the sudden change in tone. “Oh… yeah,” you said, turning to glance at the small planter box near your front step. “Picked them up yesterday. Thought the place needed some color.”
“They suit you,” Jungwon said warmly, stepping closer to peer at them like they were the most interesting thing he’d seen all day. “Bright. Soft. Kind of hard to ignore.”
You swallowed, unsure if he meant the flowers at this point or you.
He crouched down slightly, fingers brushing the edge of one bloom without picking it. “You’ve really made this place yours,” he murmured.
You looked at him, unsettled by the way his attention lingered on the petals like they were something precious. Fragile. “Did you… ever talk to the people who lived here before me?” you asked quietly.
Jungwon stood again, that easy smile back on his face. “No,” he said simply. “They weren’t worth getting to know.” And just like that, he turned to you again. “Want help watering them later this week? I’m good with plants.” His head tilted. “Or I could teach you.”
Your heart beat faster, but you nodded slowly, trying not to let it show.
“Sure,” you said. “Maybe.”
Jungwon’s smile widened. “I’ll take that as a yes.”
As time passed, the line between comfort and dependency blurred.
Jungwon had a way of filling your space without ever overwhelming it. A warm smile, a quiet presence, a helping hand before you even asked. He was always there when you needed something. A lightbulb fixed, a jar opened, a walk shared when you were feeling low. It felt natural. Easy.
You didn’t even notice how often you reached for your phone to text him before anyone else. You didn’t notice how you hadn’t seen Minjae or anyone else, really in weeks. It wasn’t like you meant to drift from the rest of the town. You were just busy. Focused. Comfortable.
Jungwon made it easy to forget.
He never told you to stop going into town. He never said you couldn’t visit others. But somehow, whenever you tried, something got in the way. Plans fell through. People stopped responding. Your car wouldn’t start. A “small accident” at the store left you rattled, and Jungwon was the only one who showed up to help.
“Coincidences,” he’d hum, brushing your hair back from your face. “This town’s weird sometimes, isn’t it?”
You’d nod, resting against him. Trusting him. Because he was safe. He was there.
You didn’t question why you always felt so tired when he wasn’t around. Why it felt wrong to laugh too loudly with anyone else.
Jungwon never rushed. Never forced.
He was a slow, calculated tide that wore down your edges until all that remained was his shape. His name on your lips. His hands that you reached for. His words that echoed in your head late at night.
You didn’t notice the strings he tied around you. Not until they were woven too deep to undo.
Because why would you?
Jungwon was your sweet, harmless, and totally normal (handsome) neighbor. The kind of guy who remembered your coffee order after hearing it once. Who fixed your mailbox without asking. Who brought you soup when you had a cold and stayed just long enough to make sure you took your meds. Who smiled like the sun only rose if you were there to see it.
Sure, there were tiny moments, flickering seconds where something darker peeked through. Like when his voice dropped just a little too low when someone else said your name. Or how his eyes didn’t follow the conversation, but followed you. How once, just once, you saw red stains on his sleeve, and he brushed it off with a laugh: “Cooking mishap, you know how clumsy I can be.”
You had blinked, hesitated and then smiled back. Because he was so normal about it, so casual, that you felt silly for even asking.
Because every time your instincts whispered run, Jungwon countered with warmth, with gentle words and soft chuckles. He smoothed over your worries like wrinkles in a bedsheet. Wrapped you in the illusion that you were safe, wanted, loved. And eventually, you stopped listening to that inner voice. Because it was easier. Safer, in a way. After all… it wasn’t like he was hurting you.
Right?
Just caring for you.
in his way.
And in fact, that was his downfall.
He had gotten too close. Too used to your warmth, your attention, your trust.
That’s why it didn’t feel wrong to surprise him. It felt sweet. Thoughtful. Just like all the little surprises he gave you. And after all, he hadn’t been feeling well lately, said he was tired, worn down. So you had baked him muffins, his favorite kind, warm and sweet with a hint of cinnamon. You even wrapped them in a cloth to keep them from getting cold.
Smiling to yourself, you made your way up his driveway, your breath puffing softly in the chilly evening air. The trees rustled around you, the old swing on his porch creaking slightly in the wind. You bent by the old tree stump and lifted the loose bark, retrieving the spare key he didn’t think you knew about. But of course you did. Jungwon always forgot how observant you could be.
You turned the lock and pushed open the door.
Darkness. As always.
The thick blackout curtains were drawn tight, swallowing all natural light. You stepped inside and closed the door gently behind you, the soft click echoing a bit too loudly for your liking. The air was still. Cool. That unnatural cold that clung to his house no matter the season. You had always teased him about it. "You live like a vampire, Won," but he’d just smiled and said your place was cozier anyway.
Balancing the plate of muffins in your hands, you bent to untie your shoes, calling out lightly, “Jungwon? I brought you something!”
Silence.
You straightened, furrowing your brows. That was odd. Usually by now, he’d be thundering down the stairs like an excited puppy, a grin on his face and the dimples you secretly adored showing.
But nothing.
Just quiet.
You stood still for a moment, letting your eyes adjust to the dimness. The only sound was the low hum of the fridge in the kitchen, and the faint creak of the house. You stepped further in, your socks brushing against the cool wood floors.
“Won?” you called again, voice a little softer this time. A little more cautious.
Still no answer.
Weird.
Your fingers curled tighter around the plate. Maybe he was asleep? Maybe he’d taken something for the headache he’d mentioned and was knocked out? That wouldn’t be unusual.
But even as you told yourself that, something felt… off.
You moved deeper into the house, past the living room where the furniture was always too clean, too untouched. Like it was for show, not use.
“Jungwon?” you called again, softer now, unsure if you wanted an answer. Confusion gnawed at you. He was always here. He always answered. Even when tired, he’d greet you with a smile. So where the hell was he?
You turned back toward the front door, heart picking up as you considered just going home and calling him later. But then—
Your eyes dropped to the floor.
Your steps faltered.
There, near the hallway that led toward the kitchen, a faint discoloration marred the wooden boards. Faint streaks that stood out starkly against the polished surface. You took a slow, cautious step forward and crouched down, squinting.
Stains.
Your brows furrowed. Wet-looking. Dark.
Your fingers twitched, tempted to reach out but you stopped yourself. That wasn’t juice. That wasn’t water. And Jungwon… Jungwon hated mess. He vacuumed twice a week. He color-coded his closet. He folded your hoodie when you left it on a chair once and jokingly called it “chaos.”
You stood, pulse quickening now, and looked further ahead. The stains didn’t stop there, they trailed forward in uneven drags. Like something had been pulled.
You followed, slow, careful steps guiding you past the silent kitchen. The stains eventually stopped at a door you hadn’t paid much attention to before.
A door with a padlock that was now hanging open.
You stared at it.
This was the basement.
You remembered him telling you offhandedly, once, that he didn’t like going down there. Said it was dusty, cluttered, not worth the trouble. And you’d believed him. Why wouldn’t you?
But now? Now as you stood with a clear head?
Now that excuse felt wrong. Off-key. Hollow.
Because how could someone like Jungwon, so meticulous leave a whole part of his house in disarray? Let it sit, untouched, messy? It didn’t add up. Not when everything else about him screamed control. Cleanliness. Perfection.
You reached out slowly, fingers brushing the cool metal of the doorknob. You hesitated, your heart thudding heavily in your chest. Something was wrong. You felt it. Knew it. But curiosity.. It had already sunk its teeth in.
Hesitantly, you fully opened the door, cringing at the sharp clang as the padlock slipped from its hook and hit the wooden floor. The sound echoed louder than expected, like it didn’t belong in the stillness of this place. You froze, ears straining.
Nothing. No footsteps. No sound of Jungwon calling out. Just silence.
You exhaled, slow and shaky, then leaned over to peer down the narrow staircase. It was steep, poorly lit, and the air wafting up from below hit you like a wall.
Metallic.
Old.
Foul.
You wrinkled your nose, instinctively covering it with your sleeve. “Jesus, Jungwon…” you muttered to yourself, trying to play off the chill climbing up your spine, “you seriously need to find the source of that smell. It’s atrocious.”
With the plate of muffins still awkwardly cradled in your arm, you gripped the banister and took your first step down. Each board creaked beneath your weight, announcing your presence. You moved slowly, not even sure why you were whispering your movements into the quiet.
The further you descended, the colder it became. Not the kind of cold that came from lack of heating but the kind that sank into your skin, heavy and unnatural.
Jesus, Jungwon really sets the basement mood, you thought bitterly, forcing a weak laugh that died in your throat as soon as it left your lips.
Your foot hit the cold concrete at the base of the stairs, and with trembling fingers, you reached up to tug the dangling string of a single bulb. The old lamp crackled, flickered once, and then sputtered to life with a low buzz.
The basement flooded in dim, yellow light and your breath caught in your throat.
You were going to be sick.
In the corner, a cluster of large black waste bags were stacked on top of each other like a grotesque sculpture. The floor beneath them was stained dark red, the sticky sheen of old blood glistening faintly in the light.
Your gaze jerked to the wall, where tools hung in a perfect, obsessive arrangement, neat and polished, despite the horror of their placement. But the table directly beneath them… that was a different story.
The tools there were used. Bloodied, dried chunks clinging to their edges. A bone saw. A scalpel. Pliers. Things no sane person kept in their basement.
Your knees nearly gave out as your eyes swept further across the room and that’s when you saw them.
Chains.
Heavy metal chains hanging from the ceiling, swaying slightly as if someone had moved them just moments ago. And in the far right corner, barely lit by the bulb, a man was hanging by his wrists. His head lolled forward, body limp. Blood soaked his shirt, streaked down his arms. You couldn’t tell if he was alive or dead.
Behind him, resting too casually on another worktable, was a chainsaw—massive, streaked in fresh crimson, its handle glistening.
You dropped the plate of muffins.
It shattered on the floor, ceramic and chocolate scattering across the bloodstained concrete like confetti at the world’s sickest celebration.
Your breath hitched, your pulse roaring in your ears.
This wasn’t real. It couldn’t be real.
Your body was shaking, your head reeling. You didn’t know if you wanted to scream or throw up—or both. The sight before you was grotesque, a sickly distortion of everything you thought you knew. Your skin felt too tight for your body, your lungs too small for your breath. Panic buzzed like static under your skin, your heart pounding so violently in your chest you swore it would give out.
The air smelled like rust and rot. The kind of scent that clung to your clothes and hair.
You wanted to cry, but your body was in too much shock to produce tears. Your eyes just stung, dry and wide, unable to blink, unable to look away.
And then—your gaze lifted.
A cork board.
Right in front of you.
That’s what made you move. That’s what made your brain finally snap into place, as your body responded before your mind could even fully comprehend it. You stumbled back with a choked breath.
The cork board was covered in photos. All of you.
Some were recent—your walk to the grocery store last Thursday, when you thought you felt someone watching you. You sipping coffee on your porch. You closing your gate behind you. You in your kitchen window, tying your hair up. One of you sleeping... inside your bedroom.
Your knees gave out and you hit the floor, palms scraping against the concrete. A dry sob wracked through your chest.
They were pinned in perfect rows, marked with little notes scribbled underneath in tight, obsessive handwriting.
“Blue sweater. Pretty. Smiled at me today.” “Talked to Minjae. Upset.” “Slept at 2:43 AM. Dreaming again?” “Jealous. Looked too long at cashier.” “No one else but you”
And beneath the board, on a small table, a journal. You didn’t want to touch it, didn’t want to know, but your body moved on its own. You flipped it open, and it was pages and pages of more—more pictures, sketches, descriptions. Timelines.
You were being studied.
Stalked.
Catalogued like a beloved pet or a future possession.
You were so caught up in the horror you didn’t notice anything else until a soft giggle rang out behind you.
You whipped around so fast it made your vision blur, the motion jerking your whole body like a snap. Whiplash shot through your neck and shoulders, but it didn’t matter.
Because standing there… was Jungwon.
His clothes were spattered in red. His face, normally so calm and sweet, now twisted into something else. Something delighted. Like he was genuinely happy to see you.
And in his hands… was the chainsaw.
You glanced to your left. The one you’d just seen moments ago on the table. The same one. But he hadn’t passed you.. Hadn’t made a sound... How had he—
Jungwon giggled again, eyes raking over you from head to toe like you were his favorite thing in the world. His tongue peeked out to wet his lips, and then he tilted his head, speaking in that same gentle, lilting voice he always used when he dropped by your porch with tea or borrowed sugar.
“I told you not to come, didn’t I, baby?” he said, voice light and lilting. “Told you I didn’t want you catching whatever I have.”
He smiled again, wider this time.
Like this was all some elaborate joke. Like he wasn’t holding something meant for destruction. Like he hadn’t just shattered the thin glass of the world you thought you understood.
Your heart thudded so loudly it drowned out everything else. You didn’t know whether to run… Or scream. Or beg.
You tried to speak, but your throat tightened and your words caught in a choking sob. “Please… just leave me alone,” you managed to choke out, voice trembling and barely a whisper. “I don’t want.. I don’t want any of this. Just… go away.”
Jungwon didn’t move. Didn’t blink. He simply stood there, watching you with those cold, catlike eyes that seemed to pierce right through you before he let out a short, almost amused laugh. “That was… cute,” he said, tilting his head to the side like you were an interesting puzzle. “But no,” he whispered, his voice dropping into something softer, almost tender, but no less chilling. “I would never leave you alone. Not now. Not ever.” He stepped closer, the chainsaw forgotten at his side as his gaze locked onto yours. “You’re everything I need. Everything I want.”
Jungwon set the chainsaw down with unnerving gentleness, as his fingers found the thick, bloodied rope hanging from the handle and tightened it around his hands with slow movements, his gaze never once leaving you. His eyes were heavy-lidded and glassy, like he was somewhere far away, but still utterly focused on you.
“This won’t hurt at all, baby,” he said in a dazed, almost hypnotic tone, each word dripping with unsettling sweetness. “Just need you to stay still…”
Your heart slammed against your ribs, panic exploding inside your chest. Desperation drove your hand to the nearest object on the table: a heavy, cold wrench. You gripped it tightly and swung with everything you had, hoping to catch him off guard.
But Jungwon was faster. His hand shot out like a striking snake, wrapping around your wrist and halting your movement mid-air. A shock ran through you when you realized the wrench was stained with fresh, sticky blood—your fingers now coated in it, too. Your stomach turned violently, bile rising.
You let out a raw, terrified scream, the sound tearing through the heavy, silent air of the basement. You struggled, twisting and pulling to free yourself from his grip, but he only pressed you harder against the unforgiving surface of the table.
Jungwon’s lips parted in a chilling, high-pitched giggle as his voice dropped to a whisper, laced with cruel amusement “No one can hear you scream. I soundproofed the basement myself.”
Before you could fully register the weight of his words, he gripped the bloodied rope tightly in his hand. Without hesitation, he wrapped it swiftly around one of your wrists, the coarse fibers biting into your skin as he pulled it tight, securing the knot with a practiced hand. Your pulse raced, panic flooding your senses, and just as he reached for your other wrist to bind it as well, a sudden surge of desperation propelled you into action.
With every ounce of strength, you drove your knee sharply into his groin. The sound of his breath catching was almost as loud as your pounding heartbeat. Jungwon groaned, doubling over in pain, clutching himself, his grip on the rope loosening instantly.
The moment was yours.
You stumbled backward, adrenaline lending power to your legs, and pushed past him, your breath coming out in ragged gasps as you scrambled toward the stairs. Each step felt like it dragged you closer to freedom, even as your body screamed for relief.
When you reached the basement door, you threw yourself against it with everything you had. The door slammed open with a brutal crash, echoing off the walls as it violently hit the wall. You barely had a moment to catch your breath before scrambling upright, ignoring the sharp sting of the rope cutting into your left wrist as you moved.
Your mind was racing, heart hammering painfully against your ribs, drowning out Jungwon’s desperate shouts trailing behind you.
“Wait! Don’t leave me! Please! Come back!”
Panic surged through your veins, and you forced your legs to carry you faster, your bare feet slipping inside your damp socks as you stumbled out into the cold night air. The back door was just steps away, the only real chance for escape. Your fingers fumbled with the handle, finally wrenching it open as you spilled out into the wild darkness of the forest.
The trees stood tall and unyielding, shadows blending with the night sky, but you didn’t hesitate. Moss cushioned your frantic footsteps as you pushed forward, branches clawing at your arms and face, but you barely registered the scratches. Your entire focus was on putting distance between yourself and that suffocating basement.
Behind you, the dreadful sound started low at first, the unmistakable growl of a chainsaw revving to life. It cut through the stillness of the night like a predator’s roar, and terror twisted in your gut. Your breath came in ragged gasps, lungs burning as you pushed harder, every muscle screaming in protest.
The chainsaw’s roar grew louder, relentless, a nightmare chasing you through the forest’s tangled embrace. Your eyes darted around wildly, searching for any glimmer of safety, any break in the endless trees. But all you could do was run, run with every ounce of strength you had left because behind you, the nightmare was catching up.
Every time your foot caught on an exposed root or a patch of uneven earth, you hit the forest floor hard but every time, you pushed yourself back up. Dirt clung to your hands, leaves stuck to your clothes, and your knees throbbed from the falls. Still, you didn’t stop. You couldn’t.
You cursed yourself silently. Running into the forest had been a mistake. The fear had taken over, and your only thought had been escape, an exit, any exit. In the rush, you’d completely forgotten the front door, the one that opened onto the street, onto people, onto safety. But now you were too deep. You couldn’t even see Jungwon’s house anymore, and turning back wasn’t an option.
The only thing keeping you from breaking down entirely was the quiet.
The chainsaw was gone.
The loud, gut-churning roar that had chased you through the trees had faded, leaving only the sound of your ragged breathing and the whisper of wind through the branches. You slowed to a stop near a cluster of tall pine trees, bracing yourself against one of them as you struggled to steady your breath. Your chest rose and fell in quick, sharp movements, heart still pounding in your ears.
The silence was eerie, but it was also the first chance you had to really think.
Maybe he gave up.
Maybe he couldn’t track you in here.
You let out a shaky exhale, closing your eyes. The rope still tied around your wrist felt heavier now, a bitter reminder.
Then— A breath.
Not yours.
It ghosted over your neck before a low, almost gentle voice said, “There you are.”
Your blood turned to ice.
Jungwon’s arms came around you like a lover’s embrace, one hand pressing over your mouth before you could scream. The other wrapped around your waist, pulling you back against his chest. He was warm. His heartbeat against your spine was steady. Calm. Unlike yours.
“You really made me chase you,” he whispered, sounding more amused than angry. “That was naughty, bunny.”
You shook your head, whimpering under his palm. He just chuckled, leaning closer so his breath brushed your ear.
“Did you really think you could run from me? After everything we’ve shared?” His voice dropped, coaxing. Mocking. “After all the time I spent making you mine?” He slowly pulled his hand away from your mouth, waiting to see if you’d scream. You didn’t. You couldn’t. Fear had strangled your voice.
“That’s what I thought,” he whispered sweetly, brushing your hair back with blood-stained fingers. “Let’s go home now.” His tone was gentle, coaxing… but behind it, there was iron. Finality. You could feel it in your bones.
You didn’t resist as he turned you in his arms. Not yet. Not now. But your mind was racing. Because if you were going to survive this, you’d need to be smarter. Smarter than him. Smarter than the sweet nightmare with a smile stitched in lies.
You let him lead you back—half pulled, half dragged—through the forest. Your wrists were bound tightly in front of you with the same rope he’d tried to use before, now knotted so expertly there was no hope of slipping free. The scratch of branches against your skin barely registered. Your mind was a blur of white noise and racing thoughts, flipping through options you didn’t have.
Jungwon didn’t speak as he walked. His grip on your arm was firm but not painful, almost like he thought this was normal. Like he believed this was still salvageable. You glanced at him out of the corner of your eye. He looked content enough.
You needed a plan.
Something.
Anything.
That’s when you saw it up ahead—the ravine. It wasn’t huge, but the drop was enough to matter. The slope wasn’t a sheer cliff, but it was uneven, slick with moss and just far enough across that it might buy you time. If you could make it.
You had one shot.
You slowed your steps, carefully adjusting your breathing as if you were calming down, eyes softening when you glanced at Jungwon. “I’m sorry,” you murmured, just above a whisper, letting your voice tremble with fake vulnerability. “You scared me… that’s all.”
He stopped, blinking down at you like you’d just confessed something precious. His expression melted into something close to adoration, lips parting slightly.
“You don’t have to be scared of me,” he said, voice so soft it nearly caught in the breeze. “I just want to take care of you.”
That was your cue.
You leaned forward, lifting your bound hands like you were going to touch his face. He leaned in instinctively—lovesick and completely unaware.
Perfect.
With everything you had, you pulled your fists back and slammed them into his face.
His head snapped to the side, a startled grunt escaping his lips as he staggered, cussing out. Blood sprayed from his nose, and for the first time, his expression twisted, not in pain, but in disbelief.
You didn’t wait to see more.
You ran.
You sprinted full force toward the ravine, legs screaming, lungs burning. Your socks slipped on the mossy ground, but momentum carried you. You didn’t stop. You couldn’t.
And when you reached the edge, you leapt.
Your stomach dropped as you flew through the air, barely making it to the other side. Your knees hit first, hard, sending a jolt up your legs. You scrambled on all fours, digging your fingers into the earth, dragging yourself up over the edge.
Then you turned.
Jungwon was still on the other side.
His nose was bleeding, smeared red down to his chin. His chest rose and fell with short, rapid breaths. His hair was wild now, curling damply at his forehead from the sweat and heat of the chase. But it was his eyes that froze you in place, wide, crazed, and fixed on you like a predator denied its kill.
He didn’t shout.
He didn’t move.
He just stared, fists clenched at his sides, rage and obsession twisted into something inhuman across his face.
You stood, still shaking, backing away one slow step at a time. You didn’t blink.. You couldn’t. Not with Jungwon staring at you like that, chest heaving like he might leap across the ravine after you.
And then… something in him snapped.
His lips curled into a grin, and his head tilted, ever so slightly. “Oh, you bad bunny,” he called out, voice sing-song sweet and bone-deep wrong. “Running… hiding… making me chase you. Tsk, tsk. You know this is pointless, right?”
His smile widened, blood staining his teeth now. “You’re only prolonging the inevitable. But that’s okay. I like the thrill.”
You didn’t stay to hear the rest.
You turned and ran.
You finally burst through your front door, heart pounding wildly as if it might leap right out of your chest. Your legs trembled, but you forced yourself to keep moving, scrambling toward the kitchen, desperate to find something sharp to cut the ropes binding your wrists.
You rifled through drawer after drawer, panic making your hands clumsy.
A breath, close and warm suddenly brushed your ear.
“Caught you,” Jungwon murmured, voice low and dangerous yet oddly gentle. He moved quickly before you could comprehend anything, strong hands grabbing you and flipping you around before you could react. Your tied arms went over his head, and around his neck as his grip tightened, pulling you close until your chest pressed firmly against his.
He brushed the stray strands of hair away from your face with an almost tender touch, his fingers lingering on your cheek just long enough to send a shiver down your spine. “Making me lose control like that... bad bunny,” he whispered, his voice low and velvety, dripping with teasing warmth.
Before you could even find the words to respond, his lips pressed against yours, hard and shockingly electric. The suddenness of the kiss caught you completely off guard, your breath hitching as your body froze in surprise.
Taking the chance, Jungwon deepened the kiss, his lips parting slightly as he leaned closer, holding you tight against him. His hands tangled gently in your hair, pulling you just enough to claim your attention fully.
Your mind raced, heart pounding like a wild drum in your chest. Every nerve seemed to ignite beneath his touch, caught between fear and something you couldn’t quite name. You wanted to pull away, in gact your instincts screamed at you to, but the strength of his hold and the kiss kept you rooted in place.
His breath mingled with yours, warm and heavy, as he slowly eased the pressure, giving you just enough space to catch your breath but not enough to break the hold. His eyes searched yours, dark and deep, like he was trying to read every hidden thought inside you.
“See?” Jungwon murmured softly, his voice a mixture of challenge and affection. “You don’t want to run away after all.”
He tilted your chin up gently, his thumb tracing a slow, deliberate line across your bottom lip. “Now be still,” he whispered, voice low and coaxing, “so I can give you exactly what you need, bunny…”
me now:
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#enhypen x reader#yang jungwon x reader#yang jungwon#yang jungwon enhypen#jungwon x reader#jungwon imagines#jungwon#enhypen imagines#enhypen scenarios#enhypen fic#enhypen#enha imagines#enha x reader#enha#yang jungwon imagines#yang jungwon fluff#jungwon enhypen#jungwon enha#jungwon fluff#yang jungwon x you#yang jungwon enha#enhypen jungwon#enha scenarios#enhypen jungwon x reader#enhablr#killer au
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I don't know about you... but when I look at this abandoned victorian home, I see so much potential.
I see magic ✨️ waiting to unfold. If I had the money, I would take over an abandoned victorian home and renovate it. That would be a dream come true!

#abandoned#victorian house#victorian home#haunted house#haunted#abandoned places#goth#gothic#goth aesthetic#goth home#gothic homemaking#goth home decor#victorian#victorian gothic#gothgoth#gothcore#home renovation#goth subculture#dark#dark aesthetic#dark decor#goth style#goth girl#goth life#dark life#spooky#spooky aesthetic#spooky vibes#dream home#dream house
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I hope everyone who’s ever renovated their jewel tone coloured stained-glass filled witchy whimsigothic 90s decor-blessed house into a white & grey minimalist monstrosity is eternally haunted by what they’ve done
#whimsigoth#whimsygoth#whimsigothic#90s whimsigoth#90s witch#90s#90s decor#90s house#stained glass#maximalism#interior decorating#interior design#whimsicore#whimsical#witchy#witch aesthetic
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ghost!simon x reader.
cute little thing, weren’t you.
house renovator, too-big armor of your fathers leather belts and iron tools sits on your hips, gloves hiding the dirt under your nails. grease grows from your scalp and sits on your neck, thawing into your shirt collar with a scent that reminded simon of what it was like to be living.
laboring.
and you work tirelessly, picking up exactly where your old man had left it. peeling the floral wallpaper to reveal yellowing tobacco and its implied wallowings. scrubbing the crevices even simon didn’t know existed- and he haunts it.
wherever you step, a blanket of bleach and rubber follows you. eventually your mortal bones guide you to stiff mattress respite- until morning claws at your ankles and pulls you back to your unofficial labor.
and simon can’t help but be fascinated.
observing as you prune the wood floors like feathers, deep within a self inflicted madness of monotony. he can’t even be upset that you’re tearing apart his home when you look so agonizingly alive doing it. as if destruction gave you the foundation to breath, and rebuilding was your exhale.
he hates to admit it, but he cannot lie to anyone but himself if he says he hasn’t grown fond of the little thing meddling with his backyard.
he had plans to spook you months ago, but maybe he’ll let you stay a little longer- if only to protect you from the creaky floor boards at night.
#old draft I cleaned up#Might expand who knows#simon x reader#simon ghost x reader#simon ghost riley x you#simon riley x you#simon ghost riley x reader#cod#ghost call of duty#call of duty
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ghost stan haunting the mystery shack after it closed down years ago.... walk with me.
18+!!!!!! minors dni!!
cw // dubcon (under the cut), monster??ghost sex, reader described with female genitalia????? idk how else to describe it
you moved to gravity falls a longggg time after the mystery shack closed down and the realtor in charge of the shack was sooo hype to just get it off their hands, so u got the place pretty cheap. you'd clean up the place, excited to renovate ur new home and explore the very old mystery spot.
it would start off as cold touches like you’re sweeping and you feel a cold hand on your back, you’re cooking and it feels like an arm wraps around your waist. you ignored it all, knowing the place was old and odd. so you ignored it. you ignored the cold spots, the occasional feel of a hand on your ass, the feel of someone watching you shower, the feeling that someone else was in the house with you because, at the end of the day, nothing bad has happened to you!
you ignored it all until one night. you were wrapped on your covers, warm and peacefully asleep, when a chill runs through your body as your blankets are pulled off. you open your eyes, blearily looking around for your blanket. your eyes focus on a blurry image of a man, standing at the edge of your bed. fear paralyzes you as you register the ….
his hand was cold and rough, almost transparent as he slides it up your leg. you can hear his voice, but nothing registers in your head. he pulls down your pajama bottoms and slides a cold finger up your leg, you couldn’t move, paralyzed in fear. you swallow a moan as he presses a thick finger against your underwear. “w-who are you?” you choke out as he starts to pull your underwear.
“i’ve got a lot of names, baby.” the old man dips his head to your shoulder, whispering into your ear. “mr. mystery is one of my favorites though.” you try to stop him, but your hands go through him, unable to grab hold of him. he laughs at your antics and grips your legs tight. he smiles wide and pushes a cold, thick finger inside you. you clench around him, chills going up your spine. “come on, cutie. just relax and you’ll have fun.” you feel him pull out and push in, slowly, savoring the feel of your cunt clenching around his finger. “fuck,” he grunts, “so fucking hot.” you arch your back, as he pushes two fingers in, freezing you to your core. you moan as he brings you closer and closer to the edge, mind going numb.
but as you clench your thighs together, he pulls his fingers out. you whine, “please, no- i need-” he laughs at your begging. he shoves his fingers into your mouth and you suck them clean, tasting yourself around two translucent fingers.
“i’ll be back, pretty.” he grins. you blink and he’s gone.
ghost stan doesn’t come back for a couple days after that and you notice when you realize no one had felt you up while you were in the shack. you had done some research on the shack in that time and realized that it was not a weird dream but the stan pines who was haunting the place. a couple more days go by, and you were getting restless, hoping to see the man and question him. you try some summoning bs you found on the internet- nothing, you call his name 3 times like beetlejuice in the living room- nothing, and you even try to find his grave or living relatives- nothing. at some point, you gave up and went back to convincing yourself it was just a dream…. until a month later when stan decided to pop back up.
#minors dni#yandere#x reader#yandere x reader#stan pines smut#stan pines x reader#stanley pines x reader#ghost kink#ghost sex#monster fucker#tw dubcon#tw dubious consent#yandere gravity falls#gravity falls smut#gravity falls#lowkey hate this now
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