Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Dragon's Kiss - 1. Chapter 1
Chapter One
A car honked in the distance. The wind blew hard, breaking against the skyscrapers of Colston City, Ohio. On the roof of an eight-story building, the wind ruffled the tablecloth covering a small, round table set for two. The rose in the vase danced in the wind and came to rest after a few minutes when the wind ceased. Lonely, abandoned, like his heart. Haje Young sighed.
He’d spent the whole afternoon making chicken Cordon Bleu. A bottle of white Burgundy sat on the table ready for dinner. He glanced at his watch. His boyfriend was three hours late. It was almost ten o’clock, and his chicken was ruined. He’d spent all evening waiting, so his mood was ruined, too. He was done with Levin Cooper.
Haje strolled to the railing and stared at the busy street below. Levin was a cop in the Colston Police Department. Criminals tended to be more important to Levin than relationships. Haje understood that, but seriously, the man could try to make it to one dinner. Gripping the railing tightly, Haje took in a deep breath and screamed out.
“I hate you, Levin Cooper.”
Somehow, that declaration made the night seem easier. He’d thought he and Levin could make it work. He worked long nights at his job, too. He was a computer programmer working for the Strassen Foundation. There were projects that took up his time for days and evenings, too.
When he’d first met Levin, their weekly trysts had worked quite well. Meeting at each other’s apartments whenever they could manage the time off had been reasonable. One year along, he’d started to feel as if the relationship between him and Levin might actually work for the long run if they tried harder, maybe going beyond sex and having an actual relationship.
Apparently, he was wrong.
Haje stepped off the ledge and headed for the table. He took the wine bottle and left the plates, the vase and the tablecloth. He didn’t care if it rained. This night couldn’t get any worse, he decided, as he entered his apartment.
He was grateful for his job with the foundation. He could afford him a spacious apartment. Going down the stairs from the roof, he descended into an airy living room. He crossed the wooden floor to a cozy dining room and into a sleek kitchen. The white-marble counters were littered with dirty dishes. He ignored the mess and began a search for the corkscrew. Just because Levin wasn’t showing up didn’t mean he should ignore the wine. Where was the corkscrew, anyway?
He was rummaging through the knife drawer with a scowl when his phone buzzed. Probably Levin finally canceling their dinner. Hadn’t the man ever heard of calling ahead? He got his phone from his pocket and glanced at the caller ID.
Shin.
He answered the call and wedged the phone between his ear and shoulder.
“How do you always know?” he asked, continuing his search.
“Come out with me,” Shin said cheerfully. “You don’t need him in your life, Haje. Lev is an asshole.”
“I’m happy with my wine bottle.” Haje mused at how easy it was for Shin to know exactly how he was feeling. He couldn't hide much from his twin brother.
“Drinking alone is depressing. Leave the wine; get in your car. Come to Ricky’s, and I’ll make sure you get good hard liquor.”
“Shin,” Haje complained, “I don’t want to face people right now.”
He’d been holding on to Levin a bit too hard. Haje finally found the corkscrew mixed in with the chisels and screwdrivers. How it had gotten in there, he had no clue. He pushed the drawer closed with his hip. Stupid Levin. He propped the wine bottle on the counter and got to work. He needed time to pity himself and maybe—
“Come on, Haje. If you don’t show up, I’m getting Virgil to drive me over there. I’m pretty wasted right now.”
Haje sighed and dropped the corkscrew on the counter. “Fine, as long as you’re buying drinks.”
It took Haje ten minutes to drive over to Ricky’s on Wilson Road. He parked his car across the street from the bar. Ricky’s Bar was always packed with locals. He walked into the warm atmosphere and stopped. There was a live rock band playing tonight. A crowd was gathered in one corner dancing to the music. He turned in the opposite direction and headed to the pool tables. He heard Shin and Virgil before he spotted them playing darts.
His twin brother was in a black muscle shirt and khakis, his feet in sandals, long, dark hair caught in a messy ponytail. A shot glass in one hand, Shin threw a dart on the board and jumped up in excitement when it hit a bull’s eye.
“Pay up,” Shin said, holding out his hand to Virgil.
Haje shook his head when Virgil pulled out a hundred-dollar bill from his pocket and slapped it onto Shin’s palm.
Virgil glanced up and grinned. “Look, its Little Shin.”
Haje laughed at the description. Shin turned around and saw him.
“Haje,” Shin exclaimed. Shin’s face lit up with a wide smile, and he rushed to hug Haje. “You came, I didn’t think you would. I was about to round up a posse to rescue you. We’re going to find Levin and beat the crap out of him for hurting you.”
Haje rubbed his brother’s back. “There’s no need to punch him out.”
“No one messes around with my twin brother.” Shin’s voice was slurred. He pulled back and held out his drink. “Here! Drinks on me tonight.”
Virgil came over and patted Haje's back. “I had to restrain him from getting behind the wheel twenty minutes ago. He kept saying Haje is not feeling good.”
Haje sighed and slipped onto a stool at their table. There was a half-empty bottle of Jack Daniels on it. Shin handed him a glass, grabbed the bottle and poured him a drink.
Haje tossed it back, grimacing as it burned down his throat. “How long have you guys been in here?”
Virgil shrugged, glancing at Shin. Haje frowned, not liking the look in Virgil’s eyes. There was something wrong.
“Shin?” he asked.
Shin grinned and ruffled his short black hair. “We are just taking a break from the lab. I miss you, li’l bro; we don’t get to see each other anymore. Have you been well?”
Haje poured himself another drink and tossed it back. “I haven’t even seen my boss lately. He’s too busy with you guys underground. I hope the project you’re working on is worth it. I’m practically running the tech department alone. Also, Mom called; she wants to see you and Nora.”
Shin groaned. “Nora and I broke up two days after Mom met her.”
Haje chuckled. Their mother was on a mission to see them married. She couldn’t believe her children were still unhitched at the ripe age of twenty-eight.
“Well, the moment you enter the house, she’s going to have a new date lined up for you,” Haje warned with a tight smile. “I still can’t get over the last date she conned me into.”
Virgil laughed, taking the darts Shin had placed on the table. “I would have loved to be a bug on the wall to see that.”
Haje shook his head. “My poor date was a pretty little lady who’d just graduated from college. She was also conned by her mom to go out with me. We ended up at a bowling alley.”
Shin slumped onto a stool and sighed. “Mom thinks we should each be married and have five children by now.”
Virgil laughed and ordered another bottle from a passing waiter. Haje quickly lost himself in Virgil’s and Shin’s joking. They played darts and drank too much. He forgot about his non-date and smiled as Virgil regaled him with tales about Shin at work.
They left the bar around one o’clock. Virgil supported Shin to a black company car waiting at the curb. The Foundation furnished cars and drivers for the top researchers, especially when they were working on a project. Shin and Virgil were probably headed back to the Strassen Research facility.
“Haje, get in,” Virgil said once Shin was inside. “You can’t drive home like this; you’re drunk. I’ll make sure your car gets dropped off back at your apartment.”
Haje shrugged and entered the car after his brother. Shin drowsily shifted so that his head rested on Haje’s shoulder.
Virgil got in beside him and closed the door. The driver pulled into the main road, heading east to Haje's apartment. There wasn't much traffic, so they should get to his apartment quickly. Haje studied his brother's head on his shoulder with a small frown.
“Haje,” Shin said five minutes later. “There’s something I have to tell you. Something—”
He didn’t get to finish. The driver slammed on the brakes, the momentum sending them forward. Haje clung to his twin’s shoulders to keep him steady, since none of them wore seat belts.
“What’s going on?” Virgil shouted in irritation. The driver turned and started to explain, but a large pickup truck smashed hard into their car on Virgil’s side.
Haje held onto Shin, his ears ringing from the grinding of metal against metal, the pickup truck pushing their car off the road. It disappeared for a moment. Shin fought to open his door but it wouldn't open. The pickup truck returned, sending their car into the air. Haje tried to grab Shin but lost his hold when the car overturned, and he passed out.
His body was on fire when he woke up. Pain everywhere, he tried to open his eyes, but bright lights burned him. The lights were everywhere. His face was wet. He tried to lift his hand to clear his eyes but couldn't; a face loomed over his head shouting orders…he faded away.
*****
Haje woke to numbing pain. He opened his eyes and stared at the unfamiliar ceiling. He was on his back; every part of his body throbbed. The pristine white ceiling was foreign to him, definitely not his apartment. Seconds passed, and a set of bells and alarms went off. His heart was pounding a mile a minute. It didn’t help when he tried to talk; a tube in his mouth stopped him.
Plastic. He couldn’t taste anything but plastic and cotton. Couldn’t move, couldn’t… He tried to sit up. He coughed and tried to pull the tube out of his throat. His body felt foreign. His left arm wasn’t responding, and the fucking ceiling was all wrong. Beeping noises filled his head, grating against raw nerves. Gentle hands caught his, and his mother’s face appeared above him.
“Haje, you’re safe,” she said soothingly. “You’re in the hospital; you just woke up. Nod once if you can hear me, honey.”
He closed his eyes and nodded for her. He could hear her. He just didn’t understand why he was in the hospital. Or why a tube was down his throat.
“Relax, the nurses are going to take care of the tube.” Seol Young held his right hand with both of hers, her touch gentle as though she was afraid to break him. There were tears in her eyes; he wanted to know why.
“Haje. Haje. Haje.” Seol kept repeating his name as a team of nurses rushed in, followed by a doctor.
His mother disappeared. The doctor shone a light into his eyes; the tube was pulled out. Doing so tickled his gag reflex; his chest burned at the resulting heave. More prodding on his chest, his right leg and his left arm; he scowled when a nurse stuck a thermometer into his ear.
Questions. He frowned at the stern doctor looming over him.
“How many fingers am I holding up?” The question was asked again in a kind voice. He couldn’t reconcile the stern face with the voice.
He stared at the doctor’s fingers for a moment. When he tried to answer, his throat was too dry. He cleared his throat twice before he managed a rough, ‘three’.
The light returned, and he scowled when it hit his eyes.
“What is your name?” the doctor asked.
His mother had disappeared behind a nurse. She would have already told them his name. Why were they asking? Turning to his left, he found her standing by his head. He sighed in relief and tried to take her hand with his left one. It wouldn’t move. He glanced down to find his left hand in a cast.
“Your full name, son,” the doctor insisted.
He frowned at the annoying doctor. “Haje Young.”
The doctor smiled and jotted down a note in his clipboard. “When were you born?”
“July, nineteen eighty-five,” he answered. “I have a twin brother, Shin.”
His mother sobbed beside him, her fingers caressing his hair gently.
“That’s very good, Haje,” the doctor said encouraging. “Now, what is the last thing you remember?”
Haje stared at the doctor, his mind blank. He couldn’t remember. Panic set in, and that awful beeping noise returned. It was switched off almost immediately, but the sound filled his head.
He remembered Levin standing him up. Shin had called and asked him to drinks at Ricky’s. He closed his eyes, and the sound of clashing metal filled his head.
“The accident…,” he whispered. That’s why the hospital beeps were hurting. The car. He opened his eyes and sat up abruptly. Pain lanced through his chest, and he gasped.
“Shin,” he managed through gritted teeth, pulling at the wires stuck to his chest. “I was with Shin and Virgil. I have to see them. Mom—”
“Please lie back. You’re going to hurt yourself again,” the doctor insisted. “Mrs. Young, he has to calm down and lie back or we’re going to be forced to sedate him.”
“No.” He protested turning to his mother. “Please, Mom, where’s Shin? Is he alright?”
“Shh…” Seol made a soothing sound. “Lie back, honey. You’re not ready to get out of bed—”
“I have to see Shin,” he insisted, pushing down the covers awkwardly.
“Please calm down first,” Seol begged. “Calm down, Haje.”
“Why are you here with me? Where’s Shin? I want to see him. We were in the car and… is he in the next room? How bad is he hurt?”
Seol looked at the doctor, her gaze devastated. The nurses left the room, and he lay back on the pillows, fear taking over. His physical pain faded away when his mother turned to look at him.
*****
They’d covered Shin’s body with a white sheet. The morgue was cold. He stared at the single sheet, wondering if it was enough to keep his twin warm. His mother pushed his wheelchair closer to the gurney till he stopped it with his feet. There was no way he was going to see his brother while he was sitting in a wheelchair.
“Haje,” Seol said quietly.
“Help me up,” he insisted. She sighed and locked the wheelchair. They’d fought about his request to see Shin. She’d kept insisting he needed to remember Shin when he was alive, but she was missing the point. He still couldn’t believe his twin brother was dead.
Seol wrapped an arm around his slender waist as he stood. Pain lanced through his right leg. His left arm was cradled against his bruised chest. They were calling it a miracle, him the only survivor in the car crash. He'd walked away with a broken arm, bruised ribs and a deep gash on his right upper thigh where a piece of metal had lodged into his muscles. His face hadn’t escaped; there were a few cuts and bruises on his forehead and jaw. Pain stabbed through his body as he took slow steps to the gurney. He didn't see the merits of the miracle if it meant Shin was gone. His mother made sure he could keep his balance before she nodded to the morgue attendant.
The woman in scrubs gave him a short sympathetic glance before she pulled the sheet back to reveal Shin’s face. The loud crash in his head was deafening. Shin lay on the metal gurney, his skin so pale that Haje could barely recognize him. He searched for the laugh lines that always played along the corners of Shin’s eyes—or the beginnings of the smile that appeared whenever Shin saw him.
“Little Shin,” his twin would always say.
Shin had come first into this world. Once, they’d argued about that, and Shin had promised he’d go last. Why was it then that he was standing here staring at Shin’s body now?
“Shin,” he said his voice husky with painful emotion. “Wake up, hyung.”
“Haje,” Seol said softly, placing a hand on his shoulder. “Your brother is gone from us now.”
He shook his head, reaching out to touch Shin’s cold jaw. The same jaw he saw when he looked into the mirror. He wanted to look at Shin and see his own eyes laughing back at him.
“Hyung,” Haje said, tears filling his eyes. “Mom, Shin won’t wake up when I call.”
“Oh, Haje.” Seol managed to wrap her arms around him. She pulled his head down to her shoulder, his tears sliding down his cheeks.
Gazing at Shin, he broke down and cried. He clung to his mother. He just couldn’t imagine such a bleak world, a world without Shin.
*****
Seol carried Shin’s ashes in an ornate metal urn. Haje walked beside her, supporting his weight with a walking cane. His right leg was hard to walk on, the gash on his thigh throbbing with each step despite the painkillers. Behind them, family, friends and co-workers followed as they headed to the lakeshore and the gentle sweep of water. Haje swallowed down the lump in his throat. He’d woken up every morning this past week hoping he was dreaming. Expecting that Shin would appear at his bedroom door with a lazy grin and tease him for crying so much.
“Haje,” Seol said his name quietly. “Scatter your brother’s ashes, honey.”
He blinked back tears. His mother was holding out the urn for him. He stared at the smooth shining metal, and his heart rebelled. Christina, his mother’s housekeeper took his cane, standing close to make sure he kept his balance. He took the urn holding Shin’s ashes and met his mother’s gaze. She nodded in encouragement as Haje fought the urge to scream. Gritting his teeth, he limped to the water’s edge, waves teasing his highly polished shoes. He closed his eyes, unable to go farther. Not because of the pain in his leg; no, it was the pain in his heart.
Shin, he thought, holding the urn against his chest.
The cast on his left arm was hidden under a heavy, black, button-down sweater. He couldn’t hold the urn and open it at the same time. Thankfully, Christina came to stand beside him; she touched his shoulder gently before she opened the urn for him. Fresh tears filled his eyes, and he tried not to let them fall. It seemed like all he did these days was cry. The idea that his brother was reduced to ashes in an expensive urn felt too cruel.
An injustice, he thought.
Shin should be standing beside him skipping stones over the surface of the lake, not about to become part of the lake. Anger swept through him, and his hands shook. He limped into the water not caring that his shoes would be ruined and he’d be wet. He kept walking until the cold water reached just below his knees.
“Shin,” he said quietly. “I should have let you come to my house. I should have made us stay longer at the bar. I’m so sorry.”
Blinded by tears, he held out the urn, upending it to allow the wind to sweep his brother’s ashes into the water. He would have stayed there watching Shin’s ashes fade from his sight, but his leg hurt, his head was pounding, and he just wanted to sleep until the pain in his heart killed him.
He slowly limped back to the beach. Christina took the urn from him and handed him his walking cane. He didn’t want to talk to mourners. They could say nothing that would make him feel better. He headed straight for the black limousine his mother had arranged for the funeral.
“You’ll keep staying at home with me,” Seol said when she joined him a few minutes later. “I don’t want you to stay in your apartment alone.”
“I’ll be fine alone, Mom,” he protested.
He looked out the window, watching mourners get into their cars and drive off. They’d go back to their houses and talk; they’d pity him and his mother for their loss. They’d move on, forget Shin. He swallowed bitter anger at that thought. How was he supposed to let Shin go? Why had he survived instead of Shin?
Shin was smarter than he was. Shin was the lively one, the one everyone loved because he made them feel comfortable. Why Shin? He stared out the window unseeing; the tears he’d been fighting were back. He blinked hard, determined not to cry anymore.
That’s when he saw the man leaning on a black Mercedes parked two spaces away. There was no other car between the limousine and the Mercedes. With short blond hair and blue eyes, the man was in a long black coat, the collar lifted up to brace against the wind. A shudder ran through him as he realized he’d seen the man before—at the hospital, when his mother had been helping him walk around the halls for his daily exercise. Always watching, Haje thought.
He reached for the door handle ready to get out and ask who he was.
“Are you listening to me, Haje?” His mother touched his knee. “What’s the matter? Are you in pain?”
“No.” He turned to assure her. By the time he turned back, the mysterious man had entered his car and was driving out of the space. “Mom, did you see that man? Who is he?”
“What man?” Seol asked, leaning forward to have a look. He sighed because there was no point to his question now. “I don’t see anyone, honey. This is why you should be at home with me. You don’t look well enough to be alone.”
“Mom…” He started to complain, tired of this argument.
She’d gotten him from the hospital and driven straight to the Young home on Lakeshore Boulevard and had stopped him every morning when he’d woken up ready to move back to his apartment in the city.
He turned to her. Seeing her, his argument about returning to his apartment died a sudden death. His mother was wearing a brave face, but he could see dark shadows under her eyes. She looked elegant in a simple black dress with a black peacoat. Her hair was held back in a sleek bun.
Elegant and fragile, he thought.
She’d lost a son. Seol was in crisis, too. Shifting on the comfortable back seat, he reached out with his good hand and took her right hand.
“I’m sorry, Mom. I’ll stay until my leg heals. How are you holding up?” he asked gently.
She patted his hand gently. “I’m afraid to let you out of my sight, Haje.”
He sighed. The police were scaring her again. He still couldn’t remember much about the accident. The crashing metal, fear, bile in his mouth as he realized they were in trouble—those feelings were engraved in his brain, but not much else. The police kept saying they were investigating a homicide. The pickup truck that had crashed into them had disappeared, and its owner was shot dead. Both Virgil and Shin had died from extensive injuries resulting from the crash. A freakish miracle had ensured his survival. The cops thought it was murder; he thought they were crazy. Who would want them dead?
Seol was not sleeping well at night. Who could blame her?
Why would anyone want to murder his brother and Virgil?
“Nothing will happen to me,” Haje assured his mother.
“I almost lost you,” Seol said bitterly. “Until the police figure out what’s going on, you’re not safe outside the house. I can’t lose another son.”
“Mom,” he sighed.
She’d lost her husband four years ago. A difficult time, Haje thought, remembering his father’s struggle with cancer. He and Shin had sustained his mother as she was going through that horrible time. Shin’s energy had kept him going. Now they were just Haje and his mother.
“Haje,” Seol said quietly, squeezing his fingers. “Don’t leave the house just yet, okay? Stay at home with me.”
He’d stay as long as she needed. The drive back home after scattering the ashes took fifteen minutes. His parents had purchased the house when he and Shin had been five years old. The two-story, lakeshore house was familiar, nostalgic—a safe haven. Whenever things hadn’t made sense in his life, he’d always come back home for comfort. Limping into the foyer, Haje glanced up the stairs, expecting to see Shin appear at the landing. They’d made it a habit to slide down the balustrade to the bottom, to his mother’s chagrin.
“Are you hungry?” Seol asked behind him.
Christina walked in behind them, taking Seol’s coat. Her eyes were red as though she’d been crying. She’d practically raised them; he understood her sadness. “I made some bean soup last night. I can make sandwiches and coffee.”
“I’m not hungry,” Haje said, starting for the stairs. “I think I’m going to go take a nap.”
“You didn’t have breakfast. Those meds you’re taking need you to have food in your stomach.” Seol complained to him as Christina headed toward the kitchen.
“I’ll eat when I wake up,” he promised, starting the long climb up the stairs.
On his way to his old bedroom on the second floor, he stopped at the closed door right before his. Shin’s room. He hadn’t entered it since he’d returned from the hospital. Staring at the handle, he opened the door abruptly and paused at the doorway.
It was like walking into a time capsule. A large white telescope sat by the wide windows. Shin had loved lying back on a lounge chair and watching the stars. The desk against the wall right by the windows was laden with books. There was a wooden box beside the books that he knew would be filled with wires and all kinds of knickknacks. Shin loved collecting small gears, screws and strange buttons. Haje had loved discovering the little gadgets Shin made using the things in that box. Shin, the engineer, had been an adventure to grow up with, always making strange gadgets to do funny little things. Haje almost smiled at the memory of his toy soldiers shooting paper bullets.
He ignored that table and the open notebooks on the desk. Instead, he walked to the four-poster bed and climbed on. He dropped his walking cane on the carpet and lay back on the pillows. He smiled when he saw the stars of the Milky Way painted on the top panel of the bed.
Shin had called it their secret. He and Shin would lie back on the pillows late at night whispering dreams to each other, telling tales of starships and far-away worlds.
He closed his eyes remembering those happy times. He fell asleep dreaming about Shin.
* * * * *
Haje woke up hours later choking. He couldn’t breathe, there was darkness, and something heavy was holding him down in the bed. Panic struck as he realized he was being smothered to death.
- 19
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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