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ourwitching · 1 year ago
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For the past few months, Silvia Gutiérrez and Giovanna Fontenelle (from the Culture and Heritage te...
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icewindandboringhorror · 6 months ago
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indeed my exact process once every 8 months or so
#I just thought today of a new way to format a 'profile' (like the descriptions of self that people use on friend meeting#apps and stuff) and how to organize the sections so that it seems such and such a way and oh what if there's links which click off#into branching paths so it's very acessible and there are two different forms depending on so on and so forth#and i was like 'um.. wow. amazing idea. this will be soooo aweseome and will definitely work' but then .. you know...self reflection#lol.. is this just like the millions of other iterations of a similar thing? No.. This Is Different ... Surely...#Though if I had a millionaire friend and a few people who do the type of coding you use for web design stuff and etc..#I could create the most elaborate detailed and amazing platonic friend seeking (and I guess you could also have 'dating' as an option#since that would draw in more of a crowd) website on the earth.. the new okcupid (back when okcupid didn't suckishly abandon their#whole format in hopes of trying to become just like tinder or whatever and they actually had like tons of info and percentages and#open answer questions and would list personality traits on a profile (like 'this person is more Open To New Expereinces than 65% of#other users' etc.). etc. etc. Oh what a beautiful thing I could craft for the detail freaks of the world.... Alas...#unfortunately we seem to be in an oversimplification era.. everything in short quick bites. everything on a tiny phone screen. etc.#marketing 'Introducing The Most Complicated Data Heavy Social Connection Site In The World' would not sell well I'd imagine gjhgjh#AANYWAY.. also no idea why the representation of me is in a turtle neck. what a bold fashion choice..#In another moment of self reflection.. the fact that in the first tag on this post I felt the need to define the word 'profile' just to be#specific as if people couldn't tell from context.. so clearly someone who finds filling out forms a 'fun afternoon activity' lol#the type of guy who finds psych evaluations and pop quizzes and making chore lists mostly enjoyable (< true)
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qu33rsources · 1 year ago
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How to install NewPipe on Android
NewPipe is a YouTube replacement client for Android devices. It's open-source (meaning, you can see all of their code as you please), privacy-oriented, lightweight, and supports features that are normally locked behind a YouTube Premium paywall.
Disclaimer: I am not affiliated with NewPipe, YouTube, Android, Google, Alphabet Inc, or any other brand or name mentioned here. I made this guide to help my friends who were curious.
NewPipe's Website: https://newpipe.net/
The GitHub Repository
Step 0. Compatibility check
Make sure you're running an Android device! This won't work on an Apple device of any kind! Also, for those more tech-savvy among you, if you have the F-Droid store installed, you can download NewPipe straight from there!
Step 1. Downloading
Go to NewPipe's Github repo (repository, the codebase or where all of the code is stored). Scroll to the bottom of the page until you see "Releases". Click on the one that says "Latest" next to it in a little green bubble:
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Your version number (v#...) will be different if you're reading this in the future! That's okay. Scroll past the changelog (unless you want to read it!) until you find "Assets":
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Click on the first one, the one with the little cube ending in .apk. APK files are Android Package (Kit) and are the main format for downloading apps. Once you click on the link, it should begin downloading or your browser will ask you to confirm that you want to download this file. You should always verify the filename matches what you expect it to be (namely, the file format) before attempting to install! It might take a few moments for the file to download depending on your internet connection.
Step 2. Installation
Once you have the file downloaded, you can click the download popup in your notification bar or find the file in your device's file system. One of 2 things will happen:
You will get a popup asking if you want to install an APK by the name of NewPipe - confirm that you do (and make sure the app is really NewPipe!) and it will install automatically. You can then click "Open" to open the app and begin using it.
You will get a popup warning you that you have the ability to install apps from unknown sources disabled and that you can't install this. This is normal and does not mean that you downloaded the wrong thing.
If you got the first popup, continue past this step. For those of you who got the second, let's go over what this means.
By default, most Androids have this setting disabled. This is for security purposes, so you can't accidentally install a malicious app from the whole internet. If you enable this setting (allow installations from unknown/unsigned sources), you are theoretically putting yourself at risk. Realistically, you're probably fine. But, after installing NewPipe, you can always re-disable the setting if it makes you more comfortable. That will prevent you from installing updates in the future, but it can always be re-enabled.
Ready to turn that setting on? It will vary by your individual device! Some devices will take you directly to the page with the setting upon failed installation, and some you will just have to find it yourself using the searchbar in settings.
Once you've allowed installations from unknown sources (wording may vary slightly), try to repeat the steps above of clicking the download popup or finding the APK in your files and trying to install it. It should work correctly this time!
Step 3. Updating NewPipe
Like most apps, NewPipe is in development currently and frequently has new versions released to improve it and fix bugs. Unlike most apps, NewPipe needs to be manually updated, since we haven't downloaded through the Google Play store.
To update NewPipe, all you have to do is follow the above steps for installing the app, except that when you get the popup asking to install it, it will instead say "Update". That's it! NewPipe and Android handle the rest.
NewPipe also has popup notifications for when the app has a new update, so you don't have to worry about checking the GitHub for a new release. Just click on the "A new version is available" popup and it should take you directly to the webpage.
That's it! Enjoy browsing videos in peace without ads and with the ability to download and so much more. Pro tip: you can copy paste YouTube links into the NewPipe search bar to go directly to that video/playlist/channel.
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gayestpiano · 11 months ago
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is anyone who has the premium Spotify modded APK having trouble with the app? it keeps crashing like a second after I open it
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neverendingford · 17 days ago
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#tag talk#so I'm back on fetlife rn and honestly I'm just gonna treat it like more blogging.#it's taken two days of digging but I've finally found the misfit autists who write poetry and journal their thoughts and I'm pretty stoked#sad divorced men who are rethinking their entire lives and Definitely aren't trans. really definitely aren't trans.#they just wanna be pretty women for Other Totally Unrelated Reasons.#anyway. I don't love being so visible but it's nice because that means other people are visible too. and I LOVE stalking people online#been thinking a lot about the post I saw on here a while back that was like “some people need to stop posting all their thoughts online”#and respectfully fuck off. I want to know how other people think and I can't just submit questionnaires to everyone#so it's nice when I get to see people's thoughts because then I can see how other people think and compare it to how I think.#I love people watching but it's harder on the internet because there's this layer of artificial aesthetic polluting all the data#this layer of performance. of polish. of edited appearances.#I just wanna see how other people behave. I learn by watching.#so it's nice to be able to click on someone's profile and see all their pics and posts and likes and comments and groups and friends and sh#because then i get to see an entire chunk of someone's life and social interactions all linked to a central hub. and that's so fucking cool#like... so much data to gather. so much to look at and think about. it's so fascinating.#and originally I didn't vibe with it but I've gotten more familiar with the setup and have developed a method for navigating the site.#so now I'm just opening up 20 million tabs to check out for later every time I see something new. I have learned So Many Things#I've always thought the “carve your name into my skin” people were meh. but it feels different when a thirty-something divorced man does it#there's a specific type of self-aware autistic guy that I fucking love so much. that's my drug
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coneindajunkyard · 1 year ago
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whats a "zip bomb"??
hey click this link and find out
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gendercensus · 1 year ago
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The 2024 Gender Census is now open!
[ Link to survey ]
The 11th annual international gender census, collecting information about the language we use to refer to ourselves and each other, is now open until 13th June 2024.
It’s short and easy, about 5 minutes probably.
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After the survey is closed I’ll process the results and publish a spreadsheet of the data and a report summarising the main findings. Then anyone can use them for academic or business purposes, self-advocacy, tracking the popularity of language over time, and just feeling like we’re part of a huge and diverse community.
If you think you might have friends and followers who’d be interested, please do reblog this blog post, and share the survey URL by email or at AFK social groups or on other social networks. Every share is extremely helpful - it’s what helped us get 40,000 responses last year.
Survey URL: https://survey.gendercensus.com
The 2024 survey is now closed!
The survey is open to anyone anywhere who speaks English and feels that the gender binary doesn’t fully describe their experience of themselves and their gender(s) or lack thereof.
For the curious, you can also spy on some graphs and demographic data for the incoming responses here.
Thank you so much!
[ Link to survey ]
Image credit: Malachite and rhodochrosite.
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ourwitching · 1 year ago
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For the past few months, Silvia Gutiérrez and Giovanna Fontenelle (from the Culture and Heritage te...
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bitnest · 1 year ago
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In the current rapidly evolving digital currency market, decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms are redefining the shape of financial services with their unique advantages. Bit Loop, as a leading decentralized lending platform, not only provides a safe and transparent lending environment, but also opens up new passive income channels for users through its innovative sharing reward system.
Personal links and permanent ties: Create a stable revenue stream One of the core parts of Bit Loop is its recommendation system, which allows any user to generate a unique sharing link when they join the platform. This link is not only a “key” for users to join the Bit Loop, but also a tool for them to establish an offline network. It is worth noting that offline partners who join through this link are permanently tied to the recommender, ensuring that the sharer can continue to receive rewards from the offline partner’s activities.
Unalterable referral relationships: Ensure fairness and transparency A significant advantage of blockchain technology is the immutability of its data. In Bit Loop, this means that once a referral link and live partnership is established, the relationship is fixed and cannot be changed. This design not only protects the interests of recommenders, but also brings a stable user base and activity to the platform, while ensuring the fairness and transparency of transactions.
Automatically distribute rewards: Simplify the revenue process Another highlight of the Bit Loop platform is the ability for smart contracts to automatically distribute rewards. When the partner completes the circulation cycle, such as investment returns or loan payments, the smart contract automatically calculates and sends the corresponding percentage of rewards directly to the recommender’s wallet. This automatic reward distribution mechanism not only simplifies the process of receiving benefits, but also greatly improves the efficiency of capital circulation.
Privacy protection and security: A security barrier for funds All transactions and money flows are carried out on the blockchain, guaranteeing transparency and traceability of every operation. In addition, the use of smart contracts significantly reduces the risk of fraud and misoperation, providing a solid security barrier for user funds. Users can confidently invest and promote boldly, and enjoy the various conveniences brought by decentralized finance.
conclusion As decentralized finance continues to evolve, Bit Loop offers a new economic model through its unique recommendation system that enables users to enjoy highly secure and transparent financial services while also earning passive income by building and maintaining a personal network. Whether for investors seeking stable passive income or innovators looking to explore new financial possibilities through blockchain technology, Bit Loop provides a platform not to be missed.
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#In the current rapidly evolving digital currency market#decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms are redefining the shape of financial services with their unique advantages. Bit Loop#as a leading decentralized lending platform#not only provides a safe and transparent lending environment#but also opens up new passive income channels for users through its innovative sharing reward system.#Personal links and permanent ties: Create a stable revenue stream#One of the core parts of Bit Loop is its recommendation system#which allows any user to generate a unique sharing link when they join the platform. This link is not only a “key” for users to join the Bi#but also a tool for them to establish an offline network. It is worth noting that offline partners who join through this link are permanent#ensuring that the sharer can continue to receive rewards from the offline partner’s activities.#Unalterable referral relationships: Ensure fairness and transparency#A significant advantage of blockchain technology is the immutability of its data. In Bit Loop#this means that once a referral link and live partnership is established#the relationship is fixed and cannot be changed. This design not only protects the interests of recommenders#but also brings a stable user base and activity to the platform#while ensuring the fairness and transparency of transactions.#Automatically distribute rewards: Simplify the revenue process#Another highlight of the Bit Loop platform is the ability for smart contracts to automatically distribute rewards. When the partner complet#such as investment returns or loan payments#the smart contract automatically calculates and sends the corresponding percentage of rewards directly to the recommender’s wallet. This au#but also greatly improves the efficiency of capital circulation.#Privacy protection and security: A security barrier for funds#All transactions and money flows are carried out on the blockchain#guaranteeing transparency and traceability of every operation. In addition#the use of smart contracts significantly reduces the risk of fraud and misoperation#providing a solid security barrier for user funds. Users can confidently invest and promote boldly#and enjoy the various conveniences brought by decentralized finance.#conclusion#As decentralized finance continues to evolve#Bit Loop offers a new economic model through its unique recommendation system that enables users to enjoy highly secure and transparent fin
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crazy-hazy-sims · 3 months ago
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Hey everyone it seems there a malicious individual trying to hack the sims cc community again and fill it with malware you need to stay vigilant as a creator and a downloader so
i have some tips for both to stay safe while downloading:
1- sims cc file extension is always .Package never download anything that is .exe
2- do not auto unpack zip files and rar files into your mods folder directly, open each zip or rar individually check the file extensions and drag them to your mods folder one by one
3- the only mods that have a .ts4script extension are ones that affect gameplay or how the game works, understand that if you are downloading cas or bb items you shouldn't have a .ts4script file
4- if you are downloading gameplay mods that do have .ts4script make sure that A) the creator hasn't announced on their pages that its infected B) you are downloading from a link provided by the creator of the mods themselves not something off of google or a link you got sent and make sure dates of upload match dated of announcements
5- if the mod or cc creator has retired and hasn't posted for a while LOOK AT THE DATES OF THE UPLOAD if it has been "updated recently" after the creator has left the community its most likely re-uploaded by a hacker and infected
6- download mod gaurd by Twisted mexi and keep it updated and keep your windows defender or malware detector Program up to date and always running do not disable it
7- make sure everything you download comes from a direct link from the cc creator, in this day and age do not trust link shortners, adfly, linkverse, etc get the universal bypass extension and ublock extension to stay safe but genuinely NEVER CLICK ON THOSE no matter how much the creator reassures you its safe it. is. NOT.
8- this is more of a general saftey precaution but, create a system restore point weekly before you run the game with new mods that way if anything happens you could have a chance to restore your windows to an earlier date before you downloaded anything.
9- BACK UP YOUR SHIT im serious right now either weekly or monthly put your files somewhere safe like a usb a storage card a hard drive even an online cloud if you dont have any of the previous.
10- files you should back up are your media from games and media everything else, any mods, games saves, work files, passwords, saved bookmarks, any documents txt files word files pdfs, links you saved, brushes or actions for Photoshop if you have any, any digital bills or certificates if you have any, and keep a physical list of all programs you have installed and where you installed them from
11- turn on any 2 factor authentication and security measures for any account you have
12- google and firefox have the option to check your paswords and emails against any data leaks USE THIS FEATURE and change any leaked passwords
13- regularly check your logged in sessions to make sure all the logged in devices or computers are yours and log out any that aren't and any old devices or unused sessions do this for every website and app you have an account on if available
14- change your passwords often. I know this is a hassle i know its hard to come up with new passwords but changing your passwords every few months will help you against anything mention previously that wasn't detected.
15- and as a cc creator check your cc and the accounts you host cc on and its uplaod and update dates make sure nothing has been changed without your permission :(
16- generally try not to get swept up in the "i must get it" fever you do not need to "shop" for mods weekly or monthly you do not need to download everything by that one creator you do not need to download new cc everytime you want to make a sim, im guilty of this so i know how hard it is to resist but take a breath and think "do i want this or do i need it" before downloading.
These are prevention methods i cant claim they are 100% will prevent any hacking but its better to be safe than sorry and these do keep you safe so
Brought to you by someone who has had their laptop ruined and data leaked from downloading cc once upon a time
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heron-knight · 3 months ago
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okay, but can we talk about mech vs mech hacking warfare?
You’re literally reaching into their mechs computer. You know, the thing that’s connected directly to their brain? I’m just saying there’s a lot of potential there that I haven’t really seen.
You know those reward chemicals? The ones that the pilots are pumped full of every time they kill something? You have access to that system. Hell, you have access to all the systems like that. Reward chems? Combat stims? Painkillers? That stuff they put in the mech just in case the pilot starts acting strange and command needs to shut off its brain and let the orders do the work? All you have to do is open a link and you can stretch your hand across the battlefield through the system and squeeze the IV bag. Better yet, you can choose not to. For example, you could start feeding them a baseline dose of synthetic oxytocin and then abruptly cut them off whenever they aim their gun at you.
And then start it back up when they aim it at their former allies
Then there’s the brain-computer interface itself. Blackbox data? That collection of everything the pilot thinks or feels since it got in the mech? Yours. You can know them better than they know themselves, and you can open up a comma channel to tell them just what’s hidden in their subconscious. You can tell them what they’re afraid of. What they want. Why they’re doing this, even if they don’t know why themselves. It was quite an oversight, their organization deciding to keep an open link from their mechs to command in order to monitor pilot status, because now you have their records from back at base too.
The only setting I’ve seen with a lot of mech hacking is lancer. Imagine what would happen if you put it in a setting like armored core or whatever unofficial setting we tumblr mechposters have.
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contemplatingoutlander · 6 months ago
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“'We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected,' Russell Vought [co-author of Project 2025], who has been tapped by Mr. Trump to lead the Office of Management and Budget, has said. 'When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains.'”
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If we want federal civil servants not to just abandon their jobs under the pressure of a hostile Trump administration, they will need support from the public. In this essay by Stacey Young, a lawyer in the DOJ civil rights division, explains the help that is needed. This is a gift 🎁 link, so there is no paywall. Below are some excerpts.
Federal employees like me have been hearing a lot in recent weeks about how important it is for us to stay in our jobs, despite President-elect Donald Trump’s open animosity toward much of the federal work force. We’ve been told by friends, relatives and good-government advocates that a well-functioning government — and the survival of our democracy — depends on it. We know. We understand what will happen if Mr. Trump fills the civil service with unqualified, inexperienced people selected for their political loyalty. But to stay in our jobs, we will need more than exhortation; we will need legal, psychological and other practical support. One reason many federal employees are thinking of leaving government — often after decades of serving our country, under Republican and Democratic presidents — is that we’re afraid. The incoming leaders of the government have told us in aggressive terms that they want us either gone or miserable.  [...]
What sorts of practical support would help? For one thing, lawyers and mental health providers could offer pro bono or significantly discounted services to federal employees.... Data-removal companies that specialize in taking down personal information online could offer free or discounted plans to federal employees who are being harassed or at risk of harassment. Friends and family members of federal employees with young children or other caregiving responsibilities could offer to pitch in. (Without their help, employees who are stripped of their ability to do some remote work or forced to adhere to overly rigid work schedules may have no choice but to leave their jobs.) Concerned citizens could urge their elected representatives to promote legislation that protects civil servants and oppose draconian bills that would harm them. Those with money to spare could donate to organizations that work to protect public servants. And if you value the civil service, don’t just tell us; tell your friends, neighbors, co-workers and family members too — especially whenever the pernicious “deep state” narrative rears its ugly head.
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autotypers · 2 years ago
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ICR Auto Typer Software For Data Entry & Auto Typer For PC
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cosmicsimsi · 3 months ago
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Why You Shouldn’t Use GShade
Even after two years, I still see people using GShade and claiming it's a safe program, when it’s really not! There are already some older Tumblr posts about this, but I figured it’s worth refreshing the issue.
So please read this
Around two years ago, GShade’s developer added a code that could forcefully shut down your computer, not because of a bug or security measure, but on purpose. Why? Because he was mad that someone, specifically a 16-year-old made an alternative way to install GShade without using the official updater. Instead of handling it professionally, the dev decided to add a malicious code as "punishment" for anyone trying to modify GShade. That’s malware behavior.
(The first spark) ↓
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At that time you also HAD to update Gshade to unistall it. ↓
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(Developers "Apology") ↓
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Now, you might be thinking, “Okay, but that was patched out, so it’s fine now, right?” Nope. Because the biggest issue isn’t just what he did, it’s the fact that he still thinks he did nothing wrong.
The Problem with Closed-Source Software Like GShade
GShade is closed-source, meaning no one except the developer can see or verify what’s actually in the code. This is a issue when dealing with someone who has already abused their control over the software.
With open-source programs (like ReShade), anyone can look at the code, verify it’s safe, and contribute to improving it. If something shady is added, people can catch it immediately. But with GShade, you have to just trust that the dev isn’t hiding anything malicious. And considering his past actions, that’s a massive risk to take.
Even if GShade is "safe" right now, nothing is stopping the dev from adding another backdoor, data collection, or something even worse in the future. Since no one can see the code, you wouldn’t know until it was too late. And given that he still defends his actions, there’s every reason to believe he’d do something similar again.
“But I’ve Never Had Issues With GShade”
A lot of people say GShade runs better than ReShade or has better effects. That might be true, but no amount of quality or convenience is worth putting your computer at risk. Just because something hasn’t caused problems yet doesn’t mean it won’t in the future. Malicious code can be slipped in at any time, and because it’s closed-source, no one would be able to warn you.
And honestly? You shouldn’t be using software made by someone who has already proven they’re willing to mess with your computer. If a developer intentionally inserts harmful code once, they can do it again.
What Should You Use Instead?
There’s a safe and open-source alternative: ReShade
It’s free and open-source, meaning the community can review the code to ensure it’s safe.
It can do almost everything GShade does, and while it may take some tweaking, it’s worth the effort.
Most GShade presets can be converted to work with ReShade with a bit of adjustment.
There are guides available to help transition from GShade to ReShade Here is one: How To Move To ReShade From GShade
Final Thoughts
At the end of the day, it’s your computer, and you can do whatever you want with it. But if you choose to keep using GShade, just be aware of the risks you’re taking. The dev has already demonstrated that he’s willing to sabotage people’s computers when he feels like it. He still thinks he was justified. And because GShade is closed-source, he has complete control over what’s in the code without anyone being able to check.
So ask yourself: Is that really the kind of software you want to trust?
ReShade is a safer, open-source alternative that doesn’t put you at risk.
Thank you for reading
Here are some links that discusses the whole topic:
Twitter
Reddit
The persons Blog the code was directed at
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ms-demeanor · 2 months ago
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thoughts on using library computers to disguise your digital footprint? because if the machine gets wiped when you log out, and the library doesn't keep detailed records of what machine you were using when, then all someone else would have is IP data unconnected to a person and also mixed in with whatever else folks were doing on the library computers
The machine absolutely does not get wiped when you log out and there's very little chance that a library computer will let you fire up Tor. You're better off using a traffic anonymizer than you are trying to use public computers to cover your tracks. The IP address IS the big risk here.
Libraries are generally really good about protecting their patrons' privacy and I respect the hell out of them for that but computers log everything that you do and can be subpoenaed as evidence even if the library wants to protect user privacy.
Also, I love libraries but you should treat every public computer you come across like it has a keylogger installed on it because it might. Your city could have an overzealous city council that has more control than it should over the library board and has taken it upon themselves to add covenanteyes to the library computers. Your library crew could be fantastic but less tech-savvy than is ideal and may not realize it if malware is installed on one of the machines. The library may clear browser history twice a day but the ISP still has a record of where you went and what time you went there. Somebody could have literally plugged a keylogger into a USB port on the back of the machine.
The point of a traffic anonymizer is it hides where the traffic originated; each node knows where the previous hop came from and where the next hop went, but not what came BEFORE the previous hop or what happened after, or how long the chain was, so there is no way to tell if a message originated in the US or Brazil or Vietnam or Sweden. Sending traffic from a library does the opposite of this, and very clearly says "the person who sent this message did so from this geographic area; they sent messages from these five libraries so we know they're probably within X distance of these libraries" which is a hell of a lot easier to look for than "I can't even say what continent these messages originated from."
Let us say that you go to a library to log in to your protonmail account and email a journalist a link to a file that you've saved in cryptpad. You have the link written down so you don't have to go to a secondary site and you just go sit down directly at the computer and log in to protonmail and fire off your email to the journalist. The email is encrypted, so you know the contents of the email are safe. Let's say the browser history gets automatically wiped every time you close it, and you close it as soon as you stand up and walk away. Here's the incriminating information that generated:
IP address where you accessed your protonmail account
Your protonmail email address, the journalist's address, the time you sent the email, the subject line of the email
And here are the people who can be subpoenaed to share some or all of that information with the government:
The Library's ISP
The Library, who may not carefully track users but who do have event logs on the computers and traffic logs on the firewall
Protonmail
IF you only ever logged in to your protonmail account from that ISP one time, and if you've never logged in to your protonmail account anywhere that is close to your house or your job, you may be fine. But if you logged in to your protonmail on your personal cellphone at work so that you could send photos of documents to yourself, there's some data tying that account to a local IP address. If you set up the protonmail account on a whim at a coffee shop, there's some data tying that account to a local IP address. If you get an email back from the journalist and go to another local library to open it, there's some data tying that account to another local IP address.
And that gets narrowed down very quickly. "Who has access to these sensitive and leak-worthy documents through working at this entity who also lives within a 100 mile radius of these three login locations? Is it 50 people? Is it 5 people? Of the 15 people who have access to these sensitive and leak-worthy documents who work at this entity and live within 100 miles of the three login locations, who is likely to be doing the leaking? Do we fire them all? Do we interview them? Do we compare IP addresses that they've used to log in to work remotely and find that two of them have logged in at the coffee shop? Of those two, one has facebook selfies in a maga hat and the other has a less visible online presence. Let's check their traffic history. Did they check tumblr on a lunch break? Maybe once or twice? Maybe a few times? Sure seems like they are pretty dead-set against the administration. Let's double-check the access logs for this information. Let's review security footage. Let's install the monitoring on their workstation."
The thing is, they're not going to catch you leaking and then track down all the data you left behind to confirm it; they're going to see a leak and get a bunch of digital footprints and use that to narrow down suspect pools. They already know that access to the data is limited and will be reviewing prior access and carefully monitoring future access. You are already in their suspect pool by already being one of the people with known access to the data. Adding an IP address that is geographically close to you, even if it isn't your home IP address, to that is not going to make it *harder* to find you, it can only make it easier.
So just use Tor. You're safer using an anonymizer, which you likely can't do on a library computer. Create the leak email address when you're in a Tor browser, and only EVER access that email account from Tor.
Also I don't mean to jump on you about this, but between the post I've got about why you shouldn't use your work computer to torrent and the safer leaking practices post it's clear that people really don't understand what information they're leaving behind when they use computers and the internet, or how it can be a risk to them.
Accessing burner accounts from a clear IP address means that they're not burner accounts anymore, they're burned.
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mrsjjongstby · 6 days ago
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P: Vampire!Sunghoon x Time-travel Scientist!Reader
Warnings: Mentions on biting, blood, feeding scenes, mentions of death, dissapearance, time travelling, yearning, kissing, physical touch, possesiveness, soft angst, happy ending!
Synopsis: In 2090, you're sent back in time to study a village that vanished without explanation. There, you met him. You weren't supposed to fall in love with him. But you did, with a vampire. And when time ran out, you left — believing that story had ended. Until one night, back in the future, he finds you. He hasn’t aged. And he never stopped waiting.
Wordcount: 11.8k
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June 22, 2090. 
The hum of the machines never stopped in sector 7. 
Even at 3:27 in the evening, the corridors filled with guards, the bright white light pulsing against the huge glass doors. Surveillance cameras present every nook and crook of the room with security drones flying silently overhead, scanning every face, every badge, every retinal print.  
There were no windows in this part of the KRONEX institute- no clocks, no noise from the outside world. Time, here, was studied, twisted, and sometimes... broken. 
You adjusted the collar of your lab coat, feeling the slight static charge settling against your skin. Another night. Another sequence calibration.  
You were the lead scientist for KRONEX's Temporal Division, and one of only five globally certified operators with direct clearance to manipulate raw time.  
Not because you are lucky- but because you are good- really good at what you do.  
"You are early." Said a familiar voice.  
You turned around to see Taehyun, hands in his lab coat pockets, glasses slightly askew. He always arrived fashionably five minutes late, so this was new.  
"So are you," you say smirking.  
"Someone write it in the history."  
He chuckled, stepping beside you as the biometric scanner opened the reinforced glass doors to Lab room Delta- 12. 
Inside, your team was already gathered,  
Mira, the chronophysics analyst, stood at her console with her usual lip balm which she applies ever minute, tapping at the interface like it owned her something.  
Yuvi, head of atmospheric translation, stayed near the back, mumbling data projections to herself. 
Jungwon, the youngest, but sharp as hell, greeted you with the usual, two fingered salute from behind the drone mapping panel.  
"Took you long enough." Mira muttered without looking up. 
"You're welcome for the coffee I brought you last time." You say as you head to the central table.  
Everyone quickly followed you, sitting around the table. 
You five are the specialized high qualification scientists who got chosen to be the people handling lab delta- 12. Coming from different backgrounds, having same interests and working in cases together for years made your guys' bond unbreakable.  
You five are highly qualified specialists chosen to operate Lab Delta-12. Coming from different backgrounds but sharing the same passion, you've worked on countless cases together over the years — and that’s made your bond unbreakable. 
The door opened, interrupting your casual talks.  
In walked, Dr. Han Myung-sik— head of KRONAX, the man who'd once published a paper predicting time dilation six years before it was observed in real data. His face, though aged, was unreadable— eyes sharp beneath the thick silver eyebrows.  
No one spoke. You all stood up immediately.  
"Sit," he said. "This will be quick."  
The doors sealed shut behind him. A cold hum flickered through the room as he turned on the internal projector.  
Five floating files appeared above the surface. Each labeled, RED CASE.  
"Your group— delta 12 is chosen for this matter." Dr.Han said quietly.  
You could feel the weight of his words which he's about to say.
"We've uncovered five unresolved incidents. Each linked to potentially an unnatural shift in recorded time."  
"These aren't ripples," he continued.  
"These are fractures. Events that don't line up with any known temporal logic. People disappeared, memories vanished, objects never aged and yet—"  
He tapped the interface. The room dimmed, and each of your profiles synced to a case file. 
"You are the only ones qualified to investigate." 
He started pacing slowly.  
"Yuvi. You're being sent to March 2311, Seoul; right before the blackout that erased six months of global data records. You'll observe the internal tech culture and corporate rivalry."  
Yuvi blinked, nodding quietly, already calculating her cover identity.  
"Mira."  
He turned to her.  
"Your case is year 1652, Gyeongju province. A palace scribble who reportedly recorded a 'sky-born woman of light' before his records were seized. The ink used in his account was... not of this earth.” 
Mira grinned. "Finally, something fun."  
"Jungwon. Taehyun. You'll split into Northern territories. Parallel years, overlapping reports. Two villages with identical names, but only one should exist."  
Jungwon raised an eyebrow, "Are we crossing time lines? "  
"Just brushing," Dr.Han replied. "Do not stay longer than you have to."
Then, he turned to you.  
"And you."  
The room stilled.  
"Your case is the most weird one."  
A red dot expanded above the table. 
Satellite data. Korean countryside. Grainy and quiet. 
"A village in 2019 – known to exist, documented, populated and functioning." "Then, it disappeared. Not physically or violently. Just... gone. All the databases rewrote themselves. The people who lived there vanished as if they were never even existed— never even born." "Your job is to go there, undercover. Blend in. Find the root event. Identify the root autonomy and leave before it happens."  
Your fingers clenched lightly under the table. You stared at the red dot on the map.  
2019.  
A quiet time. A dangerous one — because it was still close enough to modern history to be familiar. Easy to slip up. Easy to stay too long.  
"Do we suspect temporal interference?"  
You asked as you shifted your gaze from the red dot to his eyes. Dr.Han meets your eyes. "We suspect something far worse. Something that doesn't belong in any time."  
The files flickered red again. "You'll begin calibration tonight. You jump within 750 hours. That is one month. Use your time wisely."  
As he turned to leave, he paused just once— right by the door.  
"And one more thing," he said without looking back.  "Don't fall in love with the timeline. It doesn't love you back."  
With that, he was gone. The table darkens. The lights return. Yuvi exhales. Mira cracks her knuckles and Jungwon leans forward.  
"2019 huh?" Taehyun mutters beside you. "Better pack your sarcasm and Emo clothes."  
You don't respond. You just stare at the red dot again. 
The village. Gone from memory. Gone from maps. But waiting for you all the same.  
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One month. 
And only one day to finish prepping, calibrating your minds, bodies, and identities before entering a timeline that wouldn’t even recognize your names. You sat in the Sim Room, surrounded by floating holoscreens of early-2010s Korea. Architecture. Clothing. Language slang. Historical emotional markers. It was all too recent. Too real. 
Mira was curled on a bench nearby, watching 1600s scrollwork with a look that said I’d rather wing it. Taehyun was arguing with an AI over inconsistency in his destination’s documentation. Again. Jungwon? Already finished his prep module and was now trying to teach Mira how to drink from a metal bottle while upside down. 
“You’re going to the past, not space,” she said, annoyed but smiling.  “Still useful if I end up in a well,” Jungwon shrugged. You blinked away the holograms and stood, stretching out your arms. 
“This doesn’t feel like prep,” Yuvi murmured, joining you. “It feels like goodbye.” 
You didn’t answer.  
She studied you, thoughtful. “You okay with your timeline?”  “2019 is barely the past,” you said. “Feels like I could bump into my parents if I’m not careful.”  “Yeah, but yours is the haunted village,” Mira called. “Mine is just a floating woman in the sky.” 
“You’re the floating woman,” Jungwon muttered under his breath. She chucked a protein chip at him while he hid behind you, holding your shoulders as if his body isn't larger than yours.  
“Alright,” Taehyun said, glancing around. “Final dinner tonight in the Commons? Before the serious lockdown begins?”  “Only if you don’t bring another slide presentation to the table,” Mira groaned. 
“I make no promises.”  You smiled — small, but genuine 
And as the others drifted out of the room, chattering, playfully teasing, you lingered a moment longer — looking up at the blinking red timestamp over the Sim Door. 
30:00:00:00  DAYS : HOURS : MINUTES: SECONDS  JUMP 
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You were the first one in the bay. The air smelled sterile, like metal and ionized mist. The chamber was massive — white, cold, humming. Five jump pods lined the back wall, each glowing faint blue with individual temporal calibration. 
The boots of your suit clicked softly as you walked, every step echoing louder than your breath. The fabric hugged your body like skin, the material pressure-sealed and embedded with auto-adaptive climate tech. Your mind was a storm beneath the still surface — years of training colliding with something much quieter. 
“Couldn’t sleep?” came Taehyun’s voice from behind. You turned. He looked exhausted, but composed — the kind of man who smiled with his mouth but not his eyes. “Didn’t try,” you replied simply. 
He nodded, stepping beside you, with his arm around your shoulder. You both looked at the pods in silence. 
One for each of you. One jump. One direction.  No promises of coming back the same. 
Soon after, Yuvi arrived — hair tied, suit zipped, clutching a small, folded piece of paper in her hand. A name, probably. A reminder of something real. Mira strolled in with a grin too bright to be sincere. “Guess it’s finally happening,” she said, snapping her gum, though her hands trembled slightly as she adjusted her suit cuffs. 
Jungwon came last, walking like he was on his way to a vacation. Humming. But you saw the tension in his knuckles as he flexed them once, twice. Dr. Han entered from the upper level, flanked by three silent technicians and a console assistant holding the jump sequence tablet. 
“Final clearances have been locked in,” he announced, voice loud across the bay. “You have fifteen minutes.” 
One by one, your mission drives were inserted into the small ports at your pod stations. The information would sync once you landed in your time period — personalized cover stories, forged credentials, emergency kill phrases. 
“I’ll see you all again,” Jungwon said, softer now, eyes scanning the rest of you. “In whatever version of time we land in. 
“Bring back something cool,” Mira added. “Like a comet or an alien.”  “Or your soul intact,” Yuvi muttered, mostly to herself. You looked around. 
These people — their lives had been laced into yours for years. Work. Sleep. Discover. Repeat. The way your names felt normal together. The easy sarcasm. The shared silence in moments like this. You didn’t know what it would be like without them.  Maybe you weren’t meant to know. Your pod blinked green. Final sequence activated. 
You stood in front of it, heart slamming once, sharply, against your ribs. 
“You’ll be inserted at 03:12 AM, August 9th, 2019,” Dr. Han said beside you. “Just outside the village’s boundary. Our records end there. No satellite returns after that date. No digital trails. Just fog.” 
You nodded. 
“And remember,” he added, “observe, record, don’t interfere.” He paused. “And don’t stay longer than you have to.” You stepped into the pod. The door hissed closed behind you. Inside: darkness. Soft blue lights blinked around your headrest. A countdown began in the corner. 
00:00:10  00:00:09  00:00:08...  Your breathing slowed. Fingers tight on the seat grips.  00:00:03  00:00:02...  You thought of nothing.  00:00:01  ENGAGING TEMPORAL LAUNCH. 
Everything went white. 
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You woke up choking on fog. 
Your knees hit grass first, body staggering out of the collapsed time pod buried beneath undergrowth. The pod disintegrated on schedule — technology melted into mist the second your boots touched this era. You stood slowly, the chill biting through your fabricated 2010s-era jacket. A navy hoodie. Worn boots. Phone model synced to local time tech. Fake ID in your pocket. History-approved.  And ahead of you — trees. Low mist curling over quiet fields. One winding road in the dark. 
“03:14,” you whispered, checking the time. You started walking. It didn’t take long to reach the village. Just a few winding turns along cracked pavement and flickering streetlamps — too dim for a place this small. It looked normal at first glance. Houses with tiled roofs. Wind chimes. A distant dog barking. But the silence? Too heavy. Too complete. Not a single radio. Not one human voice. 
You followed the map projection in your eye lens. Your identity here: transfer student, staying with a distant relative for the summer before university. Your cover was clean. “Blend in. Observe. Don’t interfere.” Dr. Han’s words echoed. 
You reached the village center. A bakery. A post office. A small clinic. It was beautiful — in a nostalgic, sleepy sort of way. You spotted an inn. Two stories. Wooden steps. A soft yellow porch light still glowing. You knocked once. A moment later, an older woman opened the door, eyes squinting at your unfamiliar face. 
“Ah
 you must be the niece, right? From Seoul?” You smiled, polite. "Yes, ma’am.”  “Room’s upstairs. Already made it up for you.”  With that, you leave to your room. 
August 10, 2019.
The village was quieter in the morning. Not dead. Just... slow. 
You walked past the corner bakery — the one that smelled like burnt sugar and citrus. Past a row of mailboxes that hadn’t been touched in a week. You weren’t sure if people here hated bills or just trusted too easily. Notebook in your jacket. Identity chip syncing your steps to the research log in your neural band. 
Day 2.  Civilian behavior: consistent.  Average activity start time: 6:53 AM  No sign of temporal noise. No anomalies. 
You smiled and bowed slightly to an old man sweeping the steps outside a shop. He gave you a nod in return. Eyes kind, but faintly puzzled — like he couldn’t remember when you arrived, but accepted you anyway. That was the first pattern you noticed. People here forgot details fast. But nothing big enough to ring alarms. Just enough to feel like dĂ©jĂ  vu. 
You took a seat on the raised edge of a well in the town center, glancing down at the still water.  Your eye-lens scanned your surroundings. Kids biking. A woman hanging sheets in perfect rows. Market stalls setting up. 
Everything looked normal. Back at the inn, the old woman handed you a basket. 
“Bread for the east field home. The family that lives up near the woods. They get their supplies late.” 
“East field?” you asked, trying to remember the map. 
“Take the long path. The house is old, but someone’s always there.” 
“Someone?” 
She nodded. “A quiet boy. Rarely speaks. Keeps to himself. Been around longer than most here.” 
You didn’t ask more. Just took the basket and walked. And as you stepped onto the eastern trail, into the trees and shifting light
 You didn’t know yet that you were walking toward the beginning. Of the end. 
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The path to the east house was longer than expected. 
Thick trees bent overhead like old, quiet watchers. The air here was different — cooler, touched with something metallic. You adjusted the basket in your hands. You finally reached the gate — rusted iron, half open. A path lined with overgrown grass stretched up to a traditional hanok-style house. Wooden. Quiet. Heavy with stillness. 
You stepped through, gently. No animals. No birds. Just that strange silence again. You knocked once. Then twice. No answer. You were about to leave when the door creaked open. And there he was. 
He looked like he didn’t belong in 2019. Or any year. 
Dressed simply — white cotton shirt, black slacks, sleeves slightly rolled up. But there was something... too elegant about the way he held the door. Something slow and precise. Still. His eyes — dark, unfathomable — landed on yours. 
For a full second, he didn’t say a word. Neither did you. “Delivery,” you said softly, lifting the basket. 
“Right,” he replied after a pause, voice smooth, almost melodic. “They said you’d be coming.” 
You held the basket out, but he didn’t take it immediately. Instead, he studied you. Not rudely. Not even intently. Just... curiously. Like a puzzle he couldn’t quite read. Or a scent he wasn’t supposed to follow. The moment you stepped through the trees, he felt it. The beat beneath your skin. The warmth. Your blood had a scent — not strong, not desperate like others. 
Sweet. Calming. Clean. He hadn’t fed in days. But you made the ache stir. “You live here alone?” you asked. 
He nodded. “For a while now.” 
“It’s beautiful.” 
He didn’t smile. But he didn’t look away. 
“Most people say it’s empty.” 
You tilted your head. “Are you?” 
That made something shift in his gaze — not amusement exactly, but the ghost of something near it. “Not today,” he said finally. 
He took the basket, fingers brushing yours for just half a second. His skin was cool. Not cold. But noticeably not warm. “Thank you,” he said, stepping back. “Be careful going back. The light fades fast out here.” 
You turned to leave, but your instincts tugged once. “What’s your name?” you asked over your shoulder. 
A pause. 
“Sunghoon,” he said quietly. 
You nodded once. “I’m Y/N.” Another pause. “I know,” he said. 
And then the door closed. As you walked back down the path, heart steady but hands tingling from where his touched yours, you couldn’t shake one thing: There had been no heartbeat behind that door. Just silence. You don’t notice someone- Sunghoon, watching you from his window as you walk back. 
And that, that night few people go missing because Sunghoon, couldn’t handle his hunger for blood. Not when he was reminded of how desperate he was to taste something sweet- something pure like your blood- like you. He can’t bite you, not yet. So, he resorted to his usual way, biting the villagers. One by one.  
It was quiete big village when Sunghoon first step foot in there. 2010. The year Sunghoon decided to enter into the huge village, leaving behind memories of his previous life- the one where everyone treated him like the monster he was. He didn’t like it one bit. So? He ended it. Bit and killed everyone who called him a monster.  
Leaving behind memories and people wasn’t new to him. He’s been like that since he was turned- since 527 years. It's what he’s best at other than sucking peoples’ blood. Having spent many years on this planet made him discard unwanted memories for good.  
And maybe that’s why he never truly loved anyone. It’s not because he isn’t capable of it. It's because he knows that they won't stick around. Not when they find out what he is, not when they leave this world entirely. Also, because, he never truly found someone who made him feel things. Feel things which are foreign to him- Desire.  
Desire for blood? Thats more like filling his hunger. Desire is what he felt when he saw you. If you ever told Sunghoon that he’d yearn for a girl he met once, he’d scoff, shaking his head. That can never happen, not when he's been on this earth for more than 500 years. He knows how to control his feelings- it was easy for him because he didn't have any feelings in the first place.  
But why is that the moment he saw you, heard you- your hearbeat, your blood pulsing in your throat, smelled the scent of you, he wanted to make you his?  
Its funny, really. This whatever weird feeling he has in his stomach is new to him. Perhaps he’s hungry for your blood? No. He’s hungry for you.  
You are here to find out how the village disappeared. Maybe you do find out that he’s the reason for the mass disappearance. But will your heart obey to leave behind everything that you've uncovered here? Leave behind someone, who is the sole reason why the disappearance happened in the first place? 
Only the future holds the answer. Maybe the present? You truly don't know, not when the time’s twisted and you are spiralling in it. 
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August 14, 2019. 
You weren’t planning to run into him again. You were just taking the trail by the lake. Collecting audio samples. Watching people prep for the lantern festival — all smiles and paper crafts, sunlight catching on water like glass. But then there he was. Standing near the edge of the hill that overlooked the lake. Not moving. Just
 watching it. Like the water itself had said something only he could hear. 
You almost didn’t say anything. But he turned to you first. 
“You walk this path often?” 
His voice was still soft. Still slow. Like everything he said had already passed through a hundred filters before reaching you. 
“Not really,” you said, stepping closer. “But it’s quiet. Good for thinking.” 
“Thinking,” he echoed, like it was a foreign word. “You do that a lot?” 
You smiled. “Occupational hazard.” 
“Ah,” he said. “Let me guess. You’re a writer.” 
“Wrong.” 
“A scientist?” 
You blinked. A beat too long. 
“Why that guess?” 
“Your eyes,” he said. 
“What about them?” 
“They look like they’re always dissecting things. Even me.” 
He turned back to the lake after that, leaving your thoughts spiraling slightly behind him. The sun was dipping lower, casting light through the trees. A warm breeze stirred the ends of your hair, and for once, you didn’t feel like recording anything. Just being here. 
“Why do you live so far from the village?” you asked. 
“They forget me better this way.” 
You frowned. “That’s sad.” 
“Not really.” 
“When people forget you
 you stop needing to prove you exist.” 
You turned to him then — not just listening but really seeing him. The distance in his eyes. The calm sadness he wore like second skin. 
“You don’t want to be remembered?” 
“I didn’t say that,” he replied. “I just don’t mind being forgotten.” 
A few kids laughed somewhere nearby, running with paper lanterns. You looked down at your shoes. “You’re hard to forget, you know.” It slipped out before you could stop it. He didn’t respond for a moment. Then, so quietly: “So are you.” 
Neither of you moved. The wind stilled. The air felt... charged. Like time paused. Just for this. 
Then— “You should go,” he said gently.
“It gets colder here after sunset.” He wasn’t pushing you away. But he was. And that strange ache bloomed behind your ribs without warning. You turned to go, steps slow. And as you walked, you felt his eyes on your back the entire time. 
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August 18, 2019. 
It was supposed to be a short walk. You’d been gathering weather data, checking tree patterns near the edge of the forest. The innkeeper said the rain wouldn’t come until morning. But the sky didn’t listen. It started with a single drop. Then another. 
Within seconds, it was falling fast — fat, cold drops smacking against your shoulders, soaking through your hoodie in a matter of moments. You pulled the fabric up over your head and turned to head back — but the path was already slick, the trees pressing in closer, and fog began to roll over the field like a breath held too long. 
“Seriously?” you muttered, shivering. That’s when you saw him. Standing just under the crooked edge of an old pavilion by the hill — motionless, dry, and completely unbothered by the storm.  Sunghoon. 
You blinked, surprised. "You're always just
 appearing out of nowhere.” 
“You're always walking into places you shouldn't be alone,” he replied calmly, eyes tracking the water running down your cheek. 
You hesitated. Then stepped under the structure, chest heaving slightly from the sudden cold. Your shoulders were soaked. Hair clinging to your face. Hands trembling. He watched you quietly. “You're freezing.” 
You gave a weak smile. “That tends to happen when it rains on humans.” 
He didn’t return it. Instead, he removed his outer jacket and handed it over without a word. You stared at it. “I’m already wet. You don’t have to—” 
“I want to.” 
You took it slowly. It was still warm. 
You slipped it on. It smelled like night air and something faintly old — like worn books and clean linen. Not the scent of someone who lived alone in a dusty house. 
The silence stretched. 
Raindrops tapping the roof like a ticking clock. 
Your breath fogged the air. 
His didn’t. 
“Why were you even out here?” you asked. 
He didn’t answer immediately. 
Then: 
“I thought you’d come this way.” 
You turned your head sharply. “You were
 waiting for me?” 
He didn’t flinch. 
“Something about the sky felt wrong. I knew you’d ignore it.” 
“You don’t even know me.” 
“I know your pattern.” 
That shut you up for a moment. 
And somehow... warmed you. 
More than the jacket did. 
Your teeth chattered softly. You turned away, embarrassed. 
Suddenly, you felt something. 
His fingers — gently, lightly — tucking a strand of wet hair behind your ear. 
You froze. 
“You should be more careful,” he murmured, voice barely audible over the rain. “This place doesn’t forgive softness.” 
You looked up at him then. 
And he was already too close. 
Not touching. 
Not reaching. 
Just there. 
And for a second, you wondered what it would be like if he leaned in just a little more. 
“Do you always talk like that?” you whispered, lips parted. “Like you’re centuries old?” 
He gave the faintest smile like he knows something you don’t. 
The rain kept falling. The sky stayed grey. 
And your heartbeat too loudly in your ears. 
You didn’t ask him why his hands were cold even though he felt warm. 
You didn’t ask why he never blinked when he looked at you. 
The rain kept falling. 
And he stood there, completely still, listening to the rhythm of her blood, her breath, her heart... 
And all he could think was: 
Don’t touch her again.  Don’t want her.  Don’t let her see the monster inside you. 
But it was already too late. 
Because for the first time in years, he wanted something enough to lose control. 
And it was you. 
The rain had stopped, but the night still smelled like it. 
You walked slowly. 
Beside him. 
His jacket still hung over your shoulders, and you hadn’t given it back. He hadn’t asked. 
“You didn’t have to walk me home,” you said softly, watching your boots splash through a shallow puddle. 
“I know.” 
He wasn’t smiling, but his tone was warm. Like he wanted to say, I just wanted more time with you, but didn’t know how. 
The village lights shimmered faint in the distance — soft and yellow, like floating lanterns. 
It felt like you were the only two people in the world. 
“Do you always spend your nights out there?” you asked. 
“Sometimes. I like the quiet.” 
“Most people don’t,” you said. “Silence makes them uncomfortable.” 
He glanced at you. 
“What about you?” 
You thought about it. 
“I think silence is the only time people stop pretending.” 
He actually smiled at that. Just a little. The kind that tugged one corner of his mouth — barely visible, but real. 
“What do you do all day?” you asked, curious now. “No job? No classes?” 
“I read,” he said. “Walk. Watch.” 
“That sounds like what I do, too.” 
“You watch more than most people,” he replied, side-eying you. “Always observing. Analyzing.” 
You raised a brow. “Are you calling me creepy?” 
“No,” he said. “Just... different.” 
You looked away to hide your smile. 
“Is that your way of saying I’m weird?” 
“No,” he repeated, slower this time. “It’s my way of saying I see you.” 
“Okay, your turn,” you said quickly, trying to recover. “What did you want to be when you were little?” 
He didn’t answer right away. 
“I don’t remember,” he said finally. “It’s been a long time since I was little.” 
You turned to him, blinking. “How old are you, Sunghoon?” 
He looked at you. Really looked. 
Then smiled like he knew he shouldn’t say the next thing — but said it anyway. 
“Older than I look.” 
You rolled your eyes. “That’s not an answer.” 
“It’s the only one I’ve got.” 
You reached the inn gate. 
The lantern outside flickered faintly in the breeze.  Neither of you moved. 
The air was warmer now. The clouds had parted just enough for moonlight to wash over the steps. 
You stood there — his jacket still on your shoulders, the scent of rain still on your skin, and his eyes fixed gently on you. 
“Good night, Sunghoon,” you said finally, stepping up to the door. 
“Good night, Y/N.” 
You turned the handle. 
Just before stepping inside, you hesitated. 
“You never told me what you like,” you said over your shoulder. 
He tilted his head slightly. “Like?” 
“Hobbies. Music. Favorite food. Normal things.” 
Another pause. 
Then: 
“The sound of rain,” he said. “Books with no endings. And people who don’t run away.” 
You met his eyes. 
And something about the way he said it made your heart ache. 
You didn’t know why. 
But you didn’t look away. 
Not for a long moment. 
Then finally, you stepped inside. 
And closed the door. 
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August 20, 2019.
You told yourself it wasn’t a big deal. 
Just returning a jacket. 
Just a polite gesture. 
Just good manners. 
So why did your pulse stutter when the house came into view? 
The same tall trees. The same crooked path. The same quiet. 
You climbed the short stone steps and raised your hand to knock — but before you could, the door opened. 
He was already there. 
Like he’d been waiting. 
Or like he’d heard you coming long before you got close. 
“You came back,” he said, voice low, like sunlight through fog. 
“Just to return this,” you said quickly, lifting the folded jacket. 
“Of course.” 
But he didn’t take it. 
Instead, he stepped aside. 
“Do you want to come in?” 
You blinked. 
“Is that okay?” 
“If it wasn’t, I wouldn’t have asked.” 
You stepped inside. 
The air was cool, but not cold. The interior still had that strange untouched feeling — like a photo frozen in time. Wood floors. A low bookshelf. A kettle on the counter, untouched. 
You walked slowly, setting the jacket on the nearest chair. 
“You live like a ghost,” you said softly. 
He raised a brow. “I’m neat.” 
“You’re ancient,” you teased. 
He smirked faintly. “So you’ve said.” 
You turned toward the bookshelf — rows of old spines and journals, some in languages you didn’t recognize. One looked handwritten. Another... burned around the edges. 
“These don’t look like they’re from a village library.” 
“They’re not.” 
“So what are they?” 
“Pieces of me,” he said. 
You paused, looking back. 
His expression didn’t change, but there was something fragile in his stillness. 
You let the question go. 
“Tea?” he asked suddenly, already reaching for the kettle. 
“You drink tea?” 
“No. But you do.” 
He made it quietly. Smooth movements. No wasted motion. 
He handed you the mug and sat across from you, careful, like he was making sure there was enough distance. 
“Do people visit you often?” you asked, wrapping your hands around the cup. 
“No.” 
“Why?” 
“Because they forget me,” he said. “Or
 I let them.” 
“But you didn’t want me to forget you?” you asked quietly. 
His eyes met yours. 
Dark. Unreadable. 
“I didn’t plan on you remembering at all.” 
You blinked. “What changed?” 
He stared at the steam curling between you. 
Then said, without blinking: 
“You smiled at me.” 
The silence stretched. 
The weight of it made your chest feel tight. 
Your fingers tightened around the mug. 
“Why do you always say things like that?” you whispered. 
“Like what?” 
“Like it means something. And then you never explain.” 
He stood up then, slowly — walking toward the window, looking out at the trees. 
“Because I’ve learned that explaining doesn’t stop people from leaving.” 
“So you just... stay mysterious?” 
“No,” he said, without turning around. “I stay safe.” 
You stood too. Quiet steps. 
He didn’t move as you stopped beside him, just far enough for the space between your hands to hum. 
“What are you so afraid of, Sunghoon?” you asked, not accusing — just soft. 
A pause. 
Then finally: 
“That if you knew the truth about me
 you'd stop smiling at all.” 
“What are you saying?” 
“Nothing. Don’t think too much.” He says. 
You didn’t leave. 
You just stood beside him. 
And for a moment, the silence between you wasn’t heavy. 
It was tender. 
“You okay?” you asked. 
He didn’t answer. 
Didn’t trust himself to speak. 
Because right now, he could feel it rising — that burn behind his eyes, the pressure in his jaw, the ancient ache in his throat. 
The want. 
Not just to feed. 
To claim. 
“I think you should go,” he said, voice tight. 
“Did I say something wrong?” 
“No.” 
“Then—” 
“Please.” 
His back was turned now.  He couldn’t let her see his face.  Not when his eyes were beginning to glow. Not when his fangs had started to edge down. 
He bit the inside of his cheek — hard enough to draw blood. Let the pain steady him. Anchor him. 
“Sunghoon? Is something wrong? You can trust me- I trust you.”  
But all he said was: 
“I don’t trust myself.” 
You stared at his back for a long moment. 
Then quietly
 you left. 
The door shut behind you with a soft click. 
And he stood there in the quiet, eyes still burning, heart raging inside a chest that shouldn’t have had one anymore. 
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August 21, 2019. 
You went to the library to check the village’s records.  
To look for any book, any magazine, any piece of information that would help you get a better insight about the village’s roots.  
You found a series of census logs tucked into a low cabinet—records of the village’s population numbers and names dating back to the 1900s. Faded, but surprisingly intact. 
And that’s when you saw it. 
A pattern. 
In 2010, the population was 528.  In 2012, it dropped to 413.  By 2015: 290.  2017: 178. 
No official records of why.  No mass migration.  No natural disaster.  No illness outbreak. 
Just... names disappearing. 
Not all at once.  Not dramatically. 
But slowly.  Like something was taking them. One by one. 
You scanned the reports harder now. 
Looking for causes. Deaths. Relocations. 
But most names just had one word stamped across the last column: 
“Unrecorded.” 
You slammed the binder shut and sat back. 
Your chest felt tight. 
You looked around the library. The light felt colder. The silence heavier. 
This is getting nowhere. Rather than the doubts clearing, more questions are surfacing. Too many questions. Too less information. You doubt you are even eligible to solve this mystery. Maybe Dr.Han realizes he made a mistake choosing you once you return. You wonder how the others are doing. Are they going through the same difficulties?  
You shake your head as if it shakes away the insecure thoughts creeping up. You need to focus. On this village. The people. Everyone here seems normal except... Sunghoon. 
He always seemed to appear when no one else was around. 
Your fingers curled against the cover of the book. 
No. Don’t jump to conclusions. That doesn’t mean anything. 
And yet
 
Something in your gut whispered otherwise. 
Still, when the sun began to set— 
You found yourself walking toward the hill. 
Toward him. 
Carrying questions you couldn’t ask yet. 
And a heart that didn’t want answers- the real ones.  
The sky was painted in soft blue fading to lavender.  The last light of the sun had just dipped behind the mountains, leaving a glow that shimmered across the tall grass. 
You stood at the top of the hill, overlooking the village lights far below.  Everything was quiet. 
Except your thoughts. 
Except him. 
Sunghoon stood beside you — close, not quite touching. Hands in his pockets. Eyes on the horizon. 
“You always find the quietest places,” you said softly. 
“I think they find me.” 
You turned to him, trying to read that impossible expression on his face. 
“You always talk like that. Like there’s a whole world in your head and you’re just
 giving me scraps.” 
“I don’t mean to,” he said. “I just forget how to be anything else.” 
You took a breath. 
“Then remind yourself. Just for tonight. Just for me.” 
He looked at you then. 
Really looked. 
And for the first time, he didn’t look away. 
“You scare me,” he said quietly. 
That made your chest tighten. 
“Why?” 
“Because you make me want to stay.” 
The wind brushed through the grass. 
Your heart was too loud. Your breath too soft. 
He stepped closer. 
His hand, trembling just slightly, reached up and cupped your cheek — gentle, reverent, like he was afraid you’d vanish if he touched too hard. 
His thumb brushed under your eye, then trailed down to your jaw. 
“Say something,” he whispered. 
You didn’t. 
You leaned in instead. 
And he met you there. 
The kiss was nothing like you imagined. 
It wasn’t rushed.  It wasn’t wild. 
It was slow. 
Like two people learning what it meant to feel alive again. 
His lips were cool at first — like the wind before rain — but they softened against yours. Moved with aching care. Like he was memorizing the shape of your mouth and trying not to fall apart doing it. 
You felt his breath catch. 
Felt his hand slide into your hair. 
Felt your knees go weak when he deepened the kiss — still gentle, still hesitant, but full of something you didn’t have a name for. 
And then— 
He pulled away. 
Fast. 
Like he’d caught fire. 
His eyes were wide.  Not with lust. Not even guilt. 
With fear. 
“I shouldn’t have—” 
“Sunghoon,” you whispered, reaching for him. 
He stepped back. 
“No. This was a mistake.” 
“Why are you doing this again?”  “Every time I get close, you push me away. Why?” 
He didn’t answer. 
Not with words. 
But his face
 
That expression? 
It looked like someone who just tasted something too good.  Something too human.  Something that made him forget what he was. 
“Because I can’t be the reason you get hurt,” he finally said. 
And then he turned away. 
Leaving you alone with a kiss that still burned on your lips, and a silence that felt heavier than ever. 
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August 26, 2019. 
You ignored him after that. Turned your head away whenever he got into. Looked away first when you both made eye contact. Avoided him when he came to apologize the very next day of your kiss.  
Not cause you hate him. You wish you did but no. You remember what Dr.Han said, “Observe. Record. don’t interfere.” You can't risk everything just cause of some stupid, weird feelings that you have. No. You can’t let your emotions get in the way of your case. This isn't right.  
Youre altering time, you should do it wisely, not recklessly.  
And so, you did what you thought was best. Ignore. Distance. Observe. 
Or so, you thought.  
You weren’t expecting to run into him. 
But of course you did. 
He was leaning against the side wall of the bakery, half-hidden in the shade, like always. Silent. Watching. 
He didn’t call out. 
Didn’t wave. 
But you felt it — the shift in air when his gaze hit you. That quiet weight of his presence. 
You almost kept walking. 
Almost. 
But then— 
“Y/N.” 
His voice was low. Not cold. Just
 tired. 
You turned after a moment of hesitation. 
Met his eyes. 
“Are you avoiding me?” he asked. 
Simple question. 
But it landed sharp. 
You didn’t answer right away. 
“I’ve just been
 busy.” 
“You’ve seen me.” 
“I didn’t think you wanted to talk.” 
“Don’t do that,” he said, stepping forward. “Don’t turn it around like it’s me.” 
You blinked. “I’m not—” 
“You haven’t looked at me in five days.” 
His tone wasn’t angry.  It was quiet. Steady. Too steady. 
“You smiled at me one night,” he said, “and then the next morning, it’s like I didn’t exist.” 
“Sunghoon—” 
“And I thought—”  He paused. Ran a hand through his hair, frustrated.  “I thought maybe you needed space. But then I saw you with that guy. That tall one from the orchard. And you were laughing. Just
 laughing. Like everything’s normal.” 
You looked away. 
He let the silence settle. 
Then finally: 
“It hurt.” 
That was it. Just that. 
Not possessive. Not demanding. Just real. 
You didn’t know what to say. So, you said the only truth you had: 
“I’m scared, Sunghoon.” 
He looked at you for a long time. 
“Of me?” 
“Of not knowing what’s happening. Of what this village is hiding. Of what you’re hiding.” 
You stepped back slightly, instinctively. Not far. 
But enough. 
His eyes dropped to the space between you.  Then back up. 
“Do you think I’d ever hurt you?” 
You hesitated. 
Then, quietly: 
“I don’t know.” 
That broke something in him. 
You saw it. In his eyes. 
Not rage. 
Just sadness. 
“I wouldn’t,” he said softly. “Not even if I wanted to.” 
You turned back and left without replying, unable to look into his face or even talk to him. 
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September 5, 2019. 
You shouldn’t have gone looking. 
You told yourself you weren’t.  That you just needed air.  That the trail by the forest was peaceful this time of day. 
But really? You missed him. 
And you couldn’t stop thinking about what he said. 
“I wouldn’t hurt you. Not even if I wanted to.” 
It looped in your mind for days. Through sleep. Through silence. Through guilt. 
You didn’t give him an answer. So, you were going to. 
You were going to find him and say you’re not sure what this is, but you’re willing to try. That you believe he’s good. That you want to believe it, even if you’re scared. 
But then— 
You saw it. 
You heard something first. 
A low sound. Guttural. Like a growl tucked beneath a breath. 
And then a figure stumbling — just ahead. At the edge of the trees. A man. Drunk? Hurt? 
And beside him—  Holding him up— 
Was Sunghoon. 
Or
 something that used to be him 
His head was tilted.  His lips pressed just beneath the man’s jaw.  His hands clutched the man’s shoulders too tightly.  And his eyes— 
They glowed. 
Not fully.  Just enough for the shadows to catch it. 
Red. Dim. Inhuman. 
You saw his mouth open.  Saw the flash of fang. 
And then— 
The man sagged. 
Like air had left him. 
You froze. 
Your heart punched against your ribs. 
He stared.  Still half-shadowed.  Blood on his mouth. 
He stepped forward. 
“Y/N.” 
You backed up. 
Didn’t speak. 
Didn’t breathe. 
Your eyes wide. Your expression already saying everything your voice couldn’t. 
Fear. 
The kind that wasn’t subtle. 
The kind you couldn’t take back. 
“No,” he said quietly. “No, don’t—please don’t look at me like that.” 
He wiped at his mouth. Quickly. Clumsily. 
“I can explain. It’s not—” 
You flinched when he stepped closer. 
That did it. 
He stopped. 
His hands dropped to his sides. 
And something in him
 wilted. 
“So, this is it?” he whispered. 
His voice wasn’t cold.  Wasn’t sharp.  It was just
 empty. 
You didn’t say anything. 
Couldn’t. 
You turned. 
And ran. 
And behind you, the last thing you heard was him whispering into the night: 
“I didn’t want you to find out like this.” 
You rushed back home and stumbled in. 
You quickly went to your bedroom, opening the drawers and pulled out your logbook. 
You sat on the floor beside your bed after grabbing a marker.  
The pages were filled with sketches. Maps. Observations.  And now? 
Scribbled question marks. Shaky handwriting. A timeline you couldn’t look at anymore. 
2010 — population: 528  2012 — 413  2015 — 290  2017 — 178  2019 — barely 60 left. 
No disease.  No evacuation orders.  No record of where they went. 
But you knew now. 
You saw it. 
His eyes. His fangs.  The man in the forest, half-drained and limp in his arms. 
You knew. 
And the truth clawed at your throat like it didn’t want to be swallowed. 
“I wouldn’t hurt you,” he had said. 
You remembered his voice.  Too quiet.  Too pained to be fake. 
But it didn’t matter now, did it? 
Because while he was giving you flowers and walking you home
 
He was feeding on the people who welcomed you with tea and stories. 
You closed your eyes. 
Your hands were trembling. 
You remembered the first time you saw him. 
How unreal he looked in the moonlight.  How safe you felt beside him. 
How stupid that was now. 
Was any of it real? 
The kiss. The laughter. The jacket he left folded on your bed. 
Or were you just the next name on his list? 
The next girl to get too close? 
Were you just another pawn in his game?  
Whatever it was, you shouldn't have gotten close with him. Shouldn't have tried to interfere. You shouldn't have done it and God, you regret it.  
And for the first time in years
  You cried. 
Not from fear.  But from heartbreak. 
If only you backed down that day on the hill. If only you shouldn't have let him close to you. If only... 
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September 7, 2019. 
After that day, you didn't leave your room. 
You didn't go out, the fear of him catching you always haunting your mind whenever you reach for the door handle. 
And weirdly enough, you should feel better, you really should but why did you feel... empty?  
He’s a monster! He kills innocent people, hes a vampire. But why didn't the fact alone scare you? Why were you craving for his presence? Why were you thinking about the moments you've spent together? This isn't even real. Its past, you weren't even born at this time period. You shouldn't be feeling things you aren't supposed to. 
But you can't deny the fact that your heart aches for his presence- for him.  
But you don't have time for this. Not when you have two days on your watch. Two days before everything goes back to normal, hopefully. And so, you push aside your feelings saying the time is playing tricks on you and start writing the report.  
All of your log entries, now are typed and kept in digital doc by you. You enter the log entries, from day one to the day you discovered the root cause of all of this- the dissapearance. You procrastinated too much while typing them in, thinking about all the wonderful days you’ve spent with locals- with him. 
But all of this isn't real, at the end of the day. You don't belong here- you shouldn't. This isn't your timeline. This is not your story. This isn't the reality you are supposed to live in and experience. This is just a case that you've got assigned to. It's your duty. And you fulfilled it by finding out the reason. And this is where you shall end it. End of this chapter, end of this case and end of him.  
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September 9, 2019.  
Today is the day. 
You pack your bag, filling it with the things you bought and the things you are taking back to your timeline. The memories, the events and the adventures.  
There wasn't a single second you haven't thought about him. But this is it. You have to say your goodbyes.  
You can't warn the others, who haven't yet got bitten by Sunghoon. Because as dr.Han said, “Don't interfere.”  
Youve already made the mistake of not listening to him and crossed the boundary and faced the consequences. You aren't going to do it again. Because at the end of the day, its fate. It already happened. You can't change it, not even when you go back in time. Because what's written, is written. If changed, you are bound to face the consequences.  
History can't be re-written.  
And so, with that, you leave.  
You stood by the terminal light beam.  
Delta 12’s jump pulse flickering through the mist. 
Your bag beside you. Your heart heavy with no one in the future world- the real world would understand or know of.  
You turned back one last time towards the village. 
Thanking it for everything it gave you- thanking it for giving Sunghoon. 
Who'll be remembered as the passing wind and the falling of leaves by you.  
And when you jumped- 
The light swallowed you whole. 
And in the same breath,  
You were gone.  
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July 22, 2090. 
You opened your eyes. 
The jump light was fading.  The room around you was cold. White. Familiar in a way that made your chest ache. 
You were home. 
But it didn’t feel like it. 
Not yet. 
Your bag was still at your side. Your fingers still trembling. Your body still in two places — the sterile floors of the lab
 and the moss-soft grass beneath his feet. 
You didn’t even notice the door sliding open until you heard the softest gasp. 
“Y/N?” 
You turned. 
And there she was. 
Mira.  Her braid was undone, her coat slung over one arm, her eyes red — like she’d either just woken up
 or hadn’t slept since the moment she jumped back. 
She stared at you. 
Then smiled. Weakly. 
“God, it’s you.” 
You couldn’t speak. 
You didn’t have to. 
She crossed the space between you in three quick steps and pulled you into the kind of hug you didn’t realize you needed until her arms wrapped around you. 
You felt her chest shudder. 
You were crying too. 
Soon, the others trickled in. 
Taehyun — still composed, but his eyes softer than usual.  Yuvi — who dropped her bag the second she saw you, crashing into the hug with a half-laugh, half-sob. Jungwon — who just stood by the door for a long time, taking all of you in like he didn’t believe you were real until that moment. 
No one said much at first. 
They just
 stood there. 
Five people who had faced time itself. 
And came back with hearts a little heavier. 
Eyes a little older. 
It felt nice. Seeing everyone’s familiar faces after being drowned in unfamiliar faces who don't even exist in reality.  
Finally, Mira sniffed and said, voice shaking: 
“I missed you guys.” 
Yuvi let out a teary laugh. 
“I didn’t realize how much till now.” 
Jungwon gave a small nod, blinking fast. 
Taehyun just whispered: 
“You’re all here.” 
You wiped your face and smiled. 
Soft. Quiet. Real. 
“Yeah.” 
“We’re here.” 
You all look at each other. A moment of silence. As if you guys are finally taking in and registering everyone’s presence. And then, you all hugged. A big group hug filled with emotions which arent said loud but felt. And finally, you felt like you are back home.  
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September 11, 2019.  
The room smelled of old circuits and sterile air.  The walls glowed faint blue, humming with quiet energy. 
You sat where you always had —  Same table.  Same lights.  Same white jackets. 
But nothing was the same anymore. 
Not the silence.  Not the weight in everyone’s eyes. 
Not the version of you that existed before. 
The door slid open. 
Dr. Han stepped in, shoulders straighter than usual, expression unreadable. 
“Good morning.” 
He stood at the edge of the circular table, clipboard in hand, eyes scanning each of you. 
“You’ve all returned safely,” he said. “On record, your missions were successful. But the records don’t matter if we don’t understand why.” 
He took a breath. 
“So, let’s talk about what really happened.” 
Dr. Han looked at Yuvi first.  
“Yuvi. March 2311. Seoul. What caused the blackout?” 
Yuvi didn’t hesitate.  But her voice was softer than usual. 
“It wasn’t just data loss,” she said. “It was deliberate. The two largest tech giants—SolarCore and NeuraStream—were engaged in a silent war for memory control. They each tried to overwrite the other’s data
 and in doing so, they wiped everyone’s.” 
A pause. 
“The blackout wasn’t a glitch. It was a battle. One that made the world forget six months — and made the companies forget what humanity was.” 
Dr. Han only nodded. 
“Mira. 1652. The scribe’s ink.” 
Mira folded her hands. 
“The man wasn’t mad. The ‘sky-born woman of light’ — she was a time displacer like us. From the future. Possibly one of the early, undocumented tests.” 
She met Dr. Han’s eyes. 
“The ink? It was our ink. Synthetic. Used in lab reports.” 
Silence fell. 
Dr. Han blinked slowly. “You’re saying the anomaly
 was ours.” 
“Yes,” Mira whispered. “We caused the myth.” 
“You two. Northern Territories. Duplicated villages.” 
Taehyun glanced at Jungwon. Jungwon gave a tiny nod. 
“There were two villages,” Jungwon said. “Identical. Same people. Same dogs. Same newspapers.” 
“Except,” Taehyun added, “They existed in overlapping timelines. One was five minutes behind the other. A permanent sync lag caused by a failed early prototype of time field testing.” 
Jungwon finished it quietly. 
“It was human error. A time scar. We tried to erase one. But they both kept living
 until one finally collapsed.” 
“Y/N,” Dr. Han said, turning to you. “The village of Myeon-ri. The one that vanished without cause.” 
Your fingers curled slightly on the edge of the table. 
You could still feel the wind there. Still hear his voice. 
You slid the chip forward. 
“There was no disease. No mass migration. No disaster. It was slow. Intentional.” 
You looked up. 
“A predator lived there. Not wild. Human-shaped. Possibly centuries old. A vampire, by older terms. He fed carefully, spaced apart. But eventually, the numbers dropped too far.” 
The others stared. 
You didn’t flinch. 
“He didn’t want the village gone. But he couldn’t stop. And no one remembered the ones who vanished. They were erased — from memory, from databases. Like they never existed.” 
“Vampire?” Dr.Han questioned. 
“Vampire.” You confirmed.  
Dr. Han asked, quietly: 
“Did he know who you were?” 
A pause. 
You met his gaze. 
“No.” 
A beat. 
“But I think I knew who he used to be.” 
You lied. Of course he knows you. He knows the woman he fell for the first time. He knows the woman who was his first ever kiss. 
You didn't tell them. You didn't to protect him and in a way, protect yourself too. 
Dr. Han stepped back. He looked at each of you — not as scientists, but as people who had seen too much. 
“You all did what centuries of historians couldn’t. You brought back truth.” 
He turned toward the exit, then paused. 
“Take the week off. Rest. File clean versions by the end of the month. We’ll
 figure out what to do with the rest.” 
The door hissed closed behind him. 
And you all sat in silence.  Hearts still somewhere in another time. 
The streets are quiet at 2 a.m. 
Neon signs buzz in blues and pinks.  Artificial rain shimmers above, falling against projection domes that keep your coat dry. 
You pass a street musician playing a slow guitar. 
The song is unfamiliar.  But it feels like him. 
Like a song you might’ve danced to on his porch.  Or hummed under your breath while he walked you home. 
Your throat tightens. 
You sit on a bench, ignoring your holopad as it pings with follow-up requests from Dr. Han. 
You can’t open the file.  You can’t even look at his name on the case label. 
Your hand slowly reaches into your coat pocket. 
The jacket he gave you is long gone. 
But you still have one thing. 
A pressed leaf. 
Red. From that tree near the hill.  Where he waited for you every evening.  Where he said nothing — just smiled — like you were his favorite moment of the day. 
You hold the leaf to your chest. 
And for a second
  you close your eyes. 
And pretend he’s sitting beside you. 
Back in the lab, the report still sits unsaved.  You’d written everything except the truth. 
“He didn’t follow me back.” 
But your chest burns with what you didn’t say. 
I think he wanted to.  I think I wanted him to.  And I think I left the part of me that believed in forever
 in his hands. 
You missed him. You looked for him in everything. The wind, the leaves, the clouds, the time, everything. And somewhere back in 2019, sunghoon feels the weight of your absence.  
Sunghoon didn't really think it'd affect him that much, but it did. He was helpless when he didn't find you. Asked everyone, searched everywhere but there wasn't a trace of you, there wasn't a thing left behind you. And God, did he miss you.  
The silence after you was worse than the centuries before you. 
You were only here a month —  But the air still tasted like you.  The breeze still moved like the hem of your coat. 
He stood by the river. 
The same one you almost slipped near.  The one where he caught your hand. 
You used to laugh here. 
Now it was empty. 
And so was he. 
His throat burned.  The ache that had quieted in your presence — like your scent tamed the storm in his blood — now returned with wildfire in his veins. 
He hadn’t fed in days.  He didn’t want anyone else. 
He wanted you. 
"Y/N..." he whispered, though the name felt like poison now. 
He tried to hold back.  He really, truly did. 
But you were gone. 
And he had nothing left to prove he was still human. 
The next night, they found the baker's house empty.  Then the woman who sold herbs.  Then the elder by the hill. 
No one saw what took them. 
And Sunghoon? 
He stood in the village center, blood drying at the corner of his mouth, eyes still locked on the road you used to walk down every dusk. 
His hands shook. 
His mouth trembled. 
"You were supposed to stay..."  "You promised me forever in your eyes." 
But you didn’t answer. 
Because you were gone. 
And so were the people in the village.  
The village lingered with only with him feeding off of everyone and your presence.  
Time moved on. 
The village eventually collapsed.  Records rewritten.  Footprints washed away. 
But he didn’t vanish. 
He moved.  Fed.  Lingered in shadows. 
Years passed.  Decades blurred. 
He watched the world crawl toward neon skies and cities that blinked like stars. 
You were long gone.  But he never stopped believing in the possibility that time — the very thing that tore you from him — might one day return you. 
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“Okay but hear me out,” Taehyun says, typing aggressively while Mira tries to slap his hand off the panel. “If I didn’t reroute the carbon filters that night, we’d all be bald. Fact.” 
“Fact?” Mira scoffs. “Fact is you nearly made the algae tank sentient. That thing winked at me.” 
“I still miss it,” Jungwon adds quietly, head down in his own files, a faint smile playing at his lips. 
Yuvi kicks her chair back dramatically, groaning. “My simulation’s stuck again. If I see one more ‘Data Error: Please Restart,’ I swear I’ll throw myself into the code.” 
Your lips curve as you watch them — the way the five of you fit into this space like puzzle pieces.  The room hums with soft tech glows and distant rain tapping the glass walls. 
It's late.  But none of you seem in a hurry to leave. 
Mira throws an energy bar at Taehyun. He catches it one-handed, smug.  Jungwon’s quietly stealing Yuvi’s half-charged mug again.  You just watch — feeling both part of it and
 a little removed. 
Because they didn’t live what you lived.  Not the way you did. 
Not with him. 
Not with Sunghoon. 
“You good?” Yuvi asks you suddenly, turning in her chair. 
You blink. “Yeah. Just
 tired.” 
“Duh,” she says, nudging your arm. “We’re all tired. End of world stuff every Tuesday.” 
You laugh. The others join in.  And just for a second, it feels normal. 
Like the past didn't follow you here.  Like he never reached across time. 
But the quiet ache in your chest says otherwise. 
Later, when the lab empties out one by one — when Yuvi yawns and Mira packs up her files —  you linger behind. 
Taehyun walks past you, ruffling your hair gently like he always does. Jungwon side hugs you as he exits. And Mira and Yuvi give you a hug before logging off.  
Then the lights dim.  The labs settle.  And you finally move. 
It was almost midnight. 
Your body was running on caffeine, adrenaline, and a half-shattered mind.  The labs were quiet. The halls were colder. Your coat clung to your shoulders, and all you wanted was silence. 
You stepped into the elevator. 
It was empty. Or—  so you thought. 
You didn’t even notice him at first. 
Not until the doors closed.  Not until the world narrowed into this steel box.  And not until a voice — low, aching, quiet — cut through the air like a thread snapping in your chest. 
“You didn’t even say goodbye.” 
You froze. 
Slowly, your eyes turned toward the figure standing in the far corner. 
And there he was. 
Sunghoon. 
Pressed against the wall of the elevator, the overhead light casting a cold glow across his skin.  His white dress shirt clung perfectly across his chest — sleeves rolled just below his elbows, forearms tense. His black tie was loose, like he’d worn it all day just to see you like this. 
His head was tilted slightly down, shadows covering half of his face — but even in the dimness, you saw it. 
The red.  Faint. Glowing. Watching. 
His jaw clenched. His lashes heavy against his cheek. His entire body still, like he was trying not to shake. 
Like just standing here, in front of you, took everything he had left. 
Your mouth opened. Nothing came out. 
He finally looked up.  Right at you. 
“You disappeared,” he said softly.  A step closer. 
“But I didn’t.” 
Another step. 
“I stayed. I searched.” 
His voice trembles. 
“And I waited.” 
He stops inches away from you. Close enough for you to see that his hands are shaking.  That his smile is breaking.  That the pain he’s carried all these years hasn’t dulled — only buried deeper. 
Your lips part, but no words come. 
Because what do you say to a man who waited seventy-one years for a goodbye? 
Your body doesn’t move. But he does. 
He steps forward — slowly — like if he moves too fast, you’ll vanish all over again. 
Then his hand lifts. And he touches you. 
Not roughly. Not hungrily. 
Just one cold, steady hand cupping your cheek — reverent. Careful.  The way he always touched you. Like you were something sacred. 
His other hand rests at your waist, pulling you gently toward him. 
Your breath hitches. 
His eyes flicker down to your lips, then back to your eyes. 
“I missed you,” he whispers. 
His thumb brushes your skin — and only then, do you exhale. 
But your voice barely comes out. 
“How
 how did you get in here?” 
His smile twitches — half amused, half ruined. 
“You’re not the only one who learns things in seventy years.” 
You stare at him. 
“You broke into the lab?” 
“No,” he murmurs. “I learned how to become a ghost in systems like these. Took years. But I found my way into every firewall with your name on it. Every door you walked through.” 
He leans in just slightly — not threatening. Not desperate. 
Just there. Real. Close. 
“I wasn’t going to leave without seeing you again.” 
No matter how many years it’s been —  no matter how far you ran into the future — 
he still found you. 
He holds you like a memory he never let go of.  Like a secret he kept alive for decades. 
And when he finally speaks —  his voice cracks. 
“Tell me you didn’t forget me.” 
You blink.  Your lips part, but no sound comes out. 
Because how do you explain the sleepless nights?  The dreams where he touched your hand again?  The jacket you almost replicated just to feel close? 
He waits. 
And when you don’t answer — when silence sits between you like a second goodbye — you hear it again: 
“Y/N
”  “Tell me you didn’t forget me.” 
You look up at him then. 
And the glow in his eyes — the faint red warmth — flickers. 
Flickers like it’ll die if you lie. 
Your throat is tight. 
“How did you even find me?” you whisper. 
He smiles — not the charming one.  The broken one. 
“I never stopped looking.” 
A beat. 
“The village disappeared, but I didn’t. I moved. I adapted. I learned your world. I followed every digital trail you left behind. I memorized your voice. I traced you through five corporate systems and twenty years of noise.” 
His forehead leans into yours, almost touching. 
“You left without saying goodbye.”  “I needed to know
 if it meant as much to you as it did to me.” 
You’re not breathing. 
Because in his voice — beneath the stillness, the eternal youth —  is pain. 
Not monstrous. Not violent. 
Just human. And heartbreakingly yours. 
Your hands move without thinking.  One rises to his chest — over where his heart used to beat. 
It’s quiet now.  But yours is loud enough for both of you. 
He’s still waiting. 
Eyes glowing.  Breath held. 
“Tell me,” He whispers again. “Tell me you didn’t forget me.” 
You swallow. 
Tears sting the edges of your eyes — the kind you refused to cry back then. The kind you buried inside lab reports and daily logs. 
And finally, your voice breaks. 
“I didn’t forget.” 
He closes his eyes, just for a second. Like the words hurt. Like they heal. 
“I just
” you breathe, “I just didn’t know how to come back.” 
There it is. 
The truth. 
The full, naked truth sitting between you —  soft and devastating. 
“I didn’t know if I could. If I should. If you were even—” 
He kisses you. 
Not rushed.  Not hungry. 
Just
 quiet. Desperate. Familiar. 
The kind of kiss that says thank you for surviving. 
The kind that says don’t leave again. 
it feels like time folds in on itself. 
Like the wind from the village,  the rain on your skin,  the jacket on your shoulders,  the words you never said —  they all return in that one breath. 
And this time,  you kiss him back. 
Hands gripping the front of his coat, your breath catching —  like your body finally remembered what safety tasted like. 
He pulls you in closer, desperate,  like he still doesn’t believe you’re real.  Like you’ll vanish again if he lets go. 
When your lips part, and you both breathe — barely —  your forehead leans into his. 
The glow in his eyes softens. 
And then— 
“You
” your voice cracks, soft and shaking.  “You waited? For me?” 
His eyes close slowly. 
Not like he’s in pain —  but like your question alone undid him. 
“Of course I did,” he whispers.  “How could I not?” 
You inhale sharply,  because no one’s ever said it like that. 
Not with that kind of certainty.  Like your existence was never forgettable —  just
 unforgettable. 
“You
 waited? For me?” 
His eyes flutter shut — like your voice, your doubt, undoes something deep in him. 
“Of course I did,” he murmurs, forehead still resting against yours.  “How could I not?” 
That’s when the tears come. 
You didn’t mean to.  You weren’t even sure they were still inside you. 
But suddenly, your eyes burn. 
And your voice falls out in pieces. 
“I thought
” your lips tremble.  “I thought you moved on.”  “Thought you’d forget me.” 
His arms tighten around you instantly — like he can feel you breaking and is ready to hold every shattered piece. 
“I couldn’t,” he says.  “I wouldn’t.” 
Your eyes meet again, and he says it like a vow: 
“I loved you in 2019. I loved you in every year after.  Even the ones where you weren’t there.” 
“You
 waited? For me?” 
His eyes flutter shut — like your voice, your doubt, undoes something deep in him. 
“Of course I did,” he murmurs, forehead still resting against yours.  “How could I not?” 
That’s when the tears come. 
You didn’t mean to.  You weren’t even sure they were still inside you. 
But suddenly, your eyes burn. 
And your voice falls out in pieces. 
“I thought
” your lips tremble.  “I thought you moved on.”  “Thought you’d forget me.” 
His arms tighten around you instantly — like he can feel you breaking and is ready to hold every shattered piece. 
“I couldn’t,” he says.  “I wouldn’t.” 
Your eyes meet again, and he says it like a vow: 
“I loved you in 2019. I loved you in every year after.  Even the ones where you weren’t there.” 
And just like that—  you stepped into him. 
Your arms wrapped around his torso tight, face burying into his chest, body trembling from everything you’d held back for too long. 
And he— 
He didn’t hesitate. 
He wrapped his arms around you so firmly, so protectively, it almost hurt.  Like if the world tried to take you again, it would have to tear through him first. 
One arm locked around your waist.  The other curled high around your back, hand cradling the base of your neck — fingers gently gripping, anchoring you like he was afraid you’d disappear again. 
“You’re here,” he breathed.  “You’re really here.” 
He didn’t just hold you. 
He claimed you — not with force, but with everything he never got to say. 
This wasn’t a soft embrace. 
This was the way you hold something sacred.  The way you cling to a miracle. 
And for the first time after he met in seventy years,  he didn’t feel cold anymore. 
He held you like you were his whole world —  like everything he endured, every year he starved, every time he nearly gave up
  was worth it just to feel you in his arms again. 
And for a long, still moment —  you didn’t speak. 
You just breathed.  Chest rising against his.  The faint, unfamiliar sound of his heartbeat echoing somewhere far beneath. 
Then, into the quiet, barely louder than a breath— 
“I missed this,” you whispered, cheek pressed against his chest.  “I missed you.” 
His hand gripped you tighter, almost instinctively.  Like your words shattered something inside him he didn’t even know was still breakable. 
He didn’t say anything at first. 
But you felt it —  in the way his thumb moved slowly against your back,  in the way his body trembled just slightly against yours. 
“Say it again,” he murmured. 
You tilted your head just slightly, looked up into those red-flecked eyes that had waited decades for this. 
And this time, you didn’t whisper. 
“I missed you, Sunghoon.” 
He looked at you, cupped your face with both of his hands with so much of care as if you were porcelain and would break if you added any more force.  
He kissed your forehead like it was the only language he had left. 
Slow.  Tender.  Devastating. 
Your eyes fluttered shut — his lips lingering just a heartbeat longer, like he couldn’t quite let go. 
And when he finally pulled back, just far enough to look at you again —  his voice cracked through the silence. 
“Don’t leave me this time
”  A pause. A breath.  “Angel.” 
The name hit you harder than the kiss. 
Because that’s what he used to call you.  Back in the village.  When your hands were cold from the rain, and he’d wrap his jacket around you like you were something worth saving. 
You blinked back the sting in your eyes.  But he saw it.  Of course he did.  His thumb brushed just beneath your eye. 
“You don’t have to say anything,” he murmured.  “Just
 stay.” 
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taglist: @gnarlyhoons @stormlit-pages @himynameisraelynn @see-c @shra-vasti @heesbbygurl @elikajinnie @jwyoceans (lmk if u wanna be added!)
A/N: im backkkkkkkkkk y'allllllllllllll !!!!!!!!! also this thing has been keeping me from watching the outside mv so imma watch it now! ALSO WROTE THIS THING IN 2 DAYS LIKE WTH i cant believe i did tht. anyways enjoy and stay hydrated!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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