The Day the Vampires Awoke

The Day the Vampires Awoke

Flying Free

5.0
Comment(s)
544
View
180
Chapters

I was twenty years old and dying of ALS, my body wasting away into a pile of twitching muscles and lead-heavy limbs. With only a month left to live, I took my parents' entire fifty-thousand-dollar inheritance to a rain-slicked alley and gambled it all on a single vial of "unregistered" blood. The liquid tasted like battery acid and stopped my heart cold, but when I woke up, the paralysis was gone. My skin was pale, my eyes had turned into glowing molten silver, and the only thing that could satisfy my agonizing hunger was the sound of silver jewelry shattering between my teeth. But the cure came with a terrifying new vision: I could see the blue, parasitic shadows living inside everyone around me. My neighbors, my teachers, and even the little girl next door were being hollowed out by monsters with needle-teeth and lashing tentacles that no one else could see. When the school went into lockdown and the halls filled with the scent of rotting fish, I realized an invisible invasion had already claimed the city. The military didn't come to rescue us; they came to "sanitize" the zone, turning their miniguns on the terrified students to bury the evidence of the outbreak. I was trapped on a roof with a handful of survivors and a mysterious girl named Elise who looked at me like I was a genetic mistake. "No one is coming to save us," I whispered, watching the helicopters circle like vultures. I grabbed Elise's enchanted silver dagger, ignored her warnings, and crunched the blade into a savory paste. As a wave of dark, forbidden power turned my skin into a Vantablack void, I stopped being a dying kid and became the only thing the monsters were afraid of.

The Day the Vampires Awoke Chapter 1 1

He wasn't sick anymore. But he wasn't human anymore, either.

Aden Curtis sat on the edge of his bed, looking in the mirror on the closet door.

His skin was pale.

His eyes were no longer brown.

They were silver. Molten, shifting, glowing in the dark room.

He wiped a crumb of silver from his lip.

Just an hour ago, the world had been ending. Now, it had been remade.

An hour ago, Aden Curtis sat on the edge of his bed.

The room was dark, save for the streetlights bleeding through the blinds.

He watched the second hand on the wall clock tick.

Tick. Tick. Tick.

His body was vibrating. It wasn't a choice. It was the ALS.

The muscles in his thighs and arms twitched under his skin like dying worms.

He looked at the glass of water on the nightstand.

He was thirsty.

He told his brain to lift his right arm.

The signal fired, but the wiring was frayed. His arm moved sluggishly, heavy as lead.

His fingers curled around the glass.

They trembled.

The glass slipped.

It hit the carpet with a dull thud. Water soaked into the cheap beige fibers.

Aden stared at the stain.

He didn't have the energy to pick it up. He didn't have the energy to be angry anymore.

He just felt a deep, hollow rot in his stomach.

Doctors said he had a month. Maybe less. His diaphragm would paralyze soon, and he would suffocate in his sleep.

His phone buzzed on the mattress.

The screen lit up the gloom.

11 PM. The usual spot. Cash only.

Aden closed his eyes. He took a breath that rattled in his chest.

He reached under his bed and dragged out the old Nike shoebox.

It was light. Inside was fifty thousand dollars. Every cent his parents had left him, liquidized.

He pulled on a thick hoodie. It hid how thin he had become. It hid the atrophy.

He grabbed his cane.

Getting down the stairs of the apartment complex took ten minutes.

Every step was a negotiation with gravity.

The night air in Argent City was wet. It smelled of exhaust and damp concrete.

Aden walked. He dragged his left leg.

People walked past him. They looked away. No one wanted to see the dying kid.

He reached the alleyway behind the convenience store.

The ground was slick with oil and rain.

Tom Bo was waiting in the shadows. He was smoking a cigarette, the cherry glowing orange.

He saw Aden and smirked.

"You made it," Tom said. "Thought you might trip and break a neck on the way."

Aden didn't speak. He dropped his backpack on the wet asphalt.

Tom kicked it open with his boot. He riffled through the stacks of bills.

"It's all there," Aden said. His voice was weak.

Tom nodded. He reached into his jacket and pulled out a metal case.

He tossed it to Aden.

Aden fumbled, nearly dropping it. His hands were shaking so bad.

He opened the case.

Inside lay a single vial. The liquid was dark red, thick, almost black.

"Unregistered," Tom said, blowing smoke into the rain. "Clan rejects. Ninety percent mortality rate. You drink that, you probably die screaming."

"I'm already dying," Aden said.

"Suit yourself. No refunds when your heart explodes."

Tom grabbed the backpack and walked away. He didn't look back.

Aden stood alone in the alley.

He looked at the vial. This was it. The fifty-thousand-dollar gamble.

He didn't hesitate. He uncorked it.

The smell hit him. Iron and sulfur.

He tilted his head back and downed it.

It didn't taste like blood. It tasted like battery acid.

It burned his tongue, his throat, his esophagus.

Aden dropped the vial. It shattered.

He fell to his knees. The cane clattered away.

Fire spread through his veins. It wasn't a metaphor. It felt like someone had injected boiling oil into his bloodstream.

He curled into a ball in the mud.

His heart hammered against his ribs.

Thump-thump-thump-thump.

Then it stopped.

Silence.

Darkness took him.

Time passed. It might have been a minute. It might have been an hour.

Aden gasped.

Air rushed into his lungs. It was cold and sharp.

He sat up.

He touched his chest.

Thump.

A long pause. Six seconds.

Thump.

His heart was beating ten times a minute. Slow. Powerful. Like a hydraulic press.

Aden looked at his hands.

They weren't shaking.

He stood up. He didn't reach for the cane.

He didn't need it.

His legs felt solid. The weakness was gone.

He clenched his fist. The knuckles popped loud and clear.

He felt power coiling in his muscles, tight and ready.

Then came the hunger.

It wasn't a rumble in his stomach. It was a void. A black hole opening up in his gut.

He needed to eat.

He stumbled out of the alley and ran back to his apartment. He didn't limp. He sprinted.

He burst through his door and tore open the fridge.

Cold pizza. Leftover pasta. An apple.

He shoved the pizza into his mouth.

He gagged.

It tasted like ash. It tasted like rotting garbage.

He spat it out onto the floor.

He tried the apple. It tasted like wax and dirt.

He vomited bile into the sink.

The hunger grew sharper. It was a physical pain, twisting his insides.

He stumbled back into his bedroom, wiping his mouth.

He knocked over his mother's jewelry box on the dresser.

It crashed to the floor. Necklaces and earrings scattered.

A silver ring rolled across the carpet and stopped near his foot.

Aden stared at it.

His mouth watered. Saliva pooled under his tongue.

The scent of the silver was intoxicating. It smelled sweet, rich, heavy.

He fell to his knees.

His rational mind screamed no. It was metal. It was hard.

But his body didn't care.

He grabbed the ring.

He put it in his mouth.

He bit down.

Crunch.

The silver shattered like hard candy.

It wasn't hard. It was crisp.

He chewed. The metal broke down into a warm, savory paste.

He swallowed.

A wave of euphoria washed over him. The pain in his stomach vanished.

Aden sat on the floor, breathing hard.

He looked in the mirror on the closet door.

His skin was pale.

His eyes were no longer brown.

They were silver. Molten, shifting, glowing in the dark room.

He wiped a crumb of silver from his lip.

He wasn't sick anymore. But he wasn't human anymore, either.

Continue Reading

Other books by Flying Free

More
Lost Love, Bitter Victory

Lost Love, Bitter Victory

Romance

5.0

My wife, Olivia, and I had what I thought was the perfect life, a vibrant canvas of shared dreams and artistic ambition. But beneath the surface, a shadow lingered: her unexplained infertility, a result of an accident years ago-my fault-that filled me with a guilt I carried like a stone. I watched her endless cycles of hope, the IVF treatments we endured, believing we were fighting for our miracle baby together. Then, a single photograph arrived, shattering my world: Olivia, glowing with maternal pride, kneeling before a three-year-old boy who was undeniably hers. On the back, two words scrawled in messy handwriting: Our son. The fertility struggles, my guilt-it was all a monstrous, suffocating lie, a performance designed to keep me blind. I couldn' t breathe, trapped in her beautiful deception, so I planned my escape, a desperate attempt to vanish from a life that was never truly mine. After I "disappeared," a new life began, quiet and anonymous, painted in the solitude of the Oregon coast. But the past refused to stay buried, returning with the salt on the wind, a ghost with haunted eyes and the cruel truth of consequences. Now, she stands before me, broken and desperate, having lost everything-her child, her lover-in the wake of my strategic vanishing act. She believes my "death" was her fault, the ultimate price for her lies, unaware that the real architect of her downfall was closer than she ever imagined. I am not the man she married. I am a stranger forged in betrayal, ready to confront the wreckage she created.

Rebirth: A Wife's Bitter Reckoning

Rebirth: A Wife's Bitter Reckoning

Modern

5.0

The piercing wail of an ambulance siren was the first thing I heard. I was lying on the living room carpet, the scent of dust and cheap air freshener in my nose. A few feet away, my younger sister, Chloe, clutched an empty bottle of pills, feigning unconsciousness. It was a pathetic performance, but it had destroyed my life once before. This was the day I received my acceptance letter and full scholarship to the nation' s most prestigious art school-the day my life was supposed to begin. Instead, guided by my mother' s frantic sobs and my father' s angry accusations- "Ava, how can you be so selfish? Your sister is trying to kill herself because of you!" -I buckled. My fiancé, Mark, whispered poison: "What' s a scholarship compared to your sister' s life?" I believed them. I gave it all up, watching as my scholarship was transferred to Chloe. The betrayal festered. A month later, I discovered Mark hadn' t failed his exams; he and Chloe had plotted to steal my future. When I confronted them, they locked me in my art studio and set it on fire. I survived, disfigured and broken, only to be forced into a brutal marriage where I eventually died. But now, I was back. Seventeen again. Whole. The future they stole, once again within my grasp. Chloe fluttered her eyelids, a flash of triumph in her eyes as they met mine. This time, the burning rage had cooled into something harder, sharper. They thought this was their victory. They had no idea it was just the beginning of my revenge.

The Price of a Billion-Dollar Love

The Price of a Billion-Dollar Love

Billionaires

5.0

The private jet' s hum was supposed to drown out the silence, but it only amplified the heavy dread in the cabin. Across the table, my husband, Ethan Vance, watched me with cold, unblinking eyes, his once-loved face a mask of cruelty. "Sign it, Chloe." His low, calm voice cut through the air. The document lay between us, a single sheet of paper that would transfer my half of our billion-dollar company to him-and to her, Scarlett Hayes, his long-lost ex, the ghost haunting my marriage. My hands trembled, but it wasn't just the document. Through the open jet door, his bodyguards held my sixteen-year-old sister, Lily, her face pale with terror, thousands of feet in the air. "Scarlett needs this," he' d said when I begged, "You were just holding her place, Chloe. It's time to give it back." His words were a physical blow, shattering illusions of the life we'd built. My love, my security, my entire world-all just a temporary placeholder. Watching Lily' s silent tears stream down her face, I knew he was using my deepest love as a weapon. My signature was a shaky scrawl, a testament to my broken spirit. "There. It's done. Now let her go." A flicker of satisfaction crossed his face. Then, the guards tightened their grip, and with a brutal shove, pushed my sister out the open door. Her scream tore away with the wind, leaving only a horror too profound to process. He had promised to let her go, and he had murdered her instead. In the ensuing darkness, as my world fractured, a terrible clarity sliced through the pain: I was never the love of his life; I was just the bandage for a wound he never wanted to heal. But as the jet descended, a defiant spark ignited in the ashes of my heart. I would survive. I would escape. And he would pay.

You'll also like

The Ghost Wife's Billion Dollar Tech Comeback

The Ghost Wife's Billion Dollar Tech Comeback

Huo Wuer
4.5

Today is October 14th, my birthday. I returned to New York after months away, dragging my suitcase through the biting wind, but the VIP pickup zone where my husband’s Maybach usually idled was empty. When I finally let myself into our Upper East Side penthouse, I didn’t find a cake or a "welcome home" banner. Instead, I found my husband, Caden, kneeling on the floor, helping our five-year-old daughter wrap a massive gift for my half-sister, Adalynn. Caden didn’t even look up when I walked in; he was too busy laughing with the girl who had already stolen my father’s legacy and was now moving in on my family. "Auntie Addie is a million times better than Mommy," my daughter Elara chirped, clutching a plush toy Caden had once forbidden me from buying for her. "Mommy is mean," she whispered loudly, while Caden just smirked, calling me a "drill sergeant" before whisking her off to Adalynn’s party without a second glance. Later that night, I saw a video Adalynn posted online where my husband and child laughed while mocking my "sensitive" nature, treating me like an inconvenient ghost in my own home. I had spent five years researching nutrition for Elara’s health and managing every detail of Caden’s empire, only to be discarded the moment I wasn't in the room. How could the man who set his safe combination to my birthday completely forget I even existed? The realization didn't break me; it turned me into ice. I didn't scream or beg for an explanation. I simply walked into the study, pulled out the divorce papers I’d drafted months ago, and took a black marker to the terms. I crossed out the alimony, the mansion, and even the custody clause—if they wanted a life without me, I would give them exactly what they asked for. I left my four-carat diamond ring on the console table and walked out into the rain with nothing but a heavily encrypted hard drive. The submissive Mrs. Holloway was gone, and "Ghost," the most lethal architect in the tech world, was finally back online to take back everything they thought I’d forgotten.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book
The Day the Vampires Awoke The Day the Vampires Awoke Flying Free Modern
“I was twenty years old and dying of ALS, my body wasting away into a pile of twitching muscles and lead-heavy limbs. With only a month left to live, I took my parents' entire fifty-thousand-dollar inheritance to a rain-slicked alley and gambled it all on a single vial of "unregistered" blood. The liquid tasted like battery acid and stopped my heart cold, but when I woke up, the paralysis was gone. My skin was pale, my eyes had turned into glowing molten silver, and the only thing that could satisfy my agonizing hunger was the sound of silver jewelry shattering between my teeth. But the cure came with a terrifying new vision: I could see the blue, parasitic shadows living inside everyone around me. My neighbors, my teachers, and even the little girl next door were being hollowed out by monsters with needle-teeth and lashing tentacles that no one else could see. When the school went into lockdown and the halls filled with the scent of rotting fish, I realized an invisible invasion had already claimed the city. The military didn't come to rescue us; they came to "sanitize" the zone, turning their miniguns on the terrified students to bury the evidence of the outbreak. I was trapped on a roof with a handful of survivors and a mysterious girl named Elise who looked at me like I was a genetic mistake. "No one is coming to save us," I whispered, watching the helicopters circle like vultures. I grabbed Elise's enchanted silver dagger, ignored her warnings, and crunched the blade into a savory paste. As a wave of dark, forbidden power turned my skin into a Vantablack void, I stopped being a dying kid and became the only thing the monsters were afraid of.”
1

Chapter 1 1

15/01/2026

2

Chapter 2 2

15/01/2026

3

Chapter 3 3

15/01/2026

4

Chapter 4 4

15/01/2026

5

Chapter 5 5

15/01/2026

6

Chapter 6 6

15/01/2026

7

Chapter 7 7

15/01/2026

8

Chapter 8 8

15/01/2026

9

Chapter 9 9

15/01/2026

10

Chapter 10 10

15/01/2026

11

Chapter 11 11

19/01/2026

12

Chapter 12 12

19/01/2026

13

Chapter 13 13

19/01/2026

14

Chapter 14 14

19/01/2026

15

Chapter 15 15

19/01/2026

16

Chapter 16 16

19/01/2026

17

Chapter 17 17

19/01/2026

18

Chapter 18 18

19/01/2026

19

Chapter 19 19

19/01/2026

20

Chapter 20 20

19/01/2026

21

Chapter 21 21

19/01/2026

22

Chapter 22 22

19/01/2026

23

Chapter 23 23

19/01/2026

24

Chapter 24 24

19/01/2026

25

Chapter 25 25

19/01/2026

26

Chapter 26 26

19/01/2026

27

Chapter 27 27

19/01/2026

28

Chapter 28 28

19/01/2026

29

Chapter 29 29

19/01/2026

30

Chapter 30 30

19/01/2026

31

Chapter 31 31

20/01/2026

32

Chapter 32 32

20/01/2026

33

Chapter 33 33

20/01/2026

34

Chapter 34 34

20/01/2026

35

Chapter 35 35

20/01/2026

36

Chapter 36 36

20/01/2026

37

Chapter 37 37

20/01/2026

38

Chapter 38 38

20/01/2026

39

Chapter 39 39

20/01/2026

40

Chapter 40 40

20/01/2026