Mag-log inFor a decade, Yolande and Don were the definition of endgame. From high school sweethearts to navigating the grueling world of medicine, they built a life together. Now an adult, Yolande works tirelessly as a hospital nurse, while Don has climbed the ranks to become a surgeon alongside Yolande’s lifelong best friend, Maria. It was supposed to be their dream team. But the sterile, high-stress walls of the hospital quickly turn into a pressure cooker for betrayal. Bonded by life-or-death surgeries, late-night shifts, and exhaustion, Don and Maria begin to drift into a world where Yolande doesn't fit. What starts as innocent coffee dates and trauma-bonding evolves into a quiet, devastating erasure. Yolande is forced to watch from the sidelines as her boyfriend and her best friend slowly build a life together, leaving her invisible in her own skin. When the emotional neglect finally shatters her heart, Yolande finds herself in a dark bar, drinking to numb the agony of a love completely lost. But her grief calls out to something darker. In the shadows of the bar, she crosses paths with an entity that shouldn't exist: a creature with no human presence, born from the forbidden, impossible fusion of a vampire and a werewolf bloodline. An anomaly of nature, it is an outcast wandering the edges of reality. Bound by mutual isolation, two entities that the world forgot are about to collide—and reality will never be the same.
view moreThe sterile scent of antiseptic and floor wax always clung to Yolande’s skin long after her shift ended, but today, she didn’t mind. Today, she had fought for a free afternoon. In the grueling ecosystem of St. Jude’s Memorial Hospital, securing matching days off for a nurse and a resident surgeon required a level of scheduling gymnastics that bordered on a miracle. But she had managed it. Three weeks of picking up extra night shifts, trading weekends, and surviving on lukewarm coffee had finally paid off.
Today was for her and Don. Just the two of them.
Standing in front of the bathroom mirror in the staff locker room, Yolande pulled the elastic band from her hair, letting the dark waves fall over her shoulders. She traded her shapeless teal scrubs for a soft, cream-colored knit sweater and a pair of dark jeans. Looking at her reflection, she tried to smooth away the faint shadows of exhaustion under her eyes. She wanted to look beautiful for him. Not just functional, not just efficient, she wanted Don to look at her the way he used to when they were teenagers, before the hospital swallowed their lives whole.
Ten years. They had been together since their junior year of high school, holding hands through college applications, med school entrance exams, and her own nursing certification. They were supposed to be the unshakeable couple, the blueprint.
Yolande checked her phone. A text from Don from twenty minutes ago read: Just scrubbing out of a minor appendectomy. Meet you by the main lobby fountain in ten.
A smile touched her lips. She grabbed her bag and headed out, her footsteps echoing softly down the linoleum corridor.
When she reached the lobby, she spotted him immediately. Don was leaning against the marble edge of the indoor fountain, still wearing his dark blue surgical scrubs, his white coat slung carelessly over his arm. He was looking down at his phone, his thumb flying across the screen, a faint, familiar smirk playing on his lips. He looked handsome, even with the faint lines of fatigue etched around his mouth.
"Hey," Yolande said, stepping into his line of sight, her heart doing that familiar, comforting skip. "You actually made it out on time. I’m impressed."
Don looked up, the smirk instantly smoothing out into a warm, albeit tired, smile. "Hey. Yeah, Dr. Vance took over the post-op chart notes. I’m all yours." He stepped forward, leaning down to press a quick, dry kiss to her forehead. "You look nice. Ready to get out of here?"
"Starving," she admitted, slipping her hand naturally into his. His palm was warm, but his grip felt a little loose, lacking the firm squeeze she used to rely on. Still, she leaned into his shoulder as they turned toward the sliding glass doors of the hospital exit. "I was thinking that little Italian place three blocks over. The one with the—"
"Don! Wait up!"
The voice cut through the ambient noise of the lobby like a scalpel. Yolande’s shoulders dropped a fraction of an inch before she could stop herself.
Running toward them, a file folder clutched to her chest, was Maria. Her lab coat was unbuttoned, fluttering behind her, and her dark hair was pulled into a chic, effortless claw clip. As a fellow surgical resident, Maria shared the exact same grueling universe as Don. They breathed the same high-stakes air, spoke the same rapid-fire medical shorthand, and, lately, occupied the exact same space.
"Thank god I caught you," Maria gasped, stopping in front of them, slightly out of breath but radiating an intense energy. "Don, the pathology report for the Beckman case just came back. Dr. Harris wants a review before the morning rounds, and I swear I cannot decipher his notes on the biliary tract anatomy."
Don’t posture changed instantly. The tired slump in his shoulders vanished, replaced by the sharp, alert stance of a surgeon on call. "Did he check the ultrasound margins? I told him the inflammation was tracking higher than the scan showed."
"Exactly!" Maria’s eyes lit up, a brilliant spark of shared understanding passing between them. "That's what I said! But you know how he is."
Yolande stood quietly, her hand still resting in Don’s, though it felt more like an anchor he was dragging than a connection. She watched their faces. It wasn't that she didn't understand the medical jargon—she was a nurse, she knew exactly what they were talking about—but she was entirely excluded from the rhythm of their conversation. It was a dance they knew by heart, a rapid back-and-forth built on shared adrenaline.
"Maria," Don said, his voice laced with genuine regret as he finally glanced back down at Yolande. "Look, I’d love to dive into this right now, but Yolande and I were actually just leaving. We have a date. She went through hell to get this afternoon off."
Maria blinked, her eyes shifting to Yolande as if noticing her for the first time. A look of profound guilt washed over her face, and she took a step back, raising her hands defensively. "Oh my god, Yolande, I am so, so sorry! I completely forgot it was your day off. Don’t let me ruin your plans. Seriously, go. The biliary tract can wait."
She looked so genuinely apologetic that Yolande felt a sharp prick of shame for the resentment bubbling in her chest. Maria was her friend, too. They had known each other since college. Maria wasn't a villain; she was just driven, talented, and always there.
"It’s fine, Maria," Yolande said, forcing a soft, accommodating smile. It was the smile she used for difficult patients—polite, reassuring, shielding her true feelings. "You guys have a lot on your plate."
Don looked between the two of them, his brow furrowed. He checked his watch, then looked back at Maria’s file. "Hey... what if you just come with us? We’re just grabbing a quick bite at the Italian place down the street. We can eat, look over the file together, and then Yolande and I can walk around the park after. It’ll kill two birds with one stone."
The words felt like a sudden drop in atmospheric pressure. Yolande’s breath hitched in her throat. Two birds with one stone. Her hard-fought, meticulously planned date night was being turned into a working lunch.
"Oh, no, I couldn't intrude," Maria said, though her fingers tightened around the folder. "It’s your guys' time."
"Don't be stupid, Maria, you have to eat anyway," Don insisted, his tone easy and casual, completely blind to the quiet shattering happening right next to him. He looked down at Yolande, his eyes pleading for her to be the understanding, supportive partner she had always been. "Right, Yo? You don't mind if Maria tags along for a bit?"
The trap was perfectly set. If Yolande said yes, she sacrificed her intimacy. If she said no, she was the selfish, insecure girlfriend holding back her boyfriend's career and alienating their mutual friend.
"Of course," Yolande heard herself say. Her voice sounded hollow, like it belonged to someone else entirely. "Come along, Maria."
"You're a lifesaver, Yolande," Maria said with a relieved sigh, slipping the folder into her bag.
As they walked out of the hospital doors and onto the bustling city sidewalk, the afternoon sun was bright, casting long shadows against the concrete. The autumn air was crisp, the kind of weather Yolande usually loved. But as they started the three-block walk toward the restaurant, the dynamic shifted with a terrifying, natural ease.
Don and Maria stepped forward, falling into a synchronized, brisk pace. Don’t hand had slipped out of Yolande’s to gesture wildly as he began explaining a surgical technique he’d read about in a medical journal that morning. Maria walked right beside him, her head tilted toward him, nodding intently, interrupting with her own sharp insights.
“If we approach it laparoscopically, the recovery time is halved, Don.” “True, but Harris prefers an open entry if there’s any scar tissue from previous interventions…”
Yolande’s stride faltered. She slowed down, just a fraction, testing a theory she didn't want the answer to.
They didn't notice.
Don and Maria kept walking, side by side, their shoulders almost touching. From behind, they looked perfectly paired—two young, ambitious doctors conquering the world together, matching each other step for step, thought for thought.
Yolande stopped walking entirely, standing dead center on the sidewalk as pedestrians swirled around her like a river around a stone. She watched the space between herself and Don expand. One yard. Three yards. Five yards.
He didn't look back to see if she was keeping up. He didn't reach his hand out blindly behind him to find hers. He was completely captivated, entirely locked into the orbit of Maria’s intellect and shared ambition.
A heavy, suffocating weight settled onto Yolande’s chest. It wasn't a sudden, explosive betrayal; it was worse. It was a slow, agonizing erasure. She was being phased out of her own life, reduced to a ghost watching the man she loved drift toward someone else, entirely unaware that he was leaving her behind in the dust.
She looked at the gap between them, wide and insurmountable, and for the first time in ten years, Yolande realized that love wasn't enough to bridge it anymore.
"Don't answer it," Maria panicked from the wall, her voice cracking. "Yola, seriously, do not answer that. She knows your voice. She’s going to know you're freaked out.""If I don't answer, she’ll call the cops," Yolande muttered. Her brain was misfiring, trying to handle a breakup, a traumatized best friend, and an impossible man all at once. She looked up at Lucian, her voice dropping to an embarrassed, desperate whisper. "You need to calm down. Whatever you're doing to the air, stop it. If she hears a weird buzz or the call drops, she’s going to drive over here."Lucian stared at her, his jaw clenching. He clearly hated the phone, and he looked incredibly frustrated that a tiny piece of plastic had this much power over her. But seeing her look that stressed, he closed his eyes and took a slow, heavy breath.The suffocating, weird pressure in the alley immediately vanished. The freezing temperature leveled out, and the normal, boring sounds of suburban traffic leaked back into the s
"Let go of me," Yolande whispered, the words catching in her throat as she gave her arm a desperate, useless tug.Lucian’s grip didn't tighten, but it didn't yield either. His hand was a solid, freezing band against her skin, sending that terrifyingly familiar electric current straight through the fabric of her cream sweater. He looked completely out of place under the pale winter sun—a dark, towering fracture in her quiet, suburban reality. His chest rose and fell in heavy, ragged movements, and she could feel the intense, localized heat radiating off his frame, fighting the sudden drop in the air temperature."Yolande," Lucian rasped, his eyes scanning her face with a raw, borderline frantic intensity. "You vanished from the estate. The bond—the line stretched so thin the eastern wards began to crack. I couldn't trace your frequency until a microsecond ago.""Lucian, look around you!" she hissed, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. Her clinical, logical mind wa
The heavy, suffocating silence of the bedroom settled over Yolande like a shroud the moment the air fractured and Lucian vanished. She lay perfectly still on her back, her fingers still curled into empty fistfuls of her quilt, her breath catching in her throat. Her lips were swollen, tingling with a persistent, electric heat that refused to fade, and the heavy, damp ache between her thighs pulsed with an agonizing rhythm.She stared up at the dark ceiling, her mind spinning through a chaotic loop. He had just disappeared. Not walked away, not slipped out the window, but vanished into thin air right out from under her touch."The alcohol," she whispered into the dark, her voice trembling as she pressed the heels of her hands against her eyes. "It has to be the wine. That crimson wine... Shaw said it was strong. I’m hallucinating. I’m completely, utterly drunk."It was the only logical explanation her analytical mind could grasp. The massive ancient mansion, the telepathic looks between
The dining room of the ancient mansion was a spectacular, candlelit hall where a massive mahogany table groaned under the weight of an incredible feast. Platters of perfectly seared meats, roasted winter vegetables, and rich, decadent sauces were passed around in a warm, lively blur. Despite the intimidating, gothic grandeur of the estate, Lucian’s friends went completely out of their way to make sure Yolande felt like the centerpiece of the evening, constantly weaving her into the conversation.Through it all, Lucian’s hand never left hers. His long, pale fingers remained tightly intertwined with her own under the edge of the table, his thumb rhythmically stroking her skin, sending a constant, intoxicating current of warmth straight to her core."So, Yolande," Mira said, leaning forward with a warm, elegant smile as she passed a platter of roasted rosemary potatoes. "Lucian told us you are transitioning from nursing into law. That is an incredibly fierce shift. What drew you to the l
The bedroom mirror reflected a version of Yolande she hadn
When the heavy wooden door of her parents' house finally clicked shut, latching securely against the freezing November wind, Lucian stood perfectly still on the manicured lawn. He remained frozen under the yellow, artificial glow of the porch light for a single, breathless second, watching her silh
The bright neon glare of the convenience store faded behin
The hot sting of humiliation that had threatened to bring Yolande to her knees suddenly transformed into something else entirely. It was a sharp, unyielding spark of pure, protective anger. She looked at Don, really looked at the flushed, ugly rage distorting his face, and the last remaining thread
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