Chapter One - The First Bite

527 Words
The first time he struck me, I thought it was the end. But endings, I would learn, can take years to arrive. Daniel was beautiful in the way storms are—dark, magnetic, impossible to ignore. When I met him, he smelled like old wine and mystery. His smile was crooked, his eyes hollow, and yet I fell for him as if he were the only source of light in a world full of shadows. The truth revealed itself slowly. The nights out where he drank too much. The mornings where his temper turned sharp as glass. The bruises, small at first, like secrets blooming on my skin. And always, the apologies afterward, whispered promises of change. But the promises never lasted. It was during one of those nights—after a fight that left me trembling—that I saw what he really was. His teeth elongated, pale lips curling back as his hunger took over. I had thought him a monster for his words, his fists, his rage. But I had been wrong. He was something older, something that fed on more than just alcohol. A vampire. He never confessed it, but he didn’t need to. I saw it in the way he drank from bottles as if they were veins, the way he stayed out until dawn, and the way his eyes glowed red when anger consumed him. He drained me—body, soul, and spirit—like the blood he craved. Still, I stayed. Because monsters can be charming, and cages can feel like homes when you forget the sky. But then came the night I almost died. The fight began with his jealousy, sharp and unreasonable. His voice rose, his hands followed, and suddenly I was on the floor, tasting copper. His teeth grazed my neck, not in love but in violence. For the first time, I realized he didn’t want me alive—he wanted me emptied. Something inside me broke, but not in the way he expected. Not into pieces. Into fire. I remembered my daughter asleep in the other room, small and innocent, her dreams untouched by the nightmares I endured. And I knew: if I didn’t escape, she would grow up believing this was love. I rose, bloodied but unbroken. His fangs shone in the dim light as he came toward me. But he had forgotten something. Vampires may crave blood, but women like me—women who survive storms—learn to turn pain into weapons. On the table lay a broken bottle. I seized it. When he lunged, I drove the jagged edge into his chest. His scream was less human, more animal, but it didn’t matter. I ran, my daughter clutched against me, out into the night where the air was cold and clean. I don’t know if he died that night. Vampires have a way of surviving. But I do know I did. For the first time, the darkness behind me was not my prison but my past. And as I walked toward the dawn, I whispered a vow to myself: I will never let another monster drink the light out of me again.
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD