đŻď¸Â dead by daylight, resident evil, gaming fics + slasher content.Â
đŻď¸Â NO minors. 18+ only. (i do write with dark content in mind).Â
ao3.Â
rules.Â
anime blog.Â
ŕźşâ°ŕźť finished works:Â
âł after dark; frank morrison/reader
chapter 1. | chapter 2. | chapter 3. | chapter 4. | chapter 5.Â
working on (currently):Â
âł White is Tender ; Huntress/Reader (coming soon)
âł The Sinew & the Flesh; Ghostface/Reader (coming soon)
âł In the Hollow; Tarhos/Reader (Chapter 3: Ruthless Surrender)Â Â
âł Surrender, My Heart; Jake Park/Reader (coming soon)
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TAGS:Â Historical References, Historical Inaccuracy, Medieval Medicine, Eventual Smut, Power Play, No Such thing as Chivalry, Nihilism, Power Imbalance, Action/Adventure, and Canon-Typical Violence
The princess holds her coins out to the merchant. âI want two shovels of those morsels you have here,â she requests. The merchant grins, blackened teeth flashing her. âAye miss, but where would ya like to get else?âÂ
She thinks for a moment, before finally gesturing to the section of fruits. âThose there, the purplish thing.â
âAye, the szilva?â the merchant offers one to her. The princess grins, tightening the fabric to cover her face better.Â
âWill give you as much as I have in my satchel,â she responds delightfully.Â
The merchant nods, giddily adding the rich fruit into the rucksack he will give to her. She hands him a handful of florentinus.Â
The merchant gawks, his one good eye bulging. âMy, my, yer more than just a traveler.âÂ
She grins beneath the scarf, nodding her head. âA secret, if you will allow this.âÂ
âAye, ya have my word,â the merchant says.Â
Tarhos tracks down the girl easily. A merchant had told him the whereabouts of a young woman passing through. Fitting the description perfectly.
Him and his men set off westward of the town, heading towards the otherside where the merchant said sheâd be.Â
It was simple. He could sniff out a princess, pretending to be hiding among the regular everyday peasantry. That isnât too hard. Thereâs a gait and a certain way women in this century hold themselves. Itâs a refining standard. Their heads held up high, their confidence oozing with every single step of their leather bound shoes.Â
He runs into something, gripping their arms tightly. The veil falls from their head, cover blown.Â
âFound ya,â he grumbles roughly. She sneers at him. The scar across her, then he feels the pelts of her legs; nothing is felt for him. He nearly laughs in delight. Â
âLet me go, or IâllââÂ
âYouâll what? Kill me?â Tarhos inquires, a grin forming.Â
His strong fingers dig into her flesh. The princess is here in such a disgusting place. To Tarhos, to his men, and in this horrible corridor where there are moans nearby.Â
âYou frequent places such as these, do ya, girl?â he pulls her up to whisper the filth into her ears. She thrashes again, her kicks pinging against his armor.Â
Tarhos laughs. He glances at his men, signaling them to depart ahead of him. They already know the look.Â
He glances back to the princess, an odd thing to behold in the dimness of night.Â
She is exactly what he expected her to be. A wonderfully cruel and defiant thing.Â
âYou,â she hisses. âIâve seen you following me at the market.âÂ
He leans in close, nose bumping her temple. The scent, the hair, the eyes. This is the kingâs daughter. A horribly, unretained woman. He nearly licks the side of her cheek, an alluring emotion growing inside of him.Â
Strong emotions for a person so wicked.Â
Tarhos reels back, knowing she is lethal in ways he is unaware of. He cannot let his guard down with her.Â
He feels the odd sensation of something hot and tight in his gut. The slim dagger forcing itself into his side, slicing the bit of flesh it can pierce through even with armor. Clever girl, he thinks.Â
âLet me go,â she grits out, eyes ablaze. It doesnât feel like anything. Pain is secondary to him.Â
The struggle heâs endured before this. Before now. The princess thinks she can wound him, down him with a single piece of scrap metal. Laughable, really.Â
Tarhos grabs her hand, covering her own with his and forcing the weapon even more into his side. If she can kill him correctly then he will let her, if she hesitates he takes her. âYouâre already here,â he challenges. âFinish it.âÂ
She snarls, pushing into him and he grunts. Ah, that pinch of pain.Â
The sensation opens him, uncoiling a flame beneath him. Hot and heady. She is blissfully obstinate as he heard she is.Â
Tarhos presses himself to her, entangling her with his free arm, allowing the dagger to push through. He groans deep, the sound rumbling in his chest. The moans around them grow louder, the sounds of a pleasure house only exceeding in drowning out their own foreplay. Â
âYou,â she murmurs, eyes widening, glancing down quickly at his side. She moves away from him as quickly as she can. This cannot be, her mind warns.Â
He grabs her, baring his teeth. âFinish, girl.âÂ
The princess swallows, her lips parting. Hesitation will only bring about more suffering. He plunges it for her, grabbing her hand and thrusting the weapon deeper into him.
She gasps, more so at the way heâs gripping her, how he seems enthralled by the action. This is a pleasure for him.
No Knight has ever done such a thing.Â
âA reward, princess,â he says.Â
âWhat?â She asks, breathlessly. Confused by the turn of events. She realizes their lips are so close. It is the devilâs work. Tarhos is a knight. A foul mercenary doing his kingâs bidding.Â
The knight pulls her into his embrace, her hands dropping to her side. âSlay the knight that has tried to capture you, and you will be set free,â he tells her.
She swallows dryly, feeling the sweat prickle against her back, rolling down her skin. The moans in the alley grow louder by the second; lovers interlocked.Â
Is this what it looks like for them too?Â
The princess shuts her eyes, the sounds, the smell of musk on her tongue. The iron is just beneath, the wound should kill him.Â
It does not.Â
The princess realizes thereâs a freedom in the space he gives her. She runs, the dagger dropping and resounding in the alley.Â
A sharp clang and she vanishes into the night.Â
Arriving back to his men, empty-handed and bloodied. They all look at him quizzically.Â
âThe girl escaped?â Alejandro asks. His men look nervous, waiting with baited breath for what Tarhos will say next.
âAye,â Tarhos responds. âIâll track her. Iâll bring her back.âÂ
âBy yerself? Nowââ Sander tries to speak, but is cut off when Tarhos speaks.Â
âIâll do it. This is my cargo.âÂ
He leaves then, turning from his men as he can feel their eyes as he continues down the alley. Heâd go back to the village and fetch her. He feels the thrum of his blood again, sucking in his teeth. Something about her makes him feel entirely roused, an utterly powerful sensation he hasnât felt since heâs had his claymore slash against multiple men.Â
The wound at his side pulses. He sucks his teeth in.Â
This will be a game. Â
He finds her at the back of a horse stall. When he hovers above her, he has half to pull her by the hair. Too long, too soft. He wants to know how she maintains it, what it would feel like draped over his face or his crotch.Â
Tarhos hoists her over his shoulders. Her hands bound and mouth stuffed with a rag, itâs difficult managing her to behave. Her words come out in a muffled way, which are definitely meant to be various insults thrown his way. It thrills him really. A lady doing such filthy things causes his emotions to stir within him.Â
A sort of forbidden fruit; delectable, vile.Â
âDo not speak, youâll only waste your energy,â he warns her.
He can hear her huff, shifting in his hold to get herself free.Â
Tarhos considers this a part of the fun.Â
She struggles, trying her best to kick him and to cause him harm. Something to make him hurt. Sheâs been running since as long as she could remember. Has been trying to make sense of all of this. Her cursed father, and his wretched kingsmen. She hopes they all rot in hell.Â
âKeep trying, princess. Itâll only exhaust you,â he rumbles.Â
She mumbles something angrily.Â
Awful, man, she thinks. Rotten, terrible, vile, disgusting. His large hands cup against her ass and she nearly does manage to wriggle away.Â
He nearly drops her into the gravel, but catches her carefully.Â
âNow, now, weâve got a long night ahead of us.âÂ
She thrashes one more time, feeling her body ache at the amount of running and moving she has done.Â
Tired, winded, sheâs done enough for a lifetime. Surrendering doesnât seem like an option for her, but how can she get out of his hands?Â
She needs to think, she clenches her teeth against the rag in her mouth. Her eyes closing as she thinks of every possible angle to get out of this hold. She will run away, she will be free, she tells herself.Â
Tarhos lips twitch slightly upwards as he notices sheâs calming down.Â
Only he has managed to make her lose her mind. To completely unravel her being. Her sense of self. It drives him to inhale sharply. The essence of jasmine wafting in his nose, his hands grip tighter on the back of her thigh.Â
The supple skin underneath. It stirs something deep in him. Insatiable and burning.Â
A princess is a lady. A lady of a kingdom. The daughter of a King who wishes to have her head.Â
A part of him almost wishes to drag this opportunity for his own selfish gain. Heâs become fascinated by her, by her spitfire. She is by law a witch. One that would burn for her treasons against kin. Tarhos snarls, holding her tighter. Heâd burn the whole kingdom down if it meant he got to keep what is rightfully his. His own. His.Â
Some sort of possessiveness maims inside him, a roaring need. The King may have employed him, but some contracts are meant to be broken.Â
Tarhos grins beneath his mask, the wound in his side still there as he carries her back to the Guardia Compagniaâs hideout.
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Anna lifts you up, you wrap your legs around her, gripping her hair for leverage.
She mutters something in Russian, a harsh tone that causes your thighs to quiver. âПаНонŃĐşĐ°Ń ĐťĐ¸Ńа,â she murmurs again, biting into the flesh of your neck. You moan, tightening your legs around her waist. Anna presses you harder against the metal bars, the bolts digging into your back in a delicious way. It felt good to hurt.Â
To finally feel something other than the Entityâs talons snapping you in half or a killerâs blade into your gut. Itâs exhilarating this way.Â
You grunt when she reaches under your shirt, her palms grazing your heated skin in a way that tingles your nerve endings. Anna kisses you then, all teeth and tongue. You jolt when she unhooks your bra, her hands reaching to palm your breasts.Â
She grips you so tightly, your hips desperately seeking friction. âPlease,â you rasp, breath being pushed out of you.Â
Anna nuzzles close to your neck, licking all the way down to your collarbone.Â
In any minute those generators could be done, in any minute you will hear the chiming of the clock before you escape.Â
You want to stay like this forever, close to the harshness of her tongue and warmth of her body. Huntress remains a terrifying force to be reckoned with in trials, you have evaded her every time. Being able to leave before she could take you down with her throws.Â
Anna has always watched you leave, standing before the exit gates while you turn towards her, her pale mask tilting as if curiously examining you. Almost carefully deciding your fate when you two meet again.Â
Laurie watches you closely, uncertain of what to make of your disheveled appearance. âDid you survive?âÂ
You cut her off with a wave. âI just got thrown around a bit, no worries.âÂ
âBut you escaped?â She asks incredulously.Â
You huff, worrying about the hem of your sweater. âItâs nothing, I won the trial. So whoop.âÂ
âYouâve won every single one with the huntress,â interjects Felix, eyeing you with suspicion.Â
âKillers donât leave survivors alone unless they want something,â Jane says. She walks close to you, leaning towards your ear. âSometimes your body is part of the equation.âÂ
You feel burned. How could they know? Have the other survivors ever experienced this before too? Have they run into these unfortunate events with the killers. Where agreements take place and you offer them something in return.Â
Janeâs eyebrow raises, a smug smile crossing her lips. She watches as Laurie and Felix head away towards the group at the camp. Jane just promises her one thing. âItâll be our little secret.âÂ
You had Anna cornered, completely at your mercy. You moved her mask up, the way her throat bobs and her lips take shape to form the perfect curve of surprise.
âGot you,â you murmur, lips utterly close to hers. You wait to see what sheâll do next. Her ax still aimed towards your side.
She doesnât slash it down to cut, she doesnât seem to react much at this. To your enjoyment, it clatters down onto the wood of the shack as she wraps her arms around yours to kiss you with fervor. You moan, clawing at her neck, pulling her closer.
You want to swallow her whole and let her digest in your system. Itâs ill fated and disgusting the way you desire her. The way you wish to consume her every bit. Itâs an eager yearning that seems to implode in the worst way.
You push her forward into the wood of the den, hoping thereâs splinters and loose nails stabbing into her skin.
You want her to sense all the emotional hunger she has caused you. To understand exactly what it meant for you to hunt her in such a way.Â
She seems to mutter something in Russian, a husky tone shifting her to dig her nails into your waist, dragging them down to leave you marred.Â
âYouââ you growl, biting her lower lip, surprising her enough to reel her head back against the wooden walls.
She groans, pulling back to huff. Her mask is still on and your lips are wet from her spit.
You want to feast on her skin so that sheâll only ever think of the wounds youâve left for her. All for you and none for anyone else. You smile, all teeth and fangs. Anna notices how much of a surprising trump card you are. When you had first joined the team of survivors you had seemed so reserved. Somehow lost and doe-eyed as if you had no clue of what to do. Anna didnât trust the fawning. She didnât seem at all fooled by the game of pretend you seemed to be playing at.Â
The sort of ease you fell into when she would chase you. Each and every time losing you in the thunder of pallets dropping, the dark mist coiling itself around her sight. Sometimes, when itâs stagnant in motherâs den, when the entity would let the other killers rest on rare occasions sheâd think of you.Â
You and your grin, your hand coming up to fight her off when she carried you to a hook. Sometimes, at mercy sheâd release you, examining you at every inch. The muscle in the planes of your arms and the way you crawled to her indignant on survival.Â
It made her inhale sharply at the scent of copper, fortitude and need. Anna has never been this fascinated by a specific survivor. Not one like yourself. Others couldnât even compare to being as special as you.Â
It made her suck in her breath, tongue rolling against her teeth. She prods the appendage against her canines harshly to taste the blood. She wanted to bite down, to completely leave you full of marks. Your skin and your body at her mercy. An innate need to consume. Instead, Anna had fallen into your grasp. She had lowered herself to let you do as you please. You tongued her neck, biting against the flesh and nibbling. Annaâs hands drifted to your hips, feeling them roll against nothing. Insatiable creature, she thinks. Merciless in your need to have her close.Â
Anna hums when your tongue moves to her collarbone. She makes a noise of appreciation when you bite down, sensing the smile against her skin.
The world begins to crumble again, everything becoming a race against time. A moment to have each other.
It would soon vanish like the rest of this piece together.
You pull back, looking at her. You grasp her chin, thumbing her lower lip and dragging it.Â
ââTill next time,â you murmur. You leave then, finding the exit. You leave her there lost and worn.Â
Her mind reels itself, hammering and reminding the way it had held you seconds before. Now leaving and to see each other on the entityâs terms. Anna grits her teeth, her hands fisting themselves. There will be a way to get you back. To have you here. Only with her.Â
You made your way down the path. It had been simple enough, you had smiled. A part of you feeling on cloud nine at what you had all accomplished. Huntress was now in your grasp and thatâs all that seemed to matter now.Â
In this very moment you had her captured, a hare caught in the snare. The hare struggles to escape as you approach. Interested in the way it squirms, cries out to be freed. In the same way you know she must be feeling. Itâs simple enough.Â
What you did not expect was to be summoned by the dark talons of the entity. The world cuts itself open to move you through its many realms. You had ended up in the Red Forest, back here. The world shifts around you and you sneer. This could only mean one thing. You were starting in a trial.Â
Except there was no sounds of generators being done and the crows seemed to hover in one area. They were watching you behind their beaks, curious eyes blinking at you from afar. You really had no way of knowing how you had ended up here. Unless the entity may be making special offers only to some. You frown at that, uncertain of what you would be initially doing here.Â
The suddenness of an ax flying beside you causes you to duck. It passes by you in a spur of wind and you look to see the obvious answer.Â
Huntress stands there, heaving as she holds the other weapon in her hand. You grin at her. âWell, well, look who we have here,â you say. You feel the flutter in your chest and the pulsing in your blood. This could be an easy way for you to get what you want. Maybe the entity was trying to give everyone what they wanted. A cease and desist to this cat and mouse game that seemed to drag everyone else into the fold.Â
It only left you and Anna charged with each other. The lingering taste of one another on your tongues. âDid you call me here?â You ask her, strolling up to her. Not in the least bit concerned by her weapon, by the way you can see her dark eyes through the mask.Â
Sheâs always been good at observing. She hides beneath the scenery, blending in and getting to analyze her targets in this way she can bring them down more efficiently. In this case, she doesnât seem beholden to this. She wonât hurt you. Not in the way she should be, anyway.Â
This had been only a game. To see how you could toe the line with the item of your attraction. Your obsession really. It had been about grace, about wanting. Really, it was to entertain you. You had been bored. The way the monotonous tone of this world, the surviving. You had been too strong for the entity to placate you. You had known immediately there was one you could get some enjoyment in the purgatory of horrors. You could find your own way to be sated.Â
It was easy. In your past life, sex had been nothing. It had been easy to lead someone to your bed, it had been nothing but a game. A win for both parties or more. Anna had been different for you. She is a different conqueror, it takes a usurper to win over the power she holds.Â
Anna seems to fight you, fight the familiar desire and sexual advances; yet she seemed all the more willing to lean into them. In a way she won too. She received something out of it, a distraction of sorts.Â
She approaches quickly, grabbing your hair and thrusting her close to you. Her body seems to be on fire, like molten lava. A volcano prepared for eruption. You only sigh, feeling at home with this sort of defiling. It could be everything. It had been. You wanted this to be a long lasting feeling for the two of you. You knew Anna had nothing better to do. She may have gotten dozens of people with her looks, but you know better.Â
You know she could never fully have you in the way she wants.Â
And that makes your blood pulse and your body quiver with anticipation. You sidle up to Anna, kissing her neck. âLet this be a reminder,â you murmur against the heat of her skin. You brush your lips against the freckles on her tanned skin.Â
You can feel her tense at this. âYou can always come back to me,â you finish.Â
When you leave, Annaâs eyes have closed into themselves. She counts down, hearing the familiar hum of an old tune; a lullaby from memory. A time long gone.Â
You returned back, confident and thriving. Nothing could ever be this close to tasting some form of victory. Huntress had been in your grasp for sometime; this just solidified it. You hear footsteps encroaching and you see Jane, smug and arms crossed.Â
âYouâre a deviant, arenât you?â She questions, you turn to her, not really up for any interrogation.Â
You smile, a sharp thing, not wanting to deny the woman in front of you anything. She could know much more than you, have that over your head. You will not let her have the satisfaction of flaying you alive in some sick way. âI know what I am, but do you know what you are?âÂ
Jane smirks. âI would love to know what I seem like in your eyes.âÂ
You sigh, dropping your arms from the defensive. âWeâre similar, in a way. Arenât we?âÂ
Jane shrugs, knowing exactly what youâre referring to. âWe all want what we canât have.â
She continues, circling you, knowing exactly where youâve been. âSometimes we get a bargain in this shit ass place, something we canât say no to. So we all do it, sometimes with the same killers or sometimes with others.âÂ
You look at her trying to read her expression. You feel a flare of jealousy, imagining a wanton Anna with a curvaceous Jane, her body rolled like a gift from the Gods. Jane grins then, serpentine. âDonât worry,â she says softly. âYouâre a rare one for the Huntress. She never holds any interest in any of us. Youâre her favorite pet,â she whispers close.Â
âWho else has been involved in something like this?â You ask, already curious which survivor seemed to have offered themselves up to the entity or the killers in such a way.Â
Jane shakes her head. âThereâs no telling, some of them are too honorable for that. Not me, though. And not you either,â she points out.Â
âHonorâs fake,â you say. âThereâs never been anything like it. It holds you back to what you really want.âÂ
âOh?â She prods, delighted at your response.Â
âTo be able to control another being with just our presence.âÂ
Janeâs eyes glint, tilting her head to look at you in another light. âI knew I would like you, fox,â she hisses. You feel like youâve heard something similar from Huntress before. A familiar phrase in her native language that seems to remind you. Â
It had been time to give your monotonous routine some fun while being ripped apart by beasts and killers alike. Jane seemed to understand it, but the rest of the survivors looked upon you as if you had stepped from the fiery pits of hell. You would be covered in blood, needing a wash of some kind, but they all seemed to know. They knew you were only doing it to be able to get something you want.Â
It wouldnât be the first time someone existed in such a way, so you wouldnât be the last to do it.Â
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absolutely i will! i am actually trying to buff it up some more and attempting to add more plot points since the first chapter was definitely more of a prelude to it so i can get hurry up and get to the meat of the story!
since you asked so nicely here is a sneak peek!
âKeep trying, princess. Itâll only exhaust you.âÂ
She mumbles something angrily. His lips twitch slightly upwards. Only he has managed to make her lose her mind. To completely unravel her being. Her sense of self. It drives him to inhale sharply. The essence of jasmine wafting in his nose, his hands grip tighter on the back of her thigh. The supple skin underneath. It stirs something deep in him. Insatiable and burning.Â
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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You realized then how delicate this all still was.
Pairing: Plaga!Leon S. Kennedy/F!Chubby!Paranormal Investigator!Reader
Tags: Fluff, Mutual Pining, Angst, Sexual Tension, Masturbation, Blood, Body Horror, Animal Injury & Death
Notes: Heeeeey, guys. It's been a minute since I last posted, but here is chapter 4 (finally)! My summer has been more busy and stressful than I ever could have imagined, so I'm happy to finally be able to finish this chapter, which is the longest chapter of anything I've ever written at just over 14k words!!! I keep breaking my own personal record every time I write, it feels like lol. I also think this is some of the best writing I've ever done and I'm extremely proud of it! Not sure when chapter 5 will come out, as school is starting back up for me soon and a couple people I know irl are getting married this fall, so I'll be traveling a lot as well. Anyway, I hope you guys enjoy it! Let me know your thoughts! (And here's a little behind-the-scenes tidbit: the painting I describe at the beginning of this chapter is actually in RE4R in the grand hall!)
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You awoke before Leon, for once.
You couldnât stop yourself from sitting up on your air mattress and looking at his curled-up form, finally allowed to take in his appearance fully without having to sneak a glance or risk embarrassing yourself and him by getting caught staring.
You had yet to see him so at peace until this moment. He was laid atop his blankets, nearly in the fetal position, one long arm tucked under his pillow while the other was slung across his exposed midriff. His appendages were retracted again and his tail was hanging off the side of the bed, twitching slightly in his slumber. His breaths were deep and even, and his messy blond hair covered his closed eyes.
Never in your life did you think a literal monster could be so damn cuteâso damn attractive in ways most humans hadnât been to you before. Even the ones you dated. You wondered what that said about you.
As you gazed at Leon, you were reminded of the day before, a lovely warmth settling over you like that of the sun spilling in from the window above.
You could feel yourself blush as you recalled him carrying you across the bridge; how he had plucked a flower just to stick it into your hair; the fact he was willing to dance with you in the dilapidated ballroom simply because you asked; the way he played into your little game as you sat upon the throne, faces so near, you could brush your nose against his if you had just moved a little bit closer.
But then he had pulled away, leaving you breathless⌠and confused.
You werenât sure why he would humor you with the flirting and the lingering glances and the gentle touches just to distance himself againâwhy he was holding himself back.
It was maddening, and you struggled to muster the courage to ask him about it or take matters into your own hands. Because, if you were honest with yourself, you were terrified of what it would mean if you did.
Worst case scenario, he would reject you and send you away. It would sting, but you had grown accustomed to the feeling; almost expected it by now. Besides, you were going to leave anyway, werenât you?
Best case scenario, though? He would reciprocate and then⌠what? What could come of this? Would you still go home and let this remain as some passionate, short-lived fling? Would you work out how to stay and leave your entire lifeâfriends and familyâbehind? Or would you come and visit him when you could manage it, living some kind of half-life split between your world and his?
Every outcome you could think of seemed to hurt, and you thought maybe it would be better to keep things as they were; tense but platonic.
However, being with him was so easy. Natural as breathing (when he wasnât stealing your breath away, that is). Sure, there had been hiccups and misunderstandings. The both of you were stubborn and set in your ways, but you put your differences to rest so quickly.Â
But god, were you different. The type of different that you thought before meeting him would never work. As a human, he was handsome. Devastatingly so. Could have been a model, had he chosen another career.
And, most notably, he could have had anyone he wanted.
You had come to love your body with all its curves and marks, but you doubted he would even look your way if you had crossed paths in another life.
You knew it wasnât fair to yourself or to him to compare who he was to who he is now, considering how much he had gone through over the years and his transformation. However, you couldnât help but think the attention you were getting from him came from loneliness and nothing more.
If anyone else had been just as stupid and nosy as you, he probably would have acted this way towards them in your stead.
Could you so easily be replaced?
Your chest clenched painfully at the thought and you forced yourself to look away from him, eyes bouncing around the room until they landed on the painting hung on the nearby wall.
It was a beautiful depiction of the castleâhow it must have looked when it was occupied by people instead of dust and crumbling stone. The colors were vibrant, and a couple in the foreground were walking away from it, arm in arm. You admired it for a long while, feeling a sense of serenity overtake your anxious mind for a moment.
And then memories of the day prior flooded it instead, how you and Leon had spent the rest of the evening making crude wooden frames for the paintings you had âborrowedâ from the castle, carefully finding the best places to hang the new pieces on his once empty walls.
Leon acted like he didnât care, letting you decide for him, but you caught him glancing at the artwork from time to time, a gentle smile on his face at the way they brightened up his home.
You knew once you left he would be lonely again. You hoped if you could make these changes for him it might be enough to keep him content, even for just a little while. And, selfishly, you felt that if you couldnât have him, you could at least inject remnants of yourself into his life. Maybe then heâd think of you the way you knew youâd think of him until your last breath.
Everything about it was unfair.
You heard a rustle and a quiet call of your name, your gaze meeting the half-lidded one of Leon as he sat up to look at you. He let out a yawn, his impossibly wide mouth gaping open in a way you once thought to be terrifying, those razor teeth glinting in the low light of the morning sun. Now, as he blinked the sleep from his red eyes, you found it more endearing, like the maw of a cat. Precious in all its sharp edges.
âGood morning,â you told him softly, a smile playing on your lips as if you hadnât nearly worried your teeth through them moments ago.
âMorninâ. You been up long?â he asked as he swept his hair from his face. You wished you could do it for him, but you pushed that thought deep down instead.
âNot long. Was just looking at the painting,â you replied, half-lying as you pointed at the artwork in question.
His gaze trailed up to it, a small grin alighting his bizarrely beautiful features. âIt really was a great idea, bringing them back here. Makes the place a lot less depressing.â
âI have those, occasionally,â you joked, pulling yourself to your feet. âIâm gonna start breakfast if youâre interested in something other than fish.â
With a tilt of his head, he asked, âWhatâre you makinâ?â
You smirked as you walked up to him. âYou can find out for yourself if you get dressed and meet me downstairs.â
He rolled his eyes playfully, catching you off guard by leaning in close, so tall that even sitting down he was the same height as you were standing. âSo demanding, bunny.â
You scoffed. âForgive me. Please get dressed and meet me downstairs. Better?âÂ
âBaby steps.â
Splaying your hand against his chest, you teasingly shoved him, âWhatever. Iâll just cook without you.âÂ
He grabbed your wrist, clawed fingers cool against your skin, causing a shiver to run through you. âCâmon, youâre breaking my heart here.â
It was your turn to roll your eyes, pulling slightly against his hold. âThen be good and do as youâre told.â
He sighed dramatically, releasing you from his grip. âYes, maâam.â
You grinned triumphantly, gently tapping your finger against the tip of his nose. It caused him to scrunch up his face in a way that made you laugh, and then you turned on your heels and strolled to the door.
You glanced back at him as he stood and stretched. âBacon and eggs, by the way.â
âNow thatâs something I canât pass up.â
âFigured.â And with that, you were on your way.
You kickstarted your morning by brushing your teeth and washing your face in the sink, then quickly got dressed so you could begin working on breakfast.
Leon was swift to join you, staying out of your way as he would be little help with his claws but keeping you company regardless. You made sure to leave his eggs runny and his bacon undercooked to abide by his more primal eating habits.
Soon enough, the two of you were at the table, sitting across from each other as was becoming the norm. It all felt so⌠domestic.
âGot any plans I need to know about?â he inquired after emptying his plate.
You swallowed the bite you had been chewing, glancing out of the nearby window. âItâs a nice day out. Pretty warm for autumn. Would that lake trip I mentioned yesterday be out of the question?âÂ
âDonât see why we canât. And thereâs lots to see. I think youâre going to have a good time.âÂ
âWith you? Always.â
You could have sworn a faint pink rose to his face, but he was quick to stand and place his used dishes in the sink, so you couldnât be certain.
After a quick prep for the trip, you headed down to the lake, Leon helping you get onto the boat, which rocked violently as you stepped onto it, to your dismay. He chuckled as you grappled his shoulders to steady yourself, slowly lowering onto the bench beneath you.
âNot too keen on a swim, huh?â he teased you.
âNot fully clothed, at least,â you muttered in reply.
He simply smirked at that but didnât respond.Â
Leon smoothly directed the loud motorboat to the first location you had agreed upon back at the house, which was a small cave that held a wooden shack inside. It was such a strange little place, but you liked to hear the echo of your voices bounce off the cave walls, as well as the sound of the boat gently slapping against the dock.
The headless statue with the dark stains on itâthat looked an awful lot like old bloodâmade you uneasy, but you could see yourself camping out at a place like this.
After that, Leon said he was taking you to what he called âchicken islandâ, which made you laugh.Â
âCanât imagine why theyâd call it that,â you mused.
âIt had chickens there if you can believe it,â was his deadpan response.Â
And he didnât lie. Although the birds were no longer present, many rusted cages full of straw nests were stacked across the small area and worn feathers littered the ground. There wasnât much to it, as he had warned, but you felt the need to at least say you had been to such a silly place.
He then took you into another cave, pulling up to a large dock with only your flashlight as a guide. You climbed up the ladder to the deck aboveâa place that you had passed through to get to the lake in the first placeâto sit on a crate and eat your lunch.
Time was passing rather quickly while out on the water, and you worried if you spent too much time dawdling, youâd have to come back the next day and waste precious hours you could be doing other things.
The end of your visit here was coming up sooner than youâd like, after all.Â
You were halfway through your sandwich, giving the room a more intense sweep, when your eyes fell upon the elevator in the corner. You had pointed it out before, but Leon wasnât keen on using it, as the generator keeping the thing in service had long since lost fuel.Â
Apparently, there had been a shooting range with moving targets on the floor below, to your bewilderment. There was also one inside the castle and another in the mines beneath it, though Leon told you it was too dangerous to trek the old shafts.Â
You glanced at the counter next to the elevator and a thought came to your mind. âHey, Leon, you said there were moving targets in the shooting range, right?â
He looked at you quizzically but nodded, mouth full of sliced ham.
You giggled at the sight, but continued your questioning, âSo if they were moving, was someone controlling them?â
He swallowed thickly before answering, âYeah... This guy I just referred to as âThe Merchantâ. He popped up all over the village while I was trying to save Ashley. Helped me a lot by selling me supplies. He was in charge of the shooting ranges around here.â
âHow did he know where youâd end up in time to set up shop? And how did he avoid getting infected with the parasite?âÂ
Leon clicked his tongue. âYour guess is good as mine. He was⌠weird⌠but he did me a solid, so I figured it would be best not to ask questions. Even sold me some things to live on after I turned. He never came back after that.â
âDo you wish he did?â you asked, unable to stop yourself from prying. It was a bad habit, you knew, but you couldnât help it.
You wanted to get to know Leon in every capacity, even though leaving would only hurt worse if you did. You must've been a masochist, then.Â
He sighed wearily, crossing his arms. âIf Iâm being honest⌠every day I wished someone would come back. Didnât matter who. Used to lay awake at night and think about Claire or Ashely or Adââ he paused at that, and you were going to ask what name he was about to say when he continued, âAnyway, I used to imagine them coming to find me. Just to say hi, I guess. To see how I was doing. But they never did. Not that they should. I told Ashley not to come back for her safety, and to not tell anyone I was alive. Donât know why I hoped sheâd break her promise.â
âWell,â you started, reaching over and wrapping your fingers around his hand, âat least Iâm here.â
âYeah, and Iâm glad for it, even if it's just for a week.â He was staring down at your knuckles and you wanted nothing more than to coil your arms around him, but you refrained.
You considered him for a long moment instead, all your overthinking from earlier being tossed out of your mind as you promptly made a decision, saying, âI could always come back. Make this a yearly trip or something.â
His gaze jumped up to your own, then, shock evident in his pale features. âAnd why would you do that?â
You let out a huff of laughter. Was he really that clueless? Well, you werenât about to give him the full truthâthat you were utterly infatuated with himâinstead replying, âBecause Iâm your friend, arenât I?â
âFriend,â he repeated, voice low. Was there a hint of disappointment in his tone, or did you imagine it? âYeah, I guess at this point, you really are. But I donât know if it would be a good idea for you to come back.â
âWhy?â You felt hurt by that, but you tried to hide it behind a nonchalant attitude, attempting to sound more curious than bitter.
âWeâre wasting daylight,â he said instead of answering you, standing up from his crate. âWe should keep moving.â
You stood up, too, confusion and frustration circling in your head like vultures. âFine, but this conversation isnât over, Leon.â
âHm,â was all he replied, already making his way to the boat before you even finished zipping up your backpack.Â
The short trip to the other side of the cave was one full of awkward silence. You didnât want to show that you were annoyed, but it was difficult to mask it while he was giving you the cold shoulder.
You realized then how delicate this all still was. A few days together was not enough time for him to fully open up to you. You were upset, but he had a stormy historyâone he wasnât keen on sharing.
Whether it was to protect himself from the vulnerability or spare you from the weight of his past, you didnât know. But you wanted nothing more than to assure him that he meant something to you. That he could trust you.
You kept your mouth shut.
Despite the change in attitude, Leon was still quick to help you out of the boat. It was something you appreciated, given your apparent lack of sea legs.
Your concerned thoughts were replaced with a renewed sense of awe, though, as you shone your flashlight over the cave walls and rushed forward. Leon simply followed behind you while you explored the place, as he made a habit of doing since your arrival.
You found another headless statue stained in dark brown, to your disgust, but not much else resided in the labyrinthine tunnels.
You went back to the boat, and as you were about to leave the area altogether, you pointed out another small dock nearby. âWhatâs over there? Can we go?â
He seemed hesitant, shoulders tensing, but he eventually nodded, pulling up alongside it.
Once on solid ground, you were swift in finding a painting on the cave wall, which was a large and very old map of the lake with what looked like a whale in the center.
âWhat is that?â You asked Leon, the uneasy silence from just before fading as your curiosity took root in its stead.
He grimaced as if remembering something terrible. âDel Lago. Giant fish monster in the lake. I killed it, though, so donât worry.â
âAh, a Spanish Nessie, then,â you teased despite your horror at such a concept. âMust have been old, if this painting is anything to go by.â
âIts body sank to the bottom of the lake pretty much as soon as I downed the thing,â he said, looking up at the depiction of the creature. âItâs almost a shame, what happened to it.â
âWhy, cos you killed an ancient majestic beast?â
He turned to you with a smile. âNo, cos I wasted all that meat.âÂ
You laughed and he chuckled in response, the awkward tension from earlier finally giving way to the easygoing banter you enjoyed so much.
âCâmon, thereâs more to explore,â you urged, grabbing his wrist and pulling him along.
Near the mural was a shrine with two large hands sticking up from the cave floor, a head sitting in either stone palm.
Well, that explains the headless statues, you mused.
You moved on quickly after that, the cave giving way to a forested path. You made a face as you skirted past a sacrificial altar, gripping Leon a little tighter.
After having to crawl underneath a tiny gap in a stone formation, you made it to a fork in the path, a small building to your right, and a winding trail to your left.
âWhatâs over there?â you asked Leon as you pointed to the trail, leaning down to wipe the dirt from your clothes.Â
He seemed to freeze before responding a little too quickly, âNot much. And that cabin just leads to another dock. We should head back to the boat.â
âOh, câmon, weâre already here! Might as well take a peek!â you chirped, marching onto the trail.Â
Leon didnât argue, but he was tense as he followed you up to the end of the path.
You were more than a little confused by what you found there.
âGraves?â you questioned aloud as you looked upon the two crosses made crudely of sticks, names carved into the wood. They werenât next to each other like youâd expect, but spread apart and angled toward the center of the dead-end path. âHow strange. The only other ones Iâve seen were in the church cemetery.â
âYeah, strange,â Leon muttered behind you, sounding almost⌠nervous? You wondered why.
You leaned down to the cross on the left, barely able to make out the name âLuis Serra Novarroâ on the wood. An old lighter was on the ground beside it. You wondered if it even worked anymore with how long it looked to be sitting there.Â
You then crouched before the other cross, âMajor Jack Krauserâ etched messily upon the surface.
âWell, his name isnât very local-sounding,â you joked of the latter.
Leon didnât reply, but you were too distracted by what was dug into the ground in front of the cross to comment on it. It was a large knife with an engraving of a snake on its rusted blade.
âWow, thatâs cool,â you mused, reaching out to pull it from the dirt. It felt like a waste to leave such a well-crafted weapon just sitting there.
âStop!â Leon barked, lunging forward and yanking your hand from where it brushed against the scales.
Shocked, you pulled away and stood up, taking a step back at the snarl on his face. âWhoa, whatâs wrong? The thing booby-trapped or something?â
He sighed, his expression turning weary instead of angry. âNo, just⌠would like to respect the dead.â
You tilted your head in confusion. âRespect the dead? You piled up human corpses at the entrance to the village. Not sure how thatâs exactlyââ You stopped mid-sentence, realization hitting you as you took in the miserable look on Leonâs face. âYou⌠you knew these guys, didnât you?â
He grimaced at your words but slowly nodded in response.
âWho were they?â
Leon crossed his arms over his chest tightly, as if to hug himself, before jerking his head to the grave on the left. âLuis helped me and Ashley. He actually saved me from him, too,â he said, looking at the grave to the right. âHe was killed by that very knife.â
âWhy bury this guy next to your friend if he murdered him?â You were flabbergasted by this whole thing, desperate to make sense of Leonâs strange actions.
He winced at that. âHe was my mentor. Trained me to be an agent in the first place. Without him, I donât think I could have survived.â
âWhat caused him to change?â
Leon decided to plop onto the ground, his tail whipping in agitation along the dirt. You joined him, sitting cross-legged beside his slouched figure, waiting for him to say something.
âHe was betrayed by the very country he fought to protect. His whole unit was wiped out and he was badly injured, unable to fight like he used to. He ended up going MIA and joined the cult. They infected him with the Plagas, too. I had to fight him. I had toââ he stopped to take a steadying breath, âI had to kill him. With that same blade. His blade.â
âIâm so sorry, Leon,â was all you could offer him, placing your hand over his and squeezing gently. He closed his claws into a fist and squeezed back.
âI buried Luis first,â he began. âHad to go into the mines to retrieve his body, ferry it out here. Then I went to the island on the other side of the castle to find Krauser. The whole place had collapsed in on itself, but I had hoped I could get to him. Dug in the rubble for days, but⌠couldnât find a body. The knife is all I had left of him, so now itâs here.â
âI see,â you said quietly, staring down at the muddled reflection of Leonâs dirt-covered leg in the rusted blade. âWhyâd you place their graves so far out of the way?â
âItâs secluded. Quiet. Peaceful,â he replied, head tilting towards the sky and closing his eyes. âFigured I would bury Wolfie here, too, when he eventually dies. Just thought it would be a good place toâŚâ
You saw him swallow back his words.
âA good place to what?â
He sighed and shook his head before looking at you, those red eyes so hauntingly melancholy, it made your heart ache. âA good place to rest.â
The two of you sat quietly in the dirt, simply holding hands and watching the breeze ripple through the foliage surrounding you.
Heâs right, you thought, comforted by the shade of trees, yet still able to make out the blue of the sky above, it is a good place to rest.
You knew Leon grieved the life he once lived, so evident in the way he carried himselfâthe way he spoke. But this kind of loss was news to you. You never realized just how much weight he carried.
You were determined to lighten the burden in any way you could.
âCome on,â you told him, finally standing. âWe have one last stop, donât we?â
He didnât need your help to get to his feet, but he still took your outstretched hand, giving you a small, grateful smile when he towered over you once more. âYeah. We do.â
Before you knew it, you were back on the motorboat, heading straight to the center of the lake for your last location.
You had seen the old, half-sunk fishing vessel from the shore, but wanted to explore it last for the hell of it. You were glad you made that decision, hoping that spending more time on the calm waters might lift Leonâs spirits.
He came to a stop at the port of the large wooden boat, gracefully exiting onto the dilapidated vessel before reaching his hand out and pulling you onto the algae-slick deck with him.
âCareful,â he warned, releasing his hold on you. âThe boards are pretty damaged. Wouldnât want you to fall through.â
âYes, sir,â you teased, but you took your time walking around, just in case. You heard him chuckle as you shuffled slowly forward, giving him a lighthearted glare in response.Â
There really wasnât much to see of the place, only able to access the front of it.Â
You leaned against the railing of the bow after a brief sweep of the area, looking out onto the blue, blue water. It was beautiful, and you could see why Leon would spend hours fishing out here beyond catching a meal or two.
You glanced over your shoulder at him, finding him leaning against the front of the cockpit, his eyes already on you. You wished you knew what he was thinking when he looked at you like that. You hid your blush by turning back around.
You placed your hands on the railing, a light giggle escaping you as a thought crossed your mind.
âWhatâs so funny?â he questioned, and you knew he was smiling without needing to face him.
You tapped your fingers on the wood. âYou ever see the movie Titanic?â
He scoffed but didnât answer, instead stepping closer. Before you knew what was happening, he had gently tugged your arms up, holding them in the air as he leaned down to place his chin on your shoulder. Your breath was caught in your throat by the proximity, his own tickling your cheek.
âWas this what you had in mind, bunny?â he asked you, voice low and teasing in a way that made your stomach flip. You kept your arms up as he slid his hands down to rest on your waist and you wondered if you would pass out from your inability to pull oxygen into your lungs.
You needed to get yourself together, so you forced out a nervous laugh before saying, âIf only we had Celine Dion playing in the background. I think weâd be dead ringers for the remake.â
Leon laughed heartily. âI canât imagine theyâd do a remake of such a nineties classic.â
You giggled, turning slightly to meet his eye. âThey remake everything these days.â
âWell, I donât think I have what it takes to play Jack, but youâre pretty enough to go on the big screen.â
Oh.Â
That compliment made heat flood your whole body, though you didnât want him to notice it. âWhat are you talking about? Youâre practically Leo DiCaprio two-point-oh.â
âMm, maybe ten years ago,â he mused, pulling away from you, to your chagrin. âCâmon, we should head back to the house.â
You pouted as you turned to face him. âBut I donât want to yet!â
âWell, thereâs not much left to do out here,â he replied, as if coaxing you to follow his lead.
But that wasnât exactly your style, now was it?Â
Instead, you let your hair down from its messy bun, kicked off your shoes and socks, and yanked your shirt over your head.
Leonâs eyes widened to the size of dinner plates as you stripped in front of him, pulling your jeans off and leaving yourself only in your underwear. You could tell he was trying not to stare, focusing solely on your face as he choked out, âWhat the hell are you doing?!â
Still, you saw his gaze drop to your bare skin. You felt utterly exposed, but you werenât ashamed.
In fact, you felt good.
You felt free.
You sat on the railing of the boat, smiling wickedly at him as you flipped your legs over the edge. âI told you if I was going to have a swim, it wouldnât be fully clothed, didnât I?â
Before he could say anything else, you plunged into the water.
It was so cold, you locked up for a moment, your body shocked by the sudden change in temperature. You stayed under for a few seconds, willing yourself to adjust before breaching the surface.
You wiped the water from your eyes, blinking up at Leon as he hung off the bow of the boat. It looked like he was about to dive in after you, as if he was worried you wouldnât come back up.
His concern for you warmed you right up.
âAre you serious?â he interrogated, breathing out a sigh of disbelief. âYou said it was too cold to bathe out here, but youâll take an afternoon swim?â
âDefinitely too cold for a bath,â you replied, nodding sagely. âBut you should still come join me!â
âAbsolutely not. Youâre crazy, you know that?â
You smiled, all teeth. âWhat was your first clue, sweetheart?â
He scoffed. âYou showing up here in the first place, probably.âÂ
âSoâŚâ you began, âyou should learn to expect the unexpected. And jump in. I know the cold doesnât bother you, Leon.â
He sighed, staring over at the shore for a moment before turning to face you once more. âFine.â
You whooped in victory as he stepped back from the railing, and then bit your lip as you watched him pull off his shirt, revealing his lean, taut upper body. His legs were obscured by the boat as he tore his pants from them, but you got a good look when he leapt onto the ledge of the bow. You had to crane your neck to take in all of him, grazing your eyes up his muscled form, covered only by boxer briefs.
Before you could stare for too long, he dove into the water behind you, and you covered your eyes as it splashed up in a small wave.
He quickly rose to the surface, flipping his blond hair from his face.
âSee? Not so bad,â you told him, paddling closer to where he was treading.
âGuess not.â
You were about to speak again when you felt something large slither along your leg. You yelped, pulling your body away from the sensation. âOh my god, something just touched me!âÂ
Leon shrugged. âProbably just a fish.â
âNo, no, it was definitely a snake!â you told him, eyes staring down as if you could see into the dark water.
âItâs possible. Thereâre vipers in the area, I told you that before.â He seemed to be taking joy in your distress and you glared at him angrily for it.
âLeon, if thatâs true, I need out RIGHT now.â
You began to swim towards the motorboat, suddenly very over this whole situation, when something touched your leg again. You screamed as it wrapped around your ankle, pulling you under the water.
You werenât under for very long, whatever it was almost immediately releasing you. You sputtered as you pushed your head above the surface, panicking.
But then you heard Leon laughing hysterically nearby, and the realization that he was just screwing with you hit you like a brick.
âOh, you asshole!â you yelled, wading back over to him and shoving his chest in rage.
âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry, I just had to,â he told you between laughs.
âYeah, you will be.â With that, you splashed his face with water, feeling smug that you got him before he could use his arm as a shield.
You splashed him a few more times until he lunged toward you, grabbing your arms, âOkay, weâre even now. Happy?â
He released you and you pretended to think about it for a moment, easing closer. Your faces were mere inches apart, and you wanted nothing more than to lean forward and kiss him. You werenât sure how the action would even work, considering his protruding fangs, but that didnât stop you from wanting to find out.Â
He seemed to edge nearer, and you wondered if he had the same idea.
But your nerves got the better of you.
Instead, you jumped up and shoved his shoulders down, dunking him completely under the water.
It was your turn to laugh as he came back up, his wet hair covering his eyes. âNow Iâd say weâre even.â
He pushed the strands from his face and shook his head, chuckling. âYeah, I deserved that.â
Before you could say something else, the sky seemed to darken suddenly. You still had a couple hours of daylight left, so you glanced up, confused. You saw that clouds had converged over the sun, looking awfully heavy.
Something splattered against your forehead, and you wiped it off, realizing it was a raindrop. Several more began to fall on and around you, and you knew it was time to head back to shore.
You and Leon quickly got dressed as the sprinkle of rain turned into a steady shower, dampening your once-dry clothes. Still, you made the time to glance at Leonâs cute butt as he leaned down to pull up his pants, and when you turned to put on your own, you could feel his eyes on you too.
Thankfully, Leon decided to head back to the cave, the rain only coming down harder as you finally entered it. Leon moored the boat, and the two of you hurried through to the quarry.Â
A flash of light streaked across the sky as you reached the church, the echoing BOOM that followed it making you jump out of your skin. You mustâve looked like a wet chihuahua with how you shook, both from the sound and the cold rain seeping down to the bone.
Leon turned to face you, his expression concerned. He got close, placing his palms against your arms. âYouâre freezing. Câmon, letâs get you home.â
Despite your misery, you couldnât help but feel warmed by his words.
Letâs get you home.
He said it like it was yours, too.
He grabbed your hand, tugging you along as you rushed back to his place, knowing it was still quite a trek.
You finally made it to the house, and you doubled over as soon as you crossed the threshold, panting heavily from practically jogging the whole way. You were shivering violently, your teeth chattering as you finally caught your breath, when you felt Leon lay his hand across your back.
âHey, you should get changed. Iâll start a fire,â he urged, eyes soft as he looked at you.
You nodded, doing as he said, wringing your drenched clothes over the tub before hanging them on the sides of it.
Feeling slightly better, you went back into the main room, seeing that Leon had pushed the dining table over and moved the couch in front of the fireplace, where a stack of logs was piled in the hearth.
He was struggling with the matches again, so you gently took them from his hands, alighting the kindling yourself. He simply nodded at you before you sat down on the couch and reached your hands towards the slowly growing flames.
âYouâre soaked,â you told him. âGo change. Iâll make dinner when we warm up.â
He smiled down at you as he stood, stroking the top of your head. You never wanted him to stop. âBe right back, then.â
You were finally losing the chill as he returned, sitting down beside you, his tail draped between you on the seat.
Another loud crash of lightning made you cry out, flinching.
âWhoa, there,â he said softly. âYou okay?â
You grimaced. âYeah, Iâm not⌠the biggest fan of storms. I like the rain when Iâm cozied up inside, but thunder and lightning⌠I donât know. It freaks me out.â
âSo youâre afraid of heights, snakes, and storms. Anything else I should know about?â he asked lightheartedly.
You rolled your eyes. âIâm not afraid of heights, just falling off a shoddy bridge, thank you very much. And snakes only scare me when theyâre venomous and I think theyâre slithering around my leg.â
His tail flicked up as you stared pointedly at it, the movement incredibly cute to you. He could really be just like a cat sometimes.
âI stand corrected. Just storms, then,â he teased.
The conversation flowed to other things, but looking around, you realized with sudden concern that Leonâs dog wasnât nearby. âHey, whereâs Wolfie? Was he upstairs?â
Leonâs brows furrowed at that, standing and glancing around the room. âNo⌠he wasnât. He usually doesnât stay out when it storms.âÂ
âIs he okay?â you questioned.
Leon crossed his arms. âIâm sure heâs fine. Maybe staying somewhere out of the rain.â
You nodded, though you worried for the poor dogâs safety.
As you promised, you made dinnerâa roast, actuallyâand you had never seen Leon so excited by something you had cooked thus far (though he wouldnât touch the potatoes, onions, and carrots that simmered alongside it).
As you worked on washing dishes, you saw Leon staring out of one of the windows, and you knew he was looking for Wolfie. You finished the chore, walking into the main room to stand beside him.
âHeâs never been gone this long,â Leon stated with a frown.
You worried your bottom lip. âMaybe⌠Maybe we should go find him.â
Leon glanced at you, then, brow raised. âIâll go find him. You should stay here.â
âNo way,â you argued, already pulling on your hiking boots. âIâm not letting you go out there alone.â
âYou could catch a cold, and that bear is still around. Besides, you hate the thunder and lightning, and it's only getting worse.â
âWell, Iâm worried about him too. I want to help.â
He sighed as you stood upright, seeing the determination in your eyes. âFine, but dress warm.â
You nodded vigorously. âI have a raincoat and a jacket, donât worry.âÂ
You quickly ran to your luggage, throwing on your hoodie, sliding the raincoat over it, and grabbing your flashlight from your backpack.
You met Leon at the door, the two of you heading out into the dark.
You kept your arm braced above your brows to block the rain from your eyes, the hoods of your jacket and coat pulled over your head still not enough to prevent the onslaught, raking your flashlight over the ground as you and Leon called Wolfieâs name.
You didnât know how long you were in the storm, and although the clothes on your top half helped to keep you dry and warm, your legs were getting soaked through. You pushed past the discomfort, your concern for Leonâs animal companion taking precedence.
The look of worry on his face was compelling enough to keep moving forward on its own.
You were near the church again, calling out the dogâs name as loud as you could, getting desperate to find him safe, when you heard Leon gasp beside you.
âWhat?â you questioned.
âThis way,â was all he responded, bounding through the woods at a speed you could barely keep up with.
Leon was taking you deep into the forest, and you could focus on little else but his darting form as you followed him, afraid to be left behind in the dark.
You thought you were gaining on him when you tripped over a root, cutting your knee as you fell to the ground, hard. You were quick to pick yourself back up, sprinting after him and gritting your teeth against the pain.
You lost him, though, the realization filling you with panic. You just continued running in the direction you saw him taking off, calling after him frantically.
The thunder rumbled deafeningly from above, making you cower in fright, but you knew you had to keep going. The darkness seemed to encroach upon you, the torrent of rain pelting against your whole body hard enough to hurt.
You donât think you had ever felt this afraid. Â
To your relief, you finally caught up to Leon, but it was short-lived when you took in what was ahead of you.
Leon was crouched over, and you could hear him muttering in distress. Before him was Wolfie, laying motionless on his side, four streaks of dark red seeping out of his white fur.
You rushed forward, dropping onto your injured knee, not caring how badly it stung as you assessed the animal in front of you. He was still breathing, thankfully, and letting out quiet little whimpers. The wounds looked deep as you appraised them, wondering what could have done this to him.
As if reading your mind, Leon growled, âIt was that damn bear.â
You didnât respond as he stripped his shirt off, easily ripping it into strips. They were soaked through with rain, but it was better than nothing.
âHere buddy,â Leon reassured Wolfie as he grabbed his own tail.
âWhat are you doing?â
Ignoring you, he gently pricked the barbed end into the dogâs side, who yelped and writhed at the feeling before near-instantly relaxing.
âKills the pain,â is all he offered as you looked at him in shock. He then shoved the strips of cloth into your hands. âIâm gonna lift him up and I want you to wrap these around him, okay?â
Heâd only ever been this serious when protecting you from that bear two days prior, and you swallowed before nodding in response.
You began to carefully slide the first strip over one of the gashes, about to tie it off, when Leon interjected, âTight, but not too tight.â
âGot it,â you said, fingers shaking as you followed his direction for each wound. You werenât sure if it was the cold or the nerves but you managed it well enough.
When you were done, Leon stood. Wolfie was held in his arms, the dogâs blood smearing against his bare chest. It made your stomach twist with unease.
âI have bandages in my first-aid kit,â you told him as he began the trek back to the path, trying to keep up with his long, hurried gait.
âHeâs lost a lot of blood,â Leon said. âWe can change the bandages, but I donât know if heâs⌠I donât know if heâll make it.â
You couldnât reply, tears pricking your eyes at the thought.
Leonâs voice wavered as he continued, âI know heâs old. I knew Iâd lose him eventually. But not like this. Not this soonâŚâÂ
You pushed back your tears, sadness giving way to conviction. âAfter we replace the bandages, Iâm gonna take him to the vet, okay? Youâll have to carry him to my car, but I think if weâre fast, we can do this.âÂ
âWhat if he dies on the way there?â Leon asked miserably, âI donât want to be away from him in his last moments.â
âI know itâs a risk, but we have a real chance of saving him, Leon. You told me to trust you yesterday, right? Well, now I need you to trust me.â
He seemed so conflicted but eventually nodded, his features solemn. âOkay. Iâll trust you.â
You reached over and squeezed his arm comfortingly.
God, I hope Iâm right about this.
+++
It had been a long time since Leon felt this afraid.
He had lost everything once, and was forced to spend a decade trying to survive the hole that loss gouged out of him. Just a void sitting inside his chest, the edges slowly creeping out to devour what was left.
Wolfie had been there for him in ways humans never were. Even when he wasnât this grotesque monstrosity, he would rather die than burden someone else with his innate brokenness, preferring to mask it with his need to help or his oftentimes cynical sense of humor.
The truth of the matter? He didnât know who he was when he wasnât useful to someone. When he wasnât a protector. He had never felt so unmoored, going without this self-imposed purpose to drive him forward.
Wolfie had renewed that purpose a month after his transformation, when Leon was at his lowest. He limped up to him with a swollen leg after being bit by a viper, clearly recognizing him despite his mutated features. He had done all he could to nurse the poor dog back to health, and Wolfie hadnât left his side since.
He sometimes wondered if it was fate that brought them together againâif he allowed himself to believe in something beyond the mundaneâbut he had renounced god and any other spiritual bullshit ages ago.
He looked down at the dog in his arms, no longer in pain due to his venomâs painkilling properties, but his breaths were still concerningly shallow. He wanted nothing more than to sprint full speed back to the house but worried the movement would only exacerbate Wolfieâs injuries.
He wasnât completely sure he was okay with letting you take his dog from himânot wanting to miss any precious time he might have leftâbut he agreed that it was worth a shot to bring him to the vet clinic, even if he couldnât join you.
He glanced over at you, your teeth gnawing into your bottom lip as you silently walked beside him, and was at least glad you were here with him in this nightmare. He couldnât imagine what it would be like to do this alone.
Eventually, you made it to the house, and he moved aside to let you open the door for him. You both rushed into the building, you grabbing your first-aid kit and a pair of scissors.
You were quick to find the proper bandages, and Leon just held Wolfieâs body out so you could cut off the bloodied strips of his shirt and re-wrap the wounds. Your hands were shaking, but you were careful and methodical, so he didnât comment on it.
When you finished, you grabbed a blanket and a towel, laying them on the dining table so Leon could bundle the dog tightly inside to protect him from the rain. It was a bit of a walk to the hunting lodge, after all.
You moved away to wash your hands and find your car keys, but Leon could only stare down at your leg as you came back into the room. There were mud and grass stains, which he expected, though he was caught off guard by the knee of your jeans being torn, bright red trickling down your shin in a small but steady stream.
âWhat happened to your leg?â he questioned, unable to recall when you could have gotten the injury.
âOh, it's nothing. I just tripped when I was chasing after you. Nearly lost you completely because of it, but I found you pretty fast,â you told him nonchalantly as you packed your bag.
He felt his stomach drop at your words, realizing that he hadnât once looked back to check on you during his mad dash to find Wolfie. The thought that you were hurt and lost in the middle of the woods during a storm that scared you, and he just left you there, making bile rise to his throat.
âFuck, Iâm so sorry. I should have waited for you⌠I didnât even know you werenât behind me anymoreâŚâ
You shook your head, smiling at him, but the expression couldnât hide the exhaustion in your eyes. âItâs okay, I promise. You were worried about Wolfie. I donât blame you.â
âItâs not okay,â he seethed, his own self-hatred pooling into his chest. âI left you alone in a storm! In the dark! What if that bear was still around, huh? It could have killed you and I left you there, with nothing to defend yourself with!â
âLeon, Iâm fine. Nothing happened beyond this little cut.â Your voice was calm and he wished he could hate it. Hate you for how you could talk him into or out of almost anything.
It had been mere days. He didnât know you, and yet he trusted you implicitly. Trusted you with the life of his only companion.
And then, when he asked you to trust in him, he had sabotaged it in an instant.
He didnât respond, knowing he might say something heâd regret, so he only watched as you quickly rolled up your pant leg to blot and disinfect the cut. He disliked seeing you in pain, witnessing the way your face screwed up as you used peroxide on the small woundâheard the hiss you made as it bubbled up on your broken skin.
You were wrapping one of the extra bandages over it when Leon looked out the window, the storm only hitting harder as the hours passed. âMaybe we should wait it out. You shouldnât be driving in this.â
You sighed as you unrolled the leg of your jeans, walking over to stare into the dark with him. âUnder normal circumstances, you couldnât pay me to go out in this weather. But I donât think we have time to waste, Leon.â
You both glanced over at Wolfie on the table, wrapped up and hopefully comfortable in the blanket. Leon had no choice in this if he didnât want to lose his dog.
He was meant to protect him and now he was sending him off with someone most people would call a stranger.
Any quality of his that could be halfway useful in this situation, and he wasnât even there when Wolfie was attacked. And now his only companion was bleeding out on his dining table and he could do nothing to stop it but put him in someone elseâs care and hope he lived. Â
Leon had all this strength, all these heightened senses. His entire body was deemed a weapon. And yet he couldnât even save his dog.
What was the point of any of it, then?
And what would he have done if you werenât there to help him? Watch Wolfie slowly die, helpless to prevent it?
Worse still, what if it was you who had been attacked?
He imagined your lifeless body lying in his arms, frightened eyes wide and staring off into nothing, drenched in blood that wouldnât stop pouring out of you, and he could do absolutely. Fucking. Nothing.
âCome on, Leon. We have to go,â came your gentle voice, pulling him out of his dark thoughts.Â
He only nodded in response, grabbing Wolfie and heading back out into the downpour, beyond the safety of his home.
The two of you trudged in silence through the village, the storm raging above your heads. He could practically sense your anxiety coming off of you in waves, but you were doing your best to remain stoic. He didnât know if it was to calm yourself or him, but he appreciated the attempt. Â
Finally, you made it to the hunterâs lodge, and you spoke up as soon as the door shut out the torrent. âI was wondering, how did you know where Wolfie was? Back there in the forest?â
âThe storm dampened it, but I could hear him whimpering from the path. When I got close enough, I could smell the blood.â
âRight, super senses. Thank god for âem.â
He glanced at you sharply. âIâd rather have stopped him from getting hurt in the first place.â
âHey, I know this sucks, but heâs alive and heâs going to stay that way if I have a say in it.â
He really took you in at that. Your face was wet, strands of your hair sticking to your forehead, but the fire in your eyesâŚ
He had no way to know if things would work out the way you wanted, but your convictionâyour unyielding, infectious hopeâquelled the needling fear, if only for a moment.Â
He might not believe in god, but angels must be real if you were standing beside him.
You made it to the car shortly after, Leon gently placing Wolfie into the backseat as you threw your bag into the passenger side and sat behind the wheel.
You turned the ignition, the vehicle roaring to life as Leon looked down at you, urging, âPlease be careful. I might lose Wolfie, but I canât lose you too.â
âI will be. I promise.â Before you closed the door, you glanced back up at him, asking, âWhat are you going to do while weâre gone?â
He clenched his clawed hands into fists, feeling the sharp edges dig into his skin as he grated out, âIâm going to kill that fucking bear.â
You looked shocked by his words but nodded in agreement. âOkay. Good luck.â
And with that, you closed the door.
Leon stepped back to let you drive off, knowing that the fate of his companion was out of his hands.
He exhaled harshly and turned on his heels, ready for the hunt.
Now this is what he was good for.
Shifting onto all fours, Leon was quick to shed his more human qualities for the sake of the kill, sprinting faster than he ever had on his legs alone. He focused solely on his senses to direct him through the downpour and to his prey, feeling his claws digging into the wet earth below.
As he had told you earlier, the storm dampened his abilities, but that wouldnât stop him from reaching his objective.
In fact, it only made him more hellbent on completing it.Â
It took him nearly an hour to find where the massive animal was lurking: a cave not far from where he had found Wolfie bleeding into the mud.
Despite its size, there was not much of a fight as Leon latched those deadly teeth of his around its throat and ripped. It barely had time to even register him launching at it before it was wheezing and choking on its own blood.
In this form, Leon was too proficient at killing. A part of himâdeep, deep downâwanted to take his time tearing the beast limb from limb, listen to it roar and whine in agony before he finally put it out of its misery.
When its jilted movements eventually stilled, blood coating the cave floor and Leon from his mouth to the knees of his dirty pants, he stumbled back into the wall and closed his eyes tightly.
Vengeance. It was something he understood, but he didnât see the point of it. Blood for bloodâs sake never sat right with him. He only sought to kill out of necessityâto survive.
And yet, here he was, bloodlust finally fading as the bearâs large corpse laid before his weary gaze.
He could pretend all he wanted that this was an act of protection, a means to prevent further attacks in the future, but the sadistic glee he felt when his teeth sunk into warm flesh⌠there was nothing to excuse that.
This bear was simply living as it was born to do, even in its aggression.
Maybe Leon really was losing his humanity. Not a descent into a mindless killing machine, but a dissipation of selfâfully aware of his own cruelty, but basking in it instead of rebuking it.Â
He wasnât sure which version scared him most.
He had to make this worth it, then. He had to alleviate this burning shame and break apart the guilt sitting heavy in his gut like a stone.
And so, with care, he carved up the carcass of the once dignified beast and devoured it, leaving only bones and fur in his wake.
It was the only form of reverence he could convey.
He dug a shallow hole in the mud beside the cave, laying the gory remains inside before covering it once more.
The storm had finally started to clear as he finished the task, the scent of petrichor not quite able to hide that of blood.Â
Unsure of how long it would take for you to return with news of Wolfieâs condition, he rushed over to the hunterâs lodge to wait out the hours.
They passed slowly. Agonizingly. All he could do was curl in on himself and sit just inside the door of the old building, wet with rain and blood and mud.Â
He once thought his initial transformation was the worst he had ever felt, that it was rock bottom. Before that, it had been what transpired in this village. And before that, it had been the disaster of Raccoon City.
He realized bitterly there was always further to fall.
He wasnât sure why you were so adamant to befriend him like this. To help him. Was this pity? Was Leon some charity case for you?Â
But then he thought of the way you smiled at him, the look on your face as he joined you in the cold water of the lake, the way you drifted to him like you were caught in his orbit and couldnât fight the pull.Â
The thought that maybe, just maybe, you felt the way he did⌠it was a jolt across his slumped form.
However, nothing could change what he was. His nature, it was a vicious one. And someday, you might not survive the animal that unfurled inside of himâthrough him.
Whatever happened after tonight, he knew one thing: his only escape was death.
He would simply wait out the end of your trip, selfishly wanting to wring out any joy he might find in your company, and if Wolfie survived the night, he would send him home with you to live out the rest of his days. He was certain you would take good care of him, provide for him better than Leon could ever hope.
But, he was reminded, Wolfie might not survive.
And it was Leonâs neglect that was to blame.
Useless, useless, useless, he repeated like a mantra in his head.Â
He never imagined heâd have more to lose than he already did. More to ruin.
He wasnât sure how long he sat there, the dawn breaking up the night. The sunâs warmth upon his skin did little to lighten his moodâas it burned more than soothedâbut then he thought of the way your soft flesh felt against his and he nearly fell into a dream, eyes drifting shut.
He shot up suddenly at the sound of an approaching vehicle, though, his misery morphing into an all-consuming apprehension.
Was he prepared to grieve?
Your car finally pulled up near the lodge, and he rushed to the side of it, his heart palpitating as he stared into the backseat window.
He saw Wolfie laying there, breathing slow and steady.
He was alive.
Leon had never felt so relieved.Â
He turned to face you as you opened the door, looking up at him with tired eyes.
Your expression turned to full-blown concern when you took in his appearance, reaching out to touch the blood staining his bare chest. âAre you okay?â
Leon placed his fingers over your hand, holding it close to him, the warmth of it more of a balm than the sun ever was. âIâm fine. It isnât mine.âÂ
You sighed, eased by his words. âYou found the bear, I take it?â
He nodded solemnly. âIt wonât bother us anymore.â You didnât reply and he looked back at Wolfieâs unconscious form once more. âHow did everything go? Will he be alright?â
âIt went great. He got stitches and a blood transfusion, and they kept him overnight for observation. Went ahead and got him a few shots when they said he was in the clear this morning. He took it all like a champ.â You dropped your hand, to Leonâs chagrin, grabbing your bag from the passenger seat. âThey told me to change his bandages every few hours and monitor for any infection. Gave me antibiotics and a few days' worth of painkillers. He should be just fine.â
âWhat did you tell them about the injury?â he questioned, suddenly concerned by what information you might have let slip in your distress.
âDonât worry, I told them he got attacked while I was out camping. No specifics, I promise.â A look of realization then dawned on your features, to his confusion, before you began sifting through your bag.
You then pulled out a blue collar from its depths. It jingled as you held it up to Leon, shot tags dangling behind a bone-shaped one at the front, sporting the dogâs name and what he assumed was your number.Â
âPicked this up before I took him from the clinic. Hope heâll wear it,â you said, shrugging as you stood from the car.
A flood of emotions washed over Leon, then, namely an overwhelming sense of gratitude for what you had done for him. It went deeper than the collar in your hand, deeper than even saving his dog.Â
You had faced a storm for him, soaked to the bone and afraid. You suffered being lost in darkness with an injured knee, even if it was only briefly. You drove through a torrent and stayed up all night to make sure his companion would live. You witnessed him covered in blood and filth and you reached outâŚ
You were always reaching out.
Before he could think it through, he wrapped his arms around you, pulling you into a tight embrace. He felt your plush body pressed against his hard edgesâheard the way you gasped in shock. You almost immediately settled into it, though, holding him in turn despite the drying grime flaking onto your clothes.
âThank you, for everything,â he murmured, face buried into your neck, the natural smell of you drifting to his nose. It was all at once sweet and grounding.
There was so much more he wanted to say, but this would have to suffice, the words caught in his throat.
âIâd do it all again in a heartbeat,â you whispered, your small hands sliding across his back soothingly.
The warmth of you made him ache, made his eyes burn, never wanting to let you go.
He knew he must.
The walk back to the house was a silent one, the only sounds the rainwater dripping onto the ground and the squelching of mud underfoot, but it wasnât uncomfortable. The two of you were just exhausted and still reeling from how the night had spiraled to near tragedy.Â
Leon glanced down at Wolfieâs sleeping form in his arms, so drugged up on pain meds he likely wouldnât wake for anything. He gave the dogâs head a gentle stroke, beyond relieved that, for now, it wouldnât be the last time.Â
The three of you entered Leonâs home, deciding that you would bring Wolfieâs bed and blankets downstairs, nestling them beside the fireplace to keep him comfortable and prevent him from exerting himself more than necessary once he was up and moving again.Â
Once the dog was settled in, Leon could only stand and stare, worried that if he took his eyes off of him for a moment, he might die in his absence.
âIâll make you up a bath, Leon,â you said quietly from the kitchen, already bringing a large pot to boil on the stove. âYou could really use one.â
He sighed, finally dragging his gaze from Wolfie so that he could level it on you. âDonât worry about that. I can just clean up at the lake.â
You huffed indignantly, approaching him and taking him inâin all his filthy, monstrous glory. âNo way. You need a nice hot bath, and thatâs that.â
âYouâre stubborn as hell, you know that?â he replied, scoffing good-naturedly. In truth, the thought of you caring for him like this made his heart beat a little faster.Â
âOh, I know,â you said with a smile, one that was so sweet, he would hold on to the sight of it for the rest of his life, âbut itâs what you like about me.â
He found himself chuckling for the first time since last night, always so surprised by your ability to pull him out of his misery.
âNot the only thing,â he said lowly, fingers twitching at his sides to reach out and touch you again.Â
Your cheeks flushed pink at his words, but you shook your head and laughed. âGo on, sit down for a bit while I finish what I started.â
He wanted to argueâto assist you in your taskâbecause being waited on like this was something he had never been used to. Instead, he did as he was told, plopping down next to Wolfie on the floor and petting him to pass the time.Â
He had almost fallen asleep again, unable to fight his eyes from drooping closed, when you called to him, informing him his bath was ready. He stood and stretched, yawning as he met you at the entrance of the side room.Â
âHere,â you told him, a pile of his clothes, a towel, and a washcloth in your arms, âknock yourself out. Well, donât really.âÂ
He took them gratefully, smiling at your ridiculous comment as he thanked you and disappeared behind the corner.Â
He quickly shed what was left of his tattered clothes, dropping them haphazardly onto the floor before stepping into the tub and lowering himself in the water.
It was hot, but it didnât burn. In fact, it was rather soothing as it lapped at his skin. The tub was almost too small for him, however, his knees peeking out of the water from having to fold his long legs.
It was cramped but not completely uncomfortable. He sunk in a little further, letting out a pleased sigh.Â
This was definitely better than the lake, that was for sure.Â
Before he could relax fully, he caught sight of something on the side table next to him. He turned his head and instantly regretted it.
It was a makeup mirror you had brought, and it was angled in a way he could stare directly at his own reflection.
It made him flinch.
He didnât look away, however, gritting his teeth against the image of himself he had loathed from the moment he transformed. But not only was he faced with his monstrous visage once more, he could now see the blood and dirt caked onto his skin, exposing him for what he truly was.
Something that was meant to kill. Â
He fought the urge to shatter the glass, not wanting to destroy something that belonged to you, instead leaning over and turning it away.
As he laid back in the water and began scrubbing the grime from his body with the rag you had provided for him, a barrage of thoughts overtook his tired mind, all of them relating to you.Â
He couldnât bear to look at himself, yet you rarely took your eyes off of him.
He was disgusted by his own existence and the form he was forced to live in, yet you treated him like he was normal. Like he was a person.Â
He quickly finished bathing, the water starting to cool, but he was in no rush to leave, allowing himself this moment of peace and to think.Â
He rested his clawed hand against his chest and could still feel where your small palm had been placed there, could still feel the way your flesh gave under his tight hold when had embraced you. The warmth that radiated from your very being.
His hand lowered mindlessly as he lingered on the image of you stripping bare to him on that boat, offering him your impish little smirk and batted lashes over twinkling eyes.Â
It lowered further as he thought of your lips, wondered how theyâd feel against his skinâhow soft they would be.
He hissed as his hand gently wrapped around the base of his cock, almost shocked to feel it was already achingly hard.
Leon couldnât remember the last time he had touched himself like this.
In the beginning, he worried he would hurt himself, what with the small daggers that were his new fingers. Eventually, he dared to wanderâcarefully, of courseâand soon it was one of the few things human left of him, to have this libido to relieve. But as the years passed and his body changed, he hardly had the urge.
And now here he was, fisting his cock at the thought of you.Â
He held back a groan as he slid his thumb across his slit, imagining it was your tongue instead.
He could picture your pretty eyes looking up at him as you took him into your mouth, how youâd tease him with kitten licks and the gentle scrape of your teeth until he was begging you for more, how youâd pull away just to level him with that mischievous smirk you wore so well before youâd cave and take him to the hilt.
Leon gasped as he picked up the speed of his pumping fist, lifting his hips above the cooled water, trying to avoid sloshing it onto the floor with the motion.Â
He then thought of your cunt, how sweet it would taste as he laved it with his tongueâmused about what precious little sounds he could pull from those plush, kissable lips of yours. He could almost feel how your fingers would card through his hair, yank it to get him closer to where you wanted him; how heâd tease you the way you did him before finally conceding, your desperation for him almost more delicious than the very essence of you that he fed upon.
He grit his teeth as he neared the edge, fighting to hold back.
Too soon. It was too soon.
He paused his movements, taking in a slow deep breath to calm his rapidly beating heart, letting the wave of pleasure that nearly crested over him fade to a lapping tide.
His mind slipped back into his fantasy, then, needing to finish what he started before he was driven mad with desire.
He imagined you underneath him now, bodies flush together, the head of his cock sliding against youânot a taunt but a preparation for what was to come.
He wondered how tight youâd be as he pushed inside, how warm and wet and inviting, squeezing his hand as he emulated the scene from his head.
How well would you take him?
Although much of his body had changed over the yearsâgrownâwhat sat beneath his belt had not. This was not a concern for him, however, having been well-endowed even for a human man of his former stature. In fact, he almost seemed more⌠proportionate⌠now.
Would he be too much?
Or would you plead for him to go harder and faster? Deeper?
Leon couldnât stop the near growl that escaped him as he imagined the way youâd cry out into the crook of his neck, his name like a breathless prayer against his skin. He could feel you wrap your legs around him, scraping your nails across his spine hard enough to draw blood.Â
He was on the precipice once more, but this time he didnât hold back.
He thought of you looking into his eyes as you came undone beneath him, wide and full of unshed tears, overwhelmed by the euphoria coursing through you. His body shuttered at the idea of your walls tightening impossibly around him, pulsing and wet.
He managed to bite back the whine that clawed up his throat as his cock twitched, his seed spurting across his chest and stomach.
He collapsed back into the tub, his mind so gloriously blank and full of fuzzy warmth as he caught his breath.
And then the realization hit him.
He had just masturbated. To you. While you were just on the other side of the wall, without even a door to fully separate the room.Â
He was flooded with remorse, then, wondering if he had managed to keep quiet enough so that you wouldnât hear or suspect his reckless sin against you.
He stilled, listening intently to any sounds in the house, his inhuman ears able to pick out the overlapping breaths of you and Wolfie over the whistling wind outside, right there in the dining room.Â
He swallowed the lump of shame that formed in his throat and roughly wiped the spend from his flesh, the harsh scrape of coarse fabric a small punishment for his transgression.
As he dried himself and changed into sleepwear, he wondered how disgusted youâd be with him if you knew just what he was thinking.
Surely, youâd never look at him the same.
He wanted to blame his exhaustion from a sleepless night, but he knew deep down this was bound to happen eventually. Your very existence was a temptation to him, after all.Â
He took a steadying breath before he finally turned the corner to face you, pleasantly surprised and more than a little relieved that you were fast asleep, curled up on his couch with a blanket draped across your legs.
He smiled softly as he approached you, all worry forgotten as a swell of affection replaced it.
You looked so sweet laying there, head resting upon the pillow you must have brought from upstairs and your pressed hands, your breaths puffing out a strand of hair hanging over your mouth. Leon quietly chuckled as he tucked it behind your ear and pulled the blanket up and around your shoulders to keep you warm before standing upright once more.
He knew as he gazed upon you that regardless of whether you returned his feelings or not, his own might never leave him. He would have to make his peace with that.
He sighed, closing his eyes tightly before opening them once more, deciding that was a problem for later.
He then sat beside Wolfie, checking on him briefly before laying down right there on the floor, exhaustion overtaking any real need for comfort. Not like he hadnât done it the first night of your arrival, anyway.
As he drifted into a deep slumberâŚ
He couldnât help but dream of you.
+++
The night had been a long one.
You had sat in the emergency room of the vet clinic with Wolfie for hours, watching as they tried to keep him alive.
You would never get the image of his terrified eyes out of your head, looking to you for help or for comfort as people he didnât know surrounded him while he couldnât even move.
You didnât let your tears escape until they told you he was stable, locking yourself in their bathroom across the hall and sobbing into your hands, the events of the night finally catching up to you.
He would live.
You werenât sure you could forgive yourself if he didnât. You wondered if Leon would have.
Oh, Leon, you thought worriedly, I hope youâre okay.
You wished you could get ahold of him somehow to let him know Wolfie was alive, aware of the fact that even if he owned a cell phone, the village had no service anyway. You were half tempted to drive out to see him and tell him the news, but you didnât want to leave Wolfie alone for that long.
You then recalled the bear and Leonâs promise to kill it, hoping desperately it didnât hurt him. You didnât know what youâd do if you drove back just to find him bleeding out in the mud like he had found Wolfie, the thought piercing your heart like a bullet.
To calm yourself, you replayed the day in your head, focusing only on all the good parts.
You thought of how he opened up to you at his friendsâ graves, how he held your hand as you sat in the dirt together.Â
You thought of how he slipped his palms across your waist on the boat, how he spoke so lowly in your ear, how your faces got so close in the water.Â
You thought of how he stroked your hair while you sat by the fireplace, the affection so freely given it was as if he couldnât stop himself from touching you.
You thought about how concerned he was for you when you returned to the house after finding Wolfie, how he was upset you had gotten hurt and lost in the woods and blamed himself.Â
And then you thought of what he said before you left for town:
âI might lose Wolfie, but I canât lose you too.â
Those words were looping in your brain over and over.
You knew he was just concerned with your safety, that heâd probably feel guilty if something happened to you while you were trying to save his dog, but the way he said it⌠The way he looked at youâŚ
âI canât lose you.â
It was like he meant it.
Despite your anxiety, you managed to nap a bit on the bench outside of the observation room, asking the veterinarian to wake you when Wolfie came to.
In the morning, while he was still out cold, you took a brief stroll outside of the clinic, making your way into the neighboring pet shop to bide the time.Â
As you passed the shelves of toys and supplies, your eyes caught on a large blue collar, realizing that it was about Wolfieâs size. You held it aloft as you considered buying it, thinking it was almost silly to put a collar on a half-feral dog.
But then you thought of the other outsiders that might appear in the village every so often. You worried they might dog-nap Wolfie for his friendliness or kill him for his intimidating appearance, deciding it may be worth the purchase, just in case.
Besides, Leon seemed drawn to the color blue, if the majority of his shirts and his preference regarding the castleâs art was anything to go by. It was oddly endearing imagining the scorpion man and his wolf-dog matching in such a way.
After buying it and getting an engraved name tag, you returned to the clinic, petting Wolfie and offering him soft words of encouragement as the vet gave him some much-needed shots.
The rain finally subsided as you made your way back to the village, your nerves still alight despite Wolfieâs improved condition.Â
When you finally pulled up to the dirt road near the lodge, you were overjoyed to see Leon appear beside the car.
Your heart was in your throat, however, when got a good look at him, his face and still-shirtless torso covered in dirt and so much blood.
You couldnât stop the instinctual need to touch him, reaching out and placing your hand against his stained chest. âAre you okay?â
He gently laid his clawed fingers across your knuckles, pressing your palm into his skin, as if your very being was a solace to him. âIâm fine. It isnât mine.âÂ
Your relief at that was palpable, beyond overjoyed that he was perfectly safe. Though, the blood had to come from somewhere, and it wasnât all Wolfieâs. âYou found the bear, I take it?â
Leonâs eyes seemed to darken, but he nodded, replying, âIt wonât bother us anymore.â
The answer was jarringly cryptic, and Leon seemed more upset to admit he killed the bear than you would have thought, considering how eager he was to do it before you left.
You shook away your thoughts as he asked you questions, the conversation turning to Wolfieâs health.
You then recalled your purchase at the pet store, pulling it out of your bag and waving it in front of Leon. âPicked this up before I took him from the clinic. Hope heâll wear it.â
You stood from the car, ready to get back to the house and take a nice, long nap, when Leon wrapped his arms around you, to your utter shock.Â
He held you close to him, the strength of it enough to feel your bodies meld together, but not enough to hurt you.
It took you a moment to register it all, short-circuiting at the feeling of him against you, but you eventually hugged him in return, shivering as he tucked his face into the crook of your neck and let his breath fan across your skin.
âThank you. For everything.â His voice was tight in his throat and it made your heart ache to hear it.Â
It was the least you could do, a part of you deep down blaming yourself for what happened to Wolfie, because you had kept Leon out longer than he wanted. What if Wolfie had only been in the woods waiting for the two of you to come back? Maybe if you had agreed to return to the house before the storm hit, none of this would have happened to begin with.Â
Instead of saying that, you only replied, âIâd do it all again in a heartbeat.â
It was still the truth, as you would do anything to protect this half-man and his dogâwilling to suffer more than just a nasty cut and a sleepless night if it meant they were safe.
Leon pulled away, to your despair, and grabbed Wolfie, the three of you heading back to the house.
As you set up Wolfie near the fireplace, you couldnât help but notice the way Leon wouldnât take his eyes off the sleeping dog, and although you understood it, he needed to wash the blood and grime from his body and get some much-needed rest.
If your night had been rough, you couldnât imagine what his had been like.
He argued against you making him up a hot bath, but you wouldnât hear it, telling him your decision was final.Â
âYouâre stubborn as hell, you know that?â he said in faux annoyance. Â
You replied, smiling, âOh, I know, but itâs what you like about me.â
âNot the only thing.â The words and the way he said them made a tingle run up your spine, but you were quick to shoo him off, taking a deep breath as you went about your task of filling the tub.
You changed quickly into your pajamas before sending Leon to his bath, flopping onto the couch with a quiet groan after fetching your pillow and a blanket from upstairs.
You thought that maybe you could sleep forever as you shifted, getting comfortable on the old piece of furniture. You wanted to wait for Leon, though, staring up at the ceiling in quiet cogitation.
Despite your fear that you were the reason Wolfie was out in the storm in the first place, you couldnât understate your role in saving his life. Had you not been there, Leon wouldnât have been able to do anything, and you could sense the distress that caused him at the realization.
You worried deeply about what might happen after you leave.
A stray tear escaped your eye and you battled the awful thought of one or both of them dying out here in this village, all alone, with no one to call for.Â
Wolfie was old and this place was dangerous. And even if Leon ended up being fine physically, you knew his loneliness would eat him alive, especially with the inevitable loss of his dog an ever-looming threat.
You squeezed your eyes shut, wiping them to stop you from crying.
You thought about Leonâs smile instead. Thought of his voice and his laugh and the way he looked at you. Like you were normal. Like you were important.
You could still feel the way his arms wrapped around you, how safe you felt. How cherished.
You sighed deeply, turning over to stare at Wolfie, watching the slow rise and fall of his side as he breathed. You reached out your hand to him, gently stroking his head, his fur soft and warm.
You wondered as your eyes drooped shut and your mind began to fade to unconsciousness, your fingers slowly falling away from Wolfieâs form: