#gotta figure out why the jogging stroller has a wobble so i can run with lilly again
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So it turns out I like running and I figured out that doing in involves lots of little unrelated goals such as "knee doesn't hurt this run so the PT exercises are paying off" and "run up this incline without keeling over" and "so it turns out I need to work with my ADHD and schedule regular races to keep the sense of urgency that lets me remember to do things."
Anywho signed up for my second 5k last night. I ran the first one in May, doing a walk/run with a bit more walking than I hoped because there were undisclosed major inclines lol. Still finished in 43 minutes. This time I know it's a flat course, it's five dollars cheaper than the last one, and my goal is to run the entire time.
On my run last night it was clear I hadn't lost all of my progress since last time even though it's been over a month. My knee only twinged once or twice and I corrected my gait. I kept my heart rate more in the aerobic than anaerobic zone. And I ran for longer intervals.
Yeah I can do this
Looking a bit more stressed in the second pic after the race lol
#personal#running#5k#gotta figure out why the jogging stroller has a wobble so i can run with lilly again#adhd#working with my adhd
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FIC: Welcome to Backwater ch.7 (spicyhoney)
Summary: Stretch knows he can't really depend on the kindness of strangers, but oh, sometimes he wishes he could.
~~*~~
Read âThe Kindness of Strangersâ on AO3
or
Read it here!
~~*~~
It was with a heavy, weird-ass book in hand that Stretch returned to the heat of the afternoon. This time he made haste getting back to the store while his knees were cooperating, almost jogging on the sidewalk and waving to any regular customers as he passed. The sun was on its downward path by now and the strollers were out in full force, the Human moms and pops pushing them hardly paying him any mind past a âgood afternoonâ as he went by.
His knees were back to the wibble-wobbles when he slipped through the door, the bell announcing him with a muted clank. The first thing he noticed was that Red wasnât behind the counter. He was standing at the back of the store, leaning on his cane and blocking off the hallway that led to both their living quarters. Yeah, that looked like insurance that Stretch couldnât hurry on past him upstairs; Red wasnât quick, but he also wasnât stupid, and Stretch could feel his hard gaze scrutinizing him from across the store.
Wonderbar.
Stretch pasted on a grin and tried to act like someone who hadnât been recently felt up by Redâs little brother in the public library. Not that Red said that he couldnât, but some things, (for example, random groping) could probably be inferred.
âhey, whatâs up?â Stretch said brightly.
âmy bro called,â Red said bluntly, and Stretchâs feeble hopes deflated like yesterdayâs party balloon. So much for discretion.
âi can explain,â Stretch blurted, âit wasnât my idea, seriously, i was onlyâ"
Red interrupted him with an amused snort. âeasy, kid, donât haul out your guilty conscience on my account. all he did was give me the gist of things, said you had yourself an unexpected adventure.â Red jerked his head towards the hallway. âgâwan, string bean, you can use my bathroom. take a shower and cool off.â
A cool shower pouring down on his dirty, sweaty bones sounded like Eden itself right about now, apple not included.
âthanks,â Stretch said gratefully. He skirted around Red, who didnât move, only squatted there like a grouchy stump in the middle of the doorway while Stretch squeezed around him. Must be tempering his kindness with a little extra asshole to keep things even.
On his way to showerland, Stretch took a quick detour to leave the book on the coffee table amidst the clutter. Maybe he could ask Red about it, get the cliff notes version.
The shower in the downstairs bathroom was stuck with the same crappy water heater as upstairs, not that it mattered since Stretch was about ready to cuddle with an iceberg to cool off. Added bonus, the showerhead was a lot better and it managed to crank the feeble water pressure up to its max. There was a cheap plastic stool sitting in the tub, way too short for Stretch. He sat on it anyway, knees almost up to his chin as the cool water poured down on him and washed away the sweat and filth.
He was shivering a little by the time he was done, dragging a ratty towel over his dripping bones. The pile of his clothes was missing and there a new folded bundle sitting on the closed toilet lid. He mustâve been out of it more than he thought, heâd never even heard Red coming in. Unless laundry fairies were a thing and wasnât that idea a lot more pertinent than it was yesterday.
Stretch picked up the bundle and part of it fell on the floor. Pajama pants, luckily not a pair of Redâs although it mightâve been hilarious to see Stretch wandering around like a scrawny hulk who sprouted upward out of his clothes instead of sideways. They were red plaid flannel and worn to the stage of being shiny at the knees and elbows. Probably an old pair of Edgeâs, the fit was pretty close and not too many Humans wore their waistband quite as skinny as a guy without a waist.
(he was not getting a cheap thrill out of wearing a pair of Edgeâs pajamas, no matter what his libido was trying to tell him)
He wandered out into Redâs living room, still squeegeeing his skull dry with the damp towel, and saw the sofa was made up with some blankets and a pillow, the television remote set helpfully in reach.
âyou done?â Redâs voice echoed up from the store and his peculiar gait made its way down the hallway until he appeared again in the doorway. âthen lay down and turn on the boob tube, zone out awhile. youâll feel better.â
âwhat did your brother tell you?â Stretch asked. Not that he wasnât willing to do what he was told. The couch was saggy in the middle, but the blankets were clean and smelling of laundry detergent. They felt blissfully cozy after the cold shower.
âsaid you met edgar allen,â Red said. âunder less than stellar circumstances, iâm guessinâ, since i donât think ya got an invite for a meet and greet with the local scarecrow.â
This time his shiver had nothing to do with the temperature. Edgar Allen was an okay guy, (guy?) but Stretch was still on the fence about the cornâs attitude problems. ânot exactly, no. thanks for the heads up, by the way.â
Red tilted his skull to one side, baffled, âheads up about what?â
âi dunno,â Stretch leaned up on an elbow to see him better and hopefully increase the effect of his dirty look, âmaybe when youâre warning me off from the local landmarks, you couldâve touch on that fact that a stroll through the fields might involve the corn trying to hold me as a captive audience?â
ânaaah,â Red scoffed. Stretch didnât miss the way he absently started picking at his gold tooth; that was a nervous tell right there and maybe all this wasnât just concern but dealing with a little guilt that Stretchâs latest town bonding experience was less than top notch. âthat's why the damn scarecrow is there t'begin with. âsides, even without him youâd have gotten out before dark. anyway, never expected you to go tromping off into the corn in search of a maze, sorry i misgauged the direction of your dumbass.â
âno, iâm sorry, not your fault.â Stretch couldnât hold back a yawn so wide it nearly split his skull, yeesh, it wasnât even dinner time and he was ready to sleep for a week. The imaginary hamster running on the wheel in his head wasnât quite as ready and it decided to race back to thoughts of Edge sitting in the library, alone. Researching heâd said, so intent on his books from the so-called restricted section, like a bargain basement Hogwarts. âhey, what does your brother do?â
âmostly heâs a pain in my ass.â
It was said with great feeling and Stretch snerked out a laugh. Yeah, kinda a universal trait with little brothers. âno, seriously, i mean, for a living, what does he do?â
Red shifted his feet, his cane scraping the floor. âwhy are ya askinâ?â
âcurious. bored,â Stretch shrugged, âtake your pick.â He didnât really want to explain to Red that his brother wasnât just a sexy pair of legs in boots anymore, (but those hips would never be forgotten). He was interesting, no, fascinating. This whole town was turning out to be some kind of puzzle and it seemed to him that Edge might be a big piece. Heâd said that figuring out Backwater was a foolâs errand, but heâd never met Stretchâs kind of fool before.
âkidââ Red sighed and that resigned tone snapped Stretch out of his whimsies. He cringed internally. What was he even trying to do here, he owed Red so much and not just for the job, and here he was digging for information about his bro after Red already warned him off, not once, but twice, so maybe what he was really digging was his own grave, if he didnât knock it off.
ânevermind,â Stretch said hurriedly. âi shouldnâtâve asked, none of my business, i get it.â
Red shook his head. âthat ainât it.â
Stretch tried on a little laugh, ha ha, see, it wasnât that big a deal, right? âlook, the state of your brotherâs ass aside, i get it. thatâs your little brother, and i didnât forget what you said. we only bumped into each other at the library, iâm really not trying to get into his pants.â
He left off on making it a promise; he was telling the truth, but why take the chance on not keeping it.
He didnât expected the hand that suddenly scruffed over his skull, like the noogies he used to give to Blue when he was littleâŠwell, okay, Blue was still little but noogieing was off the table since heâd started his guard training.
This wasnât like that childish roughhousing, Redâs knuckles only scraped softly along his coronal sutures. âno, kid, you donât get it. my bro can handle himself, it ainât him iâm worried about. but you? donât ya got the feeling you ainât up to any new affairs of the soul right now? might want to take it easy awhile.â
That unexpectedly gruff kindness made tears sting in his sockets. Stretch guiltily leaned into that touch to absorb every drop, and how was it he could accept it from Red when he couldnât take it from his own brother? âi donât get you. you barely even know me. why are you so nice to me?â
Red huffed out a laugh. âyou want i should be an asshole? okay, but i gotta warn ya, iâm a contender when it comes to dick moves.â
âthanks, but you can keep your dick in your pants.â
âyour loss.â
âseriously, though, what i mean is. i just donât get it. this place is so weird, but everyone is nice.â It didnât exactly line up with Stretchâs view of the world. His brother was always nice sure and Snowdin hadnât been too bad, if you didnât count the fact that all his friends were from drinking his nights away at Muffetâs. The surface world ran about fifty-fifty with Monsters being on the kinder side of the scaleâŠuntil he got dumped and found out he lost all his friends in the divorce, how was that for loyalty.
Red only chuckled. ânow youâve gone and cursed yourself. canât say everyone is nice, you ainât met everyone yet.â
That was true, fuck, he hoped the universe wasnât listening and if it was, that it didnât decide to drum up a little drama. âred?â
âyeah, kid?â
Stretch craned his head back on the pillow and met Redâs crimson gaze upside-down. âthank you for being nice.â
âdonât tell anyone. iâll lose my resident asshole status.
âsecret is safe with me, promise.â Stretch yawned again and the cow bell suddenly jangled loudly out front, startling them both.
Red shouted. âyeah, iâm coming!â He tossed over his shoulder back at Stretch, âtake tomorrow off, sleep in, you ainât had a day off since ya got here.â
âthanks, boss.â
Stretch started to settle in, nap ahoy, captain, hard to starboard and all that, and his eye lights snagged on the book. Shit, he forgot to ask Red about it. Probably didnât matter, Redâs ingredient label kinda went equal parts of cryptic and cryptid, so he probably wasnât gonna give the right answers even if Stretch figured out what to ask.
Wait.
If Red and Edge want to share the part of the local Obi-Wan with their mysterious ways, that was fine. He already had the perfect person lined up to ask about the townâs history. Well, part of a person, anyway, the most important part.
Plan formed, Stretch turned on the television and snuggled into the blankets, letting the dulcet tones of Pat Sajak lull him to sleep.
He didnât dream.
~~*~~
The next day, Stretch headed over to the theater bright and early, still munching on the muffin Red handed off to him as he settled on the stool for the day with his latest book, this one with a bare-chested pirate embracing a busty Human woman as the ocean sprayed up over the hull over them. Seemed to Stretch that would be less smokinâ sexytimes and more cold and wet, but what did he know, his closest encounter with the ocean was extra salt on his Applebeeâs margarita.
âthanks, mom,â Stretch said as he took the little paper lunch bag Red held out to him. Red only grunted and didnât look up from his book. In the midst of rummaging for his tasty free breakfast, Stretch hesitated at the front door.
He felt a little guilty even though Red was the one who told him to take the day. Before he started working at the store, was Red really sitting there all day long, twelve hours of a cash register and customers while he drank beer and soaked up a little romance language in the form of a cheap paperback?
Not that Stretch was judging, hell, if that made Red happy, more power to him. Still, there had to be more to his life than that, didnât there? Maybe heâd see if Mitch sold sudoku pads at the gas station, pick him up one along with a six-pack. Hard to guess if they carried that kind of entertainment; Mitch was either some kind of crossword grand champion or the kind of guy who ate ketchup on his cheerios and Stretch still wasnât sure which.
The first movie showing wasnât for another hour, but Igor didnât make a fuss when Stretch asked him if he could go sit down early. (and holy shit, the proprietorâs name was actually Igor? He wasnât sure if the guyâs parents hated him or if the universe sense of irony rolled a natural D20 when it hit this town.)
Igor only grunted and handed over two cups of popcorn without being asked, handing back a crumpled dollar in change. Aww, Stretch had a usual, see, he was settling into town just fine, suck it, Edge.
(donât think it, donât think it, donât think itâŠ)
Stretch made his way to the theater to his regular seat, propping his sneakers up on the chair in front of him. The popcorn he set aside for now, it wasnât exactly his idea of a breakfast treat and that muffin Red gave him was still settling into his magic. To be honest, he wasnât entirely sure if Doris could show up very long before the movie. He was no expert, but he did know that ghosts could have some peculiar rules about manifesting. Hopefully this wouldnât mess with her morning routine, whatever it was.
He didnât have to wait long. Maybe Doris could sense him or maybe she could just feel it when a living person came into the theater. She slowly came into focus next to him, pale ectoplasm coalescing, and the already cool air chilled even further.
Doris happily sniffed at her popcorn as she said, whispery soft, âGood morning, Stretch, youâre here very early.â
âyeah, took the day off work,â Stretch said. His voice sounded too loud in the empty theater, not even the elevator music was playing yet. âi need your help with something.â
He might as well have flipped Dorisâs switch to âonâ. She lit up, a smile curving her pretty mouth and seeming more solid than ever. The seat behind her was barely visible through her pale pink dress as she said eagerly, âOf course, anything that I can do.â
So that was how Stretch came to tell her the story about Edgar Allen. He didnât leave out any details, including the bit about the kids shouting at him not to go in the field, the corn closing in around him in a dizzying maze of green, Edgar Allenâs assistance, and Edgeâs cryptic warning that the scarecrow would disappear with the harvest.
Doris listened to it all raptly, her eyes wide and startlingly blue, and she never flickered once the entire time. The only unsettling sight was a single trickle of blood running down the side of her face, gathering in a heavy droplet on her chin.
âMy, that sounds terrifying,â Doris breathed, unaware of the irony of her saying that while a slender thread of ghostly blood ran down her cheek. The droplet swelled fatly, growing until it finally fell with a plip onto her dress, leaving behind a perfectly round spot that would slowly vanish, only to be replaced by the next drop.
It didnât really bother Stretch much anymore; he was getting used to it and an old memory of blood was nothing compared to his recent woes. âyeah, it was spooky all right.â
âBut Iâm not sure I can help you,â Doris continued sadly, âThere wasnât a scarecrow in my day, not that I remember. But the corn. Yes. That I recall.â She shivered delicately and her chair let out a strange groan of springs. âA person could get lost for days in the corn. I rememberâŠâ Her already faint voice went softer and Stretch strained to hear her, her gaze distant. âI remember one year at harvest time, they found a skeleton in the field, it was awful. Oh!â She gasped and pressed a gloved hand to her mouth, âIâm so sorry, it was a dead person, not a skeleton like you!â
âno offense taken,â Stretch assured her. He slouched down in his seat even more and waggled his feet, his untied shoelaces laces bobbing against the seatback âhuh. so at least one person died out in the corn.â
âIâm afraid I donât remember much about it,â Doris admitted. âwhoever it was, they werenât local.â
âuh huh.â An outsider, then, like him, getting munched up by the corn triffids. âwho owns the corn fields, anyway?â
âIâŠâ she hesitated, then apologetically. âIâm not sure. I donât know if Iâve forgotten or if I never knew.â
Another mystery. If he was gonna play at Sherlock Holmes, he really needed to start taking notes. Maybe get a pipe.
âwelp, either way, edgar allen bro out there saved my ass,â Stretch told her. He picked up a piece of popcorn and didnât eat it, only crumpled it between his fingers and let the mangled bits fall to the floor, âand heâs gonna die come harvest time. i feel like i owe it to him to at least hear his story, you know? edge wouldnât tell me much, just gave me that book and a scavenger hunt.â
âThis Edge person doesnât sound very nice,â Doris said disapprovingly. Her mouth pulled down into a frown that flashed briefly to a bloody smear. âIs he local?â
âkinda? heâs a monster like me, so he could only have been in town for a coupla years. since we came to the surface, anyway.â
Sudden relief washed over Dorisâs pretty face. âHeâs not a human, then.â
ânope, heâs another skeleton monster.â That seemed to satisfy her. Note to self, Doris wasnât real keen on Humans, in a way that didnât seem like it was only about the way they ran away when they got a good look at her. That mystery wasnât all too mysterious, not with a big, bloody clue flickering in and out of view like a gory version of a kidâs flipbook. If that was a going away present from another Human, he didnât blame her for being wary. He wondered if sheâd met Edge before but Stretch hesitated to bring up that idea, or to mention Red; he didnât want her to feel bad if she didnât remember. âyep, another skeleton monster in town. heâs kinda rough around the edges, but heâs okay.â
âOkay, is that all?â Doris said with unexpected mischievousness, âhe didnât sound simply âokayâ when you were describing him.â
A blush flared hotly in his cheekbones and Stretch hunched down in his seat, weirdly embarrassed in a way he hadnât been with Red. At least Red could see what he was staring at, Doris only had him waxing poetically about Edgeâs hips to go by, and Shakespeare he wasnât.
âyeah, yeah,â Stretch grumbled, and damn, he shouldâve brought along his hoodie, at least he couldâve hidden from the laughter shining in her translucent eyes. She had a dimple in the cheek on her good side and it deepened as Stretch admitted, âcould be that i enjoy the view. but thatâs it, okay? just a little sightseeing, i donât need any souvenirs.â
âUh huh,â Doris clicked her tongue thoughtfully, âStretch, my mama always told me you canât hurry up a good time by waiting for it.â
Other people were starting to come into the theater now. One of them gave him a curious look, but they didnât stop, only followed the others down to the front row.
âthe only time iâm looking for is in the nick of,â Stretch sighed. âguess thereâs no way around it, iâll have to read the book.â
He shouldâve known not to try to find an easy way out; seemed like all his shortcuts had abandoned him, lately.
Doris laid a hand on his arm and a sudden chill sank its teeth in deep enough for his bones to ache. âIâm sorry I couldnât help,â Doris said softly.
ânah, you helped plenty,â Stretch told her. She had. Now he knew that scarecrows were slightly more recent, at least within the past century and that maybe the cornfield wasnât quiet as safe as itâd been played off to be. At least a cornfield without Edgar Allen in it.
The lights started dimming, the first credits beginning to roll. His popcorn was cold, the butter congealing it into clumps of greasy blobs that stuck to his fingers. Stretch ate it anyway, hey, it cost him a dollar, and laughed with Doris as Buster Keaton escaped from a bumbling crowd of cops by grabbing onto a passing car.
His phone was in his pocket, tucked in deep and only lightly pressing against his femur through the thin cloth of his shorts. It vibrated once in a quick, staccato burst while the movie was playing but Stretch ignored it.
That was one lesson heâd learned very well while they still lived under the mountain; if you focused on the task at hand, you didnât have to think about the ones you left behind.
~~*~~
tbc
#spicyhoney#papcest#keelywolfe#underfell#underswap#underfell papyrus#underswap papyrus#underfell sans#welcome to backwater
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