thinking about writing again...
I love movies is my fav thing ever
OHHHHH MY LORD HAVE MERCY
GIVE ME ONE CHANCE đđđđ
hello there! iâm ollie and im just testing out my writing style here, i hope you enjoy!
summary: Robin and Rooster engage in an argument causing them to miss the warnings of a storm coming inâïž
Pairings: Robin Bradshaw (my oc)X Bob floyd, established relationship(đ€)
warnings: swearing, arguing, injury (not detailed tho), Bit angsty lol!
Please lmk if there are any spelling or grammar errors đ«¶
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âRooster were falling really behind, we gotta move!â Robin shouted into her mask, desperate trying to get her team leader to pick up the pace. She knew if they failed the practice course again, flying the actual mission would be out of the question.
âNo, we can make up time in the straight away, maintain your speed!â Rooster ordered back at her. To her annoyance, they reached the target but a minute late, meaning they had aloud time for the enemy planes to attack.
âGreat, maverick is gonna kill us.â Payback sighed over coms.
âMaybe, but we reached the target how could he kill us for that.â Rooster barked back.
âYou donât get it do you? If we flew at your speed on the actual mission, weâd be dead right now.â Robin argued,
âYou donât know that!â
âWere not flying fast enough, the enemy would have intercepted us by now you stupid fuck!â
âThen itâs a dogfight!â
âAgainst 5th generation fighters? yeah right.â Robin scoffed. Between the twos bickering theyâd failed to pick up on the strong winds they had flown into. Payback and Fanboy had been long back to base at this point, leaving the siblings to argue. They had been greeted by the other aviators who were confused at the absence of the Bradshaws. Especially a one WSO.
âPayback? Whereâs Robin? Did you leave her and rooster out there?â Bob questioned the taller man as he walked towards to hanger, Payback just stayed silent, not wanting to escalate the situation,Bob lunged towards him in an attempt to strike his face but he was held back by Fanboy,âYou asshole! How could you leave her? Did you even try to warn them?â
âLieutenant Floyd, I think thats quite enough.â Cyclone shouted, allowing Payback to explain his piece.
Straightening his flight suit after the tussle, sending daggers towards Bob,
âWe tried to warn them about the storm, but they were to busy arguing about speed and time to notice, Im sure theyâll be fine-â
Payback answered before being cut off by a sudden flash then thunder clap. A worried look adorned the aviators faces, racing to the communications room. Phoenix flicked on the radio to hear the panicked shout of Rooster.
âRobin! Eject! Eject!â he kept repeating but she wasnât listening,
âNo-I can- I can do it.â her voice was frantic, focused on trying to save herself from crashing. Her F-18 had been struck by lightning and her engines were starting to die one by one and she was getting to close to the ground.
âRobin you need to eject now! You canât save the jet but you can save yourself! Think about Bob!â Rooster attempted to plead with her, when Robin heard Bobs name she looked down her the ring on her finger, remembering the promise she made to him. She knew she couldnât fix it but ejecting from the plane seemed like the worst case scenario for Robin as it was the only part of flying she feared the most,the fear stemmed from her father and the stories her mother used to tell her about when he used to fly, and how an ejection from a jet going wrong was what killed her father. But with no other way of fixing the flames starting to creep up the wings Robin knew what she had to do to get back to Bob. A final attempt of re-engaging the engines failed and they all finally gave out, the jet fell eerily silent it was now too late for any Maverick type manoeuvre the only option was for Robin to eject, with a deep breath to clear her head Robin reached for the handles and pulled hard, sending her flying into the air away from her jet, away from her brother and away from where anyone could probably find her.
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Ringing. Was the first thing Robin heard when she came to. Her right cheek was pressed firmly into the dessert sand that had dried up signalling to Robin sheâd been out here for a while as the storm was long gone. Waves of pain started to make their way across her body as she tried to move and assess her injuries, it took all her effort to just press her palms to the ground and try to sit up. However she only managed to flip herself onto her back, sending a shock of pain through her body. Attempting to look around was hindered impossible by the sun that was now beating down on her bare face, compared with the fatal storm that had brought her jet down in the first place. Looking down at her hands she noticed her ring still firmly on her finger, sighing to herself as she thought that she wouldâve have definitely lost it.
She thought about the day Bob had gave it to her, it wasnât long after they arrived at top gun. She had found a note attached to her helmet in the locker room reading that she should meet Bob on the beach after their class that day, unfortunately for Robin, Bob had not grown up near top gun so he got lost while trying to get back to where heâd set up his proposal. By this point Robin had figured out what he was trying to do and had said âBob, i donât care where we are or how you do it just ask me to marry you will you? iâve been waiting too long!â Robin chuckled to herself as she remembered Bobs face when he found out she knew, of course she did, Bradshawâs know everything.
Robin sighed to herself, bring her mind back to the present and her current situation, she couldnât do anything but wait for search and rescue, as down here she couldnât fully asses her injuries but by the amount of pain she was in she knew they werenât going to be easy to fix. Pulling off her helmet she felt an agonising pain where her goggles had been, she brought a hand up towards her forehead running over where she thought the pain was coming from, she felt something drying onto and into her hair, blood. Her major senses were impaired, she couldnât feel anything, hear anything other than ringing or hardly see anything due to her glasses being shattered when her head hit the ground.
The relief she felt when she saw the blurred out line of a search and rescue medic coming towards her was immense, she felt tears pricking her eyes. There was someone behind the medic dressed in a pilots uniform but Robin couldnât make out who it was.
âRobin! Oh my god! Hey its gonna be okay, youâll be okay. Donât panic.â a muffled familiar voice said as they knelt down beside Robin. Rooster beckoned over to the medic that it was safe before attempting to comfort his sister.
She opened her mouth the speak but nothing came out, she wanted to scream and tell them how much pain she was in but she couldnât make a sound. She wanted to tell him that she loved him and that she wanted Bob to know she loved him too, but her voice was course and quiet so Rooster couldnât hear her over the helicopter propelers
The medic brought over a stretcher and called Rooster to help move the younger girl onto it. But the pain of being hoisted onto a flat surface overcame Robin and her world went black before they even reached the helicopter.
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OHHH NO TUMBLR LIVE đđđ
*has never used tumblr live*
I feel like you gently caressed the brick before you threw it at me, this was so good oml
THE TERRIBLE HALF-TRUTHS OF THE UNDEAD ÒING
â (đ ) đĄEVENANT in folklore, a revenant is a spirit or animated corpse that is believed to have been revived from death to haunt the living ... ( đđđđŠđđđ đĄ )
1ïž5.5k revenant!yeonjun · Æ ! r ft. soobin âžș âŽïž đżđșđđđșđđ ... smut, violence, angst, death, animal death & vivid descriptions of animal death, major character death, unprotected sex, cumming inside, dry humping (because bring it back), biting, dom yeonjun sub reader, mentions of death in childbirth, reincarnation, teasing, breast worship, yj calls reader âmy loveâ, def some typos
đȘ¶ ⊠how fun is this collab? :,) this fic was so fun to write. i personally believe that tsfawc enjoyers will love this one,, but you'll have to read it to confirm that, right? hehe. and of course, go read everybody else's if you love this one! they're all set in the same world, and everybody worked so hard on these fics. send some love their way!
rê«ŚŚ Ü»blogs & asks arê«ŚŚ Ü» always apprê«ŚŚ Ü»ciatê«ŚŚ Ü»d!
đȘđđ¶đž đ°đđđ đ¶ đŻđŒđđž, in a land far, far away, where the treetops touched the soft clouds of the sky and the water sparkled under the glowing sun, where mountains rose high, and long, deep caves ran through them, where the sea met shore in collisions of swirling, foamy punches, where the undead walked among the living, where the winged flew above the finned, there was a land where things beyond reason and rhyme existed perfectly true. Among those strange beings and within the veils of Aethera, there was a girl loved by death.Â
He sits on your shoulder, a dark, boding shadow and glared at those around you with promise in his eyes.
Thatâs how it seems, anyway. Thatâs how everybody looks at you. They dodge you, whisper about you, evade your gaze as if he might reach his claws for them next if they linger for too long.
Crows with dead eyes arrive at your doorstep like some loverâs cheeky gift, other poor creatures like fat grey mice are left to rot in the wheatfields, and yarrow stocks wilt outside the wall of your room. If Death thinks that you are flattered, he misunderstands you. You are terrified of nothing more than dying. The first time, it was a sly joke. Then it happened again, and you watched their eyes change. And it happened again and again, and your people are a suspicious type. Something can only be a coincidence so many times.
When you began to sneak into a little shack with a village boy, you thought that maybe, somehow, this would all pass. He died too. Thereâs really no coming back from that, is there? You donât blame them. Youâre not the freak that they all believe you to beânone of them get close enough anymore to know that, though.
The wickerbasketâs handle creaks under your fist. You usually only forage along the shallow line of the forest; you pluck from bramble bushes topped with plump berries that crawl between trees during the summer, and when the crab apple treeâs branches hang heavy with the fruit, you snatch those up too. Youâre more useful to your family out here, in the woods that they deem just as cursed as you. Where you wonât be their burden.
Crisp autumn leaves crunch under your boots. You scan between themâmore grey and rotted this late in the season than fresh and orangeyâfor the edible mushrooms and roots that you usually forage at this time of year. The basketâs already pretty heavy with a variety, black morels and sorrel and burdock, as you bend down to pull a truffle from the dirt against a tree.
You drop it down with the rest of your finds. The basket smells like earth, no doubt your hands do too. You dust your palms off on your skirts and go to rise back from your squat.
A deep, billowing horn pierces the forestâs silence. Itâs both far away, wiggling between the whispers of rustling leaves, and much too close. It draws out. Long. Bone-chilling. You freeze, scanning between each tree trunk and praying that you wonât find what you fear you might.
You are much deeper into the woods than you usually are. Than you ought to be. And you know what that horn meansâyou know that it means something far worse than what youâd been afraid of, coming into these woods. Much more primordial than the hide-behinds you were scared you might find this deep, much less avoidable than the faerie rings you stepped around.
Why would The Wild Hunt be here? A shudder runs down your spine, and you curl your fingers into your skirts and lift them as if to prepare to run, but you donât. Your feet find root in the forest floor and all you can do is stand terribly still in catatonia. Their horn sounds again, and a procession of wicked whoops and howls follow. Wild hoofbeat rumbles under it allâthe hunt and their rides. You hope that theyâre just passing through, and you wonât so much as see one of those wild riders. There were plenty of folktales that the matrons of your village would bolster to terrify you as children, but you knew even then that their stories of the riders, with their flesh falling away from them and their pale or beady eyes and their gnarled maws and frightening figures as they rode on the backs of equally terrible steeds, were not fabricated. They are not a bogeyman or a wailing banshee; they are death made in the flesh, and they are here. In your forest.Â
Your legs wonât work. You curl your clammy fingers tighter around your basket and lean into the tree beside you. How deep had you wandered into the forest? Hopefully not too far; when you gain the courage to run, you hope that they do not send their hounds to snap their foul breath on your heels. Maybe just standing here and blending into the trees is best. The Hunt would love a chase, and you donât want to become their next.
The next call comes and you throw that all to the wind. Your heart pounds against your ribcage as you let your basket clatter to the leaves and you take off. You fly over roots and shrubbery and between the trees, your blood roaring in your ears faster. Youâd oblige if you could.
Above the loudness of your frantic mind, the harrowing whinnies and The Huntâs ruckus dulls until itâs faraway again, and then itâs gone. Well, you donât stop to check if theyâve really passed through the forest. You just run.
âThere you are, love.â
His voice cuts through your frantic escape and stops you dead in your path. You almost go crashing down over the ground with the force that you dig your heels into it. Though the voice is non-threatening, you donât turn to face the source.
He speaks again. You already know who it is. He, old as the earth you stand on itself, leads that band of wild riders. Is the king of the undead, collects souls for reaping.
And heâs the one whoâs plagued you with his attention. Death.
âWhy do you keep your back turned to me?â he says. âI frighten you. That hurts.â His voice lilts with amusement and sharpness. âI wish that you would face me.â
Youâre not fond of the way that he speaks to you with a familiarity. But then again, youâre not fond of dying, either. Your legs are boneless beneath you. Turning, you slowly indulge him, though it takes a great amount of willpower to not run again like your jittering jaw and trembling hands ask you to.
The King of Death stands tall and utterly preternatural, leaned against a crooked tree in the woods behind you. His smile cracks across his face in a jagged way that suggests he finds you amusing, but none of that meets his eyes. Theyâre the color of the greyish, rotted leaves beneath you. The dark shadows beneath his eyes are the only thing belying the weight that his infinite life might have on him. That, and the hollowness that rings from him.
And though he sounded entirely playful, you are shaken by the sorrow that you find in him now that youâve turned. Even more so, youâre not sure why you feel it echoed somewhere in the hollows of your bones. âIâm sorry,â you say. It trembles terribly. You want to say that youâre sorry you caught his attention, but it seems youâve always had his attention. Itâs more that you are petrified down to your marrow that the timeâs come that you face this⊠strange infatuation. Here he stands: the one who leaves hollowed out husks of creatures at your doorstep. Should you run or thank him? Is Death as prideful a creature as the other kinds that inhabit Aethera? âI donât mean toâŠâ
He pushes off his tree, fixing his cape that cascades over only one of his shoulders. Itâs tattered and falling apart like the rest of his clothing, though you think that the bronze stitching and swirling oakleaf patterns in the black say that they might have been immaculate at some point. Or maybe they werenât, and they had started that way. He is Death, anyway. âYouâre sorry?â he says. âWhy are you apologizing to me? Youâve hardly done a thing to warrant it.â
Faltering, you wet your chapped lips. Youâre not really sure. Holding back another apology for fear that youâve offended him and heâll now strike you down for it, you say, âI thought that, maybe the hunt wasâŠâ Wow, you sound stupid. You can see in the sly smile his lips form that it amuses him. Thatâs almost worse than angering him: intriguing him. What you really should be doing is boring him so that heâll find you a waste of his time. Then, maybe, heâd give up haunting you.
âAfter you?â he finishes. Shaking his head, he says, âMy hunters only answer to me.â
âOh,â you say plainly. Part of you wants to ask why that should comfort you, especially when youâre the one that he sends little bits of death to, but rationality keeps those words in the back of your throat. You donât really want to know. âWhy are you passing by here?â
Something akin to old longing passes through those witty eyes, and then he eats up the distance between you with languid steps of his long legs until heâs nothing more than one last step in front of you. The closeness consumes the air in your lungs, leaving nothing for you but short and shallow drags. The forest has gone dead silent aside from the sound of it. His voice is even more magnetic now that heâs so close.
You recoil when he brings a hand up to brush the pad of his thumb over your cheek and then cup your jaw, as if afraid that he might snuff you out here and now. His fingers are softer than you thought they might be, and the lines of his face sharpen into what you think is hurt. Hurt that you flinched?
âWe go here and there,â he says, âbut itâs been a very long time since we came here.â Thereâs a certain thickness to his words; a certain tension coiled over them from something that youâre not privy to. And yet, thereâs a farawayness, too. You bet heâs full of a lifetime of secrets. Lifetimes of secrets. âBut I think Iâve found myself a reason to finally return.â
Breathy and still struggling to flatten out your breathing, you ask him, âWhy?â
The Undead Kingâs smile turns wicked once more, and he doesnât answer you. Itâs awfully eerie.
âDo you have⊠business here?â you try again. Itâs a roundabout way of asking, do you have someone to take away?
âI have business wherever the living go,â he says, letting your face go but not giving you any more room. You narrow your eyes. Heâs quite good at non-answers. âNothing is more certain than that I will greet every living thing eventually. Iâll come to take you, too, when the time comes.â
Your mouth dries up. The entirety of your home, all the people youâve ever known, fear you for all the death you bring. Not one of them fears it more than you do. Youâve seen it enough to fear its frightening finality.
The drop of your face mustâve told him how much that scared you. âDying is not such an awful thing, love. Living pales in comparison.â Searching your eyes, he adds, âBut Iâve not come to take you.â
Thatâs easy for him to say: that death isnât something to fear. His words donât calm your thundering heart, but you offer him a, âThank youâŠâ It trails off toward the end when you realize that you donât have his name. If he has one, anyway.
âYeonjun.â He tilts his head, strands of sparrow hair brushing over his watching eyes. âMost donât know it, but youâre not most people, are you?â
Your breathing had just begun evening out. Itâs a shame, the way that it kicks back up at the way he looks at you. âWhat do you mean?â you say, but of course you know. Nobody else is given dead things like you. Itâs not like you yourself are very strange; you like pretty dresses and sharing gossip with friends just as much as any other girl your age.
Giving you another one of those knowing smiles that he uses just like words, he steps back. âIâm sorry that I scare you how I do.â
You donât answer him. What could you say to that? That he doesnât? That would be a lie, and he would know it.
Yeonjunâs eyes flit over your face, over your cheeks made pink by the autumn cold, lingering on your lips for a few unexplainable beats, and then landing on your eyes where he searches and finds something that sends his throat bobbing with a thick swallow. âI donât mean to be your monster. Itâs only thatâŠâ He steps back again. âYou remind me a terrible amount of someone I once knew.â
âWho?â Though your shoulders relax a bit with some distance between the two of you, you do your best to not let your guard down. All the stories that you recall being told, all those cautionary tales passed down through word of mouth around a fire, end with some stupid girl thinking that the monster could be changed or tricked. Youâre willing to bet that the man in front of you, no matter how human he looks or how enchanting his words are, could be neither.
That doesnât explain the ache in your chest when he holds your eyes for too long. But you shove that feeling way, way down. Itâs nonsensical.
His voice takes on a parting tilt when he says, âIt doesnât matter anymore. Death takes us all.â Yeonjun dips his head at you. His smile wavers. Youâd think that crooked smile on his mouth was indelible had you not seen it twitch down at the corners only for a moment. If youâd have blinked, youâd have missed it. âYou think Iâll hurt you,â he says, âwell, donât let me stop you. Go ahead, run. I apologize for your basket.â
Death takes us all. Youâre not sure what thatâs supposed to mean, coming from him, but it sends a cold wind up your spine and goosebumps crawling over your skin.
He watches you go. You donât look back when you do, but his gaze sits on your back until youâre sure youâre out of his sight. When you return to your home, your mother asks where the basket full of ingredients for supper went.
You imagine what her face might look like if you told her the truth. But that was impossible, so instead you tell her some stupid story about a wolf that startled you so bad that you ran home paying no mind to where your basket was. Itâs close enough to the truth.
àŒș ê àŒ»
It doesnât matter what you do; you canât get his face out of your head. While you cut butter into flour and then roll out dough, simmer fruits over flame and you slice cheese off blocks, you replay that meeting in the forest. The memory spins and turns over no matter how hard you try to put it away from your thoughts.
Itâs not every day that somebody meets the likes of him. You canât blame yourself; he had such captivating eyes. Dark, playful, and endless. There they are again. You sigh and dust your hands off. Maybe you are just as strange as they all think that you are. Morbid curiosity is like that, though. Taking the most normal of us and making you wonder what you absolutely should not wonder about.
And you absolutely should not wonder about him.
The sun has begun to hang high in the sky, but the breeze that crawls through the window you pulled open before you got to work is a crisp one. Autumnâs really come, now. Outside the window, a huddle of children play around in the leaves that youâd raked up. Youâll have to rake those back up, but you hardly have the heart to tell them to take their playing elsewhere. Their giggles and small voices waft in with the breeze, and a traitorous part of you yearns for a family that you know youâll never have. No man would risk that fate, not after what happened to the last man who paid you any attention. You grit your teeth at the memory.
Having a face for the thing thatâs made your life the way it is is strange. Seeing him in the flesh, with handsome eyes and a taunting mouth, looking something near human, you think youâve come to resent him for it. How dare he ruin your life? He, more than anybody, should know how fleeting life is. What is in it for him to deface what little time you have? You keep going back to that thought: why did he ever even appear to you in that forest? There is not one story in which you remember Yeonjun showing his face to those he hasnât come to claim. Death makes his visits swift and purposeful.
Moreover, why on earth would he even look your way? You wish there was a plain way to ask him why, or even to plead with him to stop. Whatever it is heâd ask of you, you think you might give him. To get back to living, you would.
A deep, familiar voice from behind you gives you pause. âWant some help with that?â Soobin says. He stands in the doorway, his head nearly brushing the top of the frame. Itâs made too small for him. Most things in your tiny village were made too small for Soobin. There had been a time where youâd been taller than him, that had hardly lasted long enough.
âAs if,â you dismiss and gesture at his dirty hands. Heâd no doubt been out working his familyâs field, his tunic sleeves rolled up to his elbows. âCow shit isnât an ingredient.â
Anybody else mightâve scoffed or taken offense, but he just laughs and invites himself in anyway. It never fazes Soobin. He doesnât let you push him away.
Itâd be better if he did. How long before he ends up dead, too? Alive one moment, and then a husk without a soul next. You donât think you could handle seeing cold, dead eyes where the annoying, warm shine should be. Of course it would be better if he stayed away, if he had half the mind to. Even most of the children have heard enough from their mothers to stay a healthy distance. Heâs not too much better than a child, though.
âIsnât it?â he says. His cheek is smudged with whatever sort of dirt heâs got on his hands and under his nails. âIâm done with work for the day. Want to go out to the field?â
You two have always ran off and avoided your life in between willowy, flaxen wheat stocks. They were just tall enough at this time of year to hide you away. But, for some reason, your stomach does a quick flip at the thought of being outside. Itâs silly; couldnât he find you here, too? âIâm busy,â you say. Youâd already kneaded this roll of dough plenty, but you dig your fingers into it and begin again.
âBusy?â he scoffs, âSince when are you too busy to get away from work?â
Gritting your teeth, you let the sounds of your kneading answer. Now, more than ever, he should keep his distance. You know one thing that youâre sure nobody else does: Deathâs come to visit.Â
His brows shoot up in your peripherals. âI donât get answers today?â
âIâm sorry,â you say, giving up working the over-kneaded dough only because your arms ache. âWhy donât you go talk off the ear of some other poor village girl? Iâve heard as much as I can handle today. And then when that oneâs tired, you can bother the next, Iâm sure.â You soften the words with a quick smile his way. No matter how many times you say something sour in hopes that itâll send him away, as soon as you glance up at his face, you reel it in.
His company is all youâve ever had. The least you can do for him is make sure he doesnât end up like carrion, even if he chooses to take that risk himself. You donât know why he does.
Voice playful, he says, âIâm glad to hear that you believe Iâve got ladies falling at my feet, but Iâd rather not annoy a pretty girl, so youâre my only option.â He pokes at the sleeve of your simple cotton dress. âShould I drag you out of here? Donât your arms hurt doing all that?â
âOh, you are a refined man, arenât you?â you say, shuffling out of his reach. Damn him, he makes it difficult. âWell, I am a pretty girl, so you should take yourself elsewhere.â
Soobin smiles easy. âIâm bored out of my mind. Youâre just going to let me suffer?â
âThatâs not my issue.â
âIâd argue that it is,â he says. âCome on. Why are you giving me a cold shoulder?â Leaning, he tries to get a look at your face. âDid I upset you? I wasnât aware that you cared much about what I thought.â When you spare him a sharp glance, he says, âI think you are very, very beautiful. Would you stop ignoring me, now?â
You wish you could fall into the easy banter that comes with being around Soobin, but you canât. You canât let him be around you. âSoobin, stop it,â you say, draining your voice. You donât look at him while you say it.
Going quiet, he seems to notice that todayâs different. His gaze is heavy as he stares at you for a few long moments. Crossing his arms over his chest, he asks, âWhat happened?â
You swallow. âNothing. Iâm just doing something.â
âOh, alright,â he says, tone inflicting in a way that says he doesnât believe you one bit. He pushes off the counter. âIâve put up with you pushing me away for years. You think I donât know what youâre doing?â
âSoobin,â you warn. If you look at him, you fear youâll be forced to watch the only one who never cared much what a risk it was being around you leaving. So you donât.
Your friend raises his hands in the air defensively. âOkay, then.â He makes for the doorway with languid, lingering steps. As if he doesnât want to leave. âTomorrow..â
Thatâs both a threat and a promise, knowing him. Sighing and watching the rowan tree out your window sway, you bid him a curt goodbye.
If only that jerk took offense to things. It would make things an awful lot easier for you.
àŒș ê àŒ»
Being out in the wheat fields brings you peace when youâre alone, but you find it to be terribly lonely. The earthy, sweet scent of it wraps around you, and the stalks whisper against each other in a soothing way.
When you look beside you, the patch of wheat imprinted with the shape of your bodies is empty on his side. You are quite weak; it makes you want to go knocking at his door for his company. But that would be the selfish thing to do, so you card your fingers between the golden straw instead.
A chill trickles down your spine. You feel his presence before you even see him; itâs a feeling that you used to get fleetingly, as if something far away was tugging at you. But then he became real, a living thing in front of you that can touch, and that is much different.
âWhy is it that I always find you out in the wilderness?â Yeonjun says. His voice comes from behind you.
Has he been watching you? You stand and dust your bottom off, heart kicking to life. âItâs nice out here,â you say. In truth, you havenât come outside since that day. Youâve dodged Soobin and made a million excuses as to why you wonât go anywhere past the fences of your home. âI like to⊠watch people go about their days. Itâs interesting.â Itâs trueâyou always watch from afar how the village folk interact. How groups of girls your age link arms and whisper to each other, how neighbors come together to fix up a shoddy fence. You watch them be a community that you are not a part of. Watching it tastes bitter sometimes, but mostly you take pleasure in imagining yourself there with them. Youâre not sure why you try making small talk with him, but what else? Should you go running again? If you were to listen to your pattering heart, maybe thatâs what youâd do. Heâs hardly shown you any bad will, though, and heâs the one thatâs come to you. Maybe itâs silly to wait until something bad happens to be cautious.
A thousand pounds in stones sit at the center of your chest, though, and his voice makes them feel lighter. Why on earth that is, youâre not sure. Itâs a nice relief regardless.
He smiles. It's different from the ones he showed you before. Itâs knowing; more sweet than cracking over his face like the smile you would expect from the likes of him. What use might he have in being sweet? âCould I join you?â
Blinking dumbly at him for a second, you nod. âOh, uh⊠Yeah.â Settling back down into your spot, you spare him a few curious sideways glances.
The breeze billows over the gold stems, moving them like gentle waves over the ocean and blowing your hair in it too. The flattened bits rustle under his weight. He doesnât even turn his face toward the village; instantly, his gravitational eyes are on you.
âDo you come here often?â
âI do,â you answer. Mostly when you and Soobin have too much to do and not enough will to do it. âItâs nice. The village doesnât like me much, so itâs easier out here.â You donât mention that mostly you donât come here alone.
Yeonjunâs face becomes far away. It looks strikingly like somebody forced into an old, unpleasant memory. âDonât like you?â he asks, âWhat reason would they have for that?â
âThey fear me. Things go wrong around me, thatâs all.â You pluck at the hay absentmindedly. âThings die. Theyâre smart to stay away.â
The hay whispers much louder for the long moment he remains quiet, digesting what youâve said. Maybe deciding what to say, considering that itâs his fault.
âDie?â he asks, voice inflected with surprise.
Turning to him, your brow creases. Shouldnât he know? Heâs the one thatâs done it to you. âEverything that gets too close ends up dead. Everything,â you say, resting your temple on your knee. âSo, I guess, I just keep it all at armâs length.â You look back at your tiny village, a collection of familiar, un-familiar thatch-roof homes.Â
Continuing to blink at you, his eyes narrowed in a strange grimace, Yeonjun says, âDeath follows me, too.â
What? A laugh of disbelief bubbles up in your chest. Of course, death follows him. You cover your mouth with a hand to obscure your laugh, but you just giggle at him harder.
A laugh twitches at the corners of his mouth, too. âI mean it,â he says. The lines of his face become distant again, eyes both trained on your face and melancholic as if the sight reminds him of something.
It ignites a question in your mind about something he said in the forest. âYou said that I reminded you of somebody,â you say, testing the waters. âWho?â
A muscle feathers in his jaw. He looks away, as if he canât look at you while he says it. âI loved a girl from this village once. When I was human, no less than you.â
You falter, mouth falling open to ask all the questions that flurry through your thoughts. You settle on one. âYou were human?â
âI was,â he says ruefully. âAnd I had everything. I had the love of my life. I think that even the most bitter of creatures on this island had envy for our love. She would braid dandelions into my hair, and then Iâd braid them into hers.â He swallows thickly and pauses, as if the wound was still festering and fresh. âAnd then she died. She died starting our family. She died because of me, in my arms.â
You donât know what to say, so you just look into his shining eyes as if thatâll help. Youâre not very useful with people, much less comforting them.
âI couldnât accept that. I wouldnât. So I went where I shouldnât have gone, and angered something much bigger than myself. They thought it would be a fitting punishment for me to live an eternity, the King of Death who could not bring back his dead lover.â The harrowed look that he gives you, only briefly, has your chest heavy all over again. âThey have a sense of humor, the forces.â
You imagine what it wouldâve been like for him to lose his lover in that way. How far heâd gone to try and have her back, but death does not give back. Where had he gone to have been turned into this? An immortal thing, forced to roam the world and scoop up the souls of the living for an eternity? To be bound in ancient bones and made to remember forever how you had lost your lover?
The grandness of what you want to say is too big, but all those words feel pitying and patronizing in a way that you donât think will actually bring him any comfort. Rather, you doubt anything you say will be able to patch up a wound older than you could imagine. Simply, you offer him a raw, âIâm so sorry.â
Yeonjun lets a crooked smile replace the trembling at his lips. âAs long as I live, so too will she,â he says, placing his palm over his heart. âDeath doesnât so much happen when we leave behind our bodies, but when weâve left the minds of the living.â Narrowing his eyes at you, he brushes hair behind your ear with his knuckles. âI know she lives on, somewhere out there. Somewhere. Iâll find her.â
That intrigues you. âIs there some way that you could bring her back?â
The grim light in his eyes tells you his answer. âMy curse is to take life,â he says, ânot to give it. But the one who made me this, he is cruel in a twisted way. If I were to find her, as a human or an animal or a blade of grass in the forest, only then could I rest.â
It is cruel. âYouâve been searching, then,â you conclude. âWhen you find her, youâll both be able to rest.â But how could he find her, if as he says, she could be any living thing? Where would he even begin?
Slowly, he shakes his head, throat bobbing. âDeath needs a farrier.â
She would become what he is. You swallow thickly. Was it not him who caused the deaths that follow you? Or, at least, it was not on purpose?
Opening your mouth, you go to tell him that youâll help him look. Youâre sure youâll be of no help. Heâs spent an immortal lifetime searching, and he still hasnât found his dead lover. Nobody would know better than him where to look.
The ground shakes beneath your palms with impact, and something cuts through the wheat. The noise of its bleating becomes nearer until the both of you scramble up to find out whatâs in such distress.
A deer stumbles around wildly. It looks lame, but you donât see anything wrong with its legs. Your throat tightens at the awful sound, piercing and sad. Frozen, you watch it try to stay upright before it finally collapses down, legs still kicking as though it still wants to run but its body has begun weakening on it. âOh my god,â you say, stumbling back. The sounds; its sounds are awful, echoing in your bones and constricting your thoughts until theyâre a pinched panic.
Thereâs an arrow lodged into its ribcage, deep and at a terrible angle. You already know that itâs pierced some vital organs, if not its heart. It continues to writhe on the ground, not ready to give up. Youâre not sure if you should approach itâyou donât want to scare it, and you can tell by the look in its wet eyes that it already wants to be away from you.
Or, maybe it had come to you. How else had it found the two of you in the middle of this field?
Yeonjunâs already on it. He puts his knees into the dirt and dried wheat to kneel by it, running his hand over the beast's pelt in long strokes. The small buck flinches at first but relaxes once he learns that his touches are gentle, not the gnashing of hungry teeth ready to make him a meal.
Blood runs like lead through your veins. You say, âCan we help it?â
He shakes his head. âHeâll die.â
Whip-lashed, you swallow thickly. He says it so unphased, and youâre sure he is. You can hardly make yourself mirror that serenity that he exudes as he runs his hand over its flank, but you get on the ground beside him anyway.
The buckâs breaths slow to desperate drags for breath. For a few long minutes, the two of you sit in silence and stay with him until he no longer fights, until his breaths are ragged. You feel his side, still warm and alive, but you see the life going from his eyes. You sit here, talking to each other about nothing just so it hears gentle voices as it goes, for a while.
Eventually, heâs gone. Quiet and at peace, no longer hurting. This time, when you look over to Yeonjun who still smooths over the deerâs skin even as he goes, guiding him delicately into whatever greets us when we go, you see death as a gentle thing.
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Though you never seek him out, Yeonjun always finds you. In hidden places, away from prying eyes, he appears behind you and makes himself known. Well, you have a feeling that he watches you for a while before saying anything. Itâs hard not to feel the strange tingling of his gaze over your form. Itâs akin to the sixth sense thatâs supposed to keep you safe out in the dark hearts of forests, an innate feeling that tells you some beast with a rotten, pale maw watches you between the trees.
Yeonjun doesnât feel rotten, though, preternatural and eerie as he is. As you shirk your duties and talk with him for hours, you stare into ancient eyes and watch his crooked mouth move around his words and you feel an odd comfort. As if heâs the only one whoâs ever understood you, or maybe that your strangeness pales beside him and for once youâre nothing but who you are. So many nights, the sun fell on your talking until the night insects buzzed from the grasses and your eyes were heavy.
Sometimes, as you dozed off with your back to a hay bale or a hardwood wall of the abandoned home beside yours with its sagging thatched roof, you caught such festering longing in his his eyes that youâd let your lashes fall and pretend to sleep so that you could imagine what it was that he longed for. No doubt his lost lover. When you imagine him, bound in bones and coming back to haunt the living for an eternity as he mourns her infinitely, searching for her in impossible places, your chest aches with a gnawing intensity.
Itâs a terrible, cursed existence. Even the nothingness of death becomes a paradise beside it.
âIs it scary?â you ask into the air, sat criss-crossed on the thick duvet of the bed. He sits across from you, looking perfectly lazy. Moonlight pools in like sterling mist through the shutters.
âWhat?â He watches you, sitting in your plain dress, as though youâre the only thing in the world.
Youâve begun to wonder. Wonder about those looks he gives you.
Shifting, you fix the shoulder of your soft chemise where itâs slipped down when you catch his eyes lingering on it. His throat bobs. âDying,â you elaborate. âIs it really nothing? After we go, all of it was for nothing?â
A slow smile tugs his full lips, made a bit red in the middle where he likes to worry it. Itâs such a human habit to see on something so far from human. âHardly,â he says. âItâs like going home, right where your soul is supposed to be. Who do you think rides with me?â
Furrowing your brows, you tilt your head toward one shoulder and let your hair pool there. âThe riders are dead?â You had thought they were undead in some way like Yeonjun, other sorts of revenants come back to life with their own purposes. Then, are their creepy horses dead, too? A chill goes down your arms. Sometimes, sitting here with him when his face is made soft by the orange glow of the fire he puts on, you forget what he is.
âThey are.â He nods, leaned back onto his elbows, his eyes alight with a hunger that makes your insides feel funny. âIt doesnât stop once weâve died. You donât need to be scared, my love. So many things end, but then so many things begin. The earth no longer holds you down, the weight of being is gone. You donât know anything like it; you donât know leaving behind the pleasures of earth to know the ones that only the afterlife can show you.â
His eyes laced with something entirely else, he adds, âAnd itâs not the end. Not for everything. For some itâs only the beginning, and for others, those who have not yet fulfilled their purpose, they come back to the flesh. They return.â
You canât tell if he means himself, or something else. The weight in his eyes, dark, endlessly swirling pools, makes you wonder again why it is that heâs lingering here: the place that he had not visited once since the death of his lover, for the fact that it still hurts too much. Why his shadow of death, his fault or not, was tangled in your soul enough to brush its fingers over the things around you.
âItâs scary,â you say, breathy. The thought of eternity.
Soft hairs brush over his eyes as he tilts his head at you. âDo I scare you?â
âNo.â
âNo?â he echos, pushing himself up so that he leans back onto his palms. âIsnât that strange? Pretty little thing says sheâs not afraid of death, but her heart races when Iâm near. Her sweet heart jumps at just the brush of my leg. Are you sure youâre telling me the truth, love?â
Your blood roars in your veins, inflaming your cheeks and making your head dizzy. Nobodyâs ever looked at you like that before. Hair prickles on your skin. âYes,â you breathe.
Feral delight sparks in his eyes, black as pitch. His smile turns up all feline at the crooked corners. âCrawl to me, then.â
Like how fire licks up oxygen in any room it is in, his words steal the breath right from your lungs. What does he think you are? You blink at him wide-eyed and dumb for a moment.
How can he say that as though it were nothing? Moreover, how does the ravenous flare in his eyes, his head tilted back as he watches you down his nose expectantly, do that to your belly?
Your mind glazes over with something thick and heady, and you damn the nerves in your belly and begin to crawl from your end of the bed to his. His tongue darts out to wet his lips, making sure you feel every inch of the taunt in his eyes as he trains them on you. When youâve gotten to him through the thickness in the air, you settle into his lap and bracket his waist with your thighs.
Yeonjun takes the soft fat of your hips in his fingers. âFuck,â he says. It sounds like heâs barely holding the gates on something endlessly consuming. Something that might break loose on the two of you, and leave you changed forever with its hungry, gnashing teeth. His head hits your collarbone. âTell me to stop. Please, tell me to go. Because I donât know how.â
âDonât,â you say. âDonât stop. I want it, Yeonjun. I want this.â
He straightens, pupils blown and eyes as tense as his set jaw. âNo, you donât understand what youâre asking for. All Iâve ever done is ruin. All Iâll ever do is ruin. I wonât ruin you; not again.â
That rings bells somewhere outside the heavy fog thatâs infiltrated your mind, but they donât sound too alarming when he looks as though he wants to drag his teeth over your heart to taste its beating. It doesnât touch the ground, when you want him to, so badly. So badly that you taste it on your tongue and it tinges your words as you tell him, âI do know what Iâm asking for. I want you. Yeonjun. Donât you want me too?â Voice and confidence wavering, you pull back. Maybe youâve read this all wrong. A tickling shame crawls over your skull. âDo you not want me?â
âYou think I donât want you?â he says, straightening up and meeting your gaze. His breath is hot on your mouth. âI want you so fucking bad. You are in the marrow of my bones. Fuck, I have done nothing but want you, but I am foul. I will only hurt you.â
He takes your hand and places it over his chest, where a heart should be. Beneath your palm, you do not feel the thumping of an alive thing. Yeonjun has no heart. You knit your brows and examine the strain of his features. Does he think that youâll be disgusted? Maybe the girl you were in that forest mightâve been, but being near Yeonjun has changed you in ways you couldnât start to put your finger on. âIâm asking you to,â you say. âShow me what you want to do to me. What youâve wanted to do to me.â
Searing silence burns between you as he drinks that in, and then he shoves you onto your back. Supporting himself with an arm beside your head, he curls his fingers into your hip and nudges your thighs wider. He doesnât lift the hem of your chemise like you expect him to. NoâYeonjun begins to grind himself into your cunt through all the layers of your clothes. Though your dress is bunched up and his pants lay between any real contact, Yeonjunâs hard and that friction tastes fleetingly sweet.
âI want you to beg me for it,â he says, grinning down at you with cruel intention. âBeg me, and make it so pretty.â
You let little sounds linger in that back of your throat and become hungrier each time he grinds against you. Itâs so much, mind swimming and sparks spraying up your spine, and yet each time it is not near enough. Damn that foxish smile on his face; you beg for him anyway. âYeonjun,â you breathe, curling your fingers around the wrist of that hand with which he pins your hip. âPâŠlease, will you help me? It feels so good; I want more, please.â
He raises his eyebrows at you and an eager grind comes right over your throbbing clit.Â
You know he wants more than that, but mortification already is making your voice unsteady and your cheeks burn. âYeonjun,â you huff, hips wiggling.
The king of the undead delights fully in your shame and rewards you with more of those pointed, dry grinds. Your legs tremble; heâs giving you so little, and yet your need takes it and magnifies it into something grand.
Though he pretends heâs on some high ground, you hear his shuddering breaths each time his fucks his hips against you. He feels that roiling, liquid need in his belly just as vehemently as you do. The room fills with your breathy pants and grinding bodies. You catch your lip in your teeth and begin to meet him half-way. Your moans are low and sweet, and each one sends his jaw tighter.Â
You twist and grind against each other like fumbling teens until youâre coiled up so tight that he has to pull himself away. Your throbbing cunt protests, but you know he doesnât want you cumming like this.
âYou want me to show you what Iâve wanted to do to you?â he says, working at his pants. His eyes are so drunk on you, and his cheeks betray his state. âOpen your legs, my love. Let me show you a little death.â
Throat gone dry, you slowly let your thighs fall open. The dull throbbing between your thighs roars to life. He slides your skirt up your leg, stopping when he frees your knee to pepper a few hot kisses into it. Once heâs got it bunched up at your ribcage, he runs his tongue over his dry lips to wet them. âFuck. Such a pretty pussy. I want to fucking eat you up.â
âYeonjun,â you whine. His name is all you can muster out, anticipation sharpened to a knife point.
Flashing his teeth, he purrs, âYou like that, you filthy thing. I bet youâd like for me to fuck you till your brainâs gone and all thatâs left is my name. Isnât that right? Is that what you want?â
Your thoughts stall and you nod, making your mouth into a filthy pout. God, how you want that. Maybe heâs right about you being filthy. Coming from him, it sounds like a delicious thing to be.
The pretty, leaking tip of his cock brushes your clit as he slides it up and down your slit to collect the mess there. Your thighs jump to close before your mind gets the better of it. He does this a few timesâup and down, letting you feel and get used to the size and length of him all the way till his cockhead kisses your clit and you squeak.
âAre you comfortable, love?â he asks, shifting your hips with strong hands. âDo you need anything from me?â
Itâs so at odds with his other, nastier words. Your head spins, the moonlight blurring. âIâm okay,â you tell him. âI⊠just want you. Want you to put it in, want to feel you.â
His cock catches on your hole, and he begins to push forward with promising pressure. But then he pulls back, smiling downturned. You whine; why canât he save his capriciousness for later? Youâd almost had itâŠ
âI could give it to you, or I could notâŠâ He hums. âWouldnât that be so cruel of me? To leave you wanting?â
You flutter around nothing. Every inch of your body buzzes. Alive. You are more alive now, at the promise of Deathâs touch, than ever before. The irony might be something to wonder about if you werenât dribbling down onto the bed sheets with crude need. âStop it,â you say. Your voice is whiny. Youâre glad you can hardly hear yourself past the pounding in your bloodstream.
That delights the King of Death. He wrinkles his nose at you, burning you alive with his eyes as he presses his palm to your belly and guides himself into you with his free hand. You wrap around each inch of him slowly. The air between you bows under the weight of your gazes; he holds your eyes the whole way, inch by inch until heâs seated fully into you with his groin flush to your body. He stretches you to fit, and yet itâs just right. You could ask for no more or no less; you might even think your body was made for him, were you not too busy circling your hips to feel him.
âGood?â he says, squeezing your hip. âDo you need a moment?â
Pursing your lips, you test out the shape of him with another wiggle. âMaybe⊠Maybe a second.â Truth be told, you need a moment to grapple with the sparks sprinkling over your mind more than you need a moment to adjust to his stretch. You let out a shuddering breath.
He traces circles into your belly, just beneath your navel. The pad of his thumb goes round and round, warm on your flesh. âAs long as you need,â he says, but itâs more like a triumphant, playful coo. Thereâs that lopsided smirk. One day, youâd like to kiss it off him. Taking that hypnotizing finger, Yeonjun trails it up your stomach, over your ribcage. He hooks it beneath your dress and drags it higher, revealing the soft swells of your breasts to the air. You shudder, body so, so hot that your nipples peak and tighten against the cool air.
âSuch pretty tits,â he says, brushing his knuckle up the underside of one. âEverything about you. Such a pretty, pretty body. God, I donât know if I want to worship it or ruin it.â His breaths fan over your skin as he bends down and pops an eager nipple into his mouth, lavishing it before releasing it with a lewd pop and letting his mouth fall all over your breast. Lick here, nip there, until youâre squirming adequately and squeezing him like a virgin. Then he blows cool air over it and watches with eyes like a cat toying with its prey as you shudder harder, your chest jumping. âFucking look at you,â he sneers.
âJunnie,â you say, lost for breath. You think youâve walked yourself into the lionâs den.
His breathy laughs fall over your breast. Taking his teeth, he drags them over your skin, right over where your heart thunders a rhythm fully for him, and then he bites. Nothing more than a shallow mark, the shape of his teeth in your soft tit. He lingers there, admiring the sight before he straightens himself up again.
âFine.â He pulls out of you slowly, but you know what comes after that, so you savor every second of it. âI suppose youâve wanted after it long enough. Let me hear your sweet voice again, my love.â
Yeonjun fucks you just right. His cock nudges right up on your sweet spot as if heâs done this before. Like he knows where to find it. You gasp and whineâyouâre just happy heâs finally giving you something.Â
âOh, fuck,â you mewl. His shoulders wear the red crescent marks of your nails. âThatâsâso good right there.â
Ever egotistical and cocky, he croons, âYeah?â Rolling himself back, he makes it his mission to hit it ruthlessly.
A sharp, pitchy sound comes tumbling past your lips. You bring your hand up over your mouth, letting your eyelids dust your burning cheeks so that you can brave the flipping in your spine and deep in your belly. Itâs nearly insufferableâthe way pleasure licks up your spine, how it spreads out into your veins and takes control of you.
âNo,â Yeonjun growls. âDonât you dare close your eyes. Let me see that look in your eyes when you cum.â
Your eyes are heavier than theyâve ever been, but you open them. The sight that greets you is worth the effort. Yeonjunâs lip twitches and then he throws his head back, the column of his neck on display as his Adam's apple jumps around a thick swallow.
If that sight wasnât enough to send you teetering down into whatever depths of lust and ecstasy that he crawled out from, then the angle he hits as he pushes one of your thighs to your chest is. The world frays, deep tremors starting at one small point in your cunt and then exploding up through your stomach and down the back of your thighs. Your chest arches off the bed and you mewl helplessly, fighting and embracing your orgasm in an intoxicating death.
âOh, fuck,â Yeonjun growls, strained with something whinier as he watches you shake beneath him. âFuck. Iâm gonnaâfuck, Iâm gonna cumâŠâ His voice chokes as his hips become stuttered more than pointed, the slick sounds of your own release tangling up with his grunts and pants until he shudders and stills, cumming into your puffy, fluttering cunt.
You both catch your breaths as if thereâs no air in the room left for a while. His hairâs damp on his forehead, as is yours on your neck, and his eyes droop lazily. More lazy and content than youâve ever seen him.
Collecting you to his chest, where only your heart thumps away frantically, he presses his mouth to your ear and says, âDo you think death is so scary now?â
With your limbs nothing more than boneless and liquid pleasure floating slowly through your thoughts, you smile.
A little death can be more visceral than living, you think.
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The tree stump beneath you makes your tailbone ache. You sit criss-crossed, watching Soobin work away at the soil and tend to that section of the fence thatâs begun to rot and sag. Your mouth moves endlessly, filling the space that would otherwise just be made up of his grunts of hard work.
âYou know, you ought to help me if youâre just going to sit and watch,â he says, straightening to swipe at his forehead, sweaty despite the cold in the air.
âTotally improper,â you say, smiling at him cheekily. âAre you saying that you canât handle yourself, strong man?â
He glares at you with the venom only somebody made to put up with hours of chatter could muster. âWhatâs got you so talkative?â he says.
You know he means why youâre suddenly not glaring him away. You canât tell him that youâve spoken with Death himself, so instead you say, âNothing.â Letting your legs dangle down, you smile at him.
Yeonjun hadnât done any of it. Itâs a comfort, to some degrees, to know that. Itâs not your fault that they died. Being around them, being around Soobin, wonât make them turn up dead. The rest of them still donât know thatâand they wouldnât believe it, anywayâbut the black shadow hanging over your shoulders dissipates.
For the first time in so, so long, you do not feel marked by death.
âSure.â His smile tilts. âA week ago, you wouldnât even look at me.â
Rolling your eyes, you decide to give him a hard time. âNot true. You just have a way of getting on my nerves.â
âI take pride in that.â
âTake pride in what? Being insufferable?â
Crinkling his nose, he says, âKnowing how to bother you best.â
âGet back to work, stupid.â Your heart soars. Itâs good to have friends. To let yourself have friends is an ever better thing. Is this how it is? To be with others and not feel like their burden, or like theyâre crossing their fingers behind their back to ward off whatever bad things you might bring onto them? Heâs made it his mission to hover around you no matter what, but this feels different.
Maybe, for so long, part of it has been your own gloom thatâs obscured it all. Maybe if you didnât bare your teeth to anybody who got too close, it couldâve been like this always. You hate to think that your own isolation could be some part your own fault. But how were you not to show your teeth when someone tried to reach their hand out to you?
It doesnât matter now. You shove that all down and let yourself feel the slight warmth of the sunâs glow on your skin where it peeks through the clouds. Itâs a nice day, you shouldnât ruin it with those thoughts.
The sunâs begun making its descent when Soobinâs done. He takes a long drink of water, hissing with relief and crumpling down to the ground with his back to your stump.
âAre you making any way with that girl you were talking to me about?â you prompt.
Giving you a long look over his shoulder, he says, âDonât.â
âWhat?â You laugh a little, raising your brows down at him. âIâm not doing anything.â
âYou know what youâre doing,â he says, voice flat as he picks stickers out of his fingers.
Soobinâs had a thousand different crushes. There was that daughter of the shepherd, and then the wealthy merchantâs daughter and her long pretty hair, and then the neighbor⊠Well, you could go on. None of them ever really came to fruition for the poor guy. He thinks that itâs because heâs a poor farmerâs son, but you always tell him that itâs because heâs got an insistent mouth, and that he should be more grateful that you deal with him. Your lips turn up at the corners a little thinking about itâheâll find the one eventually, but you like the indignant look on his face when you say it.
âI mean it!â you say, nudging him with your leg. âTell me. I want to know.â
âYou wonât even tell me whatâs happening with you. Until one of us quits keeping secrets,â he says, placing accusation heavy over the words, âIâll keep my dealings to myself. Whatâs it to you, anyway?â
Feeling the weight of his head as he lets it loll lazily against your thigh, you decide that it couldnât hurt to tell him. The itch to tell somebody crawls under your skin. Especially to tell him. âYou know the other day? When I was⊠being awful?â
His body shakes with a vindicated laugh. âIf youâre nothing else, at least youâre self-aware.â
You skirt around that with your own, more awkward, laugh. Itâs nice that he thinks so, but you donât feel it. âStop,â you huff and nudge him again. âI was foraging out where I usually go. But I guess I wandered out farther than I thought I did. You remember when they used to tell us stories, right? Like the bogeyman. That heâd come snatch us up if we didnât listen.â Your mom especially had loved that one, back when she cared what became of you. Would she care again, if you told her that everything was fine? âWell, I donât know if you remember the one about The Wild Hunt, but⊠Anyway, I was picking some stuff, andâŠâ
Sitting up from his exhausted slouch, Soobin looks like heâs suddenly come back to life. âWhat?â he interrupts. His voice is strangely serious.
âWhat?â you say, brow creasing. âThey travel here and there⊠but they were here. In the woods. Like, I heard them.â
Tersely, he asks, âWhat were you doing that deep in the woods?â
âI mean, I just kept on finding nice stuff until I just⊠was deeper.â You survey him. You hadnât thought that heâd react like this. âSo I ran, and then there was this guy,â you say, watching realization fall over his face. He knew those stories as much as you doâknew where you were going with this. He is as starkly superstitious as the rest of your people, you forgot. Pushing past the grimace on his face, you say, âAnd I knew that he was the king. The one from the stories. It was so weird; itâs like you can feel it. And I spoke to him, and thenâŠâ
Stood up now, he cuts you off once more. âAre you kidding?â
âWhy are you being like that?â you say, messing with your skirts to quell the defensive bite in your tone. âI didnât do anything.â
âYou didnât do anything? Are you trying to get killed?â He throws up his hard-working hands. âWe have rules for a reason. Donât go out into the forest, donât make deals with faeries, donât follow a banshee scream. And then you go and talk to the king of death? How am I not supposed to be upset about that? You know thatâŠâ Soobin blinks a few times as if second-guessing what heâs about to say, but he says it anyway. âYou know that heâs the reason that they treat you how they do. You know that heâs the one who ruined your life. Why would you ever mess with that?â
You push yourself up from the ground, eyes burning. That stings like a cut. âHe didnât do it. None of it is his fault,â you say, furrowing your brows. âWhat are you trying to say, Soobin? Just say what you want to say. Come on.â
âHe didnât do anything?â He scoffs, letting a heavy silence hang suspended in the air for a moment before saying, âIs that what he told you? And you just believed it? Listen to yourself, does that make any sense? Heâs played with your life like itâs some fucking toy, and now heâs come to rub it in your face. Think about it: do animals just fly into anybody elseâs windows and die? Do the trees that they pick from just end up dead? Itâs his fault that they all treat you the way you do.â
Mouth opening and closing, you donât know what to say.Â
He sees the hurt in your burning eyes and tries to reel it back in. âWhat Iâm trying to say isââ
âI know what youâre saying,â you say, grabbing up the lunch youâve been nibbling on. âI know exactly what youâre saying. I just never thought youâd say it out loud.â
âSay what?â Soobin says, his voice raising behind you as you storm off.
That you think itâs my fault, you want to say. That they all die because I am a plague, and you are a charity worker for being my friend. Instead, you just leave and try to choke down the tightness in your throat.
àŒș ê àŒ»
You curl your arms around yourself, the night biting cold. Yeonjun had dragged you from bed, and who knows what hour of the night it is? If the heaviness beneath your eyes is to judge it by, itâs far too deep in the dead of night to be outside with your boots half-laced and nothing but your sleep chemise on.
You mightâve just stayed wrapped up in your blankets if you werenât so lonely as youâve been. Soobinâs been scarce. The most you see of him is in the fields from morning to afternoons. You hope that heâll stop by your doorstep and knock so that you can groan about it but swing the door open anyway each time, but he doesnât. He thinks that you wonât want to see him, and so he allows you your space.
That couldnât be further from the truth. Itâs hard to be the one to come back after a conversation like that, though. You watch him from the windows and hope he understands at some point instead. Itâs an awful lot easier.
Other than preparing meals and window watching, youâve been up to nothing much at all. You hadnât realized how much you had, but you feel him in his absence.Â
âItâs coldâŠâ you say. The fog of breath that punctuates it makes your point. Whatever heâs brought you out here for, you have no doubt itâll be something strange. The grin on his face tells you as much.
Leading the way, he heads for the Darkwood. âOnly you would come rushing out without a cloak for your shoulders.â
âWell, only you would drag me from my nice, warm bed at this time of night. For what?â
âCanât anything be a surprise with you?â he says, shooting you a cheeky glance over his shoulder. âSurprises are fun.â
âSurprises!â you say, working your legs to catch him. âNot surprises that involve you bringing me out into the woods. You know, itâs awfully suspicious. Somebody who sees this might think that I am the type to⊠sneak out with men.â
âArenât you now?â
Your lips tug down. âYou know what I mean.â
He laughs in his airy way, a twig snapping under his foot. Youâre well in the woods, now. Probably somewhere near where youâd first met him.
Lifting a brow, you look at him expectantly. Maybe a will-oâ-the-wisp will come floating through with its light bouncing off the trees. That would be a nice surprise, you admit.
Yeonjun circles you. His presence behind you tingles in the way it always does, but true chills erupt when his breath puffs against your ear. âClose your eyes. I have something I want to show you.â
Your mind wanders back to what Soobin had gotten so twisted up about. It might be naive and reckless and against everything you ever learned, but you let your eyes fall shut to blackness. If he was going to hurt you, you imagine heâd have had that opportunity a mind-numbing amount of times before.
âAre they shut?â he asks, waiting for your nod. His voice comes from in front of you now. âI want you to keep them shut. You canât open your eyes, or it will all go away. Okay?â
âOkay,â you breathe, mind full of a bounty of questions. You donât even know where to begin to assume what heâs got going on, so you stand there shifting your antsy feet.
Thereâs a strange, rustling sound that catches you off guard with your eyes closed. It drags on for a long moment. Curiosity pries at your eyes; you want nothing more than to just crack an eye open to spy the source of the ruckus.Â
Itâll be gone if you do, anyway.
You let out a surprised squeak as something rises up beneath you, as if risen from nothing more than the dirt and roots of the forest floor, bringing you up from the earth. You wobble and send your hands out to find a perch.
A horse. Itâs a horse, its mane so tangled and windswept, but matted and clumped with leaves that crunch under your palm when you find them. It reeks of mudâeverything around you begins to smell of earth and decomposition.
You know that if you open your eyes, youâll find yourself sat upon the pale white steed of the Undead King, its eyes white and its knobby knees almost as famous as the leader of The Hunt himself. It chuffs beneath you.
âAre you ready?â Yeonjun says over your shoulder. You can hear the feral grin in his voice. Itâs the leader of The Hunt, a creature of folklore, that sits behind you now. He curls an arm around your waist and tugs you closer to him, securing you against the wall of his chest. âHold on tight, my love.â
The call of the wild, that horn, bellows again like it had the first time you heard it. Rather than coming from nearby as you thought it would, it dances between trees far off just like it had that time, too. Your heart jumps up into your throat.
Taking off with a howl, the Wild Hunt follows it.
You dig your fingers into Yeonjunâs at your waist. Weight melts away, and you know youâre in the air. Your belly swoops in tandem with the howls and hoots of the riders, heart palpitating to the hoofbeats. How thereâs hoofbeats as you ride through the air, youâre not sure. The ghostly fleet manifests around you in vivid imagery, though you squeeze your eyes shut. They are wild enough to imagine just what they might look like: with their clothes and flesh in tatters, with their eyes beady or pale, with their hounds piercing the air with their calls and running alongside them, they are a perfect personification of freedom.
Whip-lash sends you reeling, body going rigid. You grit your teeth and squeeze your eyes harder, wishing that youâll touch ground soon and that everything would become real again.
Yeonjun feels you go stiff. Bringing his head back to your shoulder from his own delight, he says, âItâs okay. Youâre okay. Let it into your bones. Do you think I would let it hurt you?â
He is their leader. If it got too much, you know Yeonjun would be there to catch you. Curling your fingers into his, you release that tension and allow their drumbeat to echo through you.
And when it does, your blood begins to sing along. The wind whips your cheeks and your hair, and you begin to laugh with them. The Hunt twists and turns and dances through the air, an apparition in the night, but nothing more than that.
It comes to a slow, eventually, until the noise and even your steed crumbles back down into the dirt it appeared from. Your eyes pop open hoping to catch at least a glimpse of them, but only the dark forest and pale moonlight answer. Your legs threaten to give out on you, veins still thrumming, but, oh, do you feel alive.
You feel more alive than you ever have, more than you ever could have hoped to have known. Mind spinning, you stumble. Yeonjun catches and steadies you before you can go scraping your knees on a rock.
âOh my fucking god,â you say.
The laugh that Yeonjun breaks into has you sending him a glare, but you break too. Everything about him is ironic; and how ironic indeed that Death himself should show you how to be alive, rather than to just live?
àŒș ê àŒ»
The air is so fresh in your lungs when you step outside that it nearly burns. You clutch your basket of warm fig tarts. Songbirds trill and fly between tree tops that slowly become more bare the deeper you fall into the season, singing their sweet songs that sound like new beginnings.
Raising your hem from the ground churned up into mud from the afternoonâs trickle, you prance into town with a lively pep in your step. You spent all last night making theseâYeonjun had kept you company, watching you how he always does as you pored over making them just right. His cruel snicker when the jam had simmered over flame for too long and became too thick bounces off your bones in a sweet melody. Youâve come to adore his wicked delight, the way his smile cracks over his face and the facetious raise of his brows, more than you fear it.
Sending small smiles to the people that you pass, you stop by a huddle of kids digging sticks into the mud. They look up at you with curious eyes, stopping to gawk.
âHey, guys,â you say, pulling back the cloth laid over the sweets. âIâve made some fig tarts. Do you like fig? I bet youâll like them; theyâre sweet.â
The kids stand up, eyes big as they share a look. They donât let out so much as a peep before they scurry off home.
You blink. Well, youâre used to weird reactions, but that was⊠different. Picking up your deflated shoulders and hesitant limbs, you make a shoddy attempt at not letting it dampen your good morning. You were expecting wary looks, anyway.
You head down a little further toward the far side of your home village, the side that breaks off after a fenceline into a great, grassy field. Thereâs a bustle, mothers washing their clothes in pails and hanging them up to dry and a few others whispering at each other lowly as they go about their days.
An old woman so old her back curves and her fingers have gone knobby makes her way to wherever the dayâs duty demands her to be. Your neighborâan eccentric old lady bound in her times. You decide on her: the elderly are forgotten by the young. She might enjoy knowing that her neighbors still know she exists.
âHello,â you say, showing her your basket with a hopeful, excited heart. âI have some treats that I was wanting to give out. I know they might not be much, but would you like one? Iâm not the best baker, but I do it often enough.â A face like that, dragged down by her years on this earth and not long to death, has no doubt spent many years making meals for her family. You imagine your goods would be nothing beside hers, but itâs the gesture, no?
âOh, girl,â she says, voice crackling as she clutches her shawl tighter around her shoulders. âIâm afraid itâs best if you found yourself missing from this place. Hurry yourself up and spare the drama.â
The incessant cawing of a crow from a clawed tree fades into the background as you furrow your brows and lower your basket to ask, â...Huh?â Your belly goes up in knots; terrible knots done up tight and fast. You havenât got a clue what sheâs talking about. Elders always did speak a bit strange, though. It could be nothing much; sheâs a stern old lady.
But her eyes are not angry and glaring in the way that a harrowed old hag might turn her nose up at the youth. They drag down with a cold pity.
âListen to me, girl.â She points at you with one of those worn, sun-spotted hands. âYou had best leave. The boyâs gone, and they are already not fond of you. Who will they point their fingers to?â the woman says. âI hardly know you, but I would hate to see it.â
The rest of her words fade into the roaring in your ears, the feral drumbeat of your heart like a wardrum in the cage of your ribs as it beats against them as if to escape from you. You donât feel the basket in your hands, donât feel the solidity of the earth beneath your feet, and donât feel a single one of your thoughts like tangible things. They flit as if liquidated into a rotten, sick mush.
Nothing. You can think of nothing. Nothing real; nothing holding you to the earth.
âWhat?â Your voice hardly reaches your ears, but what does is weak and broken and like a plea for her to tell you that itâs not really what you think it is.
And if you could see or hear anything beyond your fraying little rift in reality, you wouldâve heard the man coming up to you. You wouldâve heard the words coming from his angry, sneering mouth, and wouldâve done something when he picked up a pail of water, and you wouldâve been shaken by the nasty ice water that runs down your frozen body and plasters your hair and clothes down as he pours it over you. But none of it cuts through your stupor.
He yells some awful, stabbing things at you, and a few others join him. They tell you that you are nothing but a plague, tell you to leave and to not come back here.
But this is your home. Where else would you go?
With your sopping wet dress clutched in your shaking fists as though that might keep you grounded, you choke down the tightening of your throat and sift through their faces, searching for his face. Those brown eyes, brown and always shining with nagging playfulness, do not come up anywhere. Jaw trembling, you search harder. Out on the field where he should be at this time of day, at your doorstep demanding that you go spend the day doing nothing with him, in someoneâs yard helping them fix up a broken fence, no matter where you look, neither his broad silhouette nor his cheeky, dimpled face is there. You continue to stand stricken dumb, looking for him even though you know by the churning in your belly that itâs true, and youâre just hurting yourself trying to find him right where he should be.
Fine. Alive. Untouched by your disgusting, destructive presence.
When you can no longer fight the strangling tightness in your lungs and your dress is as heavy as your heart, you take off. The hem of your dress drags in mud and sticker bushes and catches on stray twigs, and you donât know where youâre going, but you just run. Youâll give them what they want.Â
You stumble, probably like some lost, undead thing, until you find yourself at the edge of the forest. Only then do you let the wall of whittle-edged tears roll down your face. And you assume you sound like a choking, dying animal with how you choke and heave on them, but he was the one you mightâve dropped your head and cried to, so whatâs the use of making it pretty? No; you let it all fall as it is.
Soobinâs dead. Soobinâs dead, and itâs nobody elseâs but your own fault. You clutch your chest to staunch that old ache thatâs grown teeth and tears at your heart; you have and will always be the end of everything that comes near. You are just as much the plague that you began to pretend, to believe, you werenât. It was your stupid hope that maybe you could have something and not watch it become carrion that drove that pick. It was by your hope that heâs gone.
The hair on your arms begins to raise. You pick your head up and find Yeonjun standing in front of you.
Thereâs a few beats of long, dreadful quiet as he takes in the state of you. He drags his eyes down and they become liquid flameâsomething different from the impious delight that he is made of. He becomes the King of Death.
âWhat happened?â he says. The chills on your arms prickle furiously at the words, furling out distant and yet furious like the center of the fire.
You shake your head, wiping your soaked cheek.
âWhat the fuck happened?â he growls again, taking your face into his hand. âWho did this? Who did this to you, my love? I need you to tell me who the fuck did this to you.â
Letting the venom in your mouth out, you shove his chest and say, âGet away from me. Donât fucking touch me.â
Yeonjunâs face twists up, looking scalded. Not surprised, though. âDonât do this,â he says. âLet me hold you while it hurts. Donât push me away. I canât⊠I wonât lose you again.â
All the pieces that you had been putting into the corners of your mind snap together at that. As many suspicions as you had, though, it feels sour hearing it confirmed from his mouth. That you are his dead past lover, reincarnated or whatever you are. That it was his presenceâbecause even though he stayed away for centuries, a part of him still lingered with youâthat now has torn down everything you ever thought you could love. He, standing there in front of you like a kicked puppy, is the ruination of your life in the flesh. The flipping of your stomach is nauseating.
âI hate you,â you spit. âI hate you so much.â You repeat it a few more times, and you sob it into his chest as he takes you into his arms. âIs this what you wanted? Youâve been waiting for this forever, havenât you? To find me again, so that you can die and fucking leave me here. So that you can make me exactly what you are, while you get your peace. You are a liar and a thief. All youâve ever done is steal and take. How could you do it? Huh? Tell meâŠâ Your voice trembles and staggers off. âTell me how you made love to me, how you made me believe that you loved me, and all you ever wanted was to save yourself? You betrayed me.â
Pulling back, Yeonjun says, âNo.â
âYes,â you say, stumbling back away from him with a shaking, accusatory finger pointed at him. âYes you did.â
Fingers itching to reach out to you, he holds them back by curling them into fists. âNo. Thatâs not fair. I have spent an eternity loving you. I spent the entirety of my immortal, monstrous life searching for you, just so that I might find you in any form. I would have been glad to find you as a leaf in a tree, as long as I found you. But, then, I find you alive. Alive and back, as if⊠it never happened.â He steps toward you, aching to be near you. His voice wavers. âPlease, donât do this to me, love. Please, just let me have you again. Iâve waited⊠Iâve waited and Iâve waited, and I finally have you, and now youâre looking at me like I⊠Like Iâd ever hurt you. Finding deathâfinally getting to die would be worth nothing if you werenât there with me. It was never about that.â
âI could never love you,â you say, matching his steps forward with steps away from him. âI could never love a monster that does⊠Does nothing but kill. Take.â  You know your words are cruel, but you need them to be. You need him to hurt, you need him to go so far away from you that never again will you cause another living thingâs death.Â
âYou did.â Yeonjunâs mouth cracks into a pained smile, sharp at the corners. âYou loved me just as much as I love you, once.â
âJust leave me. Leave me, and I wish to never see you again. If you love me, then youâll give me that.âÂ
He looks at you, clever eyes intense and glassy, for a long time. And then he says, âWould that make you happy? Would it make it so that you could live a happy life, and find yourself something to live for?â
Whatâs left for you? A small village that wonât ever embrace you? No, it wouldnât fix your life. But you open your mouth and tell him, âYes.â
âOkay,â he says, brushing his knuckles over your cheeks reverently. He swallows in your features, running over them for what he knows is the last time heâll be seeing youâthe very last time heâll see the face of his undying love. When he finally opens his mouth again, his voice is gentle. âIâll leave you. If my being here hurts you, then I wonât be selfish. I love you, darling.â
Donât go, you want to tell him. Please donât leave. Please, hold me. But your mouth is dry, and you let the radiant hurt in your chest stop you. You let him go.
àŒș ê àŒ»
Thereâs only one place you can think of going to. Itâs the only place your vagrant feet take you.
His spot still is held sacred by the flattened, gold wheat stalks. Your best friend, still living here on Earth in at least one way even if heâs not here to listen to your stupid rambling. And he would maybe complain, but heâd always listen.
The last thing youâd done was fight with him. What an awful thingâwhat an awful way to repay him for being the only one who ever dared to get close.
You sit in your spot, beside his, and rest your chin on your knees. If only the ground beneath you would open up and swallow you whole. Youâd deserve it.
Whatâs left for you? Is there a place in the world that would keep you happily once they see what you do? No. There is not. You wish you knew what to do; you wish you had somebody to ask.
Releasing a long, tight breath, you just sit and wait for something to give you answers. A gentle breeze makes your hair dance, but it does not whisper anything to your ears. Somethingâs circling over head, but it doesnât caw in the cadence of his laughter.
The day moves along without you. Youâre not sure how long you sit, but it stretches somewhere between a few minutes and eternity. No matter how long you wait, there are no answers. No matter how long you mull over it.
Conceding, you begin to push yourself up from the ground. A rustle in between the foliage stops you before you stand.
A tawny hare leaps out in front of you. It sniffs around you, nose twitching. Then it stands back on its haunches. It stares straight at you, an intelligent light in its eyes that knits your brows. The wild thing stands there with a purpose that is uncharacteristic of a forest animal.
But entirely familiar in the face of your best friend. That shine in its eyes as it stands there, nose still twitching, makes your chest tighten up.
âHey,â you say, as if it might answer you. Your eyes well up with hot tears again. Of course, it doesnât.Â
Maybe youâve gone mad, but you know that itâs him. That idiot, coming to show you that heâs okay in the afterlifeâto visit one last time and to let you know that you shouldnât worry for him or cry for him. Look at me, full of life once again, he seems to say. The hare blinks its beady eyes. It lingers there for a long time, the ease of peace found in his gaze that Soobin hadnât had in this life, saying that there is still something waiting out there for us once we go. You reach out a hand. He does not flinch as you scratch behind his ear.
âOkay,â you whisper. âIâm glad to know youâre alright. I know what I need to do, now.â
He blinks.
You laugh a hoarse, breathy laugh, familiar in only the way that Soobin could achieve. âYou look stupid.â
Indignantly, the hare stomps a bratty foot in a way reminiscent of one of Soobinâs huffs before it settles back down onto its forelegs and scurries off. He goes to live out this new form of life, because itâs true: life does not end in death. Heâs shown you that.
Maybe, like this, heâll find that pretty lady that loves him the way he deserves. That loser.
àŒș ê àŒ»
You spend only one night in your home and you know that what youâve chosen is right. After spending your day out in the field, you sneak under nightâs cover into your husk of a room and let yourself sleep there under the covers one last time. When morning breaks through the window, you gather your weary bones up and leave.Â
You run into your mother on the way out. She doesnât yell at you to leave, but her eyes have gone cold. Colder than youâre used to. Youâve killed again, in every way that counts. So you donât bother with bidding her or any of them any grand goodbyes. You couldnât handle the relief you might find falling over them, should you.
Plopping down to the floor, you take a few bites of the cheese and bread lathered in sweet jam that youâd swiped from the kitchen. The grass is long and willows in the wind, bending and dancing prettily. Itâs so soft; you enjoy the feeling of it beneath your fingers in your quiet serenity. The scent of it, fresh over the baseness of dirt, you breathe into your lungs.
It would be the loveliest place to spend the rest of eternity.
For the first time, Yeonjun appears in front of you rather than behind you. He materializes from nothing, his elbow on his knee as casual as if heâd been sat there the whole time. The darkness beneath his eyes seems heavier, but then again you know that exact heaviness. It sits right in the very center of you.
You both are quiet for a bit. You let the tall grass whisper, instead.
âBread?â you say and slant your lips into a smile. Bringing it up, you offer it to him.
His smile wrinkles his nose and curls at the edges. Entirely him. Yeonjun accepts the bread, ripping a bite out before throwing it away into the sea of green. Once heâs chewed, he leans in and captures your lips in a kiss thatâs utterly at odds with his sharp mouth. Your lips move over each other gently, save for an indulgent nip or bite here and there.
He pushes you back into a bed of sweetgrass, never letting your lips go. Not to breathe, not to say something thatâll pale in comparison to the sweetness of your mouths on one another. He kisses you until heâs had enough to fulfill a lifetime without it, and then some more.
âMy love,â he whispers into your skin, his breath hot on your collarbone. âMine,â he says, pressing a kiss into the column of your neck, and then he says it again with a hot kiss to the place where your dress suggests your breasts. He says it a handful more times as he pushes your skirts up your thighs. âMy love forever. I waited for you so long, and I would do it again.â Lowering his voice to a honeyed whisper, he adds, âI would find you no matter what.â
Laughing softly, you run your fingers through his raven hair to better see his eyes. You know he would.
Gently giving you one more of his lingering kisses that make your skin tingle, right into your bare shoulder, he presses into you. You loose a soft breath, wrapping your arms around his shoulders. The beating in your chest slows to a content purr as he begins languid thrusts in and out of you, rolling pointedly and unhurried.
Yeonjun makes love to you in a thousand dusted kisses and sweet words, your hands holding each otherâs soft edges. Yeonjun traces the lines of you, taking the pads of his thumb down your cheeks and your lips and then his hand over the swell of your breasts and down your belly and over your thighs. Clamping down on him as your belly grows tight in the way it had the first time you had done this, your thighs begin to shake.
 Breathlessly, as you hurdle over the edge, all that you can say is, âI love you, âJunnie.âÂ
Yeonjun smiles at you and then presses his face into your neck. He doesnât even brace himself against the grass to chase his own peak. Neither of you want this to end; you want to hold on to this moment and let it span forever. Slowly, Yeonjun rolls up into you until his hips finally stutter and he cums into you, his cheeks pink. The weight of him above you as he shakes with your shared ecstasy, and even as you both have come down and are nothing but lazy, is the only thing in this world. He is the only thing in this world.
Once youâve both evened your breathing out, you roll apart and face each other, still just two forms bending the grass into your shapes. Blinking slowly and digesting his features one at a timeâthe angle of his eyes, softened but never tamed, the line of his nose, the line of his mouth always so proud and playful, and that pretty dot below his left eyeâyou let them solidify fully in your mind.
âYeonjun,â you say, finally meeting his eyes across from you. âI want to go. Iâm ready.â
The gentle, knowing look that he gives you soothes over the way your heart begins to race in your chest in rebellion. âI know,â he says.
Of course he had known. Yeonjun had been called here to ferry you into the afterlife. He had known the moment he appeared in front of you that his last soul to reap would be you; an ironic circle of karma that should be cruel, but you two make it something sweet. Chewing on your lip, you will your hands to not shake as you curl toward him. Youâre no longer scared of going. You know that if youâll be with him, it will be okay. It wonât be so scary. A hot tear rolls down your temple and then drops into your hair. âWill you be with me? I wonât be there alone?â
He tucks some hair behind your ear reverently and then leaves his hand there. âI donât know,â he answers. âBut I wonât leave you. Iâll stay right here with you.â
You lay there for a long time. Chatting and giggling and just looking into each other's eyes, until your heart becomes slow and all you feel is the wind singing in your blood. Yeonjun presses one final kiss to your forehead.
Maybe, in some years, somebody might dig up your bones and find you immortalized like this in your love. Your bones bowing toward each other, as if even death were not enough to stop you from reaching for each other. Or maybe theyâll just find yours, and Yeonjun still curling into them how you know he will for an eternity more.
Either way, the going is still slow and gentle, as death always is.
đȘ¶ ⊠tears. omfg i cried writing this which could totally be me being a bitch baby but it DAMN. omfg.
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A little teaser of Folklore...a chrismd story coming soon to a Tumblr near you...
pls lmk what you think, im actually so proud of how this is coming along!!
me and all the girlies who still use tumblr in 2022
âbetter than most premier league footballers at free kicksâ MOM I AM 18 YEARS OLD
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