#i hope eddie DIESđ„đ„
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a few minds. still a wip, but i like the sketches :]!
here we have Eddie, Corona, ââloggersââ, Spark, and Voicecoder. designed a TON of minds a bit back i want to share sometime, but all their names and designs and colors are still undecided as of yet. this was me trying to color a few of them, but ideas for different drawings popped up lol.
also! please donât compare eddie to alastor. i also made him before i finished stranger thingsâŠso now thereâs a hidden joke i can makeâŠ
#chonny jash#cccc#cj mind#chonny jash mind#chonny jash hms#chonny jash hms designs#undecided on if i want eddieâs hair to be white or not#corona already has white hair so hmm#i love white hair minds <33#chonnyâs charming chaos compendium#mind chonny jash#the mind electric chonny jash#chonny jash the mind electric#eddie has the most lore out of all of them đ#it goes hARd#corona looks like a news anchor#i hope eddie DIESđ„đ„#ccccycles#cccc au#cj au#chonny jash au#pen&pencilparade
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A Doe in Fall (part 11)
âąHumanAlastor x FemaleBurlesquerReader - A Doe in Fall
A burlesquer with a penchant for conning men, you find your latest game interrupted when your next mark saves you from an aggressive fanâ by killing him. The chance encounter left you curious, still half convinced you could complete your normal chase. Unbeknownst to you, you were the one being tracked.
Part 1 - Pretty in Red smutđŠ Part 2 - Liar smutđŠ Part 3 - A Tragedy smutđŠ Part 4 - Enough Part 5 - Too Much Part 6 - Learning smutđŠ Part 7 - Recognition smutđŠ Part 8 - Trust sexual đ„” Part 9 - Shiny Things Part 10 - Good Deeds Part 11 - Caught đ (this bitch is getting long) Part 12 - Eddie Part 13 - The Release Part 14 - Someone like her smuttyđŠ
Horny? Not this story yet butâŠ.Donât worry, just wait a couple days⊠đ đŠ
Part 11 Caught
Taking time to cast out the line and wait for the big one to take the bait.
ăWarnings/Promises: Human Alastor x Fem!Reader, jaws theme plays, fishing, sweet as fuck, and then not sweet, prostitution yelled into a crowd, rough hands, I wonât say the word âpaddy wagonâ because the history seems to be targeted at the Irish in America so itâs called a wagon hereă
Minors if you violate the MDNI I will toss you back into the river lie the pinfish you are đ„ đŁ
Peaceful. Your head on his chest. Even breathes, strong heart. Corporeal. Real. There with you. A ritual to whoever brought you into his embrace, every morning you lied against him and you stared out the window. Past the greenhouse, where the woods were allowed to run wild and you knew the animals therein were safe to exist as they were meant to. Everything and everyone in their element.
His fingers would make little circles and pattern eights along your shoulder blade. Your gaze out and forward, his intently focused on the ceiling fan; then and there.
Occasionally heâd spell a word across your skin to see if you were paying attention. Today: B R E A K F A S T ?
He didnât want to interrupt the sounds of the radio on the dresser with the half hearted question.
He carried your plate out onto the front porch, the swinging bench as much a perfectly suitable place to eat as anywhere else. You both tended to enjoy the back porch, but he felt an urge for novelty.
As you nibbled, he stared at the car. He didnât really want to leave, but he wanted to go somewhere with you.
âCan I take you to the water? We could fish. Iâm in no rush today.â You were unsure, tilting your head a little when he asked. He had offered before but you admitted you didnât know how. âYouâll have time to shower before work.â His index finger came over and waited for yours to hook into his.
Alastor was beyond smitten watching you and your trousers bound down his steps. Hand in hand, in the early morning breeze of the impending fall, he led you through his property to the waterâs edge.
A small cup of earthworms he scrounged up while you changed, two poles from the shed, and a bucket he hoped would have fish soon enough.
As a child he often ran through the woods of his home and played pretend, and as he got older and his imagination shifted he would fish for his mother. When his friends began to date and pair off, heâd hunt animals in a parallel kind of chase.Â
They took home gals, he dragged in rabbits.
And when his mother died, and the food he brought home was more than he needed, he stopped venturing past the clearing. That trek home to a bright house, his mother waiting on the back porch surrounded by the chirps of crickets was something he cherished.
But then her silhouette was gone. And the cricketâs song became one of loneliness. The walk to the house now a chore, a thing he had to do to get from Point A to Point B.
Pulling you by the hand past the field and its tall grass, into the shade of the trees where the air was so cool it bordered on wet, he wasnât so worried about the return trip. No tedium in the navigation now. Â
Alastor wasnât loquacious as it were, but when he did feel like talking he talked. He could, and did, name every species of fish that lived in the river. The ones he liked to eat, the ones he liked to look at, and the fish he didnât care for much at all. His motherâs favorite was bluegill, and he said it was the scariest fish when he was young.
âThe fucker has spikes!â He said it like he was introducing a villain, âI grabbed one once and it flexed these spines and I dropped it. I broke a pole trying to beat one to death once because I was too scared to pick it up again.â
Youâd never fished. Not because you didnât care for it, it just wasnât what you did. Your mother didnât take you to rivers or the sea. You stayed in buildings and parks near people. You could see the water, just never really interacted with it. Luckily, Alastor was ecstatic to teach you.Â
He saddled up behind you and explained how to cast out. It took a few tries to get it right, the release of the line a little tricky to get down at first. You could see the shine of the reels and could tell they were expensive and unused. Easily they were worth more than three dollars a piece. He bought two of them⊠when? The thought brought a silly, crooked smile you couldnât contain.Â
âA friend accidentally hooked his own back once.â You watched the way his gaze seemed to soften as he was looking into the distant past.
âI hope heâs gotten better at it.â
Alastor shrugged.Â
Oh, right⊠Alastor had friends in a sense, but never had he really introduced you to someone that was remotely important. No one he lit up for, no one he invited over, no one he completely relaxed his put-on smile for. You had to wonder where they'd all gone.
âDo you ever see him?â
He shook his head, âHe has a life now.â
Your chuckle wasnât meant to be cruel, but it came off a little too incredulous, âDo you not have a life?â
He didn't look at you, which was the loudest indicator he wasnât fond of the question. He cast out his own line, waiting to reply until he could settle, âSweetheart, do you really think Iâve been living a life compatible with his? Or any of them?â He pulled back on the line a little to feel the tension, âWives get uncomfortable inviting over single 40 somethings like myself. And I can only stomach so many surprise female dinner guests at such things.â
You felt like an ass.Â
Being a single man at his age, with a good job, a car, and land, made people uncomfortable. A lifelong chosen bachelor is fine, a rake is expected, but someone who seemed to be disinterested in dating and in fooling around? You could imagine the looks on their wiveâs faces, asking questions that were thinly veiled insults.
What do you do for fun?
Is it difficult to find respectable dates when you work in jazz?
So, youâve never been married, is that right? Not even close?
A mood change. You waited a moment to let silence kill the topic and asked, âWhat is the catch youâre most proud of?â
He thought for a second before a lopsided grin spread and you felt your heartbeat relax. âA gull.â
âA gull?!â
Alastor cackled, doubling over at the memory. âI threw out my line and as it flew through the air, a gull passing by grabbed the worm. It fought me for a minute before managing to get loose.â He ended up squating, blue jeans rolled up at the ankles and covered in spurs you just now noticed. âIt looked as confused as I was.â
The morning was spent reveling in new and useless information about each other. Your fear of dogs, his fear of armadillos (someone told them they had the plague). The time you accidentally walked into a strangerâs home, the time he startled an old woman because he was standing too still in a store and she thought he was a mannequin.
Moments of intimacy intermittently interrupted by a tugging of the fishing line and excited easing in of the prize.
The fuckers did have spikes. You reached out for your first successful catch and the barbs pricked you. With a hurried step back, your short heel sank into the dirt and you lost your balance. Your ass hit the ground hard, and you needed a breath before you could reply to Alastorâs worried questions.
âIâm fineâ, just embarrassed, you assured him before picking up your shoe and throwing it, âI have to go home and change out these shoes.â Leftie smacked against the tree with a soft pop.
âBring over a few pairs, if you have them. Iâm sure a pair of momâs could fit you, you can wear them home. We could toss these into the river. Shoot âem. Run em over.â He retrieved the thrown shoe before kneeling to remove the other one. He touched your ankle, eyes shooting up to monitor your face for any pained expressions. âBurn âem.â
âFirst my stockings last week and now my shoes? Youâve gone fire-happy.â You wiggled your toes for his peace of mind, âItâs okay, I donât have many shoes. Weâll reconcile someday.â
Alastor sat down properly on the grass and dirt of the riverâs edge and took off his shoes and socks. You thought maybe he was trying to commiserate somehow, until he shoved the socks into the toe box and slipped one onto your foot.Â
You warned he didnât have to do that and he flashed you a look, his smirk alone called you a hypocrite and made you go silent. âYou canât perform with tattered feet or a rolled ankle.â He laced them tightly, âI know where the stickers and ant hills are, Iâll be fine.â
Your eyes wandered over the bucket of water and fish, the worms in their cup, and his bare feet on the grass.
âWho taught you to be such a well rounded gentleman?â A rhetorical question, mostly.Â
âMy mother, of course.â
âYour father didnât worry youâd be too soft?â
âAh, apparently not. He left before I was born,â Alaster fidgeted with the straps of your shoes. âHe hadnât considered,â every word was measured, âthe realities of,â you could see him searching for the words in real time; this was a conversation he had never had before, âof being with my mother before knocking her up.â
The âfamily planningâ conversation on the kitchen table fluttered back to you.
âOh, can I have permission to hate him?â Always the easiest emotion.
He clicked his tongue, hands busy looping your shoes together by their straps and then attaching them to his belt loop.
âHe left her the house and the land before going. Kept his promise to help take care of me, in that sense. So, no. I think indifference is fair enough.â He grabbed your fish by the tail and placed it into the bucket. âKinda funny though, had he stuck around heâd have seen how the only thing I got from him was his biggest worry: my complexion!â A joyless laugh, âBut Iâm just like her in all the ways that matter.â
It came out before you could think it through, âHe didnât love your mother?â
He winced. âCowards can love just fine, I think. Maybe they love the hardest actually.â You nodded, knowing this wasnât a philosophical debate where your opinion was needed. âI mean, what kind of man just gives away his only assets?â Alastor leaned over to fix the collar of your blouse, âA scared idiot in love, of course.â
You wondered about âfamily planningâ. In their age it was nothing short of guessing and lamb innards. It was impossible to pretend you knew what his father would have lived through had he stayed. But you knew very well what Alastor lived through because he left. New Orleans was different than many other parts of the country when it came to mixed children, but the attitude was less acceptance and more a baseline tolerance for their existence.
The conversation, and shoe change, brought a natural end to the morning. Alastor helped you up, taking the opportunity to brush off your backside.Â
He led you until the clearing, he knew the land was flat there, and slowed down to let you walk a little bit ahead. The view of the house was much more inviting with you in it.
As promised, a shower. Originally alone, Alastor sitting on the toilet seat talking to you about dinner. Then he got quiet. He startled you a little when he peeked behind the curtain but everything settled when he got inside and his hands wrapped around your waist. Kisses for kissâs sake. Skin on skin just to feel closer than you were before. A hum buzzing his chest as you hugged him tightly and wasted some water. Well, âwastedâ is subjective. The warmth radiating off his stomach rivaled the showerâs spray. You knew there wasnât time for a nap, but the comfort was so deeply rooted you worried youâd fall asleep in his arms then and there.Â
His mothers shoes did fit, a pair of her black double straps with a nice wide heel replaced your T-straps and their damned thin one. The offer and action of presenting them to you was bigger than could be acknowledged. It was clear in how he wiped them clean with drilled in focus and set them in front of the bed for you like the main course of a fancy meal. The way theyâd been kept packaged and neat in the guest closet.Â
âThrowing them away seemed a waste. Glad they could be of use.â He said it so casually but it was more than that. When she died he packed away her items and forgot about them. He couldnât throw them away. It still felt like her house, after all. Who was he to change anything?
It was a little surprise to himself when he offered them to you. It seemed natural at the moment but as he said it his calm heart backtracked. Was that okay to do? Was it disrespectful to his mother? Was it rude to offer you a dead womanâs things? Would you be uncomfortable?
The little strings of worry all cut loose though when you did the straps and said, âIâll return them in perfect condition.â
He had thought youâd take them forever. But no, that was better. âIâll buy you your own just like them.â
You quickly buried the sincere sweetness of the moment with a joke, âFinally this long con is paying off!â What else could you do, threading the strap of your beauâs dead, dearly loved motherâs heels? It was like being on cloud nine with lead shoes. Confusingly wonderful and supremely daunting. You were literally walking in her shoes. The irony made you squeeze your arms to your sides to make sure your sweat pads were in their place.
Alastor thought if all you were getting out of this was a pair of shoes, you were definitely coming up in the red.Â
Negative.Â
Losing out.Â
He knew it was a joke, but had it been true heâd build a home on his land and fill it with shoes and dresses and whatever else you asked for. A stage all your own if you wanted. Heâd clap and throw flowers at your feet nightly. If youâd let him.Â
Maybe he could do that anyway. Every night, praise you with his mouth in all the ways he could imagine youâd enjoy.Â
The analogy carried through as he drove you to work. What was the price of admission and had he managed to afford it yet? Again, he fretted over what he was giving you in all of⊠whatever exactly this was.
He knew exactly what he wanted it to be and knew very well what you didnât want. So, letting sleeping dogs lie, he instead considered what you were actually getting out of the arrangement as it stood now.Â
Heâd met women who just wanted a home to pretty up. You had your own space you seemed keen on so he doubted that was it. Sometimes women pursued him for his obvious disposable income. Images of you swiping the hundred off the hotel bar played across his thoughts. No, you seemed capable enough to earn more than your job paid. If anything you seemed to enjoy chasing down marks.
Youâd made it clear your thoughts on marriage (âI wonât be bought by jewelry and promises of a pretty cage.â)Â though he did consider what could ever make you want that legal lock. Heâd had friends who would have liked the safety a husband lended their image. Women who didnât have any need or want for men in general. But things like banking and ownership were easier with a husband. And if he was aware of their preferences, they could still enjoy their love lives as they always had tried to before marriage. Alastor had considered such an offer before. Seriously considered it. It seemed to solve all of the problems he and his lady friend had.Â
His hands twisted around the steering wheel. He knew, deep in the marrow of his bones, he was always going to be alone. But the tiniest speck of desire to have someone love him and share his life remained buried in the viscera of his reality. So he turned down the sham marriage. What if he met someone inconceivable? Suddenly he would be an adulterer. Which was just hilarious to him. Such a thing could lead to a loss of employment and social shunning.Â
Plus, his mother would shake her head if he opened her very deserved home to someone purely existing to make a pleasant lie for the world. Disappointment could leak straight from her grave and into the floorboards.
Everyone wants something, though. He wanted to be seen in his entirety and accepted as he was.
You?
Well. All the things you seemed to want you had. Autonomy. Adoration. Attention.Â
His mind conjured images of you sitting pretty in your trousers in Bethâs. Moments like those, before he knew you, you had all of the things you wanted and seemingly needed. It made you upsettingly attractive to him.Â
Alastor didnât want to be needed by someone, he wanted to be wanted by someone who already had everything.
As the car rolled over the bridge and you both made your way into the city proper, his thoughts wandered back to the notion of rings. His mother never had one, so he had nothing to hand down. Would you wear gold, like the necklace you hung on the mirror in the guest room? Or silver?
He suppressed an embarrassed chuckle, he was getting ahead of himself again. Daydreaming while he drove like he always did. But this time you were in the car with him.Â
You caught him blushing, asking if he got too much sun by the water earlier. Alastorâs eyes went wide and he laughed a forced âha ha ha!â, punctuated by a flat and low âNo!â
All you could do was laugh in return when he didnât elaborate. The way he was gripping the steering wheel made his knuckles go pale through the thin skin of his hands. But the wonky smile he had told you he wasnât angry.Â
He gave you a peck outside the theaterâs side door, promised to swing by yours after work so you could grab some shoes, and drove off.Â
⊠. ăâș ă . ⊠. ăâș ă . ⊠. ăâș ă . ⊠. ăâș ă . âŠ
âExcuse you, youâre not welcome here.â
You heard it but didnât really register what that implied. Sometimes people tried to sneak in whoâd been banned, but it wasâŠnot common. The list of people was quite short. You didnât stop to think of them all, regardless.
You made a habit of calling Ruth by her stage name as early in the work day as you could remember, to avoid any slip ups. So when you called out to her as you worked the room after your performance, she knew to answer.
âSkye, could you bring me some water?â Leaning on the bar you watched her make her own drink, flashing you a wink. She always got tipsy and ended up behind the bar when she was in a good mood. Which was most nights. The staff didnât mind, the real money to be made was in liquor and whatever could be passed off as beer. So the extra pair of hands was appreciated.
âYouâve been especially happy lately. Good sex?â The glass was slid to you. All you could do was nod. Youâd hadnât actually had sex in awhile, but that wasnât anyoneâs business.
Your smile barely had a chance to slip off your face, your senses too quick for your body to keep up. The awareness that something was wrong hit you fast and hard, but only milliseconds before you felt someone grab you.
Bradyâs hand gripped your shoulder and pulled you backwards, something slipping around your wrists as a uniformed cop came around the corner of the atrium. You struggled to get away from him, shouting general protests to being suddenly manhandled. Your voice erupted, the first cannon shot of the war as women and men began to swarm and berate the detective.
Barely a shocked laugh could be choked out from your tightening throat.Â
âYouâre under arrest!â He yelled it, looking at you for just a moment before announcing it to the audience. An actor to his crowd.
âFor what?!â Johnny pushed Brady with two fingers to the chest.Â
âProstitution.â
A beat of silence as the room collectively gasped. Ruth was the first one to truly lay her hands on him, snatching his hat off and smacking him across the head. The other dancers moved like a school of fish, tucking Ruth into the safety of their numbers with a simultaneous jostling of the detective.
The cop leading you away stopped, âJust her? I thought-,â
Detective Brady dusted his hat off with the back of his hand and shooed the man away. âJust her.â
Before you had reached the glass doors of the theater, you tensed and pulled back. âWhat the fuck are you doing, Mr. Brady?â
But Brady wasnât looking at you. He was scanning the room. Staring into the small but fierce roiling mass of regulars, dancers, and staff filling up the doorway in front him and flooding the atrium.Â
Johnny sized up Brady, getting nose to nose with him, âShow your face here again and weâll need an ambulance, not a wagon!â
Brady leaned into the confrontation, âNow sir Iâd be careful. That almost sounds like a threat.â
âSure as shit is!â Someone hissed.Â
âHey! Brady!â You tried again in vain to get his attention.
âHush. You confessed to it already, no point crying now.â The copâs voice was harsh, his disgust barely hidden. His palms were calloused and scratched at the exposed skin of your arms.
âSomeone! Someone call-,â Ruth snapped her fingers as the syllables teetered on the tip of her tongue.
Goosebumps rose across your shoulders like little tombstones. Your autonomic nervous system came to a crawl. The grip on your arm tightened as you had to be wretched forward and out of the front doors.
Her eyes lit up, âAlastor! Does anyone have Alastorâs work number?!â Ruth was met with confused faces and shrugs from the others.
You didnât feel yourself begin to cry, it was a reaction to the fact you hadnât blinked since you became aware Brady didnât seem too interested in your reaction to this.
This wasnât an arrest. It was a trap.
â
Ëââ§ àŹłâMasterlist.àłàż*:
Ë Ęđ„.Summoning the Horny Little Deer Cult.đ„ Ę Ë
@eris-norwega @reath-solia @catticora , @angelicribbons , @xalygatorx
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Warning. Rambling may be all over the place and possibly incoherent but I love to stream of consciousness blab about stuff so here goes.
They are purposefully avoiding Alexâs disappearance, arenât they? They canât really be this tone def?
Iâm not talking about Alex being missing, that was unavoidable with Tylerâs health stuff, but not one person thinking it so out of character that heâd be a no-show when a women whose been like a mother to him (âI came out to you seven times alreadyâ) has died or the disabling sickness the love of his life is going through?
I think this out of sight out of mind thing is just ridiculous. Itâs failed to build suspense and accomplished nothing.
Payout better be đ„ đ„ đ„
Itâs not just Alex either. It seems Rosa doesnât exist either. Arturo is mentioned more off screen than these two and heâs been on screen. (No shade, papa churro gets all my love.)
I hope theyâre not wondering why a lot of fans arenât really surprised the show got cancelled. Its obvious. And Iâm not talking about missing favorites, Iâm talking spread too thin, character plot management as a whole.
So yeah.
Kybel is rising and Iâm here for it. When Kyle said he felt closer to her after telling her he loved her even if she wasnât able to give anything back yet, that his heart wasnât broken, it was unthawing. I awwwwwed so much. And when Isobel took the flower she teased Kyle with the morning after back to Roswell and was running it over her face while she reminisced sexy times⊠I double awwwwwwed. It absolutely sucks we only get half a season of kybel gloriousness! Spin off! Kybel off to search and protect alien artifacts for the sky people.
Good old uncle Eddie and Kyle are going to stumble upon the alighting, going after Allie, arenât they? Tezca got to her very last scene last season so them searching for her is going to tie them into it now.
Max, you dummy, you donât do that without a discussion, ya nincompoop! I get why he wants it, I do, but maybe do that after the evil aliens arenât trying to do something nefarious you donât even know what it is.
Liz was once again a kick ass heroine bad ass action hero scientist.
Iâve got so many more but Iâm tired from dirt bike racing all day, gonna light and chill. More rambling thoughts soon.
#roswell new mexico#rnm s4#rnm s4 spoilers#alex manes#michael guerin#liz ortecho#max evans#kyle valenti#isobel evans
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