Wicked Fox (Gumiho #1)(72)
He couldn’t hear or think or breathe.
He could only see—darkness and the moon. The full moon. Mocking him.
40
MIYOUNG WOKE WHEN her body hit the ground.
She trembled so hard her teeth chattered.
Though she’d never felt such pain before, like ice crystals stabbing her veins, she knew why. Tonight was the full moon. The first since she’d stopped feeding. The first since she’d left Jihoon.
Something burned along her skin—the light of the moon shining through the window.
It beckoned her, telling her to come back to its embrace and punishing her because she refused.
Her door opened with a crash. Feet pounding as they hurried to her.
“Pick up her feet.” Miyoung recognized the anxiety in her mother’s voice, layered under the stern command.
Yena scooped hands under Miyoung’s shoulders while someone else cradled her legs.
She was submerged in ice-cold water, and her brain yelled at her to escape.
No, not water.
Struggling against the hands that held her down, Miyoung thrashed, surely soaking those who tried to help her.
“Open her mouth.” The voice was deep and male.
Fingers pried at her teeth. Miyoung tried not to fight, but her jaw clenched at the numbing chill of the ice water against her exposed skin, and she bit down until she tasted blood.
They tried again, undeterred by her gnashing teeth. And this time a bitter liquid poured down her throat.
Her body sagged, so exhausted she could barely hold her head up. If the water was going to claim her, then so be it. But it seemed it was too shallow and instead her cheek rested against the cold porcelain side of the tub. As long as she kept her head above the water, she’d be fine. It was a lie, but one she repeated to herself over and over until her heart slowed.
“She won’t feed?” the male voice asked.
“Apparently not.”
“It’s only going to get worse.”
“I don’t pay you to tell me what I can see with my own eyes.” Yena’s voice was laced with displeasure.
“She’s lucky she’s half human. It might be holding off the worst of it. If she doesn’t feed, there’s not much you can do.”
“There’s one thing,” Yena replied.
“The bead is in Seoul.”
“Again, something I know.”
A pause. “Perhaps it’s time to go back. We’ve found nothing here and my contacts have run dry.”
“Then get more contacts,” Yena said.
“That costs money.”
A pause. “Take whatever you need from the safe.”
“Yes, ma’am.” There was the pad of retreating feet, then the soft click of the bathroom door closing.
Miyoung finally opened her eyes. The room was a blur of light and haze. White on white, but she picked out the shape of her mother’s lips, her nose, and her eyes.
Another wave of nausea spiraled through Miyoung.
“It hurts.” Miyoung didn’t recognize her own voice, desperate mewls of sound.
“It’ll pass soon. You are my daughter. You are smart and beautiful and strong. And you will fight past this.”
Miyoung shivered with the cold of the bath and the sharp pains that still radiated through her bones. “I’ll be a better daughter.”
“Then will you feed?” It wasn’t said with anger. Instead a true question.
Miyoung let out a sob instead of answering. It was all Yena needed to hear.
“Do you refuse to feed because of that boy?”
“Yes,” Miyoung whispered. “But not the way you think. Before I realized I could care for him, I was able to convince myself I didn’t care about anyone. But I do. And if continue to kill others just so I can live, I’ll become a monster that I don’t want to be.”
Yena was silent. So quiet that Miyoung opened her eyes to see if her mother had left. She still sat beside the tub, her face pinched in thought. And Miyoung realized the implication of her words. That perhaps Miyoung thought Yena was the monster she didn’t want to become.
“You think you’ve made a choice this last month, but you haven’t.” Yena’s voice was hard and clipped. “You are waiting, hoping for a solution to come that will give you everything you want.”
“Is that so bad?” Miyoung asked. “I don’t want anyone to be hurt because of me.”
“I thought I’d taught you better, Daughter. I’ve survived a long time because I’ve made clear choices. Even if you think they were wrong.” Yena stood. “You need to make a choice.”
With that, Yena left. Miyoung shivered, but not from the ice bath.
41
WHEN JIHOON HAD one of his episodes—that’s what the doctors euphemistically called them—he dreamed so vividly he could paint a picture if he had any artistic talent.
Sometimes he dreamed of his halmeoni, how content they’d been with their simple life. He woke from these dreams with a fleeting happiness that dissipated too quickly.
Sometimes he dreamed of his parents, a fake reality where they’d never left and loved him the way parents should. He woke from these dreams bitter about all the things he’d never known and never would.