#iron flask
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a2zillustration · 2 years ago
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This actually failed spectacularly because the spectator got paralyzed immediately but IN THEORY it was a great plan.
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loulouhattie · 10 months ago
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serpenlupus · 2 years ago
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We opened the Iron flask on camp and Shadowheart decided that no one deserved healings or help XDDD (except Scratch, who is the best boy, and also helped on the fight against the Spectator by biting the hell out of him)
Bonus:
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zhentil-keep-perverts · 6 months ago
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So to summarise the Holy Lore, these are the main timeline and gameplay choice divergences that determines Rugan's fate post-game:
Wakueen's Rest crew dies at the Gate in Act 3, taking the fall for what happened to Duke Ravengard. This is directly due to Rugan's betrayal (i.e. "hempen jig" cut content is canon - Listen to the dialogue here: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3).
Is Rugan a plant of an outside faction that wants to destabilise Zarys' crew, or is he loyal to the Zhentarim? (Postmaster Shipment Enquiry note supports this theory: A letter from Danzo Arkwright to Roah Moonglow, asking about interruptions in the correspondence with the Zhentarim cell at Waukeen's Rest. )
Roah Moonglow is making a power grab--either from Darkhold or for herself. Roah orders Karcen to kill Rugan. ("Keep an Eye on Rugan" note supports this theory)
Fate of the Iron Flask: If the player takes it the player has it. If you don't take it and Roah lives the flask goes to Roah before it makes it to Nine Fingers. (Confirmed by gameplay.)
If you kill Roah at the Desecrated Temple/Goblin Camp before making it to the Iron Flask, Friol appears for the Stone Lord quest. Friol does not appear at Moonrise, but does at the Guildhall (confirmed by gameplay but unsure if bugged).
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cagemasterfantasy · 6 months ago
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DND Magic Items: Iron Flask
Type: Wondrous Item
Rarity: Legendary
Type of Item: Arcana
Attunement: No
This iron bottle has a brass stopper. You can use a Magic action to target a creature that you can see within 60 feet of you. If the target is native to a plane of existence other than the one you're on, the target must succeed on a DC 17 Wisdom saving throw or be trapped in the flask. If the target has been trapped by the flask before, it has advantage on the saving throw. Once trapped, a creature remains in the flask until released. The flask can hold only one creature at a time. A creature trapped in the flask doesn't need to breathe, eat, or drink and doesn't age.
You can use an action to remove the flask's stopper and release the creature the flask contains. The creature is friendly to you and your companions for 1 hour and obeys your commands for that duration. If you give no commands or give it a command that is likely to result in its death, it defends itself but otherwise takes no actions. At the end of the duration, the creature acts in accordance with its normal disposition and alignment.
An identify spell reveals that a creature is inside the flask, but the only way to determine the type of creature is to open the flask. A newly discovered bottle might already contain a creature chosen by the DM.
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passionfruitmango · 1 year ago
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Finally replaced the big gulp I forgot in the backseat of my friends car YEARS ago, I adore this color 💛
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fierykitten2 · 4 months ago
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10 more days until the 2-year anniversary of the top two best Pokémon ever that happen to be returning later this week (I love them so much)! I mean until we finally get more information on the replacement for the worst unfinished pieces of shit that were so unfinished they forgot to make the jokes about Legendaries with similar properties in similar trios alliterating with the English names of the games available (and shiny-huntable even though we have no indication more than one of each of them even exists)
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songbird-oracle · 1 year ago
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Shout out to Karlach for being the sole survivor of 5hp out of my durge, Shadowheart, and a more sturdy Gale, after fighting a ton of gnolls.
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elliecupcakes · 2 years ago
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The first order of November ⭐️✨
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a2zillustration · 1 year ago
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Do you understand, do you see my vision
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flashgloria · 1 year ago
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so i guess I really fucked myself over fifteen hours of gameplay ago when I lockpicked that chest...
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flaskuwu · 1 year ago
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I have got to get better(er) at art...
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bottombatch · 1 year ago
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Pockets
Day 20 of my daily writing challenge
Whew! And with this; this challenge is finally done. This final chapter is almost entirely born of my love for the tiefling children. I love those fuckers like you wouldn't believe. This does mean that Laz kind of gets sidelined in this one but... I'm not sorry, tbh.
20. if you were to try pickpocketing them, what would they be carrying?
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wickedcityy · 1 year ago
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in this d&d campaign i'm in, the dm made the mistake of letting the party steal an iron flask and now we've been using it to transport party members through situations they would struggle with, like pocketing the wizard for a dex section or the rogue when we need to fly, etc. we call it the pokeball
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luvly-writer · 1 month ago
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Basgaith: A scent of Trouble
Xaden Riorson x Gamlyn! Reader
Masterlist
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Basgaith - Training Grounds
It started with the scent.
Xaden Riorson wasn’t the type to get distracted easily. He was Wingleader of the Fourth Wing in the Rider's Quadrant, feared and respected, sharp of mind and even sharper with shadows and swords. He had people to keep alive, secrets to protect, a rebellion to continue to orchestrate, and yet—
Every godsdamned time Y/n Gamlyn walked past him, his brain short-circuited like a first-year who’d just seen a dragon for the first time.
He didn’t understand it at first. The first time she passed him in the hallway outside the sparring ring, he paused mid-conversation with Garrick. He didn’t even notice the silence until Garrick arched an eyebrow.
“You good?” Garrick had asked, half-smirking.
“Fine,” Xaden had muttered, confused.
Because she smelled like exotic fruit and sunlight and something he couldn’t name—something dangerous. And her braid had a small black silk ribbon tucked into it, elegant and absurdly perfect. Her wrist adorned with a delicate charm bracelet and her nails a deep wine red, brushed Ridoc’s arm as she giggled at something dumb her brother said.
Xaden had chalked it up to lack of sleep. Or hunger. Or some new mind-game by leadership.
But then it kept happening.
Every time Y/n was near, something in him shifted. She’d lounge on the grass during squad downtime with Rhiannon and Violet, sipping mango juice from a flask she’d somehow snuck past Dain, and Xaden’s eyes would find her. Not because she was loud—no, she wasn’t like Ridoc, whose voice carried through stone walls—but because she glowed. She radiated soft mischief and sharp intellect, and she looked like she didn’t belong in battle gear, but fought like she was born with a blade in hand.
Garrick was the first to notice.
They were walking to the Academic Wing, Xaden and Garrick trailing behind the Iron Squad. Y/n passed by them, her curls catching the wind, a new black ribbon tied neatly behind her ear.
Xaden slowed to a halt, inhaling subtly—but Garrick caught it.
“Did you just sniff her?” he asked, incredulous.
Xaden blinked. “What?”
“You definitely just sniffed her. Don’t deny it.” His grin was pure mischief now. “Oh, this is too good.”
“Drop it, dumbass.”
“Not a chance.”
Within an hour, Imogen knew. Then Quinn. Then, somehow, Bodhi—who immediately said, as if scandalized, “So, Xaden’s into Ridoc’s sister now? That’s risky, even for you, cousin!” Which caused all of them to start laughing. Loud.
Y/n, seated beside Ridoc and Liam, blinked at the outburst and tilted her head. “Did I miss something?”
“Apparently, Riorson is ogling you,” Ridoc snorted, not even glancing up from his tray. “Can’t blame him, really. I did warn everyone she was the prettier sibling.”
Y/n flushed, half-horrified, half-amused, and quickly looked away—straight into Xaden’s eyes.
And gods help him, she smiled.
It wasn’t coy or calculated. It was warm. Curious.
Later that night, Garrick leaned against the doorframe of Xaden’s room, arms crossed.
“You’re in trouble, you know.”
Xaden glanced up. “Because I noticed a girl smells nice?”
“No. Because it’s Y/n. She’s a first year. She’s Ridoc’s sister. She’s—you know—sweet.”
Xaden paused, letting the truth settle. Y/n Gamlyn, the girl who tied black bows in her hair and laughed with her whole heart, who wore perfume that no one could identify, and who painted her nails and wore gold and pearl jewelry—was now the only thing he couldn’t stop thinking about.
The next day...
It started during a quiet afternoon on the flight field, just after drills. The girls, Violet, Rhiannon, and Y/n—were stretched out on a sun-warmed patch of grass, enjoying a rare break. Boots off, gloves discarded, braids a little undone.
Violet twirled a dagger lazily between her fingers. Rhiannon was half-laying across Y/n’s lap, sipping water and occasionally tossing berries into the air to catch with her mouth. Y/n, ever composed, still had her dark red nail polish immaculate, her black silk ribbon in place, and not a drop of sweat in sight.
She should’ve known the peace wouldn’t last.
"So," Rhiannon started, grinning far too wide to be innocent, “how long are you going to pretend Riorson doesn’t look at you like you’re made of magic and sin?”
Y/n blinked, startled. “Excuse me?”
“Oh, please,” Violet cut in, sitting up with a sparkle in her eye. “He turns into an actual statue when you walk into a room. I've seen him forget what he's saying just because your perfume hits him.”
Y/n’s face went warm immediately. “You two are being ridiculous.”
Rhiannon gasped in mock offense. “Don’t you dare lie to us. Even Sawyer noticed. Sawyer.”
Y/n’s fingers brushed over the bow tied neatly in her ponytail. “You’re imagining things.”
“Am I?” Violet drawled. “Because last week, when you wore your hair in that sleek braid with the little curls at the ends—he nearly tripped over his own boots. Xaden Riorson. Tripped. Over. His. Own. Boots.”
“I—” Y/n bit her lip and looked away, blush deepening.
Violet sat straight up. “Wait.”
Rhiannon perked up. “Oh no.”
Violet leaned in, eyes wide, and gasped with full dramatic flair. “Are YOU attracted to him?!”
Y/n’s face went crimson. “Violet—!”
“Oh my gods, she is!” Rhiannon practically sang, sitting up and pointing at her. “She totally is!”
“I am not—” Y/n started, but then groaned and hid her face behind her hands. “I mean... I have eyes, Violet. I think everyone in the Quadrant at least once has been attracted to Riorson.”
Violet laughed so hard she nearly tipped over. “That’s not a no, Y/n!”
“It’s not a yes either!” Y/n protested, flustered. But the smile tugging at her lips betrayed her.
“You are so doomed,” Rhiannon said, throwing an arm over her shoulder. “That man is one smirk away from becoming your problem.”
“And honestly,” Violet added with a teasing grin, “I can't wait.”
Y/n rolled her eyes, but there was a soft, fluttery warmth in her chest that even she couldn’t deny.
"You are both ridiculous."
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A few days later...
Training was particularly insufferable that day seeing as the weather was already hot and brutal. The sun burning high above them and not a breeze in sight. The Second Squad was halfway through drills when Garrick and Xaden moved into the sparring circle for their usual round—one-on-one with no weapons, just hand-to-hand.
Y/n tried very hard to focus on her footwork beside Rhiannon. She really did.
But then Garrick muttered something too low to hear and Xaden smirked—that rare, dangerous smirk that said he was going to enjoy throwing someone across the dirt.
“Bet Garrick falls in the next thirty seconds,” Sawyer whispered beside Violet.
“I’ll take that bet,” Violet said, eyes sharp.
The sparring started fast, brutal, and beautiful. The kind of movement that drew eyes whether you wanted to look or not. Garrick was fast, almost reckless—but Xaden was precise, his control so sharp it made every movement feel like a threat.
Y/n only meant to glance.
But her eyes wandered—just for a second—tracking the way Xaden’s muscles flexed under his black shirt, the way his jaw clenched when he pivoted, the way his shadow magic sparked faintly across his fingertips like it wanted to join the fight.
And then, as if summoned by the gods of mischief themselves, he paused.
Without ceremony, Xaden reached behind his head, grabbed the back of his sweat-soaked shirt, and pulled it over his head in one smooth motion. Muscles. Everywhere. Back, arms, abs that looked like they’d been carved out of stone. Sunlight kissed every inch of him like it knew what it was doing.
“Oh no,” Rhiannon muttered beside her, catching Y/n’s not-so-subtle stare.
Violet, biting back a grin, elbowed her lightly. “You’re drooling, Gamlyn.”
“I am not,” Y/n hissed, face heating. But her eyes didn’t leave the ring.
Even worse—Garrick caught her looking. And laughed.
“Stop flexing, you dramatic bastard,” he barked at Xaden, ducking under a punch.
Xaden didn’t reply—but his smirk widened. His posture shifted, just slightly, standing a bit taller. Shoulders rolling back. Chest—definitely more puffed than it needed to be.
“Oh my gods, he’s preening,” Violet said under her breath. “He's showing off for you.”
Y/n groaned into her hands. “No he is not.”
And then, of course, Ridoc chose that exact moment to wander back from fetching water.
He took one look at the scene—Y/n's flushed face, Xaden shirtless and smug, Garrick laughing his ass off—and smirked like he’d just caught her writing his name in hearts.
“Please tell me you’re not making heart eyes at Riorson, of all people,” Ridoc said loudly.
“Ridoc,” Y/n warned.
Rhiannon grinned. “Too late, she’s gone.”
“Tragic,” Ridoc sighed. “Guess I have to beat him up now. Family honor and all.”
“I will throw myself off the Parapet,” Y/n muttered as the squad burst into laughter around her.
In the ring, Xaden shot a glance over—just the briefest flick of his dark eyes to where Y/n stood. His smirk softened into something quieter, just for a heartbeat, before Garrick tackled him to the ground again.
And Y/n?
She definitely wasn’t looking anymore.
(Except she was.)
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Taglist: @eepyfaerie @dreamdragonkadia
To be added, leave a comment <3
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furioussheepluminary · 2 months ago
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𝐘𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐁𝐥𝐨𝐨𝐝
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Pairing: vampire!Felix x afab!reader, strangers to potential lovers, vampire au
synopsis: to prove that you are once again always the brave one, you take one a dare. But meeting a cursed attractive vampire wasn't part of the deal.
Warnings: blood, angst?, curses, Felix falls in love easily (esp. with blood), but hes a meanie, dead people
A/n: this was a request made a while ago by a beautiful angel that I can't remember..but I know it was a request 😔 I'm sorry love! Please enjoy the story as it's my first time writing a supernatural au even though it's not my type. If you have extra eyes for errors, no you don't.
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It all started with a bonfire and a bottle of cheap vodka.
The night was unusually cold for early autumn, and the wind that howled through the trees felt almost like whispers brushing against the skin. The fire cracked in the center of the clearing, surrounded by seven dare-hungry souls seeking thrills in a town where nothing exciting ever happened. Except for the one thing no one dared talk about—except in jest, when the alcohol flowed and the night felt invincible. The abandoned mansion at the edge of Marrow’s Hollow.
“It’s just an old ruin,” one of the boys, Devin, said, passing the bottle. “Creepy? Sure. Haunted? Nah. You’d die of boredom before any ghost got you.”
“But people have died there,” Margo whispered, her voice trembling just enough to sound like a challenge rather than fear. “Five kids from Cresthill went in last year. Never came back.”
“Because they ran off to the city. Typical runaway story,” someone laughed, brushing it off.
Then came the dare. Drunk on adrenaline, firelight, and fermented courage.
“Y/N,” Margo grinned, eyes glittering in the dark. “You’re always bragging about how brave you are. How about you prove it?”
Y/N raised a brow, the fire’s glow casting sharp shadows across her face. “Oh? And how exactly do I do that?”
“Spend the night in the mansion.”
The group erupted in shocked laughter, some clapping, others gasping, but all eyes were now on her.
“You’re kidding,” she scoffed. “That place is sealed off.”
“Nope,” Devin replied, digging into his backpack and pulling out a rusted old key. “Found this in my grandpa’s shed. He was a cop back when the town tried to shut the place down. This opens the back gate.” The air shifted then. Like something had turned to listen.
“The rules are simple,” Margo continued. “Go inside before midnight. Stay until sunrise. No phone. Just you, your flashlight, and whatever you find inside.” Everyone expected her to say no.
But Y/N smirked, heart racing with the thrill of being challenged. “Fine. I’ll go.”
None of them knew she’d return with eyes wide, blood on her leg, and a name carved into her skin.
Felix.
She packed her bag as the sun dipped below the hills, smearing the sky in shades of bruised violet and blood-orange. No phone—part of the dare. They claimed it was cheating, that the spirits “didn’t like tech.” Instead, Y/N grabbed a flashlight, a small notebook, two protein bars, a lighter, a flask of water, and a silver pocketknife she didn’t usually carry. Just in case. Her heart thundered like a drum, but her face remained calm, stoic. She’d accepted the dare. She wasn’t backing out. By the time she reached the edge of Marrow’s Hollow, the sky had turned black, and the wind carried the sharp scent of decaying leaves and something fouler, metallic, damp, like blood soaked into ancient wood. Her boots crunched over dried twigs and gravel as the path narrowed, twisting through skeletal trees that clawed at her jacket like they wanted to drag her back.
The mansion loomed in the distance like a corpse propped upright. Gothic spires stabbed the sky, and its shattered windows stared outward like blind, furious eyes. The iron gates stood crooked, rusted with time and something darker. Moss clung to the stone fence that wrapped around the property like a noose.
That’s when she saw them.
The graves.
Dozens no, hundreds of them. Scattered around the mansion in irregular rows, half-swallowed by the overgrown earth. Some headstones were cracked down the middle, others too weathered to read, and some… disturbingly fresh. The dirt on a few was still unsettled, as if the earth hadn’t finished claiming what was inside. Her breath caught in her throat as she counted at least seven graves marked only by wooden stakes, their surfaces smeared with what looked like dried crimson.
She swallowed.
“Just theatrics,” she muttered to herself. “Someone’s sick idea of a prank.”
The beam of her flashlight trembled as her hand shook, breath shallow, every instinct screaming to turn back—but she forced herself to step further into the mansion. The air inside was colder, as though the house itself had forgotten what warmth felt like. The scent of mildew, rotting wood, and something iron-like clung to her lungs, thick and suffocating.
Her footsteps echoed through the empty, crumbling foyer. A grand staircase loomed ahead, shrouded in shadow, its once-elegant banister now splintered and dark. She panned the flashlight upward, slowly.
That’s when she saw it.
Hanging upside down like some twisted bat from the rafters, a figure motionless. Pale skin, platinum-blond hair matted with streaks of red, arms hanging limp, face partially obscured by the tangled mess of bloodstained mesh fabric. At first, she thought it was a corpse strung up in some sick ritual. But then—the light caught his face.
She didn’t scream.
Not yet.
His eyes snapped open.
Crimson.
Not the dull, dead kind of red, but burning like fire and fury trapped behind his irises. Y/N gasped, the sound too loud in the dead silence of the house. Then he moved. In one fluid, inhumanly fast motion, the figure dropped from the ceiling—landing directly in front of her with a soundless grace that chilled her blood.
She screamed and fell backward, scrambling on the cold, dusty floor. Her flashlight clattered away, spinning wild beams of light across the walls. Her hands scraped against jagged floorboards as she kicked herself back until her spine slammed into the wall behind her.
Trapped. Frozen. He was crouched in front of her now, head tilted slightly, hair casting jagged shadows across his face. His mouth curled slowly into a smirk, fangs glinting in the dim light, and he leaned in—too close.
“Why did you come here?” he whispered, voice like velvet dipped in danger.
And Y/N… couldn’t speak. He was crouched in front of her like a predator—still, coiled, every inch of him humming with danger. His head tilted slowly to the side, platinum hair falling messily across one glowing eye, the other hidden in shadow. His lips curled into something that might have been a smile… if it weren’t so cruel.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he said, voice low and velvety, but with an edge like a blade dragged across bone. “This place doesn’t welcome the living.”
Y/N’s mouth was dry, her chest heaving. She could barely form words. “I—I was dared… I didn’t think it was real. I didn’t think you were real.” He leaned in, so close now she could see the blood dried along his jawline, the faint twitch of his lip as if the word ‘dare’ had amused him in some feral, irritated way.
“A dare?” His voice deepened, colder. “You risked your life because some idiot told you to? For fun?”
Her breath caught as he rose, standing over her now. “Leave. While you still have your limbs attached,” he growled. “Or stay, and regret it for however long I let you live.”
She stared up at him, trembling but unmoving. Her body was screaming to run—but her heart refused. Something in her, deep and stubborn, latched onto the way his voice wavered on the edge of warning and loneliness. She could’ve crawled away. But she didn’t.
“No,” she whispered.
Silence. The air thickened around them like molasses. His eyes narrowed, burning red. Then—pain. Sharp and sudden. He dug his nails into her thigh, not just pressing but sinking in—deep enough to tear through her jeans and into flesh. She cried out, her back arching from the wall, her hands scrabbling at his wrist in shock and agony.
“Do you want to die?” he snarled, voice close to her ear now. “Or are you just this stupid?”
Tears welled in her eyes from the pain, but still—she shook her head. “I just… I couldn’t leave. Not yet.”
His expression flickered something dangerous, but almost curious. He stared at her a long time, then slowly removed his hand, his fingers now painted in her blood. He brought them up, inspecting the crimson smeared on his skin with idle interest.
“Not yet?” he echoed, voice low, dangerous.
Y/N winced as she sat up straighter against the cold wall, her hands trembling against the floor. “I-I have to stay the night. That was the dare. I can’t leave until sunrise.” At that, the vampire actually chuckled.
A dark, guttural sound slipped from his throat, followed by a slow shake of his head as he crouched again in front of her this time more relaxed, his elbows resting on his knees. “You humans are so entertaining,” he drawled, tone thick with sarcasm. “Stay the night? What is this, some sadistic version of hide-and-seek?”
She didn’t answer.
He leaned in, eyes flicking downward and that’s when he saw it. Blood. A slow, lazy smile stretched across his lips, revealing just a hint of fang. “Oh…” he purred, as if delighted by a surprise dessert, “You're bleeding.”
Y/N followed his gaze in horror to the gash on her thigh—right where he’d dug his nails in earlier. It was deeper than she’d realized. Crimson soaked through the fabric of her pants, trailing in a warm line down her skin.
He didn’t ask permission.
He slid forward smoothly, his hand gripping her injured leg—firm, cold, and possessive. Before she could pull away, his head dipped low. His lips met her thigh, and she gasped—whether in pain or shock, she didn’t know. His tongue traced the blood in a slow, deliberate motion, warm and terrifyingly intimate. A groan rumbled from his chest, vibrating against her skin.
“Sweet,” he murmured. “So very… sweet.”
Y/N’s heart thudded violently in her chest, panic twisting with something else, something she didn’t want to name. She finally found her voice, strained and fragile. “W-Who are you…?”
He pulled back just enough to look at her, licking the remaining blood from his bottom lip, the tip of his fang glinting in the dim light. “You don’t know who I am?” he asked finally, voice hushed, but heavy with something ancient and cruelly patient. His crimson gaze locked with hers.
“Felix,” he said, his voice low, intimate. “The thing that haunts this house. The monster they warned you about.”
He leaned in closer, his lips nearly brushing her ear.
“And darling… you just walked into my cage.”
Felix didn’t pull away completely. He stayed close, crouched like a predator who wasn’t done playing with its prey. “You want to know how I became this?” he asked suddenly, his voice lower, weightier. His eyes didn’t glow as brightly now. There was something old in them—haunted, even.
Y/N swallowed hard but nodded.
He leaned back slightly, hands resting on his thighs. “A curse,” he said simply. “From someone I trusted. Loved.” He tilted his head, lips curling into a bitter smile. “She didn’t like that I left her. So she took everything from me. My soul. My time. My death. Gave me this… thirst instead.” His nails idly traced a line on the dusty wooden floor. “She said I’d rot in this mansion forever—feeding, waiting, watching. Everyone who comes through here ends up in the ground.” He glanced at her then, eyes flicking to the window, to the graves just beyond the overgrown glass.
“I didn’t think you’d be stupid enough to come in.”
Y/N kept her face as neutral as she could, though her heart was hammering in her chest.
She breathed in shakily, brushing her hair back from her face. “Well, I didn’t come for you,” she muttered. “I came to explore the house.” Felix blinked, stunned for a second then broke into a low, amused laugh. He stood slowly, fluid and graceful, brushing the dust from his pants. “That so?” he said. “And here I thought I was the main attraction.”
He stepped back, letting the distance grow between them. “Go on then,” he said, voice still rich with mocking humor. “Explore.”
Y/N’s leg throbbed, the cut still fresh. She gathered her bag and stood, wincing as she tested her weight on the wounded limb. The stairs loomed ahead, worn and shadowed. She took a step. Felix’s voice drifted behind her, casual. “Need help limping, sweetheart?”
“No,” she bit out, without looking back.
Her hand gripped the railing, jaw clenched as she pulled herself up step by step, trying not to let him see the pain with every movement. She was determined, stubborn, stupid she knew all of it. But she wasn’t going to run. Not yet. The stairs creaked under her weight. She could hear his footsteps below but when she turned, he wasn’t there. She took another step.
He was suddenly behind her—no sound, no warning—his breath ghosting the back of her neck. She spun around, startled, but he had already vanished again.
“Ghosts aren’t the only ones who haunt,” his voice echoed faintly from the upstairs corridor.
She gritted her teeth and kept walking. Room after room stretched out before her each one dust-covered, untouched by time yet heavy with it. Cobwebs swayed in the cold air. Mirrors were cracked and warped. A child's doll sat in a corner, its porcelain face fractured like it had screamed too long.
And every time she stepped into a room… he was there. By the window. On the ceiling. In the reflection of a broken mirror. Watching and following.
She tried to pretend she didn’t see him. Tried to act like the shadows weren’t moving with him. But her fingers trembled on the edge of the doorframe as she entered the master bedroom. She whispered to herself, more for courage than belief.
“I’m just here to explore the house…”
A deep chuckle echoed from the wall.
“Keep telling yourself that, little lamb.”
The room she finally settled in was at the end of a long corridor its once grand double doors hung slightly ajar, one barely hanging onto its hinges. The air inside was thick, still, like it hadn’t been stirred in decades. Dust swirled in lazy circles through the beam of her flashlight as she hobbled in, limping more heavily now. She didn’t care. Her thigh burned with each step, but her body was too exhausted to keep moving.
The room had a tattered armchair near the fireplace, a velvet couch that had long since given in to mold, and faded wallpaper that peeled at the corners. Moonlight filtered in through shattered glass, casting silver puddles across the wooden floor.
Y/N slumped into the armchair with a pained sigh, letting her head fall back. Her fingers grazed the torn fabric of her jeans where his nails had sliced her earlier. It was still bleeding. Dull, hot pain flared through her nerves, but she welcomed it. It meant she was still alive.
Still human.
She didn’t hear him enter, but she knew. The air shifted. Warmer. Closer. She opened her eyes, and sure enough Felix was there, lounging across the arm of the ruined couch like he’d been waiting for her all along. His boots were kicked up, his dark eyes locked onto her, lazy but alert.
“Done exploring already?” he teased.
“Shut up,” she muttered, leaning her head against the chair’s backrest. “I’m bleeding and tired.”
He smirked. “You should’ve left when you had the chance.”
“I already told you. I’m not going anywhere.”
A beat passed. Silence, except for the ticking of an old grandfather clock down the hall.
“Do you ever get bored?” she asked suddenly. Her voice was softer now, tired but curious. “I mean… being here. Alone.” His smirk faded just slightly. “Sometimes.”
“You have friends?” she asked, tilting her head to look at him. Felix’s gaze shifted to the ceiling, then back to her. “I did. Once. But time… time isn’t kind. Not to mortals. Not to memories.”
There was something sad beneath his words something that slipped between the cracks of his usual sarcasm. Y/N let the silence stretch again before speaking. “I had a brother,” she said quietly. “He used to dare me into dumb things like this. Climb towers. Break into abandoned schools. He died a few years ago.”
Felix didn’t say anything. He just watched her, expression unreadable now.
“I guess I kept doing it. The dares. The exploring. Because I didn’t want to forget the rush.”
He leaned forward slightly, interested now, his elbows resting on his knees. “And vampires,” she said, a breath of a laugh in her voice, “I always thought they were… I don’t know. Lonely. Tragic. Kind of romantic in a twisted way.”
His head tilted slowly. “Romantic?” he echoed, something sharp glittering in his eyes. She nodded. “Yeah. There’s something sad and beautiful about someone who can live forever but never really live again. Always hungry. Always chasing something they can’t have.”
Felix didn’t move for a long moment. Then he rose slowly, his movements fluid, predatory.
“You’re strange,” he said quietly, stepping toward her. “Most people scream. Cry. Beg me not to kill them. And you… sit here bleeding, talking about tragic romance.” She watched him approach, heart thudding loud in her chest, but she didn’t flinch. Not this time. He crouched in front of her, his face close to hers again.
“Careful,” he whispered. “You’re starting to sound like someone I might like.” And though every instinct told her to be terrified, something in her stirred drawn in, caught in the storm of his presence.
She didn’t look away. “Maybe that’s the problem,” she whispered back.
The silence between them grew heavier. Not awkward—no, something more dangerous than that. It pulsed in the air like a heartbeat, slow and charged. Y/N shifted in the armchair, the dull ache in her thigh impossible to ignore, but what really unsettled her was the way Felix was watching her now. His eyes weren’t just curious anymore they were hungry.
His tongue ran along the sharp edge of his teeth, deliberate and slow. “Do you want me to take care of that wound?” Her breath hitched. The question lingered in the air, heavy with implication.
“You mean like… disinfect it?” she asked, though she already knew the answer.
He tilted his head, a crooked smirk playing on his lips. “Not exactly.” There was a long pause. Her heart pounded against her ribs, but then she nodded small, cautious. “Okay.”
His smile deepened, something dark and pleased glinting in his crimson gaze. “You’re brave. Or reckless.” He crossed the room with a smooth, predatory grace and knelt before her. Without asking, his fingers ghosted over her torn jeans. Then, with a soft rip, he tugged at the fabric, exposing more of her thigh. The skin was slick with blood, the wound still fresh and tender. She winced, but didn’t pull away.
His lips hovered above the gash.
“This might sting,” he murmured, almost like a tease. Then his tongue touched her skin.
It was warm. Slow. Precise. He licked up the blood in gentle, deliberate strokes like he was savoring every drop. His hands anchored her leg, firm but not painful. And when he moaned softly against her flesh, she shivered. “God,” he whispered, pulling back just enough to look up at her. “You taste sweet. Like dusk and danger.”
Her breath caught in her throat. His eyes were glowing brighter now, pupils blown wide with something that looked disturbingly close to desire. And still, he didn’t move away.
He stared at her, lips stained crimson. Then his voice dropped, lower, almost pained. “You should stay away from me, you know.” She blinked, lips parting to ask why, but he spoke first—his voice raw, quiet, like a confession.
“Because if you don’t… I’m going to fall in love with you.”
Y/N’s heart stopped.
Before she could say a word, Felix stood, licking the last trace of blood from his thumb. His eyes lingered on her for a second longer searching, maybe hoping she’d stop him. But she didn’t. And he was gone. The door creaked shut behind him, and she was left alone, her wound clean, her pulse racing, and her mind echoing with the words she hadn’t expected to hear from the monster in the mansion.
The room was warm when Y/N stirred, the kind of warmth that only sunlight could bring the soft kind that seeps through worn-out curtains and brushes against the skin like a memory. She blinked slowly, her lashes fluttering, head heavy and sore. For a moment, she forgot where she was. Then the dull pain in her thigh reminded her.
She sat up, realizing she was no longer in the chair from last night. She was on a bed now, tucked beneath a thick, dusty quilt that smelled faintly of old wood and faint cologne. Her eyes darted around the room. The lamp was off. Her bag was still against the wall. But the window to the side was cracked open, golden light pouring in. The sun had risen.
She gasped and threw the covers off, adrenaline kicking in.
“I overslept—damn it,” she muttered, quickly limping to her things and throwing everything into her backpack with shaky hands. Her heart was racing not just from panic, but from everything that had happened. The wound on her leg was bandaged now—probably by him—and she didn’t know how to process the fact that a vampire had basically confessed to her hours ago.
As she zipped her bag shut, a voice from the darkest corner of the room, cloaked in shadow, interrupted her.
“You’re in a rush,” Felix said softly.
She startled, turning to the voice. The far corner was untouched by the sun’s rays, but his silhouette was unmistakable leaning against the wall, arms crossed, as if he’d been standing there for a while.
“How long have you been there?” she asked, breath catching.
He shrugged lazily, one brow lifted. “Since before you started dreaming. You talk in your sleep, you know.” Her cheeks flushed despite herself. “I didn’t mean to sleep in,” she said quickly, strapping her bag on. “I need to get going.” She turned to leave, but something about his silence made her pause. She glanced back and that’s when she noticed it.
He looked… sad. Not dramatically so. Just the subtle downturn of his lips, the slight slump of his shoulders, the way his eyes didn’t quite meet hers. It was the kind of sadness that came quietly, like a bruise blooming under the skin.
“I was just starting to love you,” he said, his voice barely above a whisper.
She froze. It wasn’t said with charm or seduction. It was said like it hurt to admit like every time he let himself feel, the wound from his past reopened. She turned fully, letting her bag fall from her shoulder, and stepped closer into the shade.
He looked different in the dark. The edge to him was softer, the menace stripped away. She hadn’t seen him fully before not like this. His skin was pale but not lifeless, like marble kissed with moonlight. His hair, tousled and shadow-drenched, framed his face like a halo of ink. And his eyes—those haunting red eyes—weren’t glowing now. They were watching her quietly, searching. She reached out, touching the sleeve of his shirt gently. “You say that like it’s a curse,” she said.
He gave a dry smile. “That’s because it is.”
Her breath hitched. Her fingers brushed his wrist, just barely, and still he didn’t pull away. He looked down at where she touched him, then back up at her face—taking her in like he was trying to memorize her.
“You really have to leave?” he asked, voice low.
She hated herself for saying it. The words slipped past her lips before she could stop them, fragile and foolish and far too human.
“I’ll come visit,” she whispered, eyes not quite meeting his. “Every other day… if you want.”
Felix didn’t answer at first. His red eyes remained unreadable, shadowed by the darkness of the corner he stood in. But the silence stretched, heavy and uncertain. Finally, he let out a low, dry laugh—one that barely sounded amused.
“You’re lying.”
“I’m not,” she insisted, taking a step closer, heart hammering painfully in her chest. “I don’t break promises.” His eyes narrowed slightly, scanning her face for a hint of insincerity. Whatever he found, it seemed to shake him a little. His shoulders relaxed. Just a bit.
“I never got your name,” he said, quietly.
She blinked, realizing she never told him. “It’s Y/N.”
He repeated it softly under his breath, like tasting it on his tongue. Then he moved slow, deliberate, and with the kind of grace that didn’t belong to anything human. He stepped out of the shadows, careful not to touch the spill of sunlight on the floor. When he reached her, he stopped just a breath away. His hand came up, ghosting against her cheek before he leaned in and pressed his lips to it. A kiss; soft and fleeting but it lingered like heat.
When he pulled back, he hovered there, his lips close to hers. Close enough to feel her breath stutter against his mouth. His gaze dropped to her lips, then lifted back to her eyes, searching.
He didn’t want to overstep. Not after everything. Not when he wasn’t sure if she truly meant what she said.
So, he leaned in… slowly. Hesitant. Shy. A boy hiding beneath a monster’s skin.
And Y/N… Y/N closed the distance. Their lips met gently, mouths molding together like they were made for this one moment in time. It was cautious at first, full of question and fear, but it didn’t stay that way. Her hands gripped the fabric of his shirt, and he angled his head slightly, deepening the kiss with a hunger that had nothing to do with blood.
When he kissed her jaw, she tilted her head, giving him space. His lips found her neck.
She gasped softly as he trailed slow, reverent kisses down the side of her throat, each one more possessive than the last. When he found the spot just above her pulse, her breath hitched, and his lips paused there.
He inhaled sharply, and for a moment, he forgot to breathe. Her blood sang to him.
His fangs throbbed with temptation. His hands tightened on her hips. But he pulled away just in time. He turned his face from her neck, lips parted, a shiver of restraint trembling through him.
“You need to go,” he said hoarsely, his voice thick with longing. “Now… before I forget how to be gentle.”
His eyes glowed faintly, raw with emotion and desire. And he stepped back into the safety of the shadows, watching her like a secret he was too afraid to keep.
“I’ll come back,” she promised again, softer this time, as if saying it any louder might break whatever fragile thing had just formed between them.
Felix didn’t respond right away. He stood a few steps behind her in the dim shadows of the mansion’s doorway, the place where the light ended and he could no longer follow. His red eyes were softer now, less hungry, less dangerous just… quietly watching her like he didn’t want to forget what she looked like. Y/N adjusted the strap of her bag on her shoulder, her fingers trembling slightly as she turned away from him. Her legs still ached, the memory of pain clinging to her thigh, but she didn’t look back just yet. She didn’t trust herself to.
The wooden door creaked as she pushed it open, a harsh contrast to the soft silence behind her. Sunlight greeted her like a slap—too bright, too warm—reminding her she was back in the world that made sense. She stepped outside and paused on the stone steps of the mansion, the cold air brushing against her skin. Then slowly so slowly she turned around.
The building loomed behind her, still and ancient, its windows like tired, sun-dulled eyes. The vines clinging to the stone looked like veins frozen in place, and the old wood creaked under the wind’s touch. And there he was. Felix stood in the shadows, just behind the doorway, his form half-ghosted by the dark. He didn’t speak. He didn’t wave. He just watched her his head tilted ever so slightly, as if he was memorizing her all over again. There was something vulnerable in his stillness, like a statue that longed to move.
She offered him one last look, her eyes lingering on his, before finally, reluctantly, turning away.
Her footsteps were slow at first, each one echoing against the cracked stone path that led back to the world. Then, quicker. Further. Her heart pulled back with every step, but she didn’t stop.
And Felix… he stayed at the threshold, his fingers curled around the edge of the doorframe like he wanted to follow but couldn’t.
Not yet. Not in the sunlight. Not in the world she belonged to.
When YN finally reached the edge of town and stumbled through the gates of her dorm, the weight of the mansion still heavy on her, she was immediately met with wide eyes and frantic voices.
“YN?! Oh my God—what the hell—where were you?”
“You actually went through with it?”
“Are you okay? You’re bleeding!”
The voices of her friends swirled around her like a whirlwind. Arms guided her inside, and she was gently eased onto the common room couch, blankets thrown over her shoulders, questions raining down before she could even catch her breath.
She winced. “Guys, I’m fine—seriously.”
“Fine? You look like you just crawled out of a horror movie,” one of them said, pointing at the tear in her pants and bandaged wound. They demanded answers.
“What did you see in there?”
“Was the mansion really haunted?”
“Did something attack you?”
Y/N’s lips parted, her throat dry. She could still feel Felix’s lips brushing her neck, the ghost of his voice in her ear, the aching sweetness of his presence. But she couldn’t tell them that. They’d never believe her.
So she lied, believably.
“There were... graves,” she started, voice low and steady. “Dozens of them, some old, some more recent. The place is completely overgrown. Windows shattered, furniture still inside, like everyone left in a hurry.” Her friends leaned in.
“I think I tripped on one of the broken floorboards. It was dark I didn’t have a good flashlight. I cut my leg on something… maybe glass or rusted wood. I panicked, stayed in one of the rooms till sunrise, then came back.” They stared at her, wide-eyed.
“You stayed the night there alone?” Margo whispered, half in awe, half in horror.
She gave a small shrug, eyes lowered. “I didn’t really have a choice.”
None of them questioned her further not about the wound, not about the strange tiredness in her eyes, not about the way she kept glancing toward the window as if expecting someone or something to be there, watching.
She never mentioned Felix. Not his name. Not his eyes. Not his curse. That part... was hers alone.
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