#It's so gross pls let me just laugh at the stupid teenagers being cute and silly without having to look at fucking foot shots??
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samaeldire · 2 years ago
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Hmmm I'm watching Nagatoro and I have very mixed feelings on it?
The dynamic between the two mcs is fucking hilarious and adorable and I love it, but her friends are genuinely vile sometimes and it makes me really uncomfortable when them doing actually terrible stuff gets played off as gag? Plus the uh.. Beach episode... Foot shots.... Eugh
I don't have an issue with teens toying with someone they're flirting with, I was like that at that age and that's a big reason I find the show endearing and funny, but there's some moments that are blatantly fanservice and I find it really creepy tbh. It's one of those shows where you really have to just "imma pretend I didn't see that" to enjoy it sometimes :/
Pls. Make wholesome nostalgia anime without the creep shit. I beg.
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master-sass-blast · 5 years ago
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Tricks, Tricks, Tricks!
I hate doing intros when I’m tired bc it feels like it takes forever.
Summary: You and Wade set up a haunted house for the kids at Xavier’s --and prank Scott Summers, of course.
Pairings: Piotr Rasputin x Reader.
Rating: G. Just ignore the swear words. Pls.
Set before “Questions and Answers” but after “THIS IS HALLOWEEN.”
Taglist: @marvel-is-perfection, @chromecutie, @super-darkcloudstudent, @girl-obsessed-with-things, @nebulous-leo
It’s not every day that you and Wade stumble onto a legitimately, objectively good idea.
Granted, you guys have tons of great ideas. The fallback of nearly all of them, however, is that they usually involve some sort of destruction and-slash-or generally deviant behavior.
Which, in yours and Wade’s opinions, makes the entire shebang that much more fun, but dealing with the “post brilliant idea clean-up” and the temporary social fallout among your peers –depending on who you target and piss off—isn’t quite as fun.
However.
It’s Halloween season. And the teachers at Xavier’s tend to do some sort of Halloween-y thing for the students there because a lot of places that host seasonal events –surprise, surprise—won’t admit mutants.
Plus, Piotr loves Halloween, which means the two of you have a “non-deviant” spokesperson to advocate for your plan.
And, the cherry on top of it all, is that Scott has been an absolute asshat as of late, meaning that he needs to get the shit pranked out of him to whack his massive ego back down to a more manageable size.
You and Wade grin at each other as you look up various “how to make a haunted house” tutorials. This is gonna be awesome.
 ***
 Convincing Piotr to back your idea is easy.
First, you convince him without Wade around. You’ve learned that Piotr doesn’t necessarily mind if you and Wade come up with ideas, but that Wade’s manner of “selling them” completely frustrates your darling boyfriend and puts him off even the most benign suggestions.
Second, you present the idea as something fun and seasonal for the students at Xavier’s; Piotr, essentially, is a massive mother hen that loves nothing more than making his “kids” happy, which means that he’s on board for just about anything that involves doing special stuff for the students.
Third, you’re his girlfriend and he thinks you’re cute, which means all you have to really do is bat your eyelashes at him and say please.
(And, granted, you’d had other tricks up your sleeve if he’d hesitated, but sometimes life just lets you knock one out of the park. It’s a great feeling.)
***
 With Piotr’s seal of approval, you wind up selling the idea to the rest of the X-Men with no problem –and, since Jean’s out of town visiting family, she’s not here to rat you out to Scott, either.
Granted, Xavier still could, but you’re starting to think he’s less of a “lawful good” and more of a “neutral” or “chaotic good” type than he lets on. There’s been plenty of times he could’ve sold you or Wade out on any of your pranks, but he usually keeps his mouth shut.
Ah, well. Best not to question the freebies life sends your way.
Better yet, you and Wade already have a list of ideas and necessary supplies, thanks to your “haunted house research binge” that you two did earlier. Granted, Piotr outright naysays half of the suggestions due to them being too expensive, too destructive to the building, or too gross –Wade—but all in all it’s a success.
Hell yeah.
 ***
 The official set up goes as such: on the designated “haunted house day,” you, Wade, and a few volunteers get to spend the morning and part of the afternoon setting up the haunted house in a sectioned off part of the mansion –except it’s for the elementary aged students, so it’s technically “Haunted House Lite,” but that’s fine. Then, at four in the afternoon, the elementary aged students will get to walk through, enjoy some G-rated spooks, and get little bags of candy at the end to enjoy.
Lovely. Wonderful. Wholesome.
And then the fun comes in.
Because, beknownst to Piotr only because he caught you and Wade conspiring with everyone else, you and Wade managed to get all the middle school and high school students in the room and fill them in on your idea to scare the everliving shit out of one Scott Summers.
And, because teenagers are basically little shits that run on caffeine and entropy, they’re all super down to watch Scott get pranked.
So, once the little students have had their seasonal fun and have been ushered off for dinner with everyone else, you and Wade and your volunteers have five paltry hours to beef up your haunted house with some higher grade spooks and also set up your prank for Scott.
Granted, it’s not a lot of time to work with, but the two of you have worked with less before.
 ***
 The prank itself, compared to yours and Wade’s usual fare, is… unremarkable, actually.
“Go figure,” Wade grumbles under his breath while he wrestles with one of the several smoke machines he’d purchased for the prank. “Captain Vanilla-Save-For-the-Pole-Up-His-Ass doesn’t watch horror movies. Leave it to a fucking jumpscare. Fucking stupid. He’s literally the single most boring person to exist!”
“Hey, at least it makes it easy for us,” you reason as you work on dying a bunch of cheesecloth with a massive mixing bowl of tea. “Why go through the extra effort for a dill-hole like him?”
“Fair enough. Hey, I think I got this working!” Wade tries turning on the smoke machine, then pulls a scowl when it makes an alarming grinding noise, turns it back off with a disgusted huff, and turns in his chair to shout down the hall. “Nathan! Get your ass in here and talk to your cousin! This fucking thing won’t work!”
You snort and shake your head.
(Nathan does, in fact, get the smoke machine to work, but only because he bothers to read the instructions first.
Wade calls bullshit anyway.)
 ***
 The day of is nothing short of busy.
The two of you –and your volunteers—set up shop in one of the unfinished wings meant to be proper classrooms. You’ve got the entryway, the flight of stairs going up to the second floor, the hallway, and a few of the rooms of the rooms to set up your little “house of horrors” in (along with the back stair case that leads back down to the main hallway on the first floor, but that’s only for an easy exit for everyone).
The main order of business is such: put up the most labor intensive props –curtains to black out the windows, a curtain to block off the first floor hallway from view, spiderwebs, anything hanging from the ceiling or the walls that isn’t going to be switched out—first so that the bulk of the work is done for the day, since you won’t have much time between the littler students and the older students (and, most importantly, Scott).
The smoke machines get put in next, along with any special lights –including some cool black lights you and Wade had gotten their hands on, which go next to a mirror at the end of the walkthrough so the students can see what their costumes look like under the effects of the lights.
After that is the rest of the props, which are all switch out stuff. The younger students get some relatively innocuous skeletons, some cartoonish looking zombies, a couple mummies, and a bunch of pumpkins, black cats, and otherwise tame Halloween fare. The older students get much gnarlier, gorier stuff, including a demonic clown statue that actually gives you the creeps.
You grin as Wade sings “Spooky Scary Skeletons” –the dubstep remix, no less—while the two of you fill up goody bags for the students. This is going to be great.
***
 Piotr stops by after lunch with a bag of costumes –yours and his—and some extra supplies Wade had asked for.
You kiss his cheek as he hands off the bag of decorations to Wade. “Hey, babe. Had a good day?”
He nods. “Students are very excited to go through haunted house. Especially younger ones.”
“Well, here’s hoping we can give them some good, old-fashioned, spooky fun,” you say with a grin. “Ready to get changed and transform into creatures of the night?”
He does a scarily perfect Dracula laugh and winks at you. “But of course, moya lyubov’.”
Your costumes –for today and also for this year’s Halloween—are Dracula and the bride of Dracula. Piotr made nearly all of it, save for his shirt and slacks (and your two’s shoes, obviously), and between the costumes, the makeup, and some fake fangs, the two of you actually look the part.
(And Piotr sounds the part, what with his Russian accent and all. It’s almost like he was born for the role of Dracula.)
The two of you get to set up in one of the rooms with two doors, which also boasts a cauldron with a smoke machine in it, a bunch of fake spiderwebs, a couple of fake coffins, and some skeletons hanging on the walls. You get dressed, do each other’s make up, and then Piotr helps you put on your fangs before doing his own.
“So, tell me how to do a good Russian accent,” you say, lisping slightly around your fangs. “I gotta match what you’re selling.”
“I think you do just fine,” Piotr replies as he puts a glob of denture cream into one of his fangs and sticks it to his upper canine tooth. “Just try to avoid cheesy mobster accent, and you will do great.”
“Are we gonna do the whole ‘I want to suck your blood’ thing?” you ask. “I think we probably should.”
“If you want to.”
“Okay. I’m gonna practice, you tell me how I sound.” You clear your throat, get into your mental zone, then let out an accented, ominous, “I want to suck your blood!”
Piotr chuckles as he tests the fang’s hold on his tooth. “Very nice, myshka.”
You preen, then practice a few more times at varying pitches and speeds. Then, once you’re certain Piotr’s adjusted to your fooling around, you lean in and murmur, “I want to suck your dick.”
Piotr sputters, cheeks flushing –even under the pale make up you’d put on him—and looks around for anyone that might’ve overheard you. Once he’s certain that no one heard you –especially Wade—he exhales and shakes his head. “Later.”
You giggle and kiss his cheek.
***
 Right at four, the elementary aged students are ushered into the haunted house.
You can hear them from the room where you and Piotr are set up, giggling and gasping as Ellie and Yukio –who had volunteered to walk the younger students through—escort them along.
“Alright, before we enter this room, we all need to practice our brave faces,” Yukio says outside the door furthest away from you and Piotr. “Because in this room are Dracula and his wife!”
There’s some gasps and “oohs” from the kids, along with a couple expected “Dracula isn’t real”s.
“Don’t get too close,” Ellie says warningly. “Or else they might try to suck your blood!”
You grin at Piotr as the kids gasp again –he grins back and winks at you—then put on your “game face” as Ellie opens the door so the kids can enter the room.
It’s hard to keep a straight face, though, in the presence of the elementary students. It’s easy to tell that they’re really enjoying the mini haunted house, what with how they’re bouncing and grinning, and that combined with their adorable costumes –skeletons, princesses, pirates, pumpkins, there’s even one of the kids dressed as Iron Man—makes the entire thing downright heart-melting.
The kids all gasp, giggle, and whisper amongst themselves as they approach you and Piotr, flocking together like a bunch of baby birds—
And then one of the kids in the back shouts, “That’s not Dracula! That’s Mr. Piotr!”
Ellie, Yukio, and you all snort, while Piotr just winks at the kid in question.
“What do we have here, my love?” you ask, slipping into your “vampire accent” as you make a show of looking over all the kids, which prompts another slew of gasps and giggles from them. “It seems someone has brought us a bunch of tiny treats to eat!”
Piotr “hmms” as he stands, looming over the students in his long, flowing black cloak. “So it does, moya Koroleva. I must say, I am feeling peckish. Perhaps we should have afternoon snack.”
“Oh no!” Yukio exclaims. “Do you guys think they should be able to do that?”
“No!” the group of students all shout at once (which, admittedly, is a little rough on the ears).
“Well, I think we can do whatever we want,” you retort, looking over at Piotr to make sure the two of you time everything properly. “And…”
“We want to suck your blood!” you and Piotr declare while simultaneously fake-lunging at the group of students.
The students shriek, then run out the other door at Ellie and Yukio’s encouragement.
You and Piotr “pursue” the students –which is less of an actual pursuit and more just angling yourselves in their direction—until the last of the kids “escape” into the hall, then stop and grin at each other.
“I think that went well,” you say –quietly, so as not to disrupt the students’ experience.
“I agree.” Piotr holds out his arm to you. “Shall we, moya Koroleva?”
You giggle and place your hand on his arm. “Absolutely, my love.”
The two of you head out the door at the far end of the room –the door the students had originally entered in—and into the hall. Fortunately, there are a couple curtains blocking the rest of the hall from view, meaning that there’s no risk of anyone seeing the two of you sneaking through the hallway and down the stairs to the main floor.
Piotr ducks into one of the storage closets by the staircase and pulls out a box with various goody-bags stashed in it. “These looks very nice, moya lyubov’.”
“Thank you. I tried to make sure everyone got one of everything –oh, wait a second.” You reach into the closet and pull out a bag you’d stashed separately from everyone else’s. “This one’s Timothy’s. I wanted to make sure it didn’t get mixed up and he get peanuts by accident.”
“Good thinking.” Piotr sets the main box of treats on a nearby table, then turns back to you and kisses the top of your head. “How are you feeling, dorogoy?”
“I’m feeling good; I’m really looking forward to the big prank tonight!” The corner of your mouth turns up when he makes a “hmmm” of disapproval. “I take it you’re not a fan?”
“I just… I am concerned about how you and Wade target Scott,” Piotr says diplomatically. “The two of you seem to ignore everyone else.”
“Well, there’s not really a need to prank everyone else,” you reason. “And it’s not like we prank Scott all the time, either.”
“I would just worry about team dynamics.”
“He already fucks that up by being an asshole, honey,” you argue, careful to keep your voice down so the kids don’t hear you swearing. “Scott’s a total dick! He’s objectively horrible to Wade; he’s also a jerk to Russell. Like, massively.”
Piotr sighs. “I… I do not think pranking helps the situation.”
“Look, sometimes when people refuse to listen to polite conversation, you have to smack them around a little to keep them from letting their asshole behavior ooze all over everyone.” You grin. “Wade and I are just the smacking team.”
Piotr glances towards the door where the back staircase opens onto the main floor; there’s sounds of little voices and footsteps, meaning the kids are almost done. “Just… be considerate. That is all I ask.”
“Already done, baby,” you reassure him. “It’s a super basic jumpscare prank. Nothing about him, nothing about being a mutant, all Halloween themed. I made sure Wade didn’t get too crazy or destructive this time around.”
Piotr relaxes a little at that and kisses your temple—
And then the door opens, and the group of students rush into the main hallway.
“I told you it was them!” one of the students shouts, prompting everyone else to laugh.
“It was,” you admit, foregoing the vampire accent. “Did you guys like the haunted house?”
“Yeah!” the group choruses at once.
You and Piotr both grin, then work on handing out bags of candy to the students –and make sure that Timothy gets his special bag, no allergy episodes today, no sir—
And it’s good. Life is good.
 ***
 Once the younger students exit for dinner, everything switches to a mad scramble to flip the space for the second walkthrough.
Granted, it doesn’t sound like much, until you realize that it involves taking down basically all the props and putting new ones in.
It’s sweaty work, and by the time you’re done you have to reapply all your vampire make-up –because you and Piotr are still doing the vampire bit. And then—
And then.
Once the older teams exit the “vampire room,” you’ll sneak out the “entry” door and down the hall, then hover over the door everyone exits out into the main floor hall at the end of the walkthrough, and when they do, you’ll drop down next to Scott and scare the everliving shit out of him.
Simple. Stress-free. Borderline stupid.
It’s gonna be great.
 ***
 The second walkthrough is just as much of a success as the first one. The older students aren’t as giggly or excitable as the younger group, but it’s still easy to tell they’re enjoying the haunted house –at least, if the occasional screams and comments about “how cool” everything looks is anything to go by.
Better yet is that Scott is jumping and gasping at, like, everything. He’s so easily scared that you won’t even have to try when you drop down next to him. He’s so easily scared that the prank almost isn’t fun.
Keyword being: almost.
You and Piotr do your vampire schtick again –which, unlike what you did for the elementary students, this round involves the two of you lunging out of dark corners and acting, objectively, much scarier—and when the older teens and Scott run out, you grin, give Piotr a kiss, then dart out the other door.
It takes basically zero time to get positioned over the door everyone exits out of. You tuck yourself up into the corner where the walls and ceiling meet, then resign yourself to being bored while the older students finish their haunted house walkthrough.
Scott, predictably, is the first one out of the door. He looks annoyed by the entire situation, and is trying to brush fake cobwebs off his shirt.
Perfect.
You wait until there are a couple of students in the hall as well –you can’t have the prank go unwitnessed—then count down from five before dropping down next to Scott while screaming “Trick or treat!” at the top of your lungs.
He jumps five feet into the air and shrieks like a teenage girl in a horror movie, and the students laugh.
Mission: accomplished.
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