#the orginals
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Ich bin ein Jäger
Pairing(s): Remmick (Sinners) x Fem! Augustine Vampire! WOC! Reader
Crossover: TDV→Sinners (Reader has no prior knowledge of anything in the TDV universe. Just someone who is an Augustine Vampire.)
cw: graphic scenes (violence) Age gap (Idk who would be older), Stockholm syndrome???
Rating: 18+
Add-ons: AFAB reader, no use of Y/N, one-sided pinning?
(Not Proofread)
WC: 10.4K
Pt. 2
It’s a small town. To be expected is all the eyes on him as he enters a church. A white man (Not that the ‘real’ white people agree that he is a white man, but that’s neither here nor there.) in church, the pressure felt like he’s not supposed to be here. But all people will be his people. So, for now, Remmick ignores it..
This is a church and all are welcomed, that is what is preached. Especially on this night.
Christmas.
Only time he gets to enter a church without burning alive. Only time he gets to hear the words that remind him of home. (Even if they’re not in that exact order.)
Remmick is looking at the pastor. He knows this pastor. A good man, with a good wife and their precious little daughter who doesn’t seem to like this church very much. His eyes shift to you. Your leg is bouncing. It bounces through the entire sermon. Your eyes never left the cross. Not even as the church ended. (Though the longer Remmick looks at the cross, the stranger it looks. Its end is jagged and splintered.)
A man approaches Remmick. Remmick gives a smile. The smile returned. After all he did save the man, and he was invited to this gathering. Then comes the pastor. Again Remmick smiles. He greets the pastor. A good frim shake, then a softer grip on his wife. Then comes you. Pretty little smile on your face.
Maybe you’re just being polite. It’s expected of you, after all. Expected of your people. Because if you dare to push back when someone steps on your neck—They’ll only press harder and eventually they’ll break it. (What does the death of a woman of color mean to the white man?) And just looking at your neck, well, it don’t look like it’ll take much to break.
“Hi.” You extend your hand to him and he gladly takes it. You’re warm, like all people are.
“Hello.” He returns your greeting and almost as a reward, you give him your name. In thanks, he gives you his. It isn’t long before he’s ushered away from you and instead taken to others as they offer to share their food with him. Food that they have labored to get. Worked for days in the sun (What he wouldn’t give to feel the sun again and it not burn him as if he ain’t trying to alleviate the burden his people faced—the burden your people now face.) to get this meal on the table.
He sits at a table between two men. Remmick knows he looks out of place, but what does it matter?
Before anything Remmick smells the food.
Can’t have no garlic.
He takes a bite. Don’t taste like anything. Not to him, but when he looks up as he’s chewing he sees you eating with a smile on your face enjoying the food.
Everyone is smiling. Laughing. Sharing stories and food like it’s enough to keep the world from collapsing. (But it’s not. But what he can deliver is enough.)
Remmick knows it’s not enough to simply have this. He knows it’s not. Just like he knows your daddy is struggling to pay the bills. Just like he knows your mother is struggling to keep her store afloat. Just like he knows the man next to him is struggling to meet his quota. Just like he knows the woman across from him is crying herself to sleep every night because her husband is out fucking whores and the man fucking the whores? Well, Remmick knows he does it because he can’t stand his own life.
It’s no way to live.
And you? Well he knows you too. He knows you hate going to church. He knows you hate humid heat. Knows you know about your family’s troubles — and he knows you’re going to try and fix them.
Though how? Remmick has yet to find out. Maybe you’ll pawn that ring of yours on your hand. Pretty little thing. Jewel catches every bit of light in the room. Looks expensive. Too expensive. Where’d you get a ring like that, anyway?
He doesn’t know. Not yet.
You’re talking to a man next to you, but your eyes keep finding him. That little game he likes to play sometimes. See who'll look the longest. Remmick always tends to win that game. And he does with you. Over and over again until the night starts to thin. It’ll be morning soon. He’ll have to head to his house soon. (Not home. Home is across the sea. Home is long gone.) A temporary place.
A few people pass Remmick on the way out. Some nod. Some just look.
No one says his name.
And then he sees you again.
You’re standing by the window now, arms crossed, eyes still on that damn cross up front — even from here. Your ring taps the side of your elbow, soft and steady. Like a clock.
He stands.
Walks slow.
He doesn’t speak right away. Just stands beside you and looks out the same window.
“Did ya’ like it?” He heard you mumble beside him. He turned to you and you had a small soft smile on your face.
“I did.” You smiled again looking up to the cross once more. The light caught your ring.
“I’m glad. Everyone should have the chance to enjoy the lord on this day.” That confused Remmick. “No matter who we are. Don’t you think so?” You were now smiling at him again. The confusion sat with him. You didn’t like church.
“I do.” It was all he could say before you walked off.
“Well then, have a blessed night.” You left with your parents before he could say anything more.
…
The next time Remmick sees you, it’s through a window. You’re there, talking to the man from Christmas eve. The sunlight makes your skin shine. You shine almost as much as the ring on your finger.
Then you motion to his house. Remmick’s ears perk.
“I heard the white boy is living over there.” You whispered to the man next to you. The man only scoffed.
“Reckon all them white folk gon start comin’ here?” Remmick kept his eyes on you. You simply looked away from his house and faced the sun letting it warm your skin, or so he can imagine. He hasn’t felt the sun in centuries. Not without it blistering him raw anyways.
“God’s plan I sus’pose.” Maybe Remmick didn’t know you. Least, not as well as he thought.
“The devil and the white man.” Remmick could only smile at the man’s words. “You afraid of the white man? The devil?”
You left Remmick’s sight, though he could hear you clear as day. “I don’t fear the devil.”
“You a God-fearin’ woman, then?” The man asked. As you both walked further and further, Remmick strained to hear your answer. Though in the end, he was left to speculate cause Remmick never heard your answer. He wonders what you’d do if you ever saw the devil. Many say they don’t fear the devil. Well…the devil's never come for them. But Remmick knows the devil. It came for him and his people, and now, they’re after yours. The devil that wears a pointy white hat preaching that all men are equal, but some are more equal than others.
Well since he never heard you answer, it'd be best if he went to find out himself.
And so he does. It’s night when he walks. And you — you live deep on the southside, damn near the bayous. The kind of place where the roads narrow to dirt and gravel, and the streetlights don’t bother shining. The air is thick out here. Heavy with swamp heat and cicada buzz. Spanish moss hangs like old ghosts from the trees, and something unseen slinks through the reeds just off the road.
Strange for a pastor to be so far from his flock.
Remmick steps up the creaking porch steps. Peeling paint, warped boards. A porch swing sways slow, like someone just left it. He raises his fist and knocks. Once. Twice. Three times — a pattern made for stories that never end well.
(But not his story. For what he brings is salvation)
Again, his ears listen. He hears your voice from inside. Tired, but clear. “I got it, Daddy.” How trusting.
The door opens with a soft scrape of wood on wood.
You’re there, framed by the crooked doorway and warm house light spilling out behind you. A yellowed hallway. Faint smell of oil and iron and old Bible paper. And you — in a robe, hair tied, lips bare.
“Hello,” you say.
Remmick’s eyes go straight to your hand. That ring again. Big and bright, even under moonlight.
“What are you doing out here? This late at night?” Your tone is different. None of that sweet Sunday warmth. No church politeness. No false softness. You’re not smiling either.
Yes. Maybe Remmick didn’t know you.
“Thought I’d come by and say hi,” he answers. “Ain’t seen you since Christmas.”
“That so?” Your brow lifts — and there’s something sharp in your voice now. Like a blade kept just under the tongue.
“It is so.” He waits. Wonders when you’ll let him in. Night hums around you both — crickets and frogs singing their ancient hymns.
You open the door a little wider and lean against the frame, arms crossed under your chest. An invitation, maybe. “Couldn’t’ve come to see me during church?” you ask.
Remmick tilts his head, lets that wolf’s smile tug at the corner of his mouth. “You were so nice the first time,” he says. “Figured — why wait?”
You smile back. He can’t figure out if it’s nice or not. “This late? Had my daddy opened the door, you'd have been shot, boy.”
“Guess I should count myself lucky then,” Remmick says, still smiling, “that it was you who opened the door.”
You tilt your head at that. The porch light flickers once, as if considering going out. A moth bats against the glass like it’s trying to warn someone. You don’t move from the doorway.
“Guess you should,” you say, voice smooth as molasses but with something else underneath. “But I think your luck’ll run out sooner or later.”
You step just an inch closer—not enough to close the gap, not enough to invite, but enough to make him wonder what you’d do if he tried to cross the threshold.
“Now best run along,” you say, your voice quieter. “’Fore my father finds out there’s a white boy on our porch.”
The word white hangs in the air between you, sticky and heavy. Out here, it don’t just mean skin—it means history. It means ghosts with badges and fire, it means burnt crosses and blood-soaked soil. Remmick knows what it means. He remembers.
He could linger. He could lean in and say something slick. But there’s something in your eyes that stops him. Not fear. Not even hate. Just knowing.
He takes a step back, slow. Tips an imaginary hat like he’s leaving a saloon. “Wouldn’t want to overstay my welcome.”
“You already did,” you reply, soft and if he’s not hallucinating, playfully. You shut the door before he can say another word.
Behind it, he hears the faint sound of your footsteps—bare feet on old floorboards. Then the click of a lock sliding into place.
Smart girl.
He stands there for a moment longer, staring at the door, then turns and walks back into the swamp-dark night. The heat wraps around him like a second skin. The moss above sways in the still air like something watching.
Remmick’s smile fades.
No, he didn’t know you. But now, he wants to.
And so he does.
The next time he sees you, he’s sitting under a magnolia tree, its wide, waxy leaves rustling just enough to remind the world that the air still moves. He’s fine-tuning his banjo, the old wood resting against his thigh like an old friend. It’s sunset—the sky bleeding gold and peach, the kind of light that makes everything look softer than it really is.
The sun isn’t touching him—not directly—but still, he feels the phantom burn along his skin. Like a memory that lives in the muscle. Like his body knows better than to trust the light.
He ain’t welcome here. Not really. Not by the living, and certainly not by the dead that linger in these woods, these fields, these old bones of a town.
And yet, here you come.
You’re walking slow, arms tucked behind your back like a schoolgirl with a secret. You don’t look right at him, but he knows better. You’re watching from the corner of your eye, just enough to let him know you see him—but not enough to let him see you.
He plucks at a string. Then another. Then another. A lazy little tune. Just testing the cords.
The sound hums low and warm, curling through the air like smoke from a porch cigar. Notes hang between you like fireflies blinking on for the night.
You still haven’t said a word. But you’re not walking away either. That’s something. He plays a little more.
“Can you sing?” Finally, you turn your head to him, but your body stays angled away—like even your shadow doesn't know what to make of him yet.
Remmick stands. His eyes flicker to the horizon where the sun is hanging by its last thread. The final golden gasp before night swallows it whole. Finally, those cruel rays are low enough he can risk a step. So he does.
Just a little one.
The moment his foot touches the edge of light, his skin hisses. A soft, mean sound like bacon grease popping in a cast iron pan. He flinches, but he walks. Toward you.
Can you hear it? Can you smell the faint scorch of flesh? He’s burning just walking to you.
“Just a little,” he says, and his voice is steady even if his body isn’t. “Can you?”
You turn your head away. “I never cared much for music,” you reply. “So no. I can’t sing.” It’s the kind of thing said to shut a conversation down. But you don’t leave. You don’t walk away.
Remmick catches that.
He nods, slow, and looks at the road behind you. The way the shadows are getting longer. The way the trees whisper louder as the night gets closer. “Let me walk you home,” he offers.
There’s nothing syrupy in his voice. No charm. No flirt. Just the plain weight of the offer.
He watched as your eyes trail his face. From his eyes down. You’re trying to hide it. After all, a girl like you with a man like him? Well, for others, it just wouldn’t do.
(Or maybe you were just looking at his skin. The skin that is currently healing from the burns you caused.)
“You get sunburned?” Your eyes are trained on his collar bones. “I don’t see you out in the sun much. Your kind ain’t meant for it.”
He grins. The kind of grin that doesn’t show teeth. “You’re right. Sun don’t like my kind much. It’s dark now. I’ll take you home.”
You shake your head, but the corner of your mouth lifts. “My daddy wouldn’t like it.”
“I reckon he wouldn’t.” You don’t say yes. But you start walking—and you don’t stop him when he falls into step beside you.
The night rises around you both, thick with crickets and the far-off hum of cicadas. And the burn of the sun is gone, Remmick doesn’t feel the burn.
Just the quiet.
And your footsteps, steady in the dark. Then he hears it. Faint screeching off in the distance—too sharp, too wet. The kind that clings to the bones. The vultures. Always nearby. Always waiting. He calls them his shadows, though they ain’t loyal. Just hungry. Well, it’s a bad night for them. He ain’t gonna kill you—least not yet.
(It’s too bad he never thought they were there for him. Though why would he ever think that?)
Not when he still ain’t gotten his answer.
The path ahead twists like a snake through the tall grass. Eerily silent, save for the screeching. No crickets. No wind. Even the trees seem to be holding their breath. He looks to his side—
You're gone.
Remmick stops cold. No one leaves him without him knowing. No one just slips away.
A hiss cracks the stillness from his right. He turns.
There’s a feeling, deep and primal, starting to claw at his insides.
Before thought can catch up, his left leg jolts back on instinct— Snap.
He looks down. A gator. Biggest one he’s ever seen. Thick-scaled, eyes yellow and slick like oil. The air reeks of rot and mud. It hisses again, low and mean.
Remmick backs up, slow, cautious. But the thing lurches forward, jaws snapping inches from his foot. Animals don’t attack him. They bark, they hiss, they flee—but they don’t dare come close.
Not ever.
Another snap. It lunges. Remmick stumbles, his boots losing grip on the moss-slick path. He goes down hard, the earth cold and wet against his back.
The gator charges.
Though just before Remmick could flash his teeth, there you were. Grabbed the gator by its tail. It hissed at you before turning around and running away.
“You alright?” you ask, voice low. Where you came from, he didn’t know. How you got here without him hearing, he couldn’t say.
But your chest is rising fast, and your eyes are wide, shining in the dark. The moonlight catches on your ring again, that jewel blazing like a second eye. He nods slowly, still on the ground, mud soaking into his shirt. “Yeah. I’m alright.”
But what he doesn’t say is— He’s never seen anything like that before. Not from a person.
“I didn’t see it,” Remmick said quickly, getting to his feet. “Where’d you go?”
“Oh, I saw a flower just a few steps back,” you said casually looking down. “Guess you didn’t hear me stop.”
“I didn’t,” he admitted, scanning the path behind you.
“Look,” you said, lifting the bloom between two fingers. You held it up—a red hibiscus, full and blooming like it had something to prove.
“It is pretty,” Remmick said, glancing from the flower to you.
Your brows furrowed, and your eyes drifted to his hands. “Did you hurt yourself?” you asked, voice tinged with concern.
Remmick looked down. One hand had a gash in it, smeared with blood and dirt. “Guess I…” he started, then looked to his right—You weren’t there anymore.
“Did,” he muttered, blinking. Then he turned left—There you were. Smiling.
You’d just been on his right.
“Let me help you,” you said softly. Your eyes stayed lowered. In the dark, they looked almost black and he swears he hears your veins pumping blood faster than he’s ever heard. It almost sounds like porcelain cracking.
“Did you always have that purse?” he asked, eyeing the little blue thing at your side.
“Yes,” you replied, almost laughing at him, the corners of your mouth twitching. “Here,” you said, stepping closer. You took his hand. You were warm. Still human-warm. But you smelled like fresh blood. Clean. Bright. Familiar in a way that made his fangs ache.
From your purse, you pulled cotton and gently dabbed at his wound. He’d have been healed by morning— But you’d never been this close before. And he’d never smelled anything like you.
Got him droolin’.
After you cleaned his wound, you moved with careful, deliberate ease—tucking the bloodied cotton back into your purse, the soft crunch of the material the only sound for a moment. Then came the bandages, pulled from some inner pocket like you’d done this before. You wrapped them around his hand, gentle but firm, your fingers warm against his skin.
Remmick licked the side of his mouth, wiping away what drool he could reach. “It’s a nice ring,” he said, voice low.
You pulled back slightly, your eyes flicking down. He watched you turn your hand, examining the jewel like you hadn’t noticed it before. “Yeah,” you said, tone light but layered, “an old friend was kind enough to give it to me.”
Your gaze met his, and for a split second, he could’ve sworn the whites of your eyes weren’t white at all—but tinged red, like veins swelling just beneath the surface.
“That, and she owed me a couple of favors,” you added with a smile, one that was more teeth than kindness.
Then your hand lifted—slow, soft, deliberate—and you wiped the edge of his mouth where he’d missed the drool. It was an intimate gesture. Too intimate.
Maybe if Remmick had been paying attention, he would’ve noticed the strange way your fingers lingered just a second too long. Maybe he would’ve caught the lack of sound you emmit. (Humans make all kinds of sounds.) Maybe he would’ve known that humans are supposed to be cold when they sweat, but you’re always warm, no matter how much your body sweats. (Though, has he ever seen you sweat?)
But he wasn’t paying attention. He was watching your eyes, trying to remember what they looked like the first time he saw you. Now your pupils were dilated. Then they weren’t. Then they were again.
Over and over, your pupils changed sizes. A flickering pulse. Like they were breathing. Like something was watching him from inside you.
“Well,” you said, breaking the silence, “I’d offer to walk you home, but…” — you turned your gaze toward the glowing windows of your house — “I have a curfew. And technically, you just walked me.”
Remmick chuckled, licking his bottom lip again, eyes still trained on you. “I’d never ask a lady to walk me home.”
You stepped up onto your porch, your weight light against the old wood, but before opening the door, you turned back with that same strange smile. The kind that made his stomach feel like it was turning over slow in his gut.
“Well, goodnight, Remmick,” you said softly.
“Goodnight, m’lady,” he returned, tipping his head just slightly.
You paused, hand on the doorknob, then added, “Watch out for them gators on your way home. Good rule of thumb—watch for the vultures. If they’re around, chances are something aiming for you is too.”
Then the door closed, and Remmick was left alone on the porch. He knows the rules well. He’s the reason why the rule exists.
…
You’ve been walking around with someone new. Someone like you. Remmick doesn’t say anything. He just watches.
You’re out every night.
Fancy that. Preacher’s daughter out every night, and with someone you’re not supposed to be with.
Remmick doesn’t know where this new feller is from, but he doesn’t have a beating heart. It’s only confirmed when the man is smiling at him through your window. Familiar red eyes and long fangs smiling at him.
Remmick hasn’t gotten his answer from you yet. He don’t want you dead just yet. So up he goes on your porch steps giving three knocks, just like he did the first time. The man answers the door. He opens it halfway and leans on the frame, shaking his head slowly.
“If you know what’s best for you,” Remmick drawled, voice low and steady, “you’ll come outside.”
The man’s smile never touches his eyes. “No,” he murmured. “If I know what’s best for me, I’ll stay inside. Where you’re not allowed.”
Then, right before Remmick’s eyes, the red fades from the man’s irises, shifting—smooth and eerie—into a milky white.
Like bone. Like rot.
The man’s name leaves your lips—soft, questioning—and soon enough, you’re standing at the door with one brow raised.
“Remmick?” you ask, glancing between him and the man beside you. The pale, unnatural glow of the other’s eyes fades, shifting back into something more human, though they still don’t quite belong to him. He looks at you, head slightly tilted, waiting.
“What are you doing here?” you ask again, voice quieter now, laced with something unreadable. Before Remmick can answer, the man steps beside you, all too eager, and starts to usher you back inside.
Remmick steps forward, his tone harder than usual. “I think you should let me in.” Normally, he’d take his time, work his way around the rules with a little charm—but that man behind you looks ready to take your head clean off your shoulders. Probably will, too.
“Look,” you say with a smile, one that doesn’t reach your eyes, “I know we’ve talked a few times, but that don’t mean we friends. You gon’ get me in trouble. Can’t be in this part of town, Remmick.”
As you speak, your smile fades, slowly, piece by piece.
“Now you ain’t gotta—” the man beside you begins, voice low and agitated.
“Go inside,” you cut in, voice firm, but you never look at him. Remmick watches as the man lingers. From behind you, he catches the snarl stretching across the man’s face—fangs glinting in the dim porch light, a string of drool slipping from the corner of his mouth. The man holds Remmick’s gaze for a beat longer, flashing one last jagged smile.
Then he turns and slinks deeper into the house.
“Look, I know you don’t much like my kind—me being white and all—but I really do think you should—” Remmick started, his voice low, edged with urgency. He turned back to you, his smile gone. All that was left was a plain, pleading expression. A silent beg for you to let him in.
“What?” you snapped, cutting him off. Your brows drew together, your tone sharper now. “It’s not about you being—” You stopped yourself, jaw tightening. You exhaled through your nose. “Alright then. Fine.”
You glanced toward the tree line, then back at him. Your voice dropped, the edge still there, but now it was weighed with warning.
“You can’t be out here right now, Remmick. The Klan ain’t too far from us. These woods have eyes.” You crossed your arms tightly over your chest. “I was bein’ nice the first two times, but you really have to go.”
Remmick didn’t move.
Didn’t blink.
Didn’t breathe.
Not for a long second.
“I’m not here to cause trouble,” he said, voice low. “But that man in your house? He’s not right—”
“I didn’t ask.” Then, slowly, without slamming it or snapping it shut, you closed the door in his face. The sound was quiet. Final. Remmick stood there a moment longer, staring at the wood grain, then turned and disappeared into the dark.
The vultures started circling again.
Turning on his heel, Remmick bolted toward the man you’d been speaking to that night—the first time he'd seen you together. It didn’t take much to con his way close enough. One slip of the mind, one slack moment in the neck, and Remmick had him.
He drained him fast, too fast. He didn’t have time to savor it or let the man ease into death. He needed him turned, and he needed it now.
He only hoped he wasn’t too late.
(A head was already hanging by a thread of skin.)
The man awoke with a gasp like he’d broken through the surface of a black river. Blood spilled from his mouth. His hands clawed at the air, confused and feral.
Remmick grabbed him, yanking him close, their foreheads pressing together. His voice was strained, shaking from urgency and the weight of too much stolen blood.
“Get in the house,” he ordered, “and kill the man in there.”
He let go, and the newborn vampire stumbled forward, but caught himself, his instincts kicking in quick. Off he went.
Remmick wasn’t far behind, keeping to the trees. His ears sharpened for signs of life, breath, movement—anything.
He heard you.
You were breathing hard. Annoyed. He could hear it in your exhale—like a tired sigh through clenched teeth.
Then came the knock. The turned man stood on your porch, calling your name in a voice full of false pain, begging for help.
Remmick watched from the treeline.
And maybe it was just the way the shadows moved—but your eyes looked darker now. Your cheeks, hollowed out. Something strange clung to the corners of your mouth.
Just before he could focus, really focus, you turned away. You opened the door. And let him in.
Not a second later, there was fighting.
Remmick strained his ears.
He could hear you. Yelling. Screaming. Pleading with someone—“Stop!”
Then a cry of pain.
But it wasn’t yours. And it wasn’t the vampire you’d let into your house.
It was his. The newborn.
Then your scream followed. Sharp. Guttural. Like you were being torn apart from the inside.
The back door of your house slammed open. A head rolled out.
Remmick’s breath caught as he saw his freshly turned vampire stumble after it, a stake driven clean through his heart. Behind him, you stepped outside—blood smeared across your arms, your dress, even your neck. From the treeline, Remmick could see your hands trembling.
You looked... lost.
Your eyes darted over the yard like they were searching for something, someone. Then, behind you, the vampire moved—clawed fingers outstretched, crawling toward you with his last breath.
“Move!” Remmick shouted, bolting from the trees. You didn’t. You stood frozen as the vampire’s claws sank into you. He heard the rip. The unmistakable sound of flesh tearing.
Remmick caught your wrist and yanked you away, pulling you both deep into the bayou. The vampire would die soon enough. That stake would see to it.
Branches cracked beneath your feet. Your breath came fast and ragged. You kept glancing behind you like you couldn’t believe what had just happened.
Finally, when you both stopped, panting under the thick night air, Remmick turned to you. “Your back,” he said, reaching for your shoulder. “Let me see—”
“No, no. I’m okay,” you said quickly, turning to him, your hands gripping your sides.
“Is it deep?” he asked, stepping closer, trying to look at your back.
You resisted. Surprisingly strong. Remmick narrowed his eyes and used just enough of his strength to turn you gently toward him. His brows furrowed.
Your back was clean—save for deep red marks down your spine. No torn skin. No visible cuts.
“See?” You smiled at him. Too easily. “It’s not my blood.” You turned away again, smiling wider. “Thank you, Remmick.”
But he had heard it.
He had heard the claws tear into flesh.
He’d heard it enough times over the centuries to know the sound. And what he’d heard back there…
That had been your skin.
But there was nothing on you. Nothing wrong with you.
Slowly, Remmick inhaled the air.
The blood—it smelled wrong. Stale. Old. Like dried rust left out in the sun. That scent clung to every vampire eventually, no matter how young or ancient. But on you, it didn’t make sense.
Because he couldn’t smell you. Not a hint of fresh blood. Not a whiff of that sweet, distinct heat that always made his teeth ache, that made the hunger curl hot behind his ribs.
You just smelled like something dead.
Old, rotten blood.
Remmick took a step back without realizing it. His eyes flicked over your face, down your arms, your legs. No cuts. No bruises. But his ears still rang with the sound of tearing flesh.
“You’re sure you’re alright?” he asked, voice low.
“Thanks to you, yeah, I’m alright, but…Remmick.” You looked to him. Looked to him with your doe eyes as if you suddenly realized his presence here didn’t make sense. Looked to him as if realizing someone just staked your friends. Looked to him as if you just saw a man be decapitated. “Oh god.”
Remmick simply stayed silent.
“What am I gonna do? Two men just died inside my house.” That’s where your mind went? Not the fangs? Not the blood? Not Remmick, who shouldn’t’ve been there in the first place?
S’alright. He’d take it.
“The police—oh god, the police.”
Slowly, Remmick reached out, patting your shoulder, shushing you gently as you stayed still. “Ain’t gotta worry about that. You can stay with me.”
You turned to him, one brow raised. “Two white policemen start lookin’ f’me. Two dead men in my house, my parents gone—and they find me in your house?”
Again, Remmick gave a soft shush. His hands moved to your shoulders, steady.
“Ya ain’t gotta worry ’bout all that. I’ll take care of it.” He rubbed your shoulder. Flakes of dried blood crumbled off your skin.
“Remmick.” You looked at him again. Firmer, maybe. Or maybe just tired.
“Said I’ll take care of it.” His hands slid from your shoulders to your cheeks. “Now you head on home. Pack some things. We’ll go.”
He stroked your cheek once, then looked toward your house.
You nodded slowly, still held in his hands.
Slowly, the two of you walked back until the soft glow of your porch lights cut through the dark. Just before you reached the yard, Remmick gently pulled you back, using his hand to block your view.
“Don’t look,” he murmured, voice low, shielding your eyes from the porch—where a head still lay and a body slumped, stake in heart.
Then again he was on the porch of your home. You opened the door and entered. Remmick stayed put. Just as you were half way in, he saw you turn around.
“What’s wrong?” You asked him. Under the porch light, Remmick could finally see just how soaked you were. Blood covered the entire front of your dress, dyed deep crimson. The fabric clung to your body, barely hanging on.
“Nothin’ just waiting for you to invite me in.” Instead of the grin he might’ve flashed at you any other time, Remmick checked himself. This wasn’t the place for a smirk. Not tonight. So he gave you the gentlest smile he could manage—something sweet, something safe.
“Ain’t you gentlemen, but my house is a mess. Think it’s best if you don’t see it.” Again you flashed him a smile before once more the door was shut on him.
Remmick was gettin’ real tired of this door.
…
Your scent returned to you eventually—once all that blood had been washed away. That sweet, unmistakable scent.
You slept through the entire day, and just like he promised, Remmick made the problem disappear.
(Though strangely enough, by the time he got there, all the questions that should’ve been asked… never were.)
Justice don’t run right here.
Remmick looked over at you—there you were, stretched out on his bed. The heat hung heavy in the room. Your nightgown clung to you like a second skin, and the thin sheen of sweat on your body caught what little light filtered into the house, making you glow.
“They come yet?” you asked.
Remmick shook his head.
You stared up at the ceiling, eyes dull. (Bored) Then you fell back on the bed. Remmick watched as your chest rose up and down. Swore he could hear your blood pumping, swore he could hear the slow beat of your heart.
“You want some water?” You hadn’t eaten anything. Hadn’t drinken anything either.
He watched as you turned your head slowly to him. “I wanna go home.”
“I’ll take ya tonight if you want.” Remmick offered, and slowly you nodded again before closing your eyes, sleeping once more and Remmick sat in his chair just looking at you.
All this for an answer. All this just to see what you’d do if the devil came a knockin’ on your door. See if you would turn to god. Hell, all those crosses in your home. By the time Remmick went to investigate the bodies, the only thing left was a singed cross.
He could just find out now. Maybe scare ya’ while you’re asleep. Slowly Remmick stands up. Your breathing is slow. He has to stop and listen. Breath so slow he almost thinks you're dead. But you’re not. A deep breath you take tells him you’re not.
He’s salivating at the mouth. Remmick smells you. A deep and long inhale of you. Fresh, sweet, blood.
There is a sound from you. Remmick looks down. Shit. You got him droolin’ all over ya. He wipes your cheek with the back of his hand. But your skin—it’s cold. Not just clammy. Cold like him. But you’re sweating, too. Humans sweat. Humans get cold. Remmick’s been dead too long, maybe he’s forgettin’.
Remmick stayed there, on his bed sitting down just inhaling your scent. It was nightfall. You’ve been absent for almost three whole days. Nobody’s come searchin’ for you. Not your mother, father, anyone. Today was Sunday.
You missed church today. Still not a word.
Guess this wasn’t the town he thought it was.
You move again and a light hits his eye. He looks down and it’s your ring. You still have it on. The band of the ring is silver and the stone is blue with golden specks. It’s on your middle finger. His hand slides under yours. Your fingers twitch, just slightly. Remmick freezes. Waits. You don’t move again.
Was it fake? Slowly the ends of his pointer finger elongated into a sharp claw. He was about to scratch the stone before you arched your back in stretch. Quickly he reverted his finger to a human one.
“What are you doing?” Your hand was still his and your brows were furrowed but the way you spoke was still laced with sleep.
Remmick looked at you with a smile. “Just lookin’”
“If you’re wonderin’ if it’s real.” You gently pulled your hand from his grasp looking at the ring. “It is. It’s lapis lazuli. Scratches easy. Lapis lazuli stones are considered the precious stones that ruled the sky and the seas or in other stories the stone combines the blue of the heavens and golden glitter of the sun. As such, it absorbs the sunlight.” You took off the ring and gave it to him.
Remmick held it in his hand observing the fine metal work. “That ones enchanted though. The friend that gave it to me? She was a witch.” Remmick looked at you. So much for a devoted christian. “Lapis lazuli is a rock. Nothin’ real special, but it’s what she requested. So I went and found the stone, which was hard. I was working on a limited time schedule.”
Why do you speak like that? Speak as if you’re older than you are. Remmick doesn’t know how old you are—after a while, that age of humans becomes irrelevant. Anyone under the age of 100 is young to him. You speak as if you’d have more years than what is visible on your face.
“But eventually, I found a rock and brought it back to her. She did her spells. I’d recite it, but it’s Latin and it was such a long time ago, can’t remember any more.” You shrugged. “Anyways, the spell was done and now it protects me.”
Ain’t god-fearin’ because of this ring? Ain’t afraid of the devil because of this ring? It’s laughable, but Remmick won’t laugh. We’ll see how well your ring puts up against him. “Protects you against what?”
“Curses put on me.” You stood up and Remmick remained on the bed. “Well—a curse, really. Bestowed on my kind, after we were given a gift of sorts.”
“Your kind? The words felt sticky in his mouth. The way you said it—so easily. Like the ones who'd step on your neck. Such a pity.
You simply nodded. “I suffered a long time under that curse. I was limited for so many years. That gift took something away from me, and I missed it.” There you go again. Talking as if you’re older. But you’re not. He knows you're not. “So I went out, and found someone who could fix me. I met my friend, though I don’t think she really thought of me as a friend like I did her, but she’s dead now, so don’t it matter much and in the end I s'pose she got even.”
“How d’you reckon?”
“Well she placed another curse on me.” You laughed sitting down in the chair he once sat at while he looked at you sleepin’. “It was worse than the first. She didn’t take anything away—just... enhanced what was already there.” You looked at him, and suddenly gooseflesh pricked up his spin. He knew that look. “It was hell. Year after year, I tried to break it. It just wouldn’t. Told me it was an eye for an eye. She helped me and I helped her.” You shook your head and Remmick was stuck on the bed listening to you.
“Old hag knew I’d live longer than her. I was young back then.” Still are. Still naive when you never ask him the questions you should be askin’. So why do you sound so old? Why do you sound as if you’ve lived lifetimes? As many as he had. “Gullible, if you will. I mean, why after all these years, I still gotta help a dead woman? Just ain’t fair.”
Remmick said nothing and you kept looking at him. Where does he know your look from? He knows it. He really does, but god it’s been such a long time, Remmick starts to forget faces. “Eventually though, I accepted it. Learned to live with it. Enjoy it even. In the end, I’m glad she gave me another curse—though I think it’s a gift now—maybe I did break it. Maybe I just like livin’ like this now.”
You gave a deep pause.
“It’s better.”
…
This damned door.
Remmick swears he could trace every chip in the paint with his eyes closed, just from how often he’s stood in front of it. The creak of its hinges, the uneven flake of old enamel—it’s all burned into him now. Yet here he is again, and here you come, opening it once more.
“Yes?” you ask, voice soft and languid. You’re backlit, the glow of your home curling around you in warm gold. Domestic light—safe, small, human. Remmick remains where the dark clings to him, just past the porch light’s reach.
“Came to say hi,” he says, flashing you that grin—the kind meant to be disarming.
“Hi,” you echo, a little smile curling at your lips as you lean against the doorframe. Casual. Inviting. That’s good.
“Hello,” he murmurs again, quieter this time, letting it linger in the air between you both.
“Is that all?” you ask, arching a brow. There’s a slight tease in your voice now, but your eyes flicker, cautious. Curious.
Remmick doesn’t answer. Instead, he steps closer, slow and sure, letting the threshold between you become the only thing left.
“What are you doing?” you ask, your voice dropping an octave—not quite nervous, but alert.
Then you take a step forward—just one—and it’s enough.
The scent hits him like a wave.
Fresh blood. Sweet, bright, and warm. How you manage to carry that scent with you, always just on the edge of being bitten, he doesn’t know. But it’s there, thick in his nostrils now. Remmick’s jaw tightens. His tongue presses to the back of his teeth.
“You’re salivatin’,” you say, cocking your head. It’s not accusatory. Just observant.
He wipes at the corner of his mouth with the back of his hand and gives you another grin—this one slower, hungrier.
“Just for you.” Slowly he feels his eyes glaze over, but all he’s looking at is your neck. His mouth is ajar just slightly and he can feel his venom drippin’ from the side of his mouth. Slowly but surely he leans in.
He can barely register your hand against his face again wiping away his venom. But just slightly, the move is enough to turn his head and his vision from your neck to your lips. Well, poison gettin’ in you one way or another.
His hand moved too fast for it to be considered human, but he doesn’t think you noticed seeing as your warm hand is still cupping his face. His hand held a tight grip on the back of your neck as he pulled you to him, kissing you, hard. His teeth clash against yours.
You’ll have to forgive him. It’s been a while since he’s really kissed anyone. He can feel as you nails scratch lightly on his scalp as you grip his hair pulling him closer to you. You feel so warm. So warm even on such hot and humid nights.
He feels his venom accumulating on his tongue, so he forces himself into your mouth. Your sound of surprise sounds wondrous. You gladly welcome him into you. His grip softens on your neck and both of his hands start to explore your back. Lower and lower creep but just before they can reach for what his body aches for you push him away.
The momentum of pushing him away sends you stumbling backward, feet dragging across the worn wood floor, until you’re safely behind the threshold—behind the invisible line that keeps him from you.
Remmick stands frozen on the other side, one foot still lifted, as if he could follow.
But he can’t.
He looks at you. Really looks. And there it is: his venom, glistening like spilled ink, trailing from the corner of your mouth. A small, damning shimmer.
Your hand flies up, trembling as you point at him. “No,” you whisper at first, then louder, firmer, shaking your head as if to shake him out of your blood.
“No,” you repeat, breath hitching, voice frayed. “I won’t do it. Do you even know what they’d do to you? To me?” You pause, chest heaving as though you’ve run a great distance. “No, Remmick. I won’t subject myself to that.” Remmick doesn’t flinch.
“Goodbye, Remmick,” you say. It lands cold. Then—just like before—you shut the door.
And again, he’s left outside, staring at the same damned wood. The lock clicks like a coffin shutting. Remmick doesn’t move. Just stands there, bathed in the hush of the porchlight and the slow creep of night. Crickets chirp.
He got his answer, alright.
You aren’t a god-fearin’ woman and you are afraid of the devil
And maybe what stings the most is—he thought you were braver than that.
But that’s alright. He was scared of the devil once too. But now that he’s got his answer, it won’t matter no more. He can save you. Make sure you never fear the devil ever again. Make sure you can do something with your life and it won’t be meaningless. You can be equal, and no man will be more equal than others.
He wonders what happens now. You’ve got his venom in you.
You should be dead—or dying—but you’re not. Not yet. He’s never left someone like this before. Never walked away with his venom inside them without finishing the job. Usually, it’s through a bite. That’s the way it’s supposed to go.
Well… first time for everything.
Remmick wipes the corner of his mouth with the back of his sleeve, smearing spit and venom across his skin. It glistens under the faint glow of your porch light.
He turns, about to step into the night, when something makes him look back. There you are, framed by the window. Watching. The light catches your eyes—wide, cautious, and just a little bit puzzled. Like even you don’t know why you’re still standing.
Remmick frowns. He doesn’t know either.
He raises a hand, then thinks better of it. Instead, he dips his head in a small bow, mock-formal, like he’s stepping away from a stage instead of your life. Turning on his heel, he walks off into the dark, boots crunching soft against the gravel path.
Still, he can hear you. Your breath, small and quick, just behind the glass. You’re watching him walk away. He knows it.
And depending on how this goes…
It won’t be long before you walk away too—with him.
…
You hadn’t been home when he tried to visit. There was disappointment in that. Maybe you did die and you just never woke up. He should’ve just killed you. Didn’t even need to be brutal. Just a snapped neck and you would have woken up 15 minutes later.
Such a shame. Off he goes then. Ain’t nothing here for him. That something he’s been looking for just isn’t here.
Another week passes. Then—three knocks. Firm. Familiar.
Remmick wakes with a start, the sun already high and hot. Midday. The time he hates most. With a crack of his neck, he drags himself to the front door, every step heavy. When he opens it, his widen in shock because there you are.
You’re radiant.
Standing on his porch in your Sunday best, sunlight kissing your skin. And in your hands—a pie, steaming faintly under its cloth cover. You smell like warm fruit and something sweet beneath it. Something alive.
Remmick squints at you, blinking against the brightness. Best to ignore your absence. “Wasn’t it you who told me this—” he gestures between the two of you with a loose hand, a smirk curling his lip, “—was a bad idea?”
“Well yes!” you cut in quickly, chipper, too chipper. “But you see, my mother sent me over with this pie. Said you haven’t been to church for some time.”
Your mother? He hadn’t seen her in a while. Though she was dead. Your father too. He cocks a brow. “Aren’t you supposed to be in church?”
Your smile doesn’t falter. “I attended in the early mornin’.”
There’s a beat. Then, you shift your weight, pie still in hand. “Now, this hot… may I come in?” The words land like a stone in his gut. You still have that sweet smell of yours. Means you’re not like him. Not yet anyway. You walk in sunlight. Your skin doesn’t smoke. Your eyes still shine. Still, he doesn’t say it. Doesn’t invite you. Just opens the door wider.
And just as he suspected—you step inside without pause, without hesitation. Indeed you’re alive and kickin’. The light clings to you as you cross the threshold, but it fades, like it can’t hold onto you in here.
Remmick watches the sun blaze through the open door behind you, then gently pushes it closed. He turns to look at you as you set the pie down on his table. “How are ya’?”
“I’m good. Left for a week. Had to do some stuff.” You sat down at the table and again. Just like the last time you were in here, he expected to feel a prickle down his spine. But instead you just smile looking up at him with a slight tilt in your head. You look happy. Real happy.
He steps further in, slow and careful, like he’s approaching something skittish. Dangerous.
You. You, sitting at his table like you’ve always belonged here. Like there hadn’t been venom between your teeth and rejection in your breath the last time he saw you.
“You look different,” he says, voice low. Testing.
“Do I?” you hum, resting your chin in your hand. “Maybe. I feel different, if only a little.”
Remmick studies you—really studies you. Your skin’s got color, warm and soft, kissed by sun and not a hint of pallor. Your eyes shine like they used to, but something hums beneath them now. Something older.
“You were gone for a week,” he says, circling the table, watching how your eyes follow him. “And then you show up on my porch in the daylight. Dressed for church. Smilin’ like you’ve been saved.”
You laugh, soft and musical, but there’s something sharp hidden in it. “Ain’t that what Sunday’s for?”
He doesn’t sit. He leans against the back of the chair across from you, arms crossed, still watching. Still waiting. “You said you feel different?”
“I’ve been thinking. Thinkin’ real hard.” You stand up just as Remmick is behind you. “But I still have doubts.” You smell stronger today and the heat radiates off of you today. Almost too human. Enticing nonetheless. His teeth hurt.
“Thinkin’ bout what?” He murmured as he bent down trying to smell you. Fresh blood. Your blood is young.
“Well…what happened last time…” You trailed off. Remmick was right again. You’re not old. Can’t be. Not when your voice sounds so young. Sounds so impressionable. Sound so naive.
Slowly, his hands settled on your shoulders, firm but gentle, like he wasn’t sure if he was holding you or holding himself back. He drew you close. Close enough that the scent of your skin curled into his lungs and stayed there. It made his gums ache—dull at first, then sharper, the way they always ached right before his teeth came out.
(Though he ignored the sound of vein pulsing. The sound as if they hadn’t been used in a while and were stretching to being used once more. The sound of porcelain cracking.)
You didn’t stop him. Not at first. Maybe you knew what was coming.
Just before his lips could brush the edge of your throat—just before the hunger overtook the man—a knock sounded, sharp and sudden.
You flinched. The spell broke.
You tore yourself from him in one clean motion, never once looking back as your footsteps pounded against the floor and disappeared down the hall. Back to your mother. Back to the light. Back to safety.
Remmick stood there a moment longer, hand outstretched, the ghost of your warmth still clinging to his fingers.
It was fine. Nightfall would come soon. And tonight would be the final night.
The sun sank like a coin into the horizon, the sky stained in shades of fire and ash. Remmick stood by the window, watching shadows grow long and lean. The ache in his jaw had not gone away. If anything, it had deepened—moved lower, down into the bones. A hunger that knew your name.
He’d waited. He’d been kind. Patient, even.
But patience was running thin.
And you’d been marked now—by his venom, by your choice, by something neither of you fully understood.
No more knocks. No more interruptions.
Tonight he wouldn’t wait for you to come to him.
He was coming to you.
And so he did.
Just as before, Remmick stood at your doorstep, cloaked in the hush of twilight. The porch light cast long shadows across the wooden floorboards, and the scent of honeysuckle clung to the air. But this time, when the door creaked open, you stepped out to greet him.
Your figure cut through the soft light—barefoot, loose nightdress, a curl falling out of place near your temple. You looked like you hadn’t slept, but you were calm. Maybe resolved.
“Your parents?” Remmick asked, his voice quiet, cautious.
“Gone,” you replied, arms loosely crossed over your chest, but not in defense—more like you were holding something steady inside you.
He nodded once, stepping a little closer. “What is it that you want?” he asked, voice lower now, earnest. “I’ll make it happen.”
You tilted your head slightly, a skeptical smile ghosting your lips. “What can you do?”
“I can take you North,” he said, the words slow, deliberate, thick with promise. “North where we could be free. You wouldn’t have to worry about a thing.”
The porch light flickered once. The air between you buzzed with something unsaid.
“You’d do that f’me?” you asked, gaze flicking to his, voice smaller than before.
“’Course,” he breathed. “Do anythin’.”
“But what if they—”
“You ain’t gotta worry ’bout a thing,” he interrupted gently. “I’ll handle it.” His hand lifted, rough fingers brushing your cheek. His palm was calloused, but the way he held you was almost reverent.
“Remm—” your voice cracked around his name.
Softly, he shushed you. “Shhh,” he whispered, his thumb stroking just beneath your eye. Your skin wasn’t as warm tonight. That was alright. His hand lingered like he was grounding himself. “Just like I handled the last problem.”
There was a pause—one thick with knowing.
You looked at him. Really looked.
“Alright then…” you murmured, and a small smile touched your lips. You reached up, holding his hand in both of yours, delicate and sure. Then, turning slightly, your gaze flicked to the open door behind you. The threshold. The place where old lives ended and new ones might begin.
“Come on in, Remmick.”
And he did.
Slowly, Remmick crossed the threshold of your home. Each step he took felt heavier with meaning, soaked in anticipation. A grin stretched across his face—feral and proud—as he watched you move through the soft amber light of the kitchen, your silhouette framed by fluttering gingham curtains and the muted hum of a quiet house.
His eyes wandered along the walls. Old walls, wilted dried herbs. Then his gaze landed on another cross. This one wasn’t ornamental. Its angles were too sharp. Too precise. The bottom point gleamed like it had drawn blood before.
“Remmick?” you called from the kitchen, voice lilting, casual. Like this was any other day.
He hummed low in his throat, not trusting his voice. Not with what was coming.
Let’s see what your little ring was good for.
His eyes darkened and glazed over, vision sharpening until the fibers of the wood under his boots became crystal-clear. His shoulders drew back with a crack, his body shifting. Bones lengthened in his fingers, joints grinding as claws pushed through skin with an eager, slow stretch. His ears twitched, catching the creak of a cooling kettle, the soft rustle of your clothing. But nothing else. No heartbeat. No breath. Still, so still.
Strange.
Then the ache came. That sweet, gnawing pull in his gums as his canines extended, tearing just slightly at his lip. The rest of his teeth followed suit—each one honed to a razor’s edge.
God, it felt good.
“When was the last time you ate?” you asked suddenly. Your back was still to him, your hands fussing with something at the counter—tea leaves maybe, or pie slices.
His eyes flicked to your ring. It didn’t glow. Didn’t burn. Didn’t stop a thing.
But then again… maybe it was never meant to.
“A while ago,” he said, voice a rasp, thick with desire. He took a step forward, almost salivating. “Haven’t eaten proper since… well. Since your friend.”
He didn’t need to say which one. The silence that followed named her for him.
“So you’re hungry?” you asked, still without turning. Your tone was measured, smooth like syrup.
“Starvin’,” he growled, claws flexing.
“That’s good.” You turned. Slowly.
He bared his teeth fully now, ready to savor the shock on your face. But what he saw made something shift in his gut.
Your eyes did widen at first—but only slightly. There was no scream. No flinch. Just the ghost of amusement curling at your lips. And then… you smiled.
Not in fear.
In recognition. And Remmick’s claws twitched again—but this time, not from joy.
He didn’t like that smile.
Not one bit.
Then came the sound.
That sick, wet stretch of muscle tearing and reforming. The kind that always reminded Remmick of leather being pulled too tight—followed by the sharp snap of bone shifting just beneath skin. He knew that sound. Had heard it in the woods. Beneath moonlight. In his house. Only now… he knew exactly where it was coming from.
From you.
He froze, eyes locked on your face as something moved beneath your skin—quick, serpentine. Dark veins crawled up from your jaw like ink bleeding into paper, slithering under your cheekbones and reaching the corners of your bloodshot eyes. The whites of them turned red, slowly—almost deliberately—as if savoring the change.
And then, your smile twisted. Became something other. A grin, cruel and radiant, blooming with two sharp fangs that caught the light.
The grin that had lived on his face just moments ago? It was gone. Slid off like water on polished stone.
Now it belonged to you.
Remmick stepped back instinctively, his claws flexing in the air between you. Confusion struck first—then horror, slow and creeping. His lips parted, but no sound came out.
He watched you. He watched it—the creature you’d become. No… the creature you’d always been.
(That’s where he knew your face from that day. He had worn it so many times, though now it just wasn’t on him)
“Me too,” you whispered.
Note: Eh. Not my best work, but I wanted it out there. Took me forever to write💔
Pt. 2
To be added on Tag list: !(•̀ᴗ•́)و ̑̑/Gen Masterlist
#spicepost#sinners#sinners 2025#remmick x reader#sinners fanfiction#sinners fandom#poc!reader#vampire reader#the vampire diaries#tdv#the orginals#sinners au#x reader#fanfic#fanfic authors#fanfiction#fanfic readers#reader insert#remmick#remmick x female reader#remmick x you
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Hello!!!
Do you think you could do Elijah Mikaelson x TeenNiece!Reader where she’s so caught up in the responsibility of what’s going on, supernatural stuff or whatever and he wants his niece to relax and be a kid again and he finds out she’s still ticklish like when she was a kid?
A/n: I hope you like it!! The only small change I made was that he already knew she was ticklish so he's an experienced tickler 😏
Your Hope's older sister, which was great most of the time. But times like this were really stressful, the constant worry about keeping her and your family safe from the witches had you up deep in the night to find spells in your grandmother's grimoire.
Yeah that's right, you were half vampire half witch which came with enough difficulty and responsibility as it is.
So long story short, you were completely burned out.
But your family's enemies didn't sit still so neither would you.
It was the third time this week that light casted under your bedroom door deep in the night as the sun began to come up, your head bowed over the grimoire as you muttered to yourself what spells were useful.
"Y/N darling, why are you still up?" Elijah's voice came from the door since it was open.
"Trying to find the right spells"
"Love you need to take better care of yourself" Elijah said with a sigh as he walked in still in his suit.
He grabbed the grimoire and put it on your night stand, sitting on the edge of your bed looking at you.
"But you're still up too!" You exclaimed as you looked at him with bags under your eyes.
"Yes for one time, because Niklaus and I had to deal with some rogue witches" he said with a pointed look as you tried to grab the grimoire again.
"But I need to find something to help" you grumble as you fell backwards onto your bed.
"Don't think that i forgot your weakness Y/N" he said with a playful stern expression "Don't make me tickle you to surrender"
That made you hold for a second, you knew your uncle was very well aware of what your weak spots were having found them himself when you weren't listening. But then again...
"Bring it on old man" you said with a grin
You could use a break.
Elijah of course saw that too and sped over to your side as you tried to get up, pushing you down and sitting on your thighs.
"Old man? You need to learn to respect your elders young lady" he scolded as he pulled your arms over your head and immediately went for your tummy.
"Respect is earned, not givinHEHEHEH" you squealed mid sentence as he rapidly squeezed your side.
"When then I guess I'll have to earn it" he sighed as if he was sad but his smile gave him away.
Elijah let go of your wrists and attacked your tummy with pokes and squeezes, randomly switching to ghost tickling your ribs over your shirt which made it so much worse.
"ELIJAHAHHAHAHHAHA" you screamed through your laughter as you fought against his hands "GHAHAHHAHA".
"Yes that's my name" he said nonchalant as he leaned forward and blew a raspberry onto your tummy, letting his other hand slip under back and tickle your back ribs.
"MERCYHHEHEHEHHEH!!"
"I don't know... Your laugh is pretty adorable and you seem to enjoy it, since you haven't asked me to stop yet" he mused with a smirk.
This continued for a couple of minutes with your (fake) pleases for mercy before footsteps came up the stairs and Klaus appeared in the doorway.
"I think my daughter does need to breath eventually Elijah" your father chuckled as he saw your appearance, hair completely ruffled from all the squirming, red cheeks and a giant smile.
"I do believe your right" Elijah said with a laugh as he got off of you. Letting you breath before pulling the blankets over you and giving you a kiss on the forehead, your father giving you a kiss on the forehead as well.
"Now go to sleep or so help me god young lady, me AND Elijah will come back here and this time you won't have the same mercy" Klaus warned with a smirk.
"Aye aye Sir" you grinned before turning onto your side.
"Good, goodnight sweetheart" he said before he and Elijah stepped out of the room and closed the door.
And maybe, just maybe you'll dare it again...
#tickle fic#lee!reader#ticklish!reader#ticklish ribs#request#tickle punishment#elijah tickle#elijah mikaelson imagine#elijah mikaelson x reader#elijah mikaelson#klaus mikaelson#klaus tickle#klaus mikaelson x reader#tvd#the orginals
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Katherine Pierce 🗡️
#the vampire diaries#katherine pierce#elena gilbert#hell is a teenage girl#girlblogging#girlhood#girlhood is a spectrum#lana del rey#this is what makes us girls#lana del ray aka lizzy grant#lana is mother#female hysteria#girl interrupted#dangerous#dangerous woman#stefan salvatore#damon salvatore#nina dobrev#manic pixie nightmare#female manipulator#female insanity#female rage#moodboard#vampires#the orginals#klaus mikaelson#supernatural
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Mystic Falls, Virginia, USA
#moodboard#mystic falls#the vampire diaries#vampire diaries#tvdu#tvd universe#tvd edit#elena gilbert#caroline forbes#salvatore brothers#damon salvatore#stefan salvatore#the orginals#the mikaelsons#tyler lockwood#matt donovan#bonnie bennett
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Being Klaus Mikaelsons wife and the original tribrid includes:
Mikael brought you home after slaughtering your pack. He didn't kill you because you were a werewolf witch hybrid. And Esther wanted you for your magic
You developed romantic feelings towards Niklaus as a teenager, him as well. You both slowly went from friends to lovers.
You both gathered berries and flowers and made paint as kids.
You both married when you became of age, a few years before you became vampires.
You both experienced your first full moon together, holding each other in your arms as you painfully shifted.
Watching sadly as Esther sealed your wolf halves away
Comforting him after Henriks death
He could watch as Mikael "killed" you but being there when you turned and resurrected
He asks you to renew your vows every 500 years
Klaus is known for lying and breaking his word, but never once has he ever lied to you or broken his words to you
After centuries of marriage, he still thinks your the most beautiful woman in existence
Will kill anyone who flirts with you and vice versa
Klaus's pride growing every time you address him as "husband" especially in public
Your the only one who can call him "Nikki" and live
Being Marcels adoptive mother and caretaker
Him vowing to break your guy's curse and become hybrid and tribrid once more
Your his humanity, his light, his soul
His heartbreaking every time his disappoints you or upsets you
Only you he will cry in front of as you soothe him
You always being on his side no matter what he does, supporting him
You being his muse when he is painting, he has thousands of portraits of you from over the centuries
You being captured every time he is captured as well, being used as leverage against him
When sleeping, you are his teddy bear
#x reader#klaus mikaelson#mikaelson#the orginals#vampire diaries#niklaus mikaelson#werewolf#elijah mikaelson#rebekah mikaelson#kol mikaelson
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𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐇𝐄𝐑 — rebekah mikaelson



summary — you couldn’t help but swoon over the original without her even having to compel you, instead of matt being in the lake with elena its you but with a twist.
description — poc fem!reader, tvd rebekah!au, sexual themes but no smut.
— 🩸 ◦ ✺ 🦷 ⟢ —
The first time you met Rebekah in Mystic Falls you were already so fascinated with her but with your childhood friends completely having a war with her and her siblings you kept to yourself.
Being one of two humans in the friend group you were surprised that you lived for this long especially Matt Donavan, he literally gets himself killed every other day.
You were in charge of taking Elena out of Mystic Falls, she was unconscious in your car as you began to drive over Wickery Bridge. A tall silhouette appeared in the middle of the road causing you to slam onto your brakes serving off the bridge and into the deep lake.
The water wasted no time sinking into your car, bashing your hands and elbows onto the windows at fear of you and your best friend drowning.
Panic rose into your body as you started sucking in the water that filled up your lungs, the burning sensation making you hysterical until all pain vanished and the little light around you turned black.
Your body shot up as water shot out of your lungs, you gasped breathlessly finally feeling relieved that you were able to breathe again. Another subtle gasp had caused you to snap your head to the side only to see the blonde with relief written all over her face.
“Darling, I’m so sorry. I didn’t know you were in the car or else I wouldn’t have don—“ You were quick to cut her off.
“You tried to kill me Rebekah!” Anger brewed in your voice.
“No, I tried to kill Elena but besides—“ You eyes widen as you started to become aware of your surroundings. You were in the Mikaelson’s Mansions more specifically lying in the original girls bed.
“Elena! Oh my god Elena!” Sobs started choking out of your throat thinking you had killed your best friend.
“No, love. She’s alive, don’t worry she’s alive” Rebekah’s hand rubbed your face trying to soothe you.
You looked up at her confusion plastered across your face wondering how you even ended up here rather than at the Salvatores house, her baby blue orbs sadden.
“They left you in the lake to perish Darling, I hid when Stefan left with Elena when I saw it was your car and I saved you just in time.” She explained with her voice so gentle, her soft hand still caressing your face.
“They— no, they wouldn’t just leave me to die.” Your heart sunk deep into your stomach, forcefully pushing her hand away from you. Denial kicked in realizing that your once close friends didn’t even think twice to come back and even give you a proper burial if they thought you were even dead.
“Why, why would they leave me, I have done nothing but risk my life for them—“ Your throat swelled up as your heart ached, the emotion pain started becoming physical and all you could let out were extricating sobs.
Rebekah pulled you into her lap and held you close to her chest as tears streamed down your now puffed up face. “Shh sweet girl, you’re okay, you’re safe with me.” Her soothing voice slowly calming you down, little hiccups now escaping your lips.
“Why did you save me? I thought you hated me.” Your little comment made her chuckle, she so gently lifted up your chin to have you look at her mesmerizing face.
She licked her lips staring half lidded at your lips then back to your eyes, the supposed dangerous vampire leaned down and pressed her lips against your swollen pink ones. You wrapped your arms around her neck and laid back on her mountains of pillows having her crawl on top of you, caging your body beneath near.
She pulled away having you desperately chase back for more getting a smirk as she saw her red lipstick smudged into your soft lips.
“I don’t hate you baby, I hate the people you associate yourself with.” You felt your heart beating fast just by her words alone, are you sure she didn’t compel you? No, you wore a vervain bracelet that Bonnie gifted you when all of this went down.
“I didn’t even think you would be interested in girls? Let alone me.” You gave her a sweet smile, your stomach starting to do flips with the way she looked at you like you were the most beautiful creature she’s ever laid her eyes on.
— 🩸 ◦ ✺ 🦷 ⟢ —
authors note — GUUYYSSS SHOULD I MAKE A PART 2 BUT IT’LL HAVE SMUT 😩🙌🏽
#lesbian#lgbtq#wlw#rebekah mikaelson#rebekah mikealson x reader#rebekah mikealson x fem reader#rebekah mikealson drabble#the vampire diaries#tvd universe#the orginals
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The Vampire and the Serial Killer (Dexter Morgan x Mikealson’Reader)
The Vampire and the Serial Killer (Dexter Morgan x Mikealson’Reader)
Plot: The reader is a vampire with power like Hope Mikealson, vampire, witch, and werewolf. When there comes a new killer in Miami, Deb calls an old friend that owes her a favor. When the friend gets there, Dexter becomes intrigued and so does Rudy.
Prologue
Deb’s POV
As I look at the body in front of me all I can think is how this all seems familiar to the girl I met back when I was 18. She had saved me from these men trying to do the worst thing imaginable to an 18 year old. She fed on their blood and ripped their heart out right in front of me but for some reason I could never tell anyone about this encounter. Most of the time, I think I made it all up inside of my head but that can’t be fucking true. But how could this girl be able to do this. It wasn’t until I turned 21 when I saw her again. I couldn’t fucking believe it. She looked like she never aged. That is when she told me that she was a trybrid from what legends call the Originals. She is the last surviving one from this family. She gave me her cell incase something ever happened or I still can’t believe it, if I wanted to hang. I guess it must be fucking lonely never aging and always watching people die. That makes me sound like a fucking hypocrite because Im standing over a fucking body that the other detectives that are deciding that this is another animal attack. This doesn’t look like an animal attack, iv seen this before with her.
Next Chapter
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𝐍𝐢𝐤𝐥𝐚𝐮𝐬 𝐌𝐢𝐤𝐚𝐞𝐥𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝐭𝐞𝐱𝐭 𝐩𝐨𝐬𝐭𝐬
random and (partly) self-indulgent text post about my favorite Original hybrid (because i'm severely hyperfixated and he's all i think about)






#the orginals#niklaus mikaelson#klaus mikaelson#the original hybrid#the originals shitpost#the originals text post#the vampire diaries#tvd#incorrect text posts
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hi, since you have the vampire diaries as one of your new fandom. Can I please request a general yandere Klaus Mikaelson headcanon x a human reader? Thanks a lot.
❝yandere klaus mikaelson with a human partner❞
A yandere personality typically involves intense and possessive love. If Klaus were to exhibit a yandere personality with a human partner, it might involve:
1. Extreme possessiveness: Klaus would be overly possessive of his partner, constantly wanting to know their whereabouts and activities.
2. Jealousy: He would become jealous and potentially aggressive towards anyone he perceives as a threat to his relationship.
3. Isolation: Klaus might try to isolate his partner from friends and family, wanting to keep them all to himself.
4. Intense declarations of love: He would frequently express his love in an obsessive and sometimes threatening manner.
5. Willingness to do anything: Klaus might go to great lengths, including violence, to protect or keep his partner by his side.
❝a yandere's obsession❞
✭ pairing : yandere klaus mikaelson x reader
✭ fandom : the originals / the vampire diaries
✭ summary : kalus mikaelson was a hard man to love, with emotions just as challenging but when you had his trust much less his heart, best believe he loved you with all he got.
✭ yandere masterlist





Klaus Mikaelson, the formidable and ancient vampire, had found something he cherished above all else in his long, tumultuous existence - a human girlfriend named (Y/N). Their relationship was a source of both immense joy and profound torment for him. Klaus's yandere tendencies were well-hidden from (Y/N), who saw only his charming and protective side.
Tonight, they were dining at a luxurious restaurant in the heart of New Orleans, a city Klaus had once called home. The dimly lit ambiance and the soft piano music provided the perfect backdrop for a romantic evening. (Y/N) looked stunning, her smile illuminating the room as she perused the menu.
As they sat down at their reserved table, a waiter approached to take their orders. Klaus couldn't help but notice the young man's gaze lingering on (Y/N) for a moment too long, and a surge of jealousy coursed through him. He clenched his jaw, his lips curving into a tight smile as he observed the waiter's actions.
"Good evening," the waiter greeted, his eyes still locked on (Y/N) as he handed them the menus. "Can I start you off with something to drink?"
(Y/N) looked up from her menu and ordered a glass of wine, her eyes warm and friendly as she engaged with the waiter. Klaus instincts flared up as he watched their interaction. He stand the thought of another man showing any interest in his beloved (Y/N).
Klaus leaned in closer to (Y/N), his voice taking on a possessive tone. "Darling, perhaps we should order quickly. I have a strong desire to savor every moment of this evening with you." His words were meant to signal to both (Y/N) and the waiter that she was his and his alone.
The waiter, seemingly unfazed, jotted down their drink order and nodded, "Of course, sir."
Klaus's eyes never left the waiter as he walked away to give their order to the kitchen. His grip on (Y/N)'s hand tightened. His mind raced with thoughts of what he might do to anyone who dared to steal her attention.
The luxurious restaurant provided the perfect stage for Klaus and (Y/N)'s romantic evening, but beneath the dimmed lights and soft music, an undercurrent of tension simmered. Klaus's tendencies had been triggered by the waiter's prolonged gaze, and he found it increasingly difficult to contain his emotions.
As the evening progressed, Klaus maintained a watchful eye on (Y/N). He couldn't help but feel his jealousy intensify every time she laughed at a joke or engaged in conversation with their server. His grip on her hand remained firm, a subtle reminder of his claim on her.
"Darling, what do you think of the ambiance?" Klaus inquired, doing his best to sound casual. He desperately wanted to redirect (Y/N)'s attention away from the waiter.
(Y/N) smiled, seemingly oblivious to Klaus's unease. "It's lovely, Klaus. I'm so grateful for this wonderful evening."
Klaus's lips curled into a strained smile, and he leaned in closer to her. "And I am equally grateful for you, my love. You bring light to my eternal existence."
Unbeknownst to (Y/N), Klaus was concocting a plan to assert his dominance and make it clear that she was his alone. His thoughts raced as he considered his next move.
Suddenly, the waiter returned with their main course, delicately setting the plates in front of them. Klaus's eyes narrowed as he watched the young man, who appeared to be just a little too friendly and attentive. A surge of possessiveness coursed through him.
Before the waiter could leave, Klaus spoke, his voice dripping with a subtle threat. "My dear, would you mind feeding me a bite?" He picked up a forkful of his meal, his eyes never leaving the waiter, who stood at a polite distance.
(Y/N) blinked in surprise but smiled, scooping up a bite of food and offering it to Klaus. He accepted it with a satisfied nod, all the while maintaining an intense gaze on the waiter.
The young server, now understanding the unspoken warning, excused himself hastily, leaving the couple in relative peace.
As the evening continued, Klaus's possessiveness became more pronounced. He showered (Y/N) with compliments, keeping her close, and ensuring that his dominance over her was clear. The tension between his desire to protect her and the need to control his jealousy grew, setting the stage for a tumultuous and precarious relationship between Klaus Mikaelson and his beloved (Y/N).
Sometime later, as Klaus and (Y/N) left the restaurant, the cool night air provided a welcome respite from the tension that had brewed during their dinner. The drive home was a silent one, filled with unspoken emotions. (Y/N) knew that she needed to address Klaus's behavior at the restaurant, but she also understood the depth of his love and protective instincts.
Once they arrived at (Y/N)'s home, she turned to Klaus with a serious expression. "Klaus, I need to talk to you about tonight," she began, her tone firm but gentle. "Your possessiveness and jealousy... they went a bit too far."
Klaus sighed, his shoulders slumping in acknowledgment of his actions. "I'm deeply sorry, my love. I can't bear the thought of anyone coming between us."
(Y/N) reached out and cupped his face, making him meet her gaze. "I understand, Klaus, and I appreciate your devotion. But you must trust me, just as I trust you. We're in this together, and no other man will ever take your place in my heart."
Tears welled in Klaus's eyes as he heard those words. He was relieved to know that (Y/N) understood his intentions, even if they had been expressed in an overbearing manner. He leaned in and gently kissed her forehead, his lips lingering there for a moment.
"I love you, (Y/N)," he whispered, his voice filled with genuine emotion. "I can't bear to lose you, and I'll do anything to protect our love."
(Y/N) smiled, her eyes brimming with affection as she embraced Klaus. "I love you too, Klaus, and I'm happy with you. But we must find a balance. You can protect me without smothering me."
Klaus nodded, his heart swelling with gratitude for (Y/N)'s understanding. "I promise, my love, I'll work on it. I'll be the man you need me to be."
(Y/N) gave Klaus a soft, tender kiss on the cheek, sealing their renewed commitment. "That's all I ask, Klaus. As long as we have each other, nothing else matters."
With their love reaffirmed and a newfound understanding between them, Klaus and (Y/N) stood on the threshold of a future where their unique and passionate relationship could flourish, despite the challenges of Klaus tendencies.
#x reader#x reader one shot#x reader oneshot#klaus mikaelson#yandere klaus mikaelson#yandere klaus mikaelson x you#yandere klaus mikaelson x reader#yandere klaus mikaelson x y/n#klaus mikaelson x y/n#klaus mikaelson x reader#klaus mikaelson x you#yandere klaus mikaelson imagine#yandere klaus mikaelson imagines#klaus mikaelson imagine#klaus mikaelson imagines#tvd#the orginals#the vampire diaries#tvd imagine#tvd imagines
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Augustine Vampire
This isn't rlly story but I wrote it as a sequel to Ich bin ein Jäger
-Mans would probably try to get away from you bc what is this? Never met a vampire who ate other vampires. And never met one that looks like you.
Remmick clutched his neck, fingers slick with blood, warm and gushing through the spaces between them. His breaths came fast—sharp, panicked huffs—as he stumbled back against your kitchen counter, smearing red along the pale wood.
You were laughing. Laughing.
His blood painted your lips and chin, smeared across your hands like warpaint. It glistened—bright and obscene—under the humming kitchen light as you licked it off, slow and purposeful.
He fumbled blindly to his left, fingers grasping the nearest thing. Cold glass—round, wet. He hissed through his teeth.
“Shit!”
The burn sizzled across his palm. Pickled garlic. The jar hadn’t been closed properly; juice leaked in sticky trails down his wrist. The sting of it bit deep, but he gritted his teeth, forcing himself to hold on.
He looked back at you—and you were still standing there. Still smiling, though it was no longer playful. No. This smile was feral.
The dark veins beneath your skin pulsed, worming up from your jaw to bloom beneath your eyes like bruised marble. Your sclera had gone deep red—no white left to see. And those fangs, those fangs… longer now. Hungrier.
With a snarl of desperation, he hurled the jar.
It shattered against your raised arms, glass flying, brine soaking your skin. You flinched—at least he thought you did. The grin slipped into a flash of clenched teeth, and for a split second, Remmick felt something like hope.
But then you brought your arm to your nose, sniffed, and grimaced.
Then you laughed.
"Seriously?" you said, raising a brow. The broken glass crunched beneath your step as you walked to the sink, utterly unfazed. “This shit stinks.”
The faucet creaked on and cold water hissed down. You rinsed your arms with practiced ease, like washing off dirt after a long day in the fields.
“Does this actually work on you?” you asked, glancing over your shoulder with a mocking smile.
Remmick’s vision swam for a moment, but he held himself upright. The bleeding had slowed, congealing enough that he could lift his hand from his neck without spurting red across the walls.
You chuckled again, voice dripping with amusement.
“Garlic?” you said, almost pouting as you wiped a droplet of brine off your cheek. “Sad. I love garlic. Tastes great.”
He said nothing—just stared. Jaw tight. Chest heaving. In all his years, all his kills, all his tricks... he had never met a creature who could mock him with his own blood on their lips.
-Again is very confused bc wdym Garlic doesn’t work on you? Would stakes work on you then? Then if he pauses to really think, well the sunlight clearly didn’t work on you either. To him I don’t think he thinks you’re a vampire.
“The hell are you?” Remmick muttered, voice thick with pain as his body trembled. Slowly, he felt his muscles twitch and tighten—sinew and bone knitting themselves back together beneath torn flesh. His neck ached with the familiar, ugly sensation of forced healing.
You leaned back against the counter, arms crossed, a brow raised like this was just a casual chat.
“I’m you,” you said simply, almost bored.
Remmick scoffed, breath wheezing. “Like hell you are.”
“Well… different species, I suppose,” you added, voice languid now, like syrup dragging down glass. “Which, up until now, I didn’t think was possible.”
The tap squeaked as you shut it off. Water droplets clung to your skin, catching in the pale light like tiny shards of glass. You dried your hands on a kitchen towel—casual, clean, like you hadn’t just torn a man’s throat open.
“First time I met you,” you went on, voice drifting somewhere between fond recollection and cold calculation, “I was real surprised. From then—give or take a hundred, maybe a hundred and fifty years ago—I always had to make my own food.”
You smiled, and Remmick’s blood ran cold.
“I hunted others like me,” you said lightly, as though talking about rabbits or deer. “Here in the Americas. But I was too good at it. Hunted my kind until there was none left.”
You hunted your own kind? Remmick’s jaw tightened. His head throbbed.
How old are you? The question burned behind his eyes.
“I’ve never met anythin’ like you,” he said, voice lower now. “Vampires feed on humans. Ya ain’t no vampire.”
You gave a little shrug, eyes gleaming. “Well technically, I can survive on human blood. But I prefer vampire blood. Makes me feel alive.” You grinned again, wider now, teeth flashing. “I’m a cannibal, Remmick. Cannibalism doesn’t just apply to humans, right?”
He didn’t answer. Couldn’t. His fingers twitched against the counter behind him, searching for anything sharp.
“But hey,” you went on, tilting your head, “kinda like how humans don’t need alcohol to survive, but they drink it anyway? Yeah. It’s like that.”
You stepped closer, feet light on the floorboards, and Remmick suddenly felt the pressure of your presence like a stormcloud lowering just above him.
“And you, Remmick?” you said softly, almost sweetly. “You’re a drink I haven’t tried before. You’re old. Real old, and just like liquor, the older the better.”
-When he does fight back against you, it kinda scares him how quick you are to heal, unlike him, your face can be clawed off and in a couple of seconds it's like nothing ever happened.
Just before your teeth sank into him again, Remmick’s hands twisted mid-air—bone stretching, joints popping as claws erupted from his fingers. With a snarl, he swiped at your face.
The impact echoed with a crack—something important gave way. You were launched backward, your body crashing onto the table with a splintering thud. Remmick stumbled back, panting, chest heaving, claws dripping with your blood.
And then he watched. And horror bloomed fresh in his gut.
Your neck hung at a grotesque angle, twisted like a broken doll’s, but it popped sharply back into place with a sickening click. Your head turned too fast—far too fast—eyes locking onto him. The deep gouges across your face, slashed all the way to the bone, pulsed once… then knit themselves shut, muscle writhing beneath the skin like worms under flesh.
Your left eye dangled loose in your palm, glistening, gory.
Without hesitation, you shoved it back into the socket. For a second, it floated askew… then clicked into place and blinked once. Twice. Normal. As if nothing had happened.
Remmick stared.
You smiled again.
“That hurt,” you said, sounding more impressed than angry. “Good job.”
He took another step back, claws trembling now. His breathing was sharp and ragged, and his instincts screamed at him to run, to bolt, to disappear into shadow and never look back.
“You’re not supposed to be alive,” he muttered. “Nothin’ heals like that.”
You stood up slowly, brushing wood chips and broken glass off your skirt, unfazed. “And yet,” you said lightly, “here I am. Don’t worry—your confusion’s cute.”
He didn’t speak. He couldn’t. He was calculating—exit points, weapons, leverage. Anything.
You tilted your head, watching him closely. “It’s funny,” you said, licking your blood-streaked fingers. “Most vampires die before I get the chance to explain what I am. You? You might actually last long enough to understand.” Your grin stretched wider than it should have. “If you can survive me.”
Remmick’s eyes narrowed. “I’ll kill you,” he said lowly, claws flexing again.
You laughed—a sharp, delighted sound that echoed off the walls. “Oh, Remmick,” you said with mock affection. “I welcome it. Been so long. You’re older than me I would reckon’, older means stronger, but I have a better diet, so we’ll see.”
-I think the whole time it is a game of cat and mouse. Love playing with food. Also, mad lore drops.
“Don’tcha wanna ask me more questions?” you ask, voice lilting, playful in a way that doesn’t match the situation. “I’ve got questions too, y’know.”
You’re standing across from him now, calm as ever. A scarred wooden table—the only barrier—rests between predator and prey. Though who’s who now is up for debate.
“You look scary, Remmick. Real scary.” You say it with a grin, a tilt of your head, like you’re complimenting his haircut.
And you’re not wrong. His fangs are still out, claws half-raised, eyes rimmed with red. He’s crouched low, like he’s ready to pounce—or bolt. But behind the fear simmering in his chest, there’s still something else. Something stupid.
Curiosity.
There’s something about you, something beyond the hunger and the horror. Maybe it’s the ease with which you stand there—no tension, no trembling. Like you’ve already won. Or maybe it’s because, deep down, he’s desperate to believe someone like you could understand. That you might know what it’s like to live starving, wanting something more.
So he asks.
“Why you here in the South?” His voice is low, cautious. “Why this town?”
Your smile softens—not kindly, but like a cat stretching in a sunbeam, indifferent and amused. You straighten up from the slight crouch you'd held—one he hadn’t even realized was predatory until it was gone—and roll your shoulders in a lazy shrug.
“Well,” you begin, walking your fingers across the table’s edge like a bored child, “the people looked like me, so I figured I’d blend in easy. Their daughter looked like me. Maybe a decedent, who knows. Y’know they killed their own daughter? Ain't even know it. That cross that hangs in the church. That very cross they shoved it into her heart thinkin it was me, or maybe I told them too, really depends on how you look at it.”
Then your voice sharpens—still calm, but colder. “Then I took people one at a time. Turned a few. Let ‘em age a little. Gave ‘em time to grow into their blood…” You lick your lips, the grin returning. “Then I ate ‘em.”
Remmick’s mouth twitches. Disgust. Horror. But also—dreadful comprehension. You didn’t feed like he did. You raised your food like livestock.
“You’re sick,” Remmick muttered, voice low with revulsion.
You laughed—soft, breathy, and amused like he’d just told a charming joke. “No, I don’t think I am,” you said, tilting your head. “I’m quiet. Humane when it comes to eating.”
“Humane?” He scoffed, stepping back like the word itself stung.
But you nodded, calm and composed. “I give ‘em freedom. True freedom. Ain’t gotta bend the knee to nobody. Anyone tries to deny them what they want, all they gotta do is grab the bastard, look ‘em in the eye, and repeat it. Take it for themselves.”
You paused, watching him with something like pity.
“Now tell me… ain’t that just wondrous?” Your smile didn’t falter.
“I give ‘em a good life. Real good. And when I have to eat—well, I kill them. That’s just nature. And at the end of the day…” Your voice dropped low, rich with amusement. “They’re animals, Remmick.”
You laughed, not kindly. “So I slaughtered them like animals. No different than what they do. In fact it’s better than what they do.”
His face grimaced looking at you. By this point on your face was blood from gashes that no longer existed, but everything else seemingly reverted as it was once was. The whites of your eyes returned and no veins withered beneath your skin.
“Yeah. It’s better than what they do. Do you know how wasteful they are?” You stepped forward, gesturing like a preacher mid-sermon. “It’s sad. You weren’t there for the extermination of the buffalo, were you? Thousands—tens of thousands—slaughtered. Left to rot in the sun. Barely touched the meat. Just let ‘em die.”
Remmick blinked. You weren’t rambling. You were testifying.
“They’re so consumed with hate, with greed—they kill just to kill. Kill to harm. To prove something. Take that gator that nearly bit your leg. They were gonna skin him for a purse, Remmick. For boots. Left the carcass out there to fester. Contaminates everything.”
You looked back at him, eyes gleaming now. “They destroy everything. So I round them up. Raise ‘em right. Feed on a few. Move on when I’m bored. Leave the rest to grow. To repopulate. I got snacks all over—from east to west. Best part is?”
You grinned, and in a blink of an eye you were in front of him. “They just make more.”
-I don’t really see him surviving. I think out of almost all media vampires he’s not the strongest. But I do think his venom would affect the vampire, maybe make them sick or something.
He moved first—grabbed you, fast and brutal, sinking his teeth deep into your neck. You let out a sharp grunt, thrashing in his grip, but he held tighter. His fangs dug in deeper as he felt the familiar pulse of his venom releasing into you.
Then your hand found his face.
With a furious shove, you managed to rip him off—but not before he tore a chunk clean from your neck. You stumbled back, hand pressed against the wound, blood spilling between your fingers as you gasped and choked on it.
“No—” you rasped, voice raw, shaking your head as you pointed at him. “No. None of that weird shit you’ve got in you. Last time I got it in me, it made me sick.”
Remmick took his chance and ran outside. Now he faced the question again; would stakes work on you? You didn’t have any silver he could use against you (Wasn’t even sure it worked.) and clearly garlic had no effect. The only thing that worked was his bite, but he doubts you’d ever let him get close enough to bite you again. Even then, it’s not like it killed you, only made you sick.
His body reacted before his mind could catch up. One second he was in the yard, the next he was crouched on your roof like a gargoyle, chest heaving. Below, you staggered out and looked up at him, blood still pouring hot and dark from the wound at your neck.
Weren’t you supposed to heal fast?
-The only way I see him surviving is with a trivia of some kind. Like you’re asking all the questions and he’s hoping you find it interesting enough to not kill him.
“You can fly?” you asked, squinting against the light above, that same unsettling grin curling your lips.
“You can’t?” It was the best he could manage. Maybe if he weren’t fighting for his life, he’d come up with something better. Witty. Cutting.
“No. But I can run real fast, so I think it evens out.” You turned, grabbing a rocking chair from the porch and dragging it over with a squeal of worn wood. Then, like this was a casual chat and not a failed murder attempt, you sat down with a sigh and crossed your legs. “Okay. Truce?”
You extended your blood-slicked hand.
Remmick didn’t move from the roof. He mimed the motion, hand lifting in the same gesture but never touching. Still, you took it in stride and nodded like a deal had been made. That grin of yours never wavered.
“What else can you do?” you asked, tilting your head like a curious child. “Can you turn into a bat?” You laughed as you said it, and it sounded real. Genuine.
“No. No shapeshifting,” he muttered, eyeing you warily. “But I can unhook my jaw. I’ve got larger teeth in the back.” Why the hell was he answering you? Maybe part of him thought it’d buy him some time. Win some favor. Maybe if you liked him enough, you wouldn’t rip his throat out. How long had it been since he had to bargain for his life?
“Really? That’s cool.” You leaned back in the rocking chair, eyes still on him, blood drying down your collar like war paint. “I’ve got larger fangs than my kind. Comes with the diet.”
Remmick didn’t say anything—just kept his crouch tight on the roofline, tracking every twitch of your fingers.
“Of course, I’ve got all the same upgrades. Durability, speed, strength, the usual.” You waved a hand like it was no big deal. “Which I’m sure applies to you too.” He gave a curt nod.
“Oh!” You snapped your fingers. “I can smell what their diets are. Isn’t that fun?”
He didn’t answer. Just narrowed his eyes.
You grinned wider. “Smokers and alcoholics? Awful. Taste like ash and bile. Makes my stomach turn.” You tilted your head, watching him with a thoughtful frown. “You don’t smoke, do you?”
Remmick didn’t reply.
You leaned forward, resting your elbows on your knees. “Good. I’d hate to waste a perfectly decent cut.”
He could feel the venom still burning under his skin. She wasn’t healing fast. But she would—and when she did, she’d be stronger than before.
Time was running out.
“Okay,” you said, rocking back and forth, “I’m assuming venom is what turns them, right?”
Remmick gave a slight nod, before he let himself sit on the roof of your house. (He doubts it’s a home for you.)
“You kill them first or after?” He felt the focus of your eyes and he returned the gesture. He could see you clear as day. The purse of your lips as you looked at him, the way your hands picked at the dried blood on your cheek.
“Depends on how hard I bite.” There was a slight twitch in his fingers as his claws sheathed themselves.
“Huh.” You raised an eyebrow, lips twitching. “Kinky.”
He didn’t take the bait, only tilted his head. “You?”
“Blood,” you said simply. “It heals them. Suppose they’re shot—some of my blood in their system, and they’re good as new.” You gave a little shrug, tone casual, almost cheerful. “I can kill them any way I want, as long as my blood’s in them. Hell, they don’t even have to die by me. Sometimes it’s an accident.”
Remmick furrowed his brow, fangs still faintly visible beneath his lip. “Accident?”
“Yeah,” you said, stopping the rocking and simply looking up towards him. The wound on your neck now finally stitching itself back together. It was strange seeing the way the skin grew back over the red muscle. “Led to some weird stories over the years. I healed this girl once—nice girl—back in Massachusetts colony days. She was accused of witchcraft not long after.” You turned back to him, a half-smile playing on your lips. “They stoned her to death.”
He blinked and his teeth began to hide themselves back into his gums. “And?”
“She rose a couple hours later,” you said softly, almost with fondness. “Wonder where she is now. But anyways, sometimes they just commit suicide to become a vampire.”
Remmick’s ears twitched. He caught it—a faint, steady rhythm beneath the surface. “Your heart,” he said, narrowing his eyes. “Why does it beat?” It had been the thing to fool him. You were warm like a human, your heart beat. Everything about you seemingly designed to fool him.
You didn’t answer right away. Just tilted your head and smiled faintly, as if the question amused you. “My body still works like a human’s,” you said finally. “Blood’s gotta circulate to keep it moving. Muscle, skin, everything still runs off the same basic machinery.”
Vampires weren’t natural. Remmick knew that. So you haven’t evolved to simply hunt other vampires. You truly were a different species. He could fly and you could not. You could run faster than the wind and he could not. Your blood healed, he did nothing. Your bite wasn’t lethal, his was.
He had to be let in, did you? Seemingly not. Never once did he grant you permission to enter his house. That memory felt like a lifetime ago now.
You could walk in the sun.
You could eat.
You fooled every sense he relied on.
What else could you do?
Could you control others, like he could? Maybe.
Could you die?
No, Remmick doesn’t think so.
“You can’t enter anywhere without being let in,” you said suddenly. You weren’t asking. Your voice was casual, almost playful—but your eyes didn’t blink. “No stores. No houses. No churches. But there’s always someone ready to welcome you in.” You tilted your head again, mock sympathy bleeding into your tone. “So… that’s gotta be hard.”
“Ya got any rules?” Remmick muttered, though he knew you could hear him. Always could. Always would.
“Yeah,” you said, voice light. “I can’t go into a home unless I’m invited.”
“You entered mine,” he said. “I never said a word.”
You smiled, and there was no warmth in it. “You’re dead, Remmick. Rules don’t apply to the dead. What’s that saying? The dead have no rights.”
He didn’t speak. You went on, casually cruel; “Bought the property the day after—just in case you had it under a living name. Thought you were smarter. Turns out you weren’t.”
His stomach turned.
“In any case,” you said, finally getting up from your rocking chair. “I can walk into any place open to the public. Stores, bars, churches… open invitation.” A pause. Then you tilted your head, watching him with amusement. “And if it ain’t open, I can always make it.”
-Again with the venom. I think it’s very interesting on how it would affect a TDV vampire. Maybe it’s like a minny compulsion where the blood of a TVD is fighting off the hivemind of Remmick.
Remmick stood on the roof watching you.
“You can do it too. Did it on me. Doing it on me. It’s weird. I don’t like you in my head.” he watched you crack your neck. “Compulsion. You always have to bite them?”
Remmick furrowed his brows. Compulsion? No, his vampires became a part of him. They are an extension of him. What he thinks becomes their life philosophy, what he feels becomes their reality. “It’s not compulsion. They’re me.”
“It’s not compulsion,” he said slowly. “They’re me.”
You raised a brow. “Even after they’re dead?”
“It’s the only way they become me.”
“So… you can’t control the living?”
He didn’t respond right away.
“You can’t,” you said, and you sounded almost disappointed. “Huh.”
“You can?” he asked, quietly.
“Yeah. Duh.” You rolled your eyes like it was obvious. “That’s how I get people to comply. How I cleaned up the mess you said you’d handle. And I can do telepathy, too, though that takes a little more focus.”
You stepped out into the open moonlight, watching him. “So how does your... mind control work? Because I feel it. I feel you don’t want me around. I feel… obligated. Like I’m under something, but I know it. I’m not the type to keep my word, Remmick. Never have been. So this?” You tapped your temple with a sharp nail. “This is new.”
“Their memories become my own,” Remmick said, his voice low, deliberate. “Everything—feelings, desires, sensations—it all comes back to me, just as mine flows into them.”
He felt a little safer saying it aloud. If you were truly under his influence—even just faintly—you wouldn’t strike. Not while he willed you away.
You tilted your head, surprised. But then your expression shifted into something warmer, almost impressed. “Well, ain’t that somethin’. Closest thing I’ve got is a sire bond. Even then, it’s rare—and it don’t last forever.”
“Sire bond?” he echoed, unfamiliar with the term.
You nodded. “When I died, I came back as me… but more. Everything turned up. Emotions, especially. Happiness, pride, guilt… sadness. Lust.” You gave a crooked smile. “That one in particular—it’s a bitch. When a human’s in love and gets turned, that love doesn’t just survive—it amplifies.”
You crossed your arms, looking out toward the trees like the memory stirred something in you. “The sire bond’s strongest when the sire’s around the sired. It doesn’t change what they feel—but it does shape what they do. They’ll want to please the one who made them. Want to stay close. It’s instinct.” Then, with a short laugh, “Lot of ‘sire’ in that sentence.”
He watched you carefully. There was no cruelty in your tone—but there was history.
“It’s rare,” you added. “Only pulled it off twice. Long time ago.” You turned back to face him, expression unreadable. “Not worth the effort.”
Remmick raised a brow. You continued.
“Takes a long time to get someone to love you enough for a proper sire bond. And even then, it’s gotta be a special kind of love. Ridiculous as it sounds, that soulmate-type love.” You gave a short, bitter laugh. “Hard not to reciprocate it—especially when it’s strong. So it ends up being useless. You can’t use them the way you want. I failed at it. Too many times to count. So I stopped trying.”
You leaned against a tree, casual but shadowed by something colder. “And say they do tire of you—or worse, you hurt them—then the bond’s gone. Snap of the fingers. Just like that.”
He frowned, not quite understanding.
You grinned. “Literally. Flip a switch. No emotions. We can do that too—turn it all off. Humanity, feelings, regret. Gone.” You looked almost proud. “Can you do that?” You asked.
“No,” Remmick said after a pause. “Never heard of it.”
“Oh.” Your voice went flat. Disappointed.
-I think the poison would last for about a week or something. Similar to a werewolf bite, but not deadly. So in this particular instance I think Remmick would survive only bc he bit you.
To be added on Tag list: !(•̀ᴗ•́)و ̑̑
Gen Masterlist
Different vampires Masterlist
#spicepost#sinners#sinners 2025#remmick x reader#sinners fanfiction#sinners fandom#poc!reader#vampire reader#the vampire diaries#tdv#the orginals#sinners au#x reader#fanfic#fanfic authors#fanfiction#fanfic readers#reader insert#remmick#remmick x female reader#remmick x you
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The brightest star.
"Good morning darling" Elijah said with his voice still raspy from sleep, his arms tightening around your waist.
"Hmmm good morning" you mused as you snuggle into his chest.
It was the day of Christmas Eve and the whole mikaelson family was coming over to celebrate and share presents with each other at you and your boyfriend's mansion, so there was still a lot of planning that needed to be done including decorating a gigantic Christmas tree in the hallway.
"We have to get up, Niklaus will have a hissy fit if Hope's first Christmas isn't amazing" He said as he rubbed his thumb over your hip bone.
Elijah was very well aware about your ticklishness, he never used it but he did always threaten to use it against you.
Not that you really minded.
"Hmm five more minutes" you grumbled as you bury yourself under the blankets and into Elijah's chest.
"Love we need to get up" he chuckled as he wrapped his arms around you.
You just grumbled from under your fort of blankets.
"Don't make me use your weakness against you" he said in a deeper voice as he put his hands on your sides.
That made you still your movement and peek out of the blankets just a little to look at him "You wouldn't"
"You know I would" 'Lijah said with a smirk as he teasingly scribbled at your sides.
You gave a small giggle as you squirmed around, but not ones making an effort to get out of bed or stop him.
"Oh I see how it is" he muttered "You want this".
A slow grin spread across his lips before he flipped you over and quite literally laid on top of you partly to keep you pinned.
A shriek escaped you, shortly followed by a laugh as he dug into you ribs.
"Oh my, I knew you were ticklish but I didn't know it was still bad" Elijah chuckled as he squeezed your sides.
"ELIJAHHAHAHHAHAH STOPHIHIHI ITHIHI" you laughed as you wiggled around to get out from underneath him.
"All you got to do is get out of bed" he mused as he spidered his fingers up and down your ribs.
"NEVERHIHIHIHI!"
After about 5 minutes you still hadn't surrendered so he decided to switch tactics, blowing raspberries in your neck.
"GHAHHAHA ALRIGHT I GIVEHIHIHIHI" you shrieked in laughter tapping your hand against the mattress.
Elijah laughed deeply before rolling off of you, watching you scurry out of bed.
"I'll get you back for that" you said with a grin and a pointed finger at him.
"You can certainly try" he grinned back as you walked to the bathroom to get dressed.
You really were the best thing in Elijah mikaelson's life and he thought about it every single day, how lucky he was.
And as he got dressed in his usual suit, an small black ring box sat snuggly in his jacket pocket, waiting for its time to shine the bright light from the small diamond on the most beautiful star.
You.
#tickle fic#lee!reader#ticklish!reader#ler!elijah#elijah tickle#elijah mikaelson x reader#elijah mikaelson imagine#elijah mikaelson#the orginals#tvd#christmas eve#christmas fic#merry christmas
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The originals Incorrect quote p 4
Kol: *sighs*
Y/n : You bored?
Kol : Yeah.
Y/n: Wanna start drama for no reason?
Kol: I thought you���d never ask.
Klaus : I need you to come meet me, and I need you to come alone.
Y/n : And I need you to be less vague and weird.
Y/N: I never tell people off the bat that I'm gay. I wait. I wait until they say some homophobic shit and then I laugh and am like "you know I'm gay right?" and watch the look of terror on their face.
Klaus:
Klaus : I like you.
Elijah : You’d be stupid to lay a hand on me.
Y/n: Oh, you’d be surprised how much stupid shit I do.
Y/n : What’s your body count?
Klaus: Do you mean sex or murder?
Y/N: There. How do I look?
Klaus: Like a cheap French harlot.
Y/n : French?!
Y/n : You’re alive.
Kol : No need to sound so disappointed.
Y/n : I love murder mysteries!
Kol , trying to impress them: I've been a suspect in four murder cases.
Klaus : Y/n , my old friend!
Y/n : I think you tried to kill me at some point.
Klaus : That was obviously just my way of getting to know you.
#x male reader#vampire diaries x male reader#the originals x male reader#vampire diaries#vampire diaries x reader#klaus mikaelson x male reader#the orginals#kol x male reader#kol mikaelson x male reader
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I honestly don't think I've proofread any of my fics since like 2022. But, hey, at least they're fun to write.
#fics#fanfiction#fanfic#the vampire diaries#the orginals#legacies#once upon a time#marvel#mcu#harry potter#marauders#gilmore girls#supernatural#writing#imagines
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Finding their Mate
A/N: This feels like I wrote an entire series, but it was simple headcanons, which I've found to be oddly fun to do from time to time
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Freya
After everything that happened with her aunt Dahlia and her giving up everything for her family to live their best lives (without her). Can you imagine how surprised she is to find out that you two are mates; the girl is baffled beyond baffled. She doesn't pursue you when she learns the truth. If you two are friends and she has feelings for you, she'll begin to pull away a bit which leads to you confronting her and asking why she's acting the way she is because it feels like things are weird and you don't want to deal with weird. You have a hard time making friends or finding people who can tolerate you. One awkward conversation later, you two share a kiss and are on a date. I mean, if you consider you watching her practice a spell while she tries not to blush too much as a date, there you have it
Finn
Before his mother forced this life of eternal damnation onto him even if it was due to losing his youngest brother. There is one thing he never anticipated finding... you, his mate. If anyone had told him mates were real and he would meet his soon, he'd probably think you were insane. And that's saying a lot since his life has been revolving around the supernatural since he was a child. Meeting you certainly helped him through this new life, but it didn't do much when he finds himself daggered at the hands of his brother. Knowing you were out there on your own dealing with him family drove him crazy, but he didn't know you asked to be turned to live with him (imagine his surprise when he awoke nine hundred years later and found you). After talking with you, he can't imagine living without you and thanks his lucky stars for you
Elijah
When his memories came back of how he harmed Tatia, he was less enthusiastic about pursuing another female. But Davina made a friend in you (because you helped her bring Kol back) and that was the end of it. It didn't trigger that you two had met years ago until he saw the three of you enjoying breakfast together. His memories came flooding back to him and he realized that you weren't in your original body yet, hence where his younger brother got the idea to do so, trying to find the doppelgänger. You two slowly began bonding and then came the hardest time in your relationship, he lost his memories, his mind would never let him forget your face. He never knew until he and Klaus were at their end, but his brother admitted your death to him and explained that's why he has an ache in his heart. A werewolf had gotten you while you were protecting Hope. He never got to admit how sorry he was for hurting you, not until he saw you standing there, waiting for him with Hayley by your side
Klaus
He didn't believe it for a second, thought it was a hoax; thought it was something the witches cooked up to blackmail him. But the more he saw you, the more his heart raced and the more his need for you grew stronger. Not to mention the fact that his wolf didn't help, the voice calling and wanting him to take you for his own so they can claim you as theirs. He knew he was dangerous and that's why he did all he could to stay away from you in the beginning when he ever so slowly begins to accept that your fates are tied to one another. There was no way he'd let you be put in danger due to his issues or because you're associated with his family. After you manage to protect Hope and yourself while defending him and his name, he thinks maybe his family wasn't lying when they said you two were fated mates, destined to be together (perfect for one another eve). He was more than hesitant to try and form a relationship with you. You had to be the one to take the step and make things right and stop the aches n both your hearts
Kol
He initially planned on using you as leverage since he knows his brother cares about you (whether it was platonic or not). But then, there was this little spark you had and not just because you managed to shock him with your powers, to escape from him and his mother. After that he knew he had to know you, someone who is genuine friends with his half-brother and can take care of themself in they ever needed to. That one hell of a keeper and there was no way he could let you go. So, yeah, he's going to try and become your friend (only after you reject him when he asks you to go out on a date). Then when Davina tried to help him return to his body, she came to you and knew you'd be able to help more than anyone because working alone isn't enough. No one, supernatural or not, cannot deny the bond between mates. You two confessed to one another once he came back from the supernatural purgatory, in his original body, and that was that
Rebekah
After watching her brother kill almost all her lovers and ruining any chance she had at a love life, she found it hard to believe that she was offered a chance at having someone fated to be hers. Someone her brother couldn't kill without causing her severe harm. She loves too hard and fast, she knows that, but she can't help it. Now that mates are thrown into the mix, she is a little hesitant at starting something with you, but she also knows how you are (being allies with her family helped her learn more about you). Then when her siblings find their mates and watches how happy they are, she can't help but basically run into your arms and confess that she feels the bond too and wants to start a relationship with you (and if you hate Elena, that's such a bonus for her)
Hope
When she lost her parents and her Uncle Elijah, she never imagined anything good would come into her life. Always believing herself to be cursed and imagining loads of misery would continue to come her way even as she genuinely tries to let good things into her life. Then you came into play, and she was floored. First off, you're the most good-looking person she's ever seen, Landon does not compare whatsoever. But it also is more of a reason for her hesitation when it comes to interacting with you or her just trying to get to know you. You knew right away who she was to you, another reason why you wanted to talk to her, figure out how you would fit into her life. You started to pursue her, not ready to give up even as she continuously turns you down, waiting until she'll accept you. After some time, she decided to try and have her own epic love like her parents and uncle Elijah did. She doesn't regret it
Hayley
After learning the truth about her family, she didn't expect to hear that mates were a thing. Then as soon as she stepped foot in New Orleans, imagine her surprise when she met not one but two wolves who continuously looked out for her. She manages to bond with one of the two wolves right away, slightly alarmed at how easy it was to spot you in your wolf while she is out in town. Then came a full moon where she met Jackson, who may or may not, have known who the wolf was and told her, about you and your back story or the bond you two share. Unfortunately for her, you were cursed differently. Only when you find your mate on a full moon and they accept you, will you be able to turn into your human form again. She searched three moons before finding you and she thanked her bloodline for giving her someone so, well, you. You're more than she could have ever known
Davina
With everything she went through before and after learning about everything witch wise, finding a lover much less a mate was the furthest thing on her mind. After she came back from the other side and was dealing with the ancestors' punishment, you entering her life was more a blessing. Which is something she and Marcel can easily agree on. Then you put in the effort to learn about her, just as she starts to find herself, accepting everything she's done and what the other witches keep doing to her; you stay by her side is what's kept her together. She would never admit it out loud to you but ever since you had entered her life, it was more of a blessing than anyone even realized. She continues to thank her lucky stars every day once the two of you are together. You are more than she could have ever imagined, and she'll do whatever she can to protect you because there's a lot that goes on in town
Marcel
After Klaus pulled his siblings out of town after the fire and the Mikaelson's thinking he was dead, losing Rebekah... he never thought he'd get the happy ending he wanted. But then, he was out at his favorite bar, trying to charm the pants off Camille (yet again) and you waltzed in, changing his life for the better. He never knew why his heart was so full and pounding so hard until Elijah told him. Finding out that mates were a thing? He was... safe to say pleased because like the man who treated him like a son always said, a king must have a queen (or king, in some cases). And you, my dear, are his royal highness lover from now until death and that could take a while. He will always do whatever he can to give you whatever you want to keep you happy and satisfied. He wants you to feel like you can rely on him for anything and everything, which kind of makes him look like a sugar daddy with all the new things he buys you
#the orginals#the originals imagine#the originals imagines#the orginals fanfic#the orginals fanfiction#freya mikaelson#finn mikaelson#elijah mikaelson#klaus mikaelson#niklaus mikaelson#kol mikaelson#rebekah mikaelson#hayley marshall#davina claire#marcel gerard#the originals headcanon#crazyk-imagine
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Hope Mikaelson headcanon:
Dating Hope
- kissing Hope in between classes
- "I love you" Hope kissed Y/N
- "I love you more"
- pissing off Lizzie with y'all's fluff
- "shut the fuck up!!"
- Daily cuddles
- trying to get Hope to cope with her parents death
- Being her first girlfriend
- worried about her losing you like her parents (fly high Klayley 😭)
- Hope losing her shit about you meet her family
- acts tuff but is actually a cutie pie, sugar boogar, cherry pie, potato pie, oogy boogy, tutti frutti, short thang, munchkin queen
- (surprisingly) the gayest one in the family
- would literally do anything for you. Literally like anything!!!!! Like have you sit on her face
- loves more than anything, always and forever
I miss legacies 😭
#legacies#the orginals#vampire diaries#hope mikaelson#lizzie saltzman#hope mikaelson x reader#fluff#bow chicka wow wow#idk what else to tag#i'm boreeeed#i'm hungry#someone stop me#I'll literally tag forever#that weird girl who lives#bad bicth wanna fvck#i wanna be saaaaaaved#lana del ray lover fr#uhhhh tags#i'm going to sleep#ciao mother fvckers#i keep on getting cringy alpha book add ever since i got reelshort ironically#these are so fvcking cringe#curse you reelshort!!!#reelshort#kate bishop smut#the kate bishop hashtag is for the real b!tches#whatever! whatever! i do what i want!#whatever!!! you ain't tough!#i run around with g@ngs#i run around with 12 g@ngs and they all commit h@te crimes! whatever! whatever! i do what i want
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I love Klaus mikaelson so much like when i hear his name I genuinely start tweaking out. He’s so fine.
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