Snake Venom Ch 85
by berryChapter 85
10.
The first time Cheon Wooshin ever saw Lee Yeonwoo was through a video file of Utopia Sodom circulating through the intelligence network.
The footage, degraded by endless extraction and copying, was worse than old CCTV, yet Yeonwooâs features cut through the blur with striking clarity. His venom-bright eyes glinted like those of a wild animal caught in a night-vision trap, and his movements were quick, desperate, feral. In the final secondsâless than a minute longâYeonwoo was dragged helplessly by a half-human twice his size.
To anyone else, that last frame would have screamed despair. But Wooshin thought differently. Ordinarily, he would have sent it straight to Joo Doyoung after a single viewingâyet he played it again, twice, thrice. Especially those last few seconds.
He saw Yeonwoo clutch the attackerâs arm with both fists and dig his heels into the groundâa will bent on resistance. He merely looked like he was being hauled away. In truth, he was biding time, looking for the precise moment where counterattack would land. What looked fragile had been filled to the brim with a brutal will to survive.
âGather every shred of intel on Utopia Sodomâdonât bother filtering for authenticity.â
That was how he met himâand Yeonwoo was as useful as expected. What he hadnât expected: Yeonwooâs loyalty, initiative, and persistence exceeded all forecasts. Where that nature came from occasionally piqued Wooshinâs curiosity, but he hadnât intended to keep Yeonwoo long enough for it to matter.
And for the first few weeks, Wooshin believed he was keeping his boundaries perfectly.
A dog should remain a dog, used for the role assigned. Even if Yeonwoo exerted undue influence on him and his team, that was acceptable only within the scope of the Venom investigation. Yeonwoo had a home to return to and a clear desire of his own. Wooshin respected those choices to the extent he needed him. That, he believed, was the price of using someone.
He gave just enough affection that he could cut the leash at any moment. When Yeonwoo excelled, he praised him without hesitation; when potential needed room, he stepped back and waited. It was no different from how he cultivated the rest of his teamârecognize strength, cultivate it, ignite morale at the right moment. He went no further. The loyalty and devotionâthat was Yeonwooâs job.
âI just felt I needed to be by your side.â
Yet Yeonwoo read an emotion Wooshin hadnât even recognized in himselfâinstinctively responding before that feeling even surfaced in Wooshinâs awareness. His naive earnestness pierced him before he could brace.
Then Yeonwoo dared to care for a bat-hybrid he had known for a single night. During planning, he drifted off, hesitated, grew dispiritedâinfuriatingly distracting Wooshin. A flaw he would have brushed aside in any other subordinate clung to him, tugging at his stride.
Why couldnât he at least hide it? Or deny it, if discovered? But Yeonwoo was not the type to mask his heart.
âIn another time and place, we mightâve been good friends.â
His tentative confession scraped Wooshinâs nerves raw.
Ah, but Yeonwoo explained himself furtherâsaid his stubborn kindness could not be beaten out of him, not even by President Parkâs fists; that he never did anything halfway; that his warmth toward Wooshin, the team, and Seolkyung sprang from the same nature. And under those earnest eyes, Wooshin could only laugh.
âFor you, it took three seconds.â
That single line hurled a stone into Wooshinâs stagnant lake.
This⊠damn mutt.
For the first time in years, the unruly temperament heâd disciplined into silence clawed at its restraints.
What did it matter whether it was one night or three seconds? Seeing himself placed on the same scale as some bat creature made anger curl sharp inside him. Being shaken by those wide eyes and foolish sincerityâlaughable. Offensive.
Resistanceâtoward a dog on a leash. Wooshin stared at the ceiling, struck by absurdity and a punch-like shock. Something stirred in his chestâdark, unpleasant, unfamiliar. A filthy color of emotion. Close to disgust. But when he realized it was the same rootless, unnamed feeling sprouting inside himâŠ
He wanted to leave the room immediately.
âIâm going to sleep.â
Another second and he might talk nonsenseâor do something. As chaotic impulses ricocheted, Wooshin realized it was time for his suppressant.
Yes. It was because of the side effects.
He roseâyet Yeonwoo, reckless fool, reached out and grabbed him. He should have ignored itâbut his body didnât obey. Instead, he turned, stepped close, and tilted Yeonwooâs chin up.
âŠ
âŠ
Yeonwooâs face, frozen in shock, strained to look calm. They were close enough that if Wooshin tugged his collar, their breaths would meet. The faint tremble in Yeonwooâs exhale pricked his senses. That odd, ugly discomfort surged.
It wasnât Yeonwoo overreactingâWooshinâs senses had become hypersensitive to him. And thenâhe smelled it. A once-foreign scent, now sharp on his senses. Faint yet insistent, the fresh green scent of young leaves pulsed beneath Yeonwooâs ear.
His fangs itched. A craving he knew could only be the side effect flickered along his jaw.
âWhenâs your next heat?â
The question was impulsiveâeven he didnât know why it spilled out. Yeonwoo blinked, startled but trying to answer dutifully. His fluttering lashes sparked a thought Wooshin refused to examine.
And then, the day of the mission came.
âYes, I pity them.â
Yeonwoo showed a trait that could be weaknessâyet did not hide it.
âWhatever you do, Iâll follow.â
He offered an answer Wooshin hadnât known he craved.
âShall I bark?â
He even bared his belly, offering loyalty without shame.
Perhaps it began thenâwhen a new venom seeped into Wooshin. Silent, slow, insidious.
As refined and cunning as Wooshin himself, it invaded his nerves and veins without pain or sign. How could he have noticed? His emotions already churned like poison, wild and heavy.
âTeam Leader⊠thank you. Youâre really amazing. Whenever you do things like thisâŠâ
And the moment Yeonwoo shone with pure, childlike admirationâ
Something inside Wooshin snapped. Head, heartâmaybe everywhere blood and nerves reached.
Lee Yeonwoo, age twenty-three. Mosaic dog-type hybrid from the mud pit called Utopia Sodom. Loyal, pitiful muttâand mine.
Words once just data fractured inside him and spread like ink in water. Yeonwoo blended with venom, flooding him dark and deep. It took mere minutes for that color to turn opaque, swallowing light whole.
His vision blurred, then clearedâand the flame coiled inside him could not be stopped.
His body burned. The desire to devour what sat beside himâhis propertyârose hot enough to scorch thought.
At the entrance, Yeonwoo glanced back.
No amount of complaining about his lack of learning would change itâhe had clung to hope until moments ago. Wooshin had been so rational, so perfectâsurely, if he stalled long enough, the real Wooshin would return. That pitiful hope.
There is no rabbit foolish enough to walk into a tigerâs den of its own accord. Yet here he was. Was this truly the only way?
A man who wavers after speaking with one mouth is pathetic. Donât overthink it. If you canât avoid it, enjoy it.
ââŠâŠâ
His attempts to steel himself veered into dangerous territory. Had anxiety scrambled his brain after so long? Enjoy this? He might die.
âWhat are you doing.â
Wooshinâs low voice pressed against his back. His clothing brushed Yeonwooâsâhe had stepped close. The realization set Yeonwooâs nerves ablaze.
âOpen it.â