Aven
The door opens while the burn's still in my throat, and every spirit in the bar turns.
I see the aura before I see the man. It's deep, bruised red, threaded with shadows that look older than the building and heavier than anything living should be allowed to carry.
It isn't grey and wispy like the dead regulars.
It's got depth. It's got teeth. It pushes against the air of the bar, displacing the static until the spirits scatter toward the edges like dust before a broom.
Then I see him leaning against the doorframe for the briefest second, just long enough to compose himself.
His shirt's torn at the shoulder, and there's a dark wet stain on the fabric that's definitely not wine.
He looks exhausted, injured, and still somehow intentional about every inch of himself.
He carries his damage like he decided long ago that letting anyone see pain was less dangerous than letting them see need.
My seminary training, the part of me that still smells like incense and terror, starts screaming abomination at the top of its lungs.
I catch the subtle sharp curve of fangs when he winces as he moves.
My brain says run, but my customer service training, honed by years of dealing with the literal and figurative damned, says offer him a drink.
He walks toward the bar, and the crowd parts for him without knowing why.
The living don't see the red-dark swirl around him, but they feel the predator in the room.
He sits directly in front of me, his movements fluid despite whatever injury's hiding under that expensive ruined fabric.
Up close, he's beautiful in the way dangerous things are beautiful when they haven't yet decided whether they want to spare you.
His skin's pale under the bar lights, his features too symmetrical to be comforting, and his eyes are a deep hungry brown that seem to take in the room one pulse at a time.
"Whiskey," he says, his voice low and rough enough to vibrate under my skin. It sounds used to being obeyed, but there's fatigue beneath it, something frayed and barely leashed.
I reach for the top shelf, my hands steadier than they've got any right to be.
The seminary'd tell me to cast him out. Gabriel'd tell me to call an ambulance.
I just want to know why his aura looks like a sunset drowning in oil.
"Oldest thing we've got is Gabriel's sense of humor, but I can't serve that in a glass. Will the eighteen-year-old scotch do?"
He looks at me then, really looks at me, and the force of it makes the back of my neck heat.
He isn't just seeing a bartender. His gaze flicks once toward the woman by the jukebox, then back to my face, and something in his expression stills.
He sees her. He sees that I see her. More than that, he doesn't look surprised enough.
"The scotch'll be fine," he murmurs, tasting the words before he lets them go, as if language is a luxury he's still learning to afford.
His gaze shifts toward the corner where the weeping woman's trying to merge with a barstool.
"Do you always talk to empty corners, or am I witnessing a private ritual? "
I pour the drink, the amber liquid splashing against the crystal glass while the tension around us settles into something too intimate for a bar full of people.
"Only when the corners start it. They're very opinionated about the playlist. Apparently, the dead've got a very specific fondness for early Fleetwood Mac. "
He doesn't laugh, but his eyes soften at the edges.
He doesn't look at me like I'm crazy. He doesn't look at me with Ezra's pity or the cautious fear I get from students who sit too close in lecture and hear me mutter back to things they can't see.
He looks at me like I'm the only solid thing in a room full of smoke, and the sensation's new enough to feel like a threat.
"You're difficult to ignore," he says, leaning closer by a fraction. The scent of him reaches me, iron, cedarwood, and a coldness that smells like the first frost of the year. "The room bends toward you."
"That sounds like a structural issue," I say, sliding the glass toward him. "You should take it up with Gabriel. I only handle drinks, ghosts, and unreasonable requests from men bleeding on my bar."
His mouth curves faintly, but the expression's thinner than charm. He reaches for the glass, and his fingers brush mine.
The constant, grinding static of the dead ceases so completely that my body doesn't understand the absence at first. The weeping woman by the jukebox is gone from my head.
The man from the Carter administration tapping his spectral fingers on table four is gone.
Ellis's presence, the layered whispers, the background pressure I've mistaken for normal life because I was too young when it started to know anything else, all of it vanishes.
I nearly drop the bottle of scotch. My breath catches in a throat that's forgotten how to swallow.
I can hear the hum of the refrigerator. I can hear the actual music on the jukebox.
I can hear a car passing on the street outside and my own heart beating too fast against my ribs.
My ears ring from the sudden absence of noise, and my body leans toward the stranger before my mind gives it permission.
The relief's so intense it hurts. My chest loosens for the first time in years, the crushing weight of the dead lifting like fog in a sudden wind. I'm a man starving for air, and he's the only open window in the room.
He stares at our hands with the same shock cracking through me.
His fingers are long, elegant, and warmer than they should be.
When he looks up, the predator mask's slipped enough for me to see something raw underneath it.
He doesn't look like a monster then. He looks found, as if he's stumbled onto something impossible and hasn't decided whether to worship it or break it.
"What are you?" he breathes, his hand still against mine.
I swallow hard, trying to claw back enough of myself to survive the fact that the world's gone quiet and I don't know how to exist inside it.
"I'm a bartender who's very concerned about your lack of a tip.
Is this a regular thing for you, or do you only perform supernatural nonsense for the staff at establishments? "
His breath almost becomes a laugh. His fingers finally pull away as he reaches for his wallet, and the moment the contact breaks, the static rushes back in like a dam bursting.
The weeping woman reappears with a jarring flicker, her silent sobs hitting me like a physical blow.
The noise is twice as loud after the absence, an agonizing contrast that makes the bar lights too bright and the smells too sharp.
I stagger back before I can stop myself, one hand flying to my chest and gripping the black fabric of my shirt. My eyes burn. I want to tell everyone to shut up, but the worst part is that the living aren't even talking.
"Don't," I gasp, and the word hangs between us before I can make it sound less pathetic.
The stranger reaches out again but stops short of touching me.
He sees the agony on my face. He sees the way I'm looking at his hand like it's a life jacket.
The charm's gone from him now, stripped thin by whatever happened between our skin.
"I didn't know," he says, and the regret in his voice sounds too immediate to be a lie.
"I've been searching for something for a very long time, but I didn't know it'd feel like this. "
"It feels like dying," I mutter, grabbing the edge of the bar hard enough that my knuckles ache. "It feels like finally being able to hear myself think and then having the floor dropped out from under me. It's cruel. You're cruel for bringing it here."
Gabriel's moving toward us now, his face set in gruff suspicion.
He's seen the way I staggered and the way the stranger's watching me, and he knows something happened that he can't account for.
He puts a heavy hand on my shoulder, his grip a grounding human weight, but it doesn't touch the static. It's only warmth on skin.
"Aven?" Gabriel asks, his eyes staying on the man in the torn shirt as if he's already deciding where to hit him first. "You okay?"
"Fine," I lie, my voice shaking badly enough to make the word useless. "Just the Jameson hitting harder than usual. I'm going to start closing up. It's been a long night."
The closing ritual becomes a way to keep moving.
I wipe down tables, stack chairs, and chase the last of the living regulars toward the door with a sharpness that borders on hostile.
Through it all, the stranger stays at the bar, nursing the eighteen-year-old scotch and watching me with dark, ancient eyes.
The injury at his shoulder seems to have slowed, but the red aura still moves around him, pulsing softly under the dim glow of the neon Budweiser sign.
The silence isn't there anymore, not fully, but the memory of it follows me.
Every time I pass him, the static dips enough to make my skin itch.
I drink too much because I'm too tired to be responsible with the only thing keeping my hands steady.
A sip of gin behind the service station.
Another swallow while I pretend to check inventory.
Gabriel watches me from the office door once and says nothing, which is how I know he's worried.
By the time the door's locked and the lights are dimmed, the bar sits in a haze of amber and shadow.
Gabriel's in the back office, counting the till with the door half-open because subtlety's never been his strongest personality trait.
It isn't just me and the stranger, not really.
The room's still crowded with the shades of everyone who's died close enough to find me, but the man at the bar's become the only presence I can feel without flinching.
I stop in front of him with the mahogany between us.
I'm buzzed enough to be reckless, tired enough to be dangerous, and the noise is pressing so hard behind my eyes that I can taste it.
"You're still here," I say, because apparently my best survival strategy is stating the obvious to monsters from textbooks I haven't finished reading.
"I've got nowhere else to be," he replies. He doesn't move closer. He doesn't reach for me. He only sets the glass down with careful precision, as if sudden movement might break whatever fragile thing's stretched between us. "And I think leaving would hurt you."
"That's an impressive amount of arrogance from a man bleeding on furniture he hasn't paid to replace."
"It isn't arrogance," he says quietly. "It's observation."
I look down at his hand where it rests on the bar, long fingers relaxed beside the glass.
Close enough that touching him'd be easy.
Far enough away that the choice'd have to be mine.
The dead press against my skull. The jukebox woman flickers at the edge of my vision, her grief dragging nails down the inside of my teeth, and I hate him for being the only quiet thing in the room.
"You're a complication I don't have the theological footnotes for," I say, my voice lower now. "I should be throwing holy water or calling someone with a better understanding of exorcism."
"Would that make you feel safer?"
"No," I admit before I can make the answer ugly enough to hide behind. "But it'd be on brand."
His mouth softens faintly. He reaches across the bar slowly, stopping with his hand open on the wood between us.
He gives me time to step back. Time to laugh in his face.
Time to choose the screaming dead, the cross in my drawer, the life that's been grinding me down one spirit at a time because at least that misery's familiar.
I touch him first.
The silence returns with a depth that makes my knees weaken.
It doesn't explode this time. It settles over me, thick and absolute, swallowing the dead until the bar becomes only wood, amber light, the hum of the refrigerator, and the cool pressure of his fingers curling carefully around mine.
My eyes close before I can stop them. A sound catches in my throat, too soft and broken to turn into a joke.
He says my name then, because Gabriel gave it to him without meaning to. "Aven."
Hearing it in his voice should scare me. It does scare me, but fear's smaller inside the quiet. Smaller than relief. Smaller than the way my body leans over the bar, pulled toward him by something I don't understand and already want too badly.
"Tell me no," he says.
I grip the front of his ruined shirt with my free hand, the expensive fabric bunching under my fingers.
The movement drags him closer across the narrow stretch of bar between us, close enough that I can feel his breath against my mouth and smell the scotch on it.
He waits there, still giving me the space to ruin the moment, and I hate him a little for that too.
I don't tell him no.
When he kisses me, it's soft enough to be mistaken for mercy if I were stupid enough to trust mercy from something with fangs.
His mouth brushes mine once, and the silence deepens until my fingers tighten in his shirt.
For one dangerous second, I forget the ghosts, the cross, the church, and every reason I should be afraid of the beautiful wounded thing on the other side of the bar.
For one dangerous second, I kiss him back.
“Cain,” he says against my mouth, like the name costs him something.
I blink at him, too dazed to make it useful. “What?”
“My name.” His thumb brushes once over my knuckles, and the silence holds. “Cain.”
Of course it is. Of course the vampire who walks into my bar and turns off the dead is named like a theological warning label.