LIGHT OF THE LORD
synopsis. a woman of divine beauty, grace and fairness has plagued remmickâs mind and being. no matter where he goes, what time heâs inâyouâve been around every corner. he cannot escape your watchful eye. he knows you arenât human but you are no vampire like him. and while he finds everything about his situation frustrating, he finds you quite intriguing.
tags and warnings. remmicks pov, hes pining unknowingly, mythical ambiguity for the most part, temporal ambiguity so lots of time skips, readers race isnt specified or specific to the story, know-it-all gf vs quickly humbled bf, fluffy, bit angsty, some discriptions of feeding
wc. 10k
Š MILL3RD 2025 â all rights reserved. mature content. please do not steal my works
1,385 years. one thousand, three hundred and eighty-five long, excruciating years in which remmick had no choice but to endure your presenceâyour seraphic presence. seraphic, not in beauty, but in that maddening way you carried righteousness like armor, wisdom like a curse. your face, ageless and untouched by time, only deepened his resentment. the more he was forced to see itâthose eternal, untarnished featuresâthe more unbearable you became. there was nothing soft or lovely about it anymore. your immortality was a wound that never healed, and he bled quietly beside you for centuries.
you came to him first in the rawness of your gloryânude, your flesh supple and unnervingly perfect, like something carved from the dreams of old gods. it was only weeks after the catholics had spilled into ireland, clinging to their bibles and breathing scripture like smoke. remmick, newly turned and still trembling in the dark, didnât yet understand what he was. he thought he had died from the wounds carved into him by war and man, and he sobbed like a child beneath the stars when he saw you approachingânot through the river, but on it. your bare feet pressed the waterâs skin as if it were solid, each step leaving behind a shimmer like fireflies or some underwater bloom. the stream itself was dull, lifeless. it had never glowed before. it never glowed again. only when you walked toward him like it was the most ordinary thing in the world did it come alive with light.
âthe lord does not encourage such violence,â was all you said. or perhaps not to him at allâyour voice was distant, almost drifting, as if carried on mist. it felt less like a warning and more like a half-forgotten thought, spoken aloud without meaning to. weightless, airy, like you were reminding yourself of some rule you no longer believed in, repeating it out of habit more than conviction. the words hung in the air, delicate and hollow, and remmick wasnât sure if they were meant for him or the sky above.
your words unsettled him. the lord. even hearing the name turned his stomach. after everything heâd sufferedâeverything heâd lostâinvoking the man upstairs felt like a cruel joke. it was tone-deaf, sanctimonious. so when you opened your arms, all light and grace, offering some divine comfort, he recoiled like you were poison.
âstay away from me!â he snapped, stumbling backward. âi ain't interested in walking with godâs so-called vessel.â
his voice cracked, thick with fury and something raw beneath itâbetrayal, maybe. or grief.
you merely frown and watch as he scrambles off deeper into the trees.
remmick wandered deep into the woodlands, far enough that the moon vanished behind the thick weave of branches overhead. the air grew colder there, denser, and the only light came in faint silver slivers where the canopy broke. he let the owls guide him, their low, rhythmic hoots echoing like warnings through the underbrush. every step tangled him deeper in roots and bramble, the trees growing close and ancient around him, as if they were watching.
thenâa sound. sharp, low, guttural. a growl, too deliberate to be the wind. it came from ahead, thick in the dark. his eyes adjusted, and he saw them: teeth gleaming like shards of polished bone, bared in a snarl that pulsed with threat. a wolf. broad-shouldered, fur rippling like smoke in the moonless dark. remmick froze.
good, he thought. maybe now, finally, it would all end.
but something inside him stirredâdeep, primal, and hungry. not fear. not relief. hunger. sharp and sudden, like a spike to the gut. his throat burned. his limbs ached to move. and before he understood what he was doing, he stepped forward, slow and silent, toward the wolf.
it blinked, muscles tense, and backed awayâeyes locked on him, more confused than afraid. it knew something was wrong. it sensed something unnatural.
remmick kept moving, drawn not by instinct to survive, but by something darker, something ancient coiled now inside him.
before he could even think to lunge, a light broke open behind himâblinding, radiant, pure white. it wasnât overwhelming. no, it was no different to the faint light of a flame. it was just unnatural underneath the shade of the canopy. the wolf didnât wait. it bolted, tail low and body vanishing into the underbrush with a panicked rustle.
remmick turned, breath sharp, pupils blown wide as his eyes locked onto the source.
you.
you, this insufferable, god-touched creature, glowing as if the stars themselves bent to your will. no flame, no torchâjust you, radiating light as effortlessly as a flower bleeds scent. it was unnatural. it was maddening.
remmick let out a low, guttural growl. his body trembled with hunger, pain pulsing in his torn flesh like a second heartbeat. he was wounded, starving, half-madâand there you stood, pristine, untouched, a walking symbol of everything heâd come to loathe.
he squinted at you through the harsh light, eyes narrowed, seething with anger and exhaustion. âwhaâdyou want?â he snapped, voice rough like gravel. âi thought i told you to stay away.â
you didnât answer. instead, your gaze drifted lazily to his face, head tilting slightly, eyes calmâalmost amused.
âyou are drooling,â you said, voice soft and unbothered.
remmick wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, scowling as he turned away. âcanât blame a man for being hungry,â he muttered, bitterness coating each word like tar.
you only smiled, a slow, knowing curve of your lips, and without a word, followed himâsilent, steady, undeterred by his resentment. his anger rolled off you like water on stone.
âyou will have to learn how to control that hunger,â you said, voice light, almost distant, like the words werenât really meant for him alone, âyou are not the man you used to be. not anymore.â
there was a quiet finality to it, as if the truth had already settled in the soil around you, waiting for him to catch up.
âwhat am i then?â remmick asked, voice rough and brittle, like dried bark about to snap. there was a weight behind it, something choked and bruised, the kind of heaviness that clung to a man whoâd wept alone through too many sunless nightsâbecause the sun, once warm and welcoming, had turned its back on him completely.
your expression didnât shift. your voice was steady, almost cold.
âinhuman.â
âanâ what about you?â remmickâs voice cut through the air, a mix of frustration and suspicion. âyou look human, but you ainât one.â
you nodded slowly, your gaze steady, almost serene, as if every word you spoke was steeped in something far beyond him.
âa keen observation, remmick,â you replied, your voice soft yet filled with an ancient grace. âi am not human, nor have i ever been. i merely wear this face, this form, for as long as my time among mortals endures.â
remmick jumped at the sound of his name, the echo of it like a whisper from a past he hadn't invited. he never told you his name. never gave you the right to know it. yet, there it was, hanging between you like a thread woven from the air itself.
the world around him swayed, and it wasnât from too many drinks of ale or beer. it was something far heavier.
âhow did ya know my name?â he demanded, voice tight with disbelief, as his hand shot out, gripping your shoulder with an urgency that bordered on panic. âwhat even are ya? thereâs something... unorthodox about you. nobody radiates light like that! and absolutely nobody galavants around naked, Ăłinseach!â
you regarded him with an almost sorrowful expression, lips pressing together in a faint frown.
âi apologize,â you murmured, your tone gentle but laced with something ancient. âi can tone down my appearance if it frightens you.â
remmick froze, his pulse stuttering in his chest. then, before his very eyes, you shiftedâyour form bending, stretching, warping, as if reality itself could no longer hold the weight of your true essence. a blur of faces spun before himâhis younger sister, laughing beneath the sun; his mother, her tired eyes soft with love; his wife, her smile warm, full of memories that felt like a dream; his older brothers, strong and brash, voices echoing through the corridors of his past; and his daughter, her innocent eyes full of questions, a life heâd lost forever.
each face flickered in and out of your shifting form, leaving a trail of aching familiarity in their wake, and remmickâs breath caught as the weight of it all settled over him.
a terrified yell ripped through remmickâs throat, his body jolting with a surge of panic as he stumbled backward, scrambling away from you. his legs carried him without thought, driven by instinct, his heart pounding in his chest like a drum of war.
he didnât dare to look back. the imagesâthe facesâclung to him like a curse, and the sight of them twisted something deep inside him.
this time, you didnât follow.
you stood still, an immovable figure in the shifting darkness, watching him retreat with quiet understanding. your gaze lingered on the space where he had been, serene yet filled with a sorrow that was not yours to bear.
that was his first encounter with you and now he wears you like a burden. you didnât show up for days after that and remmick began to believe you were a fever dream. something he made up due to delirium.
but then, just as suddenly, you appearedâthe sound of waves washing softly on the shore marking your arrival. your natural glow was the only light beside the pale moon, soft and unearthly, illuminating the world around you in quiet brilliance.
remmick groaned in frustration upon seeing you, his shoulders sagging in resignation. âi thought yaâd have written me off by now. labelled me a lost cause.â
you shook your head, the motion slow and graceful, your presence like a steadying breath in the chaos of his mind.
âno,â was all you said, the simplicity of it carrying a weight beyond words.
without waiting for him to respond, you sat down beside him, where the sand darkened with the lingering traces of waterâs touch. the cool salt air swept over you, and the oceanâs rhythm seemed to pulse in time with your being. the salty water kissed your skin, as though it had been waiting for you to arrive.
âi found some clothes so i would not stand out,â you chirped, your voice light and carefree as though nothing had transpired between you. remmick didnât want any part of this conversation, but you were relentless.
he nodded, barely looking at you, pulling his head closer to his knee. âgood on ya.â
âi wanted to give you space after our last conversation,â you continued, tone softening. âi realize i was... insensitive. and for that, i want to apologize.â
remmick raised an eyebrow, the bitterness in his voice sharper now. âif i accept it, will ya leave me alone?â
you laughedâa sound so unexpected and pure that it caught him off guard. the first time heâd heard it, and it was like a breath of wind through still air. ânot forever, no. but for now, will that suffice?â
he sighed, letting go of the tension in his shoulders for a moment. âi forgive ya then.â
and just like that, you were gone. not with a quiet fade or a dramatic burst of smoke, but simplyâgone. one second, remmick could hear the steady beat of your pulse, the rush of blood flowing beneath your skin, and the next, the world was empty, save for the sound of waves and the distant echo of his own heartbeat.
he waited in silence, the stillness of it pressing in on him, until his hunger clawed at him again, and he turned his focus to the water, waiting for a fishâs heartbeat to break the quiet.
it took remmick a long time to understand what he had become: a vampire. it wasnât until he encountered others like himself that the true weight of his transformation hit him. in their eyes, he saw only the reflection of something monstrousâunnatural, evil. but remmick wasnât evil. his life had been stolen from him, ripped away in a moment of violence, and now he was left to survive on instinct, just like any creature would.
that wasnât evil. it was simply the harsh truth of natureâs cold hand. survival, stripped down to its most primal form. natural selection.
they taught him what it truly meant to feed, the raw satisfaction that came with fully indulging his hunger. feeding on humansâit felt strange, yes, but it also felt right, as if his body had been designed for this purpose and nothing else. there was no one to tell him there were other ways, no gentle voice reminding him of the choices he still had.
in truth, he hadnât seen you in a long while. he hadnât felt the comforting warmth of your light, nor the unsettling pull of your golden blood since that brief encounter at the beach. he had told you to leave him be, and you had listenedâsomething he hadnât expected but couldnât help but feel grateful for.
still, as time passed, something gnawed at him. it was subtle, like a missing note in a melody, a strange emptiness in the quiet that followed your departure. part of him was glad you were gone, but there was another partâa part he couldn't ignoreâthat felt... unsettled.
when you finally appeared, remmick was nestled at the edge of an ancient castle ruin, tucked into the jagged rocks and rubble. the moonlight filtered through a gaping hole in the stone wall, casting silver beams across his form, and he lay there, eyes closed in quiet stillness. moonbathing, he called it. though, when you approached, he shot you a disgruntled look, clearly annoyed by the interruption.
âmoonbathing?â you asked, your head tilting in quiet curiosity, âi understand that the sun darkens the skin, but why would you try to tan in the moonlight?â
remmick shrugged, not bothering to lift his gaze. âha'fta keep my pale complexion up to date," he muttered with a dry smirk, clearly unbothered by your confusion.
âso you have no intention of tanning?â you ask, still standing in the frame of the hole in the wall. remmick shakes his head, âif i tried to tan, iâd get a little more than sunburn.â
you nodded slowly, a thoughtful motion, but before you could speak, remmick waved a hand and grunted, âmove outta the way. youâre blocking the moon.â
he hadnât exactly told you to leave, so you quietly stepped over the rubble, your movements as fluid as mist, and settled down beside him, folding your body against the cool stone as if it belonged there.
âdo you know about constellations?â you asked after a pause, turning your head to face him, your voice gentle, like a breeze trying not to wake the earth.
remmick kept his eyes closed, but he could feel your gaze on him, steady and curious.
âno,â he muttered, âya gonna give me a random fact oâ the day?â
you smiled faintly and nodded, undeterred by his sarcasm.
âmany constellations are tied to the zodiacs,â you began, your voice slipping into that melodic cadence you often carried when speaking of old things. âtwelve of them form a path the sun appears to follow throughout the year. the ancients charted them to navigate the seas, tell time, even predict their fates. and if you look just thereââ you lifted a hand, pointing skyward ââyou can see libra, the scales. it is faint, but present. balance, even in darkness.â
your words trailed off into the night, soft and steady, like starlight dripping into silence.
remmick grunted, finally cracking one eye open to glance at you. âfascinating,â he muttered dryly, âwrite a book about all that and theyâll string you up as a witch.â
âno one knows i exist,â you replied, calm and matter-of-fact, as if discussing the weather.
remmick sighed and let his head fall back against the stone. âiontach. so iâm the lunatic talking to the ghost nobody else can see.â
âi am not a ghost either,â you said with a soft smile, the kind that barely touched your lips but somehow warmed the space between you. âi am sure you have figured out what i am by now.â
remmick let out a dry chuckle, the sound low and a little hollow. âmy best guess?â he said, eyes fixed on the sky. âiâm seeinâ things. youâre not realâjust something my mind cooked up to keep me company when the silence gets too loud.â
âif that is what you believe,â you replied, your tone quiet, unreadableâneither confirming nor denying, as steady as still water.
then, without another word, you rose, movements fluid and precise. you stepped lightly across the scattered bricks, your figure momentarily silhouetted in the moonlight as you reached the jagged hole in the wall.
âuntil next time, remmick,â you said over your shoulder, voice echoing just slightly, like it belonged to the night itself.
remmick watches as you disappear but he swears your hand lingers on the brick for a second longer. heâs left in silence now until your words echo, until next time. he groans, what about never?
he does see you. again and again and again. your visits get more frequent until youâre both caught unexpectedly in war. the eleventh century. remmick thought he had escaped your watchful eye and found himself hitching rides with strangers in their carts, hiding under thick velvet rugs until nightfall where he bid his goodbyes and wandered off. he shouldâve known youâd find him.
remmick stood at the edge of the treeline, deliberately keeping himself in the shadows, avoiding the last vestiges of sunlight that hung stubbornly in the sky. his eyes scanned the valley below, where the battle raged fiercely, men clashing in a frenzy of steel and blood. the air was thick with the sounds of warâshouting, the clang of weapons, the stampede of hooves. it was chaos, but he was content to watch from afar, detached from the madness.
and then, as if summoned by some unseen force, you appeared. he didnât need to see you fully to knowâit was the light that gave you away. a soft, golden glow that seemed to push back against the fading daylight. it clung to you, hovering just at the edges of your presence, and for a brief moment, it felt like the world itself dimmed just to make room for you.
âainât bored oâ me yet?â remmick muttered, his voice laced with annoyance and something elseâsomething he refused to acknowledge.
you didnât answer immediately. instead, there was a slight rustle in the air, a shift in the atmosphere as you moved closer. when you did speak, your voice was serene, effortless. ânot at all.â
he couldnât see it, but he could feel the subtle shake of your head, the shift in the air that told him you were amused. you always were, always so certain and unbothered by his disdain.
he huffed, rolling his eyes and returning his focus to the battle below. you were like a persistent, unavoidable breezeâalways there, no matter how much he tried to ignore you.
its silent between you two as you both experience the rage of the battle of hastings below, the cries of men filling the air as blood stains the earth beneath. the dying light of the sun casts long shadows across the field, and the sky is a mixture of fading reds and purples. you stand at the edge of the treeline, your presence almost otherworldly, that strange divine glow surrounding you like a halo. it's the kind of light that would make anyone believe you're something holy, untouchable, perfect. but remmick doesn't care about any of that.
he stands next to you, his arms crossed, eyes bored as they track the chaos below. his face is hard, indifferentâhe's seen enough of human suffering to not bat an eye at it. to him, they're all just ants. he turns his attention to you, though, the faintest hint of annoyance crossing his features. itâs the same thing every time. you show up, radiating light, acting like youâve got a hand in this worldâs fate. heâs sick of it.
you speak, your voice a soft, almost ethereal whisper. âdo you ever wonder if they know what they are fighting for?â
remmick scoffs, the sarcasm dripping from his words. âiâm sure theyâre all very aware of their ânoble causes,ââ he mutters. âbut it donât matter, do it? theyâll die anyway.â
you give him a sidelong glance, those piercing eyes of yours studying him like you always do. âdo you think death is all theyâre meant for?â
âi think most of them wanâ it,â he responds flippantly, his gaze flicking over to the chaos below. âor maybe they're just too stupid to know when to stop fighting.â
you shake your head, a quiet sigh escaping your lips, your tone almost sad. âyouâre so jaded, remmick.â
he looks at you then, an eyebrow raised. âand youâre so holy.â he leans against a tree, crossing his arms tighter. âif you think theyâre all so deserving of your pity, why donât ya help âem out?â
you ignore his question, your gaze fixed on the battle once more. itâs almost as if you canât help yourselfâyou have to watch, to be present. but then something catches his attention. the flicker of an arrow in the last rays of sunlight. it's a fleeting thing, but remmick notices it.
before he can react, the arrow strikes you.
itâs quick. too quick for him to fully process. he hears you gasp, and then you stumble slightly, your hand clutching at your side. the arrow, so perfectly aimed, has found its mark in the divine part of you, piercing through the space where your beauty and immortality should be untouched.
he doesnât react immediately. instead, his gaze lingers on you, observing the way your breath hitches as the golden blood begins to seep through your fingers. his mouth curls into something that might have been a smile, but thereâs no warmth in it. thereâs nothing but quiet satisfaction in the knowledge that heâs right.
youâre not as untouchable as you think.
âoh, look at that,â he murmurs, the words coated in a kind of cruel humor, âa little scratch. guess you ainât as perfect as everyone thinks.â
he watches for a moment longer as you stand there, your form still glowing faintly even as blood drips from you. youâre not the same now. youâre broken. youâve been touched by the same death that touches everyone, and for some reason, that gives him a sense of relief.
you look at him, and thereâs a flicker of something in your eyesâconcern, maybe. or maybe just a question. but remmick isnât interested. heâs never been interested in your divine presence. heâs only been stuck with you because you follow him, despite the fact that he wants nothing to do with you.
he takes a step back, turning his gaze away from you. âwell, iâve seen enough,â he says flatly, his voice devoid of any emotion, âyouâll be fine. immortals like you donât just die from an arrow.â
he called you immortal because he didnât know what else you were.
and with that, he turns, disappearing into the trees, leaving you there. blood staining the ground, your divine light flickering weakly.
he doesnât care if you survive. in fact, a part of him hopes you donât.
he leaves you there, under the dying light of the sunset, and walks away without a second thought. the darkness of night soon envelops him, and for the first time, he feels a strange sense of relief. maybe this is what he wanted all alongâan escape from your presence, from your light, from the divine pressure of your existence.
he doesnât look back. he doesnât even think about it. heâs long gone, disappearing into the night.
remmick hadnât seen you in over five hundred years. for a while, he thought the peace would last. the solitude had been... bearable. a century of living on his own terms, without your relentless light or your judgmental eyes, was a relief. he wandered through europe, a ghost in the shadows of history. he watched the rise of new dynasties, the endless wars of vikings, the decline of the roman empire, and the brutal reign of genghis khan. centuries passed, each one feeling like a whisper in time, and he thought he had finally outrun you.
but the renaissance? that was the point where it all fell apart. it was the 16th century in france, and somehow, against all logic, he had managed to convince the royal family that he, too, was royaltyâa lost prince from some forgotten kingdom. he was skilled in deception, after all, and no one really questioned an enigmatic figure like him. they believed his stories, and the royal family, desperate to flaunt their connection to ancient lineages, eagerly threw a ball in his honor.
âto celebrate the visit of prince remmick i,â they announced, and the court was abuzz. everyone was charmed by the mysterious foreigner, the one whose origins were as hazy as the fog that rolled across the french countryside.
as the night stretched on, lit by shimmering chandeliers and the glittering eyes of aristocrats, remmick found himself drifting through the crowd, always watching, always smiling with that knowing smirk.
he should have known. he should have known that your light would pierce through the shadows of his false life. and yet, he didnât hear your footsteps, didnât see your radiance until you were already standing before him, like a vision from another time, another world.
"ainât bored oâ me yet?" remmick asked, half-amused, half-resigned. he starts the greeting the same way he started the last one you had.
you smiled softly, as if you'd never left, "not at all," you replied, your voice soft as always, yet carrying a weight he could never ignore. you seem to remember too how he greeted you.
remmickâs fingers curled into his palm, nails digging into the flesh. how long had he really been free? how long could he ever escape your watchful eyes?
the music swirled through the air, soft and alluring, as the orchestra in the corner of the ballroom played their delicate tune. the sound of strings filled the grand hall, echoing off the gold-trimmed walls. remmick held you close, his hand firm on your waist as he led you in the dance, effortlessly twirling you through the sea of guests. each step felt like a rhythm he had known forever, like he'd danced this dance with you a thousand times, even though it was only now that he realized you were realâmore than just a haunting image from his mind.
you moved with an ethereal grace, laughter bubbling from your lips like a song he couldnât help but chase. when he spun you, the light caught in your hair, and for a brief moment, it almost felt like the entire room faded awayâjust the two of you, floating through time. his chest tightened as you laughed, that soft, knowing sound, and he couldnât help but notice how your presence filled the space around him. heâd never let himself feel this before, not for someone like you.
but before he could think on it too long, the dance shifted. your hand slipped from his and suddenly, you were in the arms of another manâan older figure, no doubt a noble, with a grasp on your waist that was far too close, intimate. you laughed again, a bright, airy sound that made remmick's stomach twist and churn.
this is the moment remmick realises you have a physical manifestation and you truly werenât apart of his imagination.
he stood still for a moment, watching as you moved away, the warmth of your hand no longer in his, replaced by the weight of something heavy that clawed at his insides. his eyes narrowed instinctively as you, effortlessly, slipped into anotherâs embrace. the man held you close, spinning you with a tenderness that made remmickâs skin prickle.
it shouldnât matter, but it did.
he swallowed down the odd bitterness that had risen in his throat. it was absurd. he wasnât allowed to feel this wayâthis possessive ache. but still, he couldnât help himself, watching the way you laughed in his arms, the way your eyes shone so brightly for someone else.
remmick shook his head, forcing himself back into the present. the princess he had been dancing with swirled into his arms, but his gaze never wavered from you. he couldnât look away. it was as if the room had ceased to exist around himâthere were no voices, just the sound of your laughter and the light that shimmered around you.
he knew it was futile to hold on to any of it, but for as long as he could, he would keep you in his line of sight, hoping you wouldnât slip away again, like you always did.
as the music reached its final notes, remmick's gaze never left you. he watched as you slipped gracefully from the arms of your partner, your presence like a flicker of light lost among the throngs of well-dressed nobles. the manâhis face now blurred by the growing distance between themâseemed unaware of the way you had subtly detached yourself, drifting into the crowd of silks and velvets, where the shadows danced just as intricately as the guests.
remmick felt an inexplicable urgency seize him. his fingers grazed the princessâs hand, and with a smooth smile, he pressed his lips to her delicate knuckles in a gesture that seemed far more rehearsed than genuine. âmy apologies, princess,â he murmured, the words slow and languid, âbut iâve promised myself a moment alone. something about cutting the cake, you know? a royal tradition, i suppose.â
she blinked, clearly satisfied by the excuse, her smile warm and unsuspecting. âof course, prince remmick. go enjoy your cake.â
and with that, she was lost to the crowd of swirling dancers, her attention already diverted. remmick didnât waste a second more. he gave her a lazy bow and watched her retreat into the gilded glamour of the ballroom. then, with a fluid, practiced motion, he slipped into the labyrinth of bodies around him, the rich fabric of coats and gowns folding into a soft blur of color.
he didnât care about the cake. he didnât care about any of it. all that mattered was finding you again before you vanished into the shadows once more. his heart pounded as his feet carried him swiftly through the crowd, his eyes darting over the sea of faces, seeking that unmistakable glow that had haunted him for centuries.
there. between the columns of the balcony, under the flickering candlelight. your silhouette, radiant even in the midst of so many others, a beacon amidst the chaos. remmickâs pulse quickened, a feelingâhalf desire, half something darkerâstirring deep in his chest.
âlong time, no seeâŚâ you breathe, your voice soft as you stand at the edge of the courtyard, staring out into the cool night. the moonlight catches the edge of your dress, making it shimmer in a way that feels almost too ethereal. âremmick.â
he swallows, his throat dry, and his eyes track the curve of your silhouette in the dim light. thereâs something about the way the dress clings to you tonightâit suits you better than anything heâs seen you wear before. he canât help but notice, even in the midst of everything else, how striking you are, even when you're so distant.
âyeahâŚâ he hums, his voice rougher than he intends. âhow longâs it been?â
you donât turn to face him, but he knows youâre listening. âah, five hundred years. it was quite the break from your presence,â he adds, with a hint of bitterness that slips from his lips before he can stop it.
you give a small nod, the movement subtle, but it feels like youâre acknowledging something deeper, something unsaid. your gaze doesnât waver from the distant horizon, the city lights far below barely flickering. âit was quite the goodbye. if i remember correctly, you left me to die.â
remmick laughs, a hollow, cold sound that doesnât reach his eyes. âyou remember correct. iâm quite fond of that memory, actually.â the words fall out like a joke, but the edge to his tone betrays him. thereâs something about it that feels unfinished, unsaid.
you remain silent for a moment, your eyes still lost in the night. then, slowly, your head falls into your hand, your fingers pressing lightly against your temple as if to hold back something that could break through. remmick watches you, his smile fading, the silence stretching between them.
he doesnât say anything more, because he knowsâno words would make this any less complicated.
so, he letâs you speak first.
âwhy did you leave me like that?â your voice is quiet, but it cuts clean through the space between you. you still donât turn to face him, your figure leaning into the cold stone railing like it might offer some kind of answer he wonât give. the moonlight brushes your skin like a veil, softening the tension in your shoulders, but remmick can still see itâthe weight you carry.
âi got quite the scolding after that,â you add, almost like an afterthought. âthat was your⌠one hundred and fifty-sixth second chance.â
the number hangs heavy in the air. remmick shifts behind you, a half-sigh caught in his throat. he wasnât keeping countâbut of course you were. of course you would remember every time he failed to live up to whatever cosmic expectation you held over him.
you donât sound angry. not really. just⌠tired. like the years havenât worn you down, but his choices have.
âglad to know someoneâs keeping count,â remmick mutters, easing in beside you. the stone railing presses into his spine as he leans back, angling his body just enough to catch a glimpse of your face in the moonlight.
your eyes drift to hisâslow, reluctantâand for a moment, something catches in his chest. if he still breathed, it wouldâve hitched, tight and sharp. you werenât supposed to look like this.
heâd seen your face in every imaginable light: serene, righteous, unreadable. you always wore that same celestial calm like armor. but now⌠now you just look exhausted. not weary in the way mortals age and sag with timeâbut a deeper sadness, old and quiet, like the fading echo of a hymn long forgotten.
remmick isnât sure what unsettles him more: the silence between you, or the way you wonât quite meet his gaze.
he swallows when you donât respond, the silence stretching longer than he expects. so he tries again, voice lower this time, almost unsure, âif iâm on my one hundred and fifty-seventh chance⌠why didnât you give up ages ago?â
you still donât answer, and that unsettles him more than any sharp retort would have.
he shifts beside you, the corner of his mouth twitching in a crooked attempt at a smile. âseriously. you should probably reevaluate your standards after that.â
itâs meant to be a joke, light enough to pull you from whatever place your mindâs wandered toâbut it lands heavy, as if even he knows it doesnât quite cover the question heâs really asking.
after a long, deathly silence, you finally lift your head and meet his eyes. thereâs no lightness in your expressionâjust that same quiet, ancient sorrow thatâs lingered beneath your skin for centuries.
âdo you want to know what i am?â you ask, voice soft but unwavering. âi am sure you have been wondering for a while.â
remmick lets out a dry chuckle, one corner of his mouth curling up. âyouâre right about that,â he says, eyes scanning your face like heâs searching for the answer there.
âi am an angel of the lord,â you say, finally standing upright, your voice calm, absolute. âi was sent down to watch youâbecause god knew you would be trouble. that you would walk on both sides of the line between chaos and order.â
remmick stares at you like youâve grown a second head. his eyes narrow, brows knit in disbelief, but somewhere beneath the confusion, it starts to make a horrible sort of sense.
âan angel?â he mutters, almost to himself. âan actual angelâs been breathing down my neck this whole time?â
he lets out a bitter laugh, scrubbing a hand down his face. âno wonder i couldnât stand you.â
âyou say that in past tense,â you note, stepping toward him, âit could not be that you havee grown fond of me, could it?â
remmick smirks, âit could be.â
âyou are angry. i have seen it,â you say quietly, stepping down from the balcony into the courtyard, your voice almost drowned by the hush of the wind through the hedges. you gesture for him to follow, and after a beat, he doesâreluctantly, hands in his coat pockets, expression unreadable.
you walk side by side beneath the open sky, your glow washing over the stone path, brighter than the moonlight itself.
âwhen everything first happenedâwhen the celts came, preaching christianity,â you begin, eyes forward, âit was not meant to be violent. but vikings... they are unpredictable, as you know. they brought fire to what should have been light.â
remmick stays quiet, glancing sidelong at you.
âgod wanted someone to keep a close eye on you,â you continue. âhe saw your heart. the way you could bend the world. not out of maliceâbut defiance. if left to your own instincts, you would unravel the threads of his design.â
you look at him then, calm, steady. âso, he sent me.â
remmick stops in his tracks, brow furrowed. âiâm sensing a but,â he mutters, voice dry. âthereâs always a but.â
âbut,â you say, and the word hangs in the air like judgment, âafter a while, he realized you could not be saved. not in the way he intended. salvation was never going to come easy for you.â
remmick stiffens under your gaze, caught in the weight of your eyesâancient, unwavering. he doesnât need you to say it. he knows exactly when that shift happened. the moment everything inside him twisted beyond repair.
you step closer, your voice softer now, though no less resolute. âit took me five hundred years to convince him to let me walk the earth again⌠to stay in your shadow. because even if you could not be redeemed, you still needed watching. without guidance, you would leave only wreckage behind.â
remmick clenches his jaw, but doesnât look away.
âi thought,â you add, quieter, more human somehow, âif i told you the truth this time⌠maybe you would finally be open. maybe you would stop running long enough to let something reach you.â
the silence that follows is thick with everything unsaid.
âyou seriously believe i can change?â remmick asks, his voice low, edged with disbelief.
you donât nod. instead, you shake your head slowly and keep walking, the gravel beneath your feet crunching softly beneath your light steps.
âno,â you say. âyou cannot change what you are. that isnât the point.â
your voice is calm, measured, not cruelâjust certain.
âwhat drives you is not redemption,â you continue, âit is motive. it has always been motive. family⌠yes? connection. people who see you. who understand you. who can stand to be near you without fear.â
you glance at him, eyes catching the dim moonlight. âthat is what keeps you from falling completely.â
your voice fades as you round the edge of a hedge, soft as mist, leaving remmick behind for a moment in the quiet. he blinks, then stumbles forward, hurrying to catch up, boots crunching against the earth. thereâs something in the way you moveâslow, graceful, unbotheredâthat makes him wonder if you see him more clearly than heâs ever let on.
he walks beside you in silence for a beat, eyes narrowed in thought. then, low and uncertain, he asks,
âwhyâve i been given another chance?â
the words feel foreign in his mouth, like they donât quite belong to him.
âpartly because i begged for it,â you admit, âbut also because the fates favour you.â
remmick raises a brow, âfavour me?â
you nod, slow and deliberate.
âthey do,â you say, voice like distant thunder softened by the night. âyou have been offered two paths. one carved from selfishness, where every step takes you closer to your own undoing. and the otherâŚâ
your eyes lift to the stars, catching their faint shimmer.
âthe other is compassion. it asks more of you, but it gives something in returnâquiet, contentment, maybe even joy. and one day, if you choose it, you might find yourself watching the sunrise not with dread, but with purpose.â
âso you know how i go out?â remmick asks and you nod, confirming his assumption. he wants to bombard you with questions but you hold your hand up, âwe should head back.â
he listens without a protest.
before you part with him at the balcony entrance, you offer him some words of advice, âdo not take my words lightly, think about your actions and do not rely on me to tell you what to do.â
remmick watches you as you glide through the crowd, mingling effortlessly with the nobility, your light drawing them in like moths to a flame. itâs a scene so far removed from himâso foreignâthat the ache he had felt earlier surges back, tight and gnawing at his insides. it pulls at him, twisting his stomach in ways that leave him feeling hollow, desperate.
he tries to shake it off, but the hunger claws at him, demanding attention. he stumbles away from his place, moving quickly through the high, echoing halls of the palace. the walls, steeped in rich history, stretch endlessly before him, their reflection of his shadow twisted and distorted as he moves through them, a ghost within his own skin.
the overwhelming scent of life all around him hits like a wave, drowning his senses. the guests, oblivious, stand in clusters, their warmth and the steady pulse of their blood flooding his senses. it's all he can focus on now. the desire to feed is primal, insistent. thereâs no escaping it, no distraction from it. not when the banquet is brimming with potential prey.
at the end of the hall, a figure catches his eye. the princess, the one he danced with earlier, stands alone for a moment, separated from the throngs. the hunger takes over before he can stop himself, and he jogs toward her, the rhythm of his steps faster than he intends.
âyour highness,â he greets, bowing low, his voice smooth, almost too smooth. she smiles, a demure expression. she asks him about the cake, her voice light and innocent. he tells her, with a playful tone, how divine it wasâhow it tasted like nothing he had ever known.
she seems to believe him, her eyes sparkling with curiosity, but her guard is down, naive to the danger sheâs unwittingly stepped into. with the fluid ease of someone accustomed to getting what he wants, remmick guides her away from the crowd, leading her into a quiet, dimly lit chamber.
the door closes softly behind them.
he doesnât waste time. with a practiced movement, he presses her against the cold wall, his fangs sinking deep into her neck. the warmth of her blood fills his senses, and the ache, that terrible, gnawing ache, begins to fade with each drawn breath. he feeds greedily, thirstily, until thereâs nothing left to take.
when itâs over, the room is silent, save for the faint echo of his own breath. her body slumps in his arms, lifeless, pale. he lets her fall to the floor, her blood staining the carpet beneath her.
remmick stands over her for a moment, his chest rising and falling as he surveys the damage. a small flicker of somethingâguilt, maybe? regret?âcrosses his mind, but itâs fleeting.
he wipes his mouth with the back of his hand, his hunger sated, but the emptiness inside remains. the cycle repeats. it always does.
heâs not going to change.
not long after that night, remmick fled parisâyour footsteps trailing his despite his growing resentment. he never lingered anywhere for long, slipping through cities like smoke through fingers. yet, somehow, you always followed. unwillingly bound or stubbornly tethered, you were there.
he dragged you through the winding streets of spain, the frostbitten stretches of russia, the misty peaks of the balkans. he even wandered through the dense, humming cities of asia for a time, lost in a sea of languages and lanternlight.
but no matter how far he roamed, his footsteps always led him back to ireland. something about the damp green hills, the crash of waves against the cliffs, the ache of memory in the stoneâhis heart answered to it like a song half-remembered. it was the one place that still felt like his. or at least, where the ghosts felt familiar.
youâd washed up on the english channel in 1888, clothes heavy with salt and divinity, and drifted through londonâs smoke-stained streets before finally making your way toward ireland. but your journey was delayedâfour months, to be exactâby a detour you hadnât planned.
a pitstop, as remmick called it.
he confessed with a twisted grin that heâd developed a taste for the blood of londonâs street women. easy prey, he said. no one missed them, and no one looked too hard when they vanished. they came willingly, and their fear made their blood taste as sweet as it was tangy, he added, and left quietly.
you spoke to him as you always didâwith the calm patience of eternity. you reminded him of light, of the path laid by the divine, of mercy, and restraint. you quoted scripture, invoked parables, and offered him alternatives. but he only scoffed, sharp-eyed and smirking.
ânothing beats an easy target,â he muttered once, licking the blood from his fingers as if it were honey.
and that was when you realized: some pitstops arenât delays. theyâre tests.
remmick came home that final night drenched in blood, the crimson soaking through his shirt and shining beneath your glow like oil on water. you didnât ask where heâd been. you already knew. he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and flung the bloodied fabric into a dark corner of the hostel youâd both occupied for months. you didnât meet his eyes. instead, you recited, quiet and firm,
âviolence shall no more be heard in your land, devastation or destruction within your borders; you shall call your walls salvation, and your gates praise.â
remmick snarled at the sound of scripture, his lip curling as if the words burned him, âi told you to quit spewing that holy bullshit around me, angel.â
he said your title like a curse, like something heâd spit into the dirt.
still, you smiledâan expression that almost reached your eyes, though it never truly did.
âyou live in a world built from devastation and oppression,â you said gently, stepping closer, âbut the real prison, vampire, is the one in your own mind.â
remmick, in a sudden fury, swept a plate of fine china off the rickety wooden table. it sailed past you and shattered against the headboard of your borrowed bed, shards of porcelain raining down like splinters of his frustration.
âainât nothinâ wrong with my mind,â he barked, chest heaving. âiâm livinâ off what i know. what i am!â
your frown deepened. the glow around you dimmed, like a flame shying from wind.
ârough night?â you asked softly.
he groaned, dragging a hand down his face, smearing blood across his jaw.
ânearly got caught,â he muttered. âsome fella interrupted my meal.â
you nodded slowly, walking toward the mess heâd made, stepping carefully over broken china.
âyou have built quite the reputation for yourself,â you said. âjack the ripper, they are calling you now.â
remmick scoffed, holding up a hand as if to physically reject the accusation.
âthat ainât me,â he said. âthereâs a difference. heâhe guts âem. rips âem open like game. i just puncture the neck, nice and neat. drain âem sideways, clean as i can. i got some standards.â
your eyes narrowed. âdo you?â
âfor my kind, i do,â remmick mutters, casting you a sidelong glance as he sinks onto the edge of the bed. the frame creaks beneath his weight.
he feels it againâthat phantom pump, the ghost of a heartbeat that only stirs when youâre near. if blood still moved through his veins, it mightâve rushed to his face, warmed his skin. instead, he remains pale, a static figure carved in cold ash and shadow.
you donât move. you stand there, still as a monument, graceful and ethereal. divine. everything about youâyour poise, your silence, even the way the light bends to wrap around youâmakes his chest ache with something unfamiliar. something like longing.
your glow brushes his skin like the edge of sunlight, and in that moment, he swears he can feel your heart. or maybe itâs his own, trying to remember how to beat. he shakes his head, breaking the moment like glass.
âiâm leaving tonight,â he says, voice flat. final.
you just watch himâsilent, as alwaysâas he picks up his old acoustic guitar. it fits in his hands like it was always meant to be there, an extension of him. heâs always had a gift for music. even in the earliest years, before he knew what he was, heâd whistle back at the birds when they sang at sunrise, tap rhythms into the bones of tables, the sides of carriages, the hollow of his own chest. it was instinct. but once he found the guitar, it all came together.
remmick doesnât look at you as he starts to play, but you can see his shoulders ease. his fingers move fluidly over the strings, coaxing out a tune that feels older than this life. you pull out a chair and sit, the wood creaking softly beneath you. no words pass between you. for once, thereâs no biting sarcasm or divine reprimands. just the melody, soft and unhurried.
he plays like itâs the only honest language heâs fluent in. and you listen, like itâs the only time you truly hear him. it's brief, but in that moment, thereâs peace.
remmick knows it, you know it. youâll follow him wherever he goes.
remmick stayed in ireland for three decades, tucked away in green hills and rain-soaked stone villages. of course, you were thereâalways there. disappearing for weeks, months even, only to reappear when he least expected it, glowing like a bad omen he couldnât shake.
then came 1921. something called to himâa sound, delicate and haunting. a woman playing an instrument so beautiful it made his dead heart ache. he boarded a ship of irish immigrants bound for boston, chasing the echo of her melody. he claimed he wanted to reconnect with his roots, to find the family heâd left behind. the truth was more selfish.
the voyage was a disaster.
desperate to reclaim what he thought heâd lostâmusic, love, belongingâremmick tried to turn them all. everyone on board: children, parents, the elderly. but vampirism is no gift, and none of them survived the transformation. blood ran like wine below deck, and the woman with the gifted hands? lost to the chaos. he never even learned her name.
when the ship docked three days later, reeking of death and silence, he slipped off unnoticed. another new instrument slung over his shoulder like a trophy. the only thing he managed to save.
but you? you were gone.
no glow in the shadows.
no soft footsteps trailing behind him.
for once, he was truly alone.
the last time he saw youâreally saw youâwas at a juke joint deep in the mississippi delta, about twenty years later.
heâd been lingering just outside the shack, half-shrouded in trees and night, the thrum of blues rolling out of the open door like the sweet aroma of pie out a window. his mouth was wet, glisteningâthick ropes of blood and spit clung to his lips, soaked into the collar of his shirt, cooling on his skin.
he was a mess. a predator fresh from the hunt.
but even in that haze, he felt it. that pull. that warmth.
you.
your light slipped through the trees before you did, soft and steady, brighter than the porch lamps and louder than the music.
he didnât need to feel warmth anymore to know it was you.
heâd always know.
"i should be more surprised that youâre here," remmick groaned, not bothering to turn around. he didnât need to see your face to know what expression you woreâhe could picture it perfectly: the sharp furrow of your brow, the disappointment etched into every line.
he leaned against a tree, dragging a bloodied sleeve across his mouth.
"why now?" he muttered. "gonna try and talk me down again? throw a bible verse at me like itâs some kind of holy water? think iâm gonna suddenly grow a conscience 'cause you showed up glowing?"
his voice was tired, bitter.
"you always show up when iâm at my worst. like clockwork."
âyou are straying from your righteous path,â you say, your face unreadable but your voice heavy with sorrow. âare you sure you want to do this?â
remmick waves a dismissive hand, âiâm sure.â
you shake your head slowly. âyou did not heed my warning.â
he arches a brow, a smirk tugging at his lips. âyou warn me all the time. howâm i sâpposed to know which one?â
he knows exactly which warning you mean. but remmick aims not just for the bestâhe strives for something beyond that. his selfish path feels carved into stone, unchangeable. youâve spoken of another way, a second path meant to offer hope. but he never entertained that hope. not once.
âi know what you think i do not know,â you begin, your voice steady, eyes fixed on the back of his head, âthere is more for you, if only you listen to my age-old warning.â
remmick clicks his tongue in frustration, something sharp and bitter rising in his chest.
you continue, voice gentle but firm,
âlife is beautiful, remmickâwhether you see it or not. and i know you are unable to, not anymore. you have grown bitter, i have watched it happen, piece by piece. but it does not have to stay that way.â
your eyes focus on his form, steady and unwavering.
âyou still have time. you can make peace with them, with yourself. you can reclaim what you have lost. not everything is beyond reach.â
you pause, searching for something in his body languageâanything.
âdo not do this. do not spill the blood of good people just because you have forgotten what goodness looks like.â
your calmness feels like mockery. he snapsâlike a wire pulled too tightâspinning around so fast it startles you.
âyou canât seriously expect me to listen to anything you have to say,â he growls, eyes burning, ânot after you vanished for twenty damn years just because you finally saw what i was capable of! how are you supposed to be my guardian angel when youâre so unbelievably shit at your job?â
you think your heart breaksâand remmick thinks he hears it. not a dramatic crack, but something quieter, crueler. like dry glass splintering under pressure.
his eyes flash a deep, dangerous red. for a moment, it looks like heâs considering itâreally considering tearing into something holy.
heâd been cruel before, callous beyond belief. but something about tonight lands differently.
you donât shout, you donât plead, you donât fall apart.
instead, just a few tears slide down your cheeks, slow and soundless.
and thatâs what gets him.
he never thought heâd see the day an angel would cry. from what he knew, you were carved from calm, built to endure without cracking.
but now, standing under the weak light of a crooked moon, he sees it. sees you.
not a symbol, not a mission. just someone deeply, utterly tired.
you donât let him linger in your sorrow. as soon as you feel the tears, you turn awayâtoo proud to let him see what heâs done. too divine to shatter completely in front of him.
your wings unfurlâslow, deliberate, and unlike anything heâs ever seen. vast and radiant, feathers pure as untouched snow, glowing faintly with a divinity that makes the dark around him feel smaller, weaker. they catch the breeze like sails on a departing ship.
remmick freezes. not because heâs scared, but because he understands.
this is it.
youâre leaving.
and this time, you wonât come back.
a part of him, the part still clinging to something human, wants to call out. wants to say donât.
but he doesnât.
he stays silent, hands clenched at his sides, jaw tight as he watches with empty eyes.
you offer him one last verseâyour final tether, a hope you quietly beg he'll remember.
âjudge not, that ye be not judged. for with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.â
your voice echoes long after your wings do.
with a single, mighty flap, the earth stirs beneath you. dust kicks up, grass bends, and thenâ
youâre gone.
all that remains is the soft imprint of your departure, a shallow crater in the earth where heaven once touched down.
his heart no longer beats in faux rhythm.
and when the sun finally rises, catching him where the shadows fail, remmick doesnât flinch. doesnât snarl or thrash or claw at the light like some cornered beast. he doesnât beg, doesnât run.
he just stares.
the light crawls across his skin, golden and relentless, and for the first time in one thousand, three hundred and eighty-five years, he lets it. he watches the sunrise not with fear or hatred, but with something elseâsomething closer to awe.
his inhuman eyes brim with tears, not from pain, but from peace.
he knows youâre near. he can feel it. after all this time, he can still sense the pull of your presence like gravity. maybe youâre watching the same sunrise from some rooftop or ruin, silently praying for whatâs left of him.
and maybeâjust maybeâheâs praying too.
he imagines his ancestors waiting for him, the ones he lost to time and blood and tragedy, their arms open and music playing. but more than anything, he hopes you're there too.
and as the fire takes him, a slow, searing bloom that begins at his chest and spreads outward like a star going nova, he closes his eyes.
not in fear.
but in surrender.
in peace.
and he smiles.
you stand over the scorch-marked earth where remmick had burned. thereâs no trace left of himâno body, no ash, just the faint smell of smoke clinging to the morning air and a body of water that moved indifferently as if remmick was never there.
you do not cry.
you knew this ending. had seen it coming centuries ago.
but still, your chest aches in a way that feels foreign. not divine. not righteous. just⌠human.
quietly, you kneel by the edge of a shallow stream, its waters catching the soft gold of the rising sun. your hand, steady and sacred, slips beneath the surface. it doesnât take long. the chain finds you, just like he always did.
you pull it from the waterâhis gold chain, warm despite the cold stream, still whole.
your fingers trace its pattern, each link familiar, worn from centuries of wear.
you smile. not wide. not bright. but soft. pained. knowing.
âgoodbye, old friend,â you whisper.
the wind stirs the trees behind you, and the morning continues.
you would not see his soul in the holy place.
not because he was born into darknessâhe wasnât. not because he was forced to live as he didâthough that part was true.
but because remmickâs choices stretched far beyond instinct, beyond what was natural. he had time. he had chances. and every time, he chose wrong. knowingly, willfully.
and heaven does not make room for those who choose to burn.














