#i love them :/
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chiblpic · 3 days ago
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I'm so proud of this art actually :)
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butterflyscribbles · 2 days ago
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Your art style is sooooooooo pretty
Can you draw Shadow?
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Whenever I draw Shadow, 90% of it is going to be him acting uncharacteristically soft so look elsewhere for canon compliance bc this boy needs 10000 hugs🖤❤️
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haveihitanerve · 3 days ago
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It was a lesson that was, as most lesson were in Gotham, learned the hard way.
"Down!" Bruce bellowed. Dick moved. But not fast enough. He looked. He didn't flinch. He hesitated, he didn't act. He doubted. He should have trusted.
Something slammed into his side, hard and small and painful, ripping apart his muscles and shredding tendons. That was the day he learned what getting shot felt like.
He sacked to the floor, finally, hands pawing uselessly at his side as he wailed in pain.
Bruce was at his side in an instant, and they got home so fast it was most definitely illegal. It never happened again.
"Drop!" Bruce called. Dick hit the floor. He was up a second later, the sharp stinging smell of gunpowder still in the air. But the bullet had disappeared. Missed. Speared into the wall.
"On your left!" Green Lantern cried, swinging his arm around, the massive hand he'd crafted with his ring spearing forward. Nightwing glanced over, used the second to ground himself, and lunged away. To the right.
"You've gotta trust me in the field." Hal complained later. "It's no use for me to call out orders just for you to check yourself." Nightwing dipped his head. Acquiescing , but not an apology. Not agreeing. Not a promise.
"Twelve o'clock!" Batman barked. Nightwing didn't even let his eyes stray, just moved, rolling away from the incoming stampede of aliens.
"What the fuck?" Hal mouthed to Barry, but the speedster had hardly a chance to shrug back before he was off to take the incoming wave.
So he waited instead until after the battle, waited until everyone was safe and back the Watchtower to advance on the young hero.
"Hey man, what the fuck is up with you?" He probably should have kept his voice down a little, but the anger had been building, and honestly, what was up with him? Disobeying Hal's orders, just to drop at the first sound from Batman's lips? Wasn't cool, wasn't fair.
Nightwing glanced up in surprise from where he was sitting on the table, patching his arm, and so did about half the League. Batman, in particular, was watching, white lenses narrowed, but didn't approach.
"I get that Bats is super cool and all that," Hal waved a dismissive arm. "But when I shout orders in the field, you're expected to follow them. Same as everyone else."
He glanced over at Batman. "No offense Batsy." he returned focus to the man in front of him. "But you don't get to pick and choose who's orders you follow kid. Not here."
"Actually I do." Nightwing answered, and, damn, Hal hadn't expected that. An apology maybe, maybe a little bit of arguing, but not a flat out refusal. The young hero didn't even bother to lower his voice or anything. Didn't even attempt to look cowed.
"You're different Hal. You're a Lantern. I'm not." his finger thrust in Batman's direction. "He's not." Hal cocked his head, frowning. "Yeah, I don't obey your orders immediately. I don't automatically trust what you call to me. Because you're. not. human. Maybe you were, once, before you got the ring. But you're not anymore. You're not on the field."
He gestured at Batman, to himself. "We deal with threats on the daily. In the streets. On the field. You're a brilliant man, I know you are. But you're not thinking for me."
He held up his hand before Hal could argue that of course he was. "You try." He agreed easily. "But you don't. Not really." He cocked his head, struggling to come up with an example.
"Lets say this; you're a cat, and I'm a dog." Hal pulled back, face twisting at the strange comparison, but Nightwing gestured to let him finished. Hal relented.
"You, as a cat, order me to drop to the ground. Because you, as a cat, know that if you drop, you'll land on your feet." Superman was nodding, following his train of thought. Hal was still a little lost, but Nightwing wasn't finished yet, so he was okay.
"But let's say that drop is fifty feet. And I'm a dog. Dogs don't land on their feet. That drop can kill me. You didn't account for that, no matter what you might think." He shrugged, glancing over at Batman, who was puffed up a little, with pride.
"He's a dog. Like me. And he thinks like a cat, like you. He accounts for that. So yeah," Nightwing shrugged, hopping from the table, and took a few steps forward. Hal stumbled back.
"I don't follow your orders immediately. I chance a look. I risk a second of disobeying your orders in order to ensure it won't kill me. Won't do more harm than good. But I still follow your orders."
He glanced over at Batman, a small smile tugging at his lips.
"And sure, I follow Batman's orders immediately." He shrugged, heading over to the older hero, smile evident in his voice.
"But what do you expect? He's my Dad."
but yeah in the same vein of Bruce’s kids only following his orders in the field…of course they do. in Gotham, if you don’t hit the deck when Bruce says “Down!” you’re getting hurt, at bare minimum. there’s no questioning orders or hesitating. you have to trust that when B tells you to do something, it’s in your best interest, or in the best interest of the civilians, to do it — and do it really fucking well. really fucking fast.
that doesn’t mean the JL give orders in the same way, even though they’re well-intentioned. that doesn’t mean they fully grasp an emergency scene or its civilians’ needs. they might not realize how risky an order they, as a meta, give to a fully human vigilante is. they’re not a tactician the way Bruce is — they’re not thinking in plans, and backup plans, and fallback plans and extractions.
so yeah, Dick doesn’t take direct orders from anyone but B. of course he doesn’t.
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dearestgentlereaders · 2 days ago
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THANK YOU GOD FOR BRINGING MY FAMILY BACK TOGETHER
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cotton-candy-anon · 3 days ago
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Antinous and Telemachus
I'm going to be fully honest, I fucking hate how Telemachus came out
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tea-moth11 · 1 day ago
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Chibi Jmart done by the wonderful @candlecoo-sideb-art! Designs based off of the No Fears AU I have out. They came out so perfect!
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blackynsupremacy · 23 hours ago
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okay but the dipshits and dingbats in question are AMAZING
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korozite · 3 days ago
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It doesn’t matter now what happens
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pechaghtlecha · 6 hours ago
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Yoo, Timkon day ✌️✨💕
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creatur3featur3 · 2 days ago
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ੈ✩ Street Rat p4✩ੈ
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word count: 8.5K (someone please kill me, my fingers are cramping)
A/N: can yall tell I love making SR and Sevika interact like an old married couple that should've gotten divorced years ago? haha, no? just me? okay-
warnings: descriptions of blood, trauma, implied self harm
ੈ✩‧₊˚༺☆༻ੈ✩‧₊˚
You weren’t sure why you were so desperate to find Sevika, you didn’t like her like that, you didn’t like her period, but something was tugging at you to look for her.
She had fed you, patched you up many more times than you’d like to admit, helped you at your absolute worst, you felt like you at least owed her the decency to look for her, to worry about her.
You wandered the streets of the Undercity, looking down the quieter alleyways, looking into what you thought were abandoned buildings before getting chased out by random punks.
“And stay out you little Rat!” A woman hissed as you sprinted down the street, panting heavily, not daring to look back before you ran into something, or someone.
You fall to the ground with a soft thud, letting out a quiet ‘oof’ before looking up to see Sevika watching you with keen, amused eyes.
“You just don’t know how to stay out of trouble do you?” She hummed thoughtfully, helping you up with her flesh hand.
She looked different, hair cut shorter, a piercing, and-
Tired.
“You look…” you trailed off, Sevika rolling her eyes slightly before crossing her arms, “different?” She questioned.
“…yeah,” you replied, not the words you were planning to say, but pretty much.
Pretty, that’s what you wanted to say, what sat at the tip of your tongue, but you swallowed the word, clearing your throat awkwardly.
Sevika raised an eyebrow at you, the corner of her mouth twitching with mild amusement. “What are you doing out here?” she asked, her voice low and gravelly. “Shouldn’t you be holed up somewhere safe, minding your own business?”
You dusted yourself off, avoiding her piercing gaze. “I could say the same to you,” you muttered, refusing to admit how relieved you were to see her. “You’ve been gone for… what, weeks? No word, no nothing. People started saying you were dead.”
Sevika snorted, the sound rough and dismissive. “Dead? Do I look dead to you?” She gestured to herself with her metal arm, her new piercing catching the dim light of the Undercity streets.
“No,” you said quietly, glancing her over again. Her sharp features looked harder somehow, the dark circles under her eyes a testament to long nights and rough days. “But you do look… different.”
Sevika’s lips quirked into something that wasn’t quite a smile. “You already said that,” she pointed out dryly. She stepped back and leaned against the wall, arms crossed over her broad chest. “What do you want, kid?”
You faltered, your carefully rehearsed words slipping through your fingers like sand. “I… just wanted to make sure you were okay. You were gone so long, and you’ve… helped me. A lot. I figured I owed you.”
Her expression softened for a brief moment, though she quickly masked it with a grunt. “Didn’t think anyone would notice, let alone care,” she admitted, her tone more subdued.
“Well, I did,” you said firmly, stepping closer. “So? Where the hell have you been?”
“Busy,” she replied vaguely, her gaze flickering away. “Work. Stuff like that.”
“Work?” you pressed, sensing she wasn’t giving you the full truth. “What kind of work?”
Sevika’s jaw clenched, her patience visibly fraying as you kept pushing. “Drop it,” she muttered, her voice sharp enough to cut. But you didn’t—couldn’t.  
“You always brush people off like this? Or just me?” you snapped, anger bubbling in your chest. “You disappear for weeks, come back looking like you’ve been through hell, and I’m supposed to just let it go?”  
Her glare darkened, the veins in her temple throbbing. “I said drop it!” she barked, the deep growl of her voice reverberating through the alley.  
“Why? So you can keep everything bottled up until it kills you?” The words tumbled out before you could stop them, your frustration overriding your common sense. “Maybe I care, Sevika! Ever think of that?”  
Her flesh hand clenched into a fist, her whole body coiled like a spring about to snap. “Shut up,” she hissed, stepping closer.  
But you didn’t. You couldn’t stop. “You act like you don’t need anyone, like you can just handle everything alone—”  
The swing came faster than you could register. Her metal fist didn’t hit you, but her flesh hand did, hard enough to knock you off your feet.  
Your back hit the ground with a jarring thud, the metallic taste of blood flooding your mouth as you felt your nose start to bleed. For a moment, the world blurred, the pounding in your head drowning out everything else.  
When your vision cleared, you looked up at her, hand pressed against your nose. Her expression wasn’t triumphant, or even angry anymore.  
It was horrified.  
She froze, her lips slightly parted as her gaze locked on yours. And there it was: fear. In your eyes, wide and scared, as if she’d morphed into a monster right in front of you.  
It was like she was seeing it for the first time, and it shattered something deep inside her.  
“I didn’t mean to…” she muttered, her voice trembling, barely audible.  
You scrambled to your feet, keeping a cautious distance, your heart hammering in your chest. “You… you fucking hit me,” you stammered, wiping at the blood trickling from your nose.  
Sevika didn’t say anything. She just stared at her hand, the one that struck you, like it belonged to someone else entirely.  
“Is this what you are now?” you asked, your voice wavering. “I come out here, looking your to make sure you're okay and not dead in a ditch- and you… ”  
Her head snapped up, the guilt etched deep into her features. “No,” she said hoarsely, taking a step back. “I… I didn’t mean it. I wasn’t—”  
“Wasn’t thinking?” you finished for her, your anger and hurt clashing violently in your chest. “Yeah, no kidding.”  
“I’m sorry,” she whispered, the words sounding foreign and unnatural coming from her lips.  
For a moment, the two of you just stood there, the tension thick and suffocating. You wanted to scream, to demand answers, but the look on her face silenced you.  
“I shouldn’t have come looking for you,” you muttered, stepping back further. “Clearly, I was wrong.”  
She didn’t stop you as you turned to leave, but her voice followed you, quiet and broken. “Wait.”  
You didn’t.
Stupid.
Stupid.
Stupid.
Your balled fist hit against your head again, you knew better, knew better than to trust anyone, to rely on anyone, it was your own damn fault you were in this mess.
stupid.
Sevika had even warned you, told you to leave her alone, that you weren't going to be safe, that you were just going to get yourself hurt again.
stupid.
You staggered down the empty street, your own ragged breaths and muffled sniffles the only sounds echoing in the night. The sting of your bleeding nose was nothing compared to the ache in your chest.  
Stupid.  
Your balled fist hit the side of your head again, harder this time.  
You should’ve listened. You should’ve known better. Sevika wasn’t a safe place—she never was. She was a storm, violent and unpredictable, and you were the fool who thought you could stand in the middle of it without getting torn apart.  
Stupid.  
Another hit to your head, frustration bubbling over into self-directed rage. This was your fault. All of it. You shouldn’t have gone looking for her. You shouldn’t have cared. You shouldn’t have—  
You stopped dead in your tracks, leaning against the brick wall of an abandoned building, sliding down until you were crouched on the ground. The weight of it all crashed over you, a suffocating tidal wave of anger and shame.  
Sevika warned you. She told you to stay away, told you what would happen. And you, in your desperate, naive need to feel… what? Important? Connected? You ignored her.  
Your fists clenched, nails digging into your palms as tears pricked at your eyes. You weren’t going to cry. You didn’t deserve to cry.  
You tilted your head back, staring up at the polluted sky of the Undercity, the faint glow of lights barely breaking through the haze.  
“Stupid,” you muttered again, voice cracking. You wrapped your arms around yourself, squeezing tight, as if trying to hold all your broken pieces together.  
This was your mess. Your pain. And you’d deal with it, like you always did. Alone. 
That’s what you always did.  
Life slipped back into the routine of survival, the kind of existence that didn’t leave room for anything soft or sentimental. The bruises on your face faded, but the ache beneath them stayed, buried deep where no one could see.  
You spent your nights fighting in the back alleys for scraps of money, fists flying as blood and sweat mixed with the grime of the Undercity streets. The thrill of it was a distraction, a way to quiet the noise in your head. And when that wasn’t enough, you stole—food, trinkets, anything you could get your hands on.  
The people you stole from didn’t matter. Maybe they deserved it; maybe they didn’t. It didn’t make a difference to you. That’s how it was down here—everyone clawing to take what little they could, stepping on anyone who got in their way.  
You were no different.  
A street rat. That’s all you were, all you ever would be. Not someone’s child, not someone’s friend, not someone’s anything. Rats didn’t belong to anyone—they scurried, they scavenged, and they survived.  
And that was enough, wasn’t it?  
The thought lingered as you huddled in the corner of a dimly lit alley, clutching a half-eaten loaf of bread you’d swiped earlier. The warmth of it had long since faded, just like everything else.  
It was enough. It had to be. Because hope was a luxury for people who didn’t live with dirt under their nails and blood on their hands.  
And you didn’t have the luxury of being anything but a rat.
You watched as a group of younger kids giggled and laughed, their voices echoing faintly down the alley as they ran past you. They clutched makeshift toys in their small hands—scraps of wood tied together, a dented tin can, things they’d probably cobbled together themselves.  
You frowned, pulling your knees closer to your chest as you sat against the cold, damp wall. They were so loud, so carefree, their laughter grating against the silence you’d grown used to. You should’ve hated them for it, envied the spark of innocence they still had in this pit of a place. But all you felt was an ache.  
This wasn’t the world kids like them should be growing up in. They deserved warm homes, full bellies, and safety—not these streets that swallowed people whole. Not this cold, dangerous place where every smile felt borrowed, fleeting.  
But that wasn’t the world they got.  
Just like it hadn’t been the world you’d gotten.  
You shifted, looking down at your battered boots. They weren’t much better off than those kids, you realized. Maybe younger, but not safer. Not really. They didn’t know yet what these streets could do to them, how they could chew them up and spit them out.  
And a bitter part of you thought maybe it was better they didn’t.  
You sighed, rubbing at your arms to keep the cold from seeping in too much. Those kids weren’t your problem. You didn’t have the energy to care about anyone else. Not anymore.  
But as one of the kids tripped and fell, scraping their knee, you found yourself moving before you could think.  
You stood, walking toward them slowly. The little boy sat there sniffling, trying to hold back tears as the others circled him, unsure of what to do.  
“You good, kid?” you asked, your voice low and gruff, startling them.  
The boy looked up at you, wide-eyed, his lip trembling. “I-I’m fine,” he mumbled, clearly lying.  
You crouched down in front of him, your gaze softening despite yourself. “Lemme see.”  
He hesitated, then reluctantly showed you his scraped knee, blood trickling down his skinny leg. It wasn’t anything serious, but it was enough to sting.  
“Hang tight,” you said, pulling a strip of cloth from your pocket. You wrapped it around his knee with surprising gentleness, tying it off. “There. Good as new.”  
The boy blinked up at you, his tears slowing as he gave a small, hesitant smile. “Thanks…”  
You stood up, brushing your hands off on your pants. “Don’t mention it.”  
As you walked away, you could hear them whispering behind you, their voices filled with wonder.  
“Who was that?”  
“Dunno, but they’re cool!”  
You shook your head, shoving your hands deep into your pockets as you disappeared down another alley.  
“Stupid,” you muttered under your breath again, the word sticking to your tongue like tar. You weren’t supposed to care.  
But you did.
You found yourself helping out the smaller people, not necessarily kids or older people but people who were like you, desperate, barely scraping by..
It started small—handing off scraps of food you didn’t need, pointing someone toward a safer place to sleep, helping a desperate soul avoid a fight they couldn’t win. You told yourself it wasn’t a big deal, that you weren’t trying to be anything to anyone. But somewhere along the way, people started noticing.  
Not the big players in the Undercity, of course. They didn’t care about people like you, scraping by on crumbs. But the smaller people—the desperate ones, the ones who lived and died in the shadows—they noticed.  
And then came the kids.  
You didn’t know when it happened, but suddenly, there was always a small cluster of them following you around. Wide-eyed and full of questions, they trailed behind like ducklings, giggling and whispering to each other.  
“Is it true you beat up three guys at once last week?” one of them asked, his eyes shining with admiration.  
“No, it was five,” another kid chimed in, puffing up his chest like he’d seen you do once. “I heard they were twice as big as you, too!”  
You snorted, shaking your head as you walked. “It was one guy, and he was drunk off his ass. Hardly a fair fight.”  
But they didn’t care about the truth. To them, you were a legend—someone who fought back against the unfairness of the Undercity and lived to tell the tale.  
“What’s it like being the coolest person in the Undercity?” one of the youngest kids asked, skipping alongside you with a toothy grin.  
“Dunno,” you replied with a smirk, ruffling his messy hair. “You tell me when you meet them.”  
That earned a chorus of laughter, and for a moment, you forgot about the cold and the hunger and the weight that constantly pressed on your shoulders. For a moment, it felt… good.  
But then the reality of it all crept back in. You weren’t a hero. You weren’t even a good person. You were just a rat, doing what rats did best: surviving.  
Still, when one of the kids tugged on your sleeve and asked if you’d show them how to throw a proper punch, you sighed and crouched down, holding out your hands to demonstrate.  
“Alright, listen up,” you said, your tone gruff but not unkind. “If you’re gonna do it, do it right. Thumb outside the fist, or you’ll break it on the first swing.”  
The kids watched you with rapt attention, mimicking your movements, their laughter filling the air.  
You told yourself it didn’t mean anything. That you were just killing time.  
But deep down, you knew better.
“Do you know Sevika?” one little girl asked, her eyes shining bright with curiosity.
The question hit you like a punch to the gut, and for a moment, you froze. The little girl stared up at you with wide, curious eyes, her excitement barely contained.  
“Sevika?” you repeated, forcing your voice to stay steady as your stomach twisted itself into knots. “What makes you ask that?”  
The girl shrugged, clutching a worn doll tightly to her chest. “Some people said you’re like her. Tough and strong. That you help people like she used to.”  
Your chest tightened, and you fought to keep your expression neutral. “I don’t know about that,” you muttered, looking away.  
You wanted to lie, to say you didn’t know who Sevika was, to brush it off like it meant nothing. But you couldn’t. Her name alone brought everything rushing back—the nights you spent following her, trying to understand why you cared so much, why she mattered to you.  
And how it all came crashing down the moment she showed you exactly who she was.  
“Did she help you too?” the girl asked innocently, her voice tugging at something raw and vulnerable inside you.  
You swallowed hard, your fists clenching at your sides. “Not in the way you think,” you said quietly.  
The kids around you fell silent, sensing the shift in your mood. Even the little girl seemed to understand she’d touched on something she shouldn’t have.  
“Forget about Sevika,” you said, your voice sharper than you intended. “She’s not someone you want to be like.”  
The girl frowned, her grip on her doll tightening. “But I thought she was a hero.”  
You let out a bitter laugh, shaking your head. “She’s no hero. And neither am I.”  
The words tasted sour on your tongue, and you hated how much truth they held. You turned away, pretending to adjust the wrappings on your hands, anything to avoid their questioning eyes.  
“Let’s get moving,” you said gruffly, motioning for them to follow. “It’s not safe to stand around here.”  
As the kids fell into step behind you, their chatter picking up again, you tried to push the thoughts of Sevika out of your head. But her name lingered like a ghost, haunting you with every step you took.
— 
You hated it. The way your chest only loosened when you saw those kids step inside their makeshift homes, doors closing behind them, locking out the dangers of the Undercity—for now.  
You hated the way your ears strained for any sign of trouble, ready to step in, ready to fight, even when you told yourself you wouldn’t.  
You weren’t a hero. You weren’t a savior. Hell, if that little girl had asked about Sevika again, you might’ve snapped at her, might’ve said something cruel enough to shut her up for good.  
Not that you actually would’ve hurt her. You weren’t that far gone—yet.  
But it made you sick, the thought of anyone seeing you as something good. Someone to look up to. You were no one’s safety, no one’s home, no one’s hero. You were just—you.  
A street rat. A survivor.  
And survivors didn’t make promises. They didn’t stick around.  
Still, as you stood alone in the dim light of the alley, you couldn’t help but glance back one last time. Just to be sure.
“I never thought I’d see you go soft,” a voice piped up, making you turn around, body tensing almost immediately as you looked around, trying to pinpoint the source of the voice.
That’s when you saw her again-
Sevika.
The woman who had taken you in more or less, taken care of you, made sure you knew when and where not to go.
Just for her to rip it all away in one night. 
Your breath caught in your throat, muscles coiling tight as your eyes locked onto her.  
Sevika.  
She leaned casually against the brick wall, her metal arm glinting faintly in the dim light. Her short hair framed her sharp features, and that same unreadable expression lingered on her face—the one that always made it impossible to tell if she was amused or annoyed.  
She looked exactly like you remembered. And yet, somehow, worse. Tired. Hardened. But no less dangerous.  
You swallowed hard, trying to keep your voice steady even as your pulse hammered in your ears. “What the hell do you want?”  
Her lips twitched, just barely hinting at a smirk. “Relax. I’m not here to pick a fight.”  
You scoffed, folding your arms across your chest as if that would somehow shield you from the weight of her presence. “Could’ve fooled me.”  
Sevika pushed off the wall, taking a slow step closer. It wasn’t a threat, not exactly—but it didn’t feel safe either. “I was just passing through,” she said, her voice low, gravelly. “Didn’t expect to find you playing babysitter.”  
Your jaw tightened. “I’m not playing anything.”  
“No?” Her gaze flicked toward the alley where the kids had disappeared, then back to you. “Sure looks like it.”  
Your fingers twitched, itching for a weapon—something to hold between you and her. Not because you thought she’d attack. But because you didn’t trust yourself not to let her get under your skin. Not again.  
“Why are you here, Sevika?” you asked, cutting through the tension with as much venom as you could muster. “Last I checked, you were done with me.”  
Her expression shifted, something almost like regret flashing in her eyes before it was gone, buried under that cold exterior. “You wouldn’t let it go,” she said quietly. “I told you to stay away. Told you it’d get you hurt.”  
You took a step forward, the anger that had been simmering for months finally bubbling over. “And you think this is better?” you snapped, gesturing at the empty alley, at the scraps of a life you’d been barely holding together. “You think walking away without a word—without even explaining—was better?”  
Sevika didn’t flinch, but her jaw set tightly. “It was the only way to keep you safe.”  
“Bullshit.”  
Your voice echoed off the walls, and for a moment, the two of you just stood there, staring each other down like opponents waiting for the first punch to land.  
But it never did.  
Instead, Sevika let out a breath, her shoulders sagging just slightly. “You don’t get it,” she muttered, more to herself than to you. “You never did.”  
And maybe you didn’t. Maybe you never would.  
But as much as you hated her—hated what she’d done, how she’d left—you hated the way her words still made your heart ache even more. 
“No,” you snapped, making Sevika's eyes narrow slightly.
“You don’t get it, do you know how much I’ve been risking nowadays? Giving away my hard earned food, taking care of kids that aren’t mine, teaching them how to protect themselves, using my supplies to cover up scrapes and cuts. I have these horrible fucking dreams Sevika, horrible horrible dreams, every time a lay down my head to rest or even just to let it relax all I can fucking hear is screaming. My sisters crying while they burned alive, my mother calling out to me like she knew what was happening. Do you ever hear that? Do you have to deal with that day in and day out?”
Sevika was tense, not meeting your eyes as you continued on.
“Do you ever hear them?” Your voice cracked, but you didn’t care. The words poured out, raw and unfiltered, the dam you’d built up for so long finally breaking. “Do you have to deal with that day in and day out, Sevika? Because I do. Every fucking day.”
Sevika stayed silent, her gaze fixed on the ground. Her jaw was clenched so tightly you could see the muscle twitch, but she didn’t interrupt. She just stood there, her shoulders stiff, her hands twitching at her sides.
“I try to forget,” you continued, your voice rising with every word. “I try to drown it out with fights, with work, with anything. But it never goes away. And then you come along, acting like you’re doing me a favor by walking away? Like leaving me behind was some kind of mercy?”
You laughed bitterly, the sound echoing hollowly in the empty alley. “You don’t get to decide that. You don’t get to act like you know what’s best for me.”
Sevika’s head snapped up at that, her eyes sharp and stormy as they locked onto yours. “And you think you’re better off with me?” she growled, the edge in her voice cutting through the tension like a knife. “You think sticking around me would’ve made your life easier? Safer?”
“I don’t know, Sevika!” you shot back, your fists clenching. “But you don’t get to rip everything away without even giving me a choice! You don’t get to decide I’m not worth the risk!”
The words hung heavy in the air, both of you breathing hard, the weight of the conversation pressing down like a storm ready to break.
Sevika looked at you, really looked at you, and for a moment, you thought you saw something crack in her cold, impenetrable armor. Something vulnerable, something almost human.
“You don’t understand,” she said finally, her voice quieter, almost hoarse. “It’s not about you not being worth it. It’s about me… not being enough.”
Her words stunned you, the anger in your chest wavering for just a moment.
“You think I don’t care?” she continued, her gaze hard but her voice trembling just slightly. “You think I don’t hear the screams, too? That I don’t see the faces of the people I couldn’t save, the ones I left behind? I walk through hell every day, just like you. The difference is, I made my peace with it a long time ago. I don’t deserve peace. I don’t deserve…”
Her voice trailed off, but the implication hung heavy in the air.
You didn’t know whether to scream at her or cry. Instead, you took a step closer, your voice softer but no less determined.
“And you think I don’t feel the same?” you asked, your tone low and raw. “You think I don’t carry that same weight? That same guilt? You don’t get to decide what I deserve, Sevika. You don’t get to decide for me.”
For the first time in what felt like forever, Sevika didn’t have a response. She just stood there, staring at you with something unreadable in her eyes, her hands curling into fists at her sides.
The silence stretched between you, heavy and suffocating, until finally, Sevika let out a long, shaky breath.
“You’re a stubborn little shit,” she muttered, the faintest hint of a smirk tugging at the corner of her lips.
“Yeah,” you replied, your voice steadier now. “And you’re a coward.”
Her smirk faltered, but she didn’t deny it. Instead, she took a step back, her gaze lingering on you for a moment longer before she turned away.
“Get some rest,” she said over her shoulder, her voice gruff but softer than before. “You’re no good to anyone running on empty.”
But the weight of her presence lingered, and for the first time in a long while, it felt like the cracks in your armor weren’t just breaking you apart—they were letting something in.
You hated that you wanted to call out to hear, to tell her to wait, to ask her to stay with you- you shouldn't.
“Sevika?” Your voice was soft, unsure, but Sevika looked back at you, raising an eyebrow in response.
You should've said never mind, or Don't get hurt without me, but against your better judgement–
“Do you–” god this was pathetic, “have anything to do tonight..?” 
Sevika stopped mid-step, her broad frame outlined by the dim glow of the streetlamp. She turned her head slightly, her eyebrow still raised, but her expression unreadable.
You wanted to shrink back, to swallow the words, to act like you hadn’t said anything. But it was too late. They hung in the air, vulnerable and raw, impossible to take back.
“Do I have anything to do tonight?” she repeated, her voice low and measured, as if trying to make sense of your question.
You shifted on your feet, suddenly regretting every choice that had led you to this moment. “Forget it,” you muttered, looking down at the cracked pavement. “It’s stupid.”
Sevika didn’t move for a moment, her silence stretching out uncomfortably. Then, with a quiet sigh, she turned fully to face you, crossing her arms over her chest.
“I don’t have time for games, kid,” she said, her tone sharper now. “If you’ve got something to say, say it.”
You bit your lip, weighing your options. You could shut up, let her walk away, and go back to your miserable little routine. Or you could take the risk—the one that had been gnawing at you since the moment you saw her again.
“Do you… want to get a drink?” you finally blurted out, your voice cracking slightly at the end. “Or—something. I don’t know. Just… talk?”
Her eyebrows shot up, and for a second, you thought she might laugh in your face. But instead, she studied you, her gaze sharp and calculating, as though she were trying to decide if this was some kind of trap.
“You want to talk,” she said slowly, her voice laced with disbelief.
You nodded, swallowing the lump in your throat. “Yeah. I mean… we never did, right? Not really.”
Sevika tilted her head, her metal fingers drumming against her arm as she considered you. Finally, she let out a low chuckle—more of a breath than a laugh—and shook her head.
“You’re full of surprises,” she muttered.
“So… is that a yes?” you pressed, trying not to sound too hopeful.
She hesitated, her expression unreadable. Then, with a small shrug, she nodded toward a dimly lit bar at the end of the street.
“Fine,” she said gruffly. “One drink. Don’t make me regret it.”
You felt your chest loosen, the tension easing just slightly as you nodded and fell into step beside her.
It wasn’t much, but it was a start.
You weren’t sure why you found yourself sitting down at a bar with Sevika, trying to avoid talking to her by slowly drinking your vodka, the liquid burning your throat as you swallowed.
You let out a soft groan, nose scrunching at the burning sensation that you couldn’t get rid of as quickly as you’d hope. 
“So,” Sevika hummed, setting down her cup as she cleared her throat, the rough sound catching your attention mid-swallow. “You never really talk about yourself, well you do, a lot actually—“ she corrects herself, making you chuckle softly as you set your own cup down.
“I mean more so where you came from,” Sevika muttered, resting her flesh forearm on the counter, “you don’t scream ‘Hey I was born in the Undercity’ like most of us.”
You paused, staring into the bottom of your glass before swirling what little liquid was left inside. Sevika’s words echoed in your head, her observation cutting deeper than you cared to admit.
“Does it matter?” you finally muttered, your voice quieter than you intended.
Sevika leaned in slightly, resting her elbow on the bar as her eyes stayed locked on you. “If it didn’t, I wouldn’t have asked,” she replied.
You let out a small, bitter laugh. “I don’t know if I should be flattered or suspicious.”
She smirked, but there was something softer behind it. “Maybe both.”
You sighed, knowing you wouldn’t get out of this without saying something real—something you hadn’t shared with anyone in a long time.
“I wasn’t born here,” you admitted, shifting uncomfortably on the barstool. “Not in the Undercity, at least.”
Sevika didn’t say anything, but the flicker of curiosity in her eyes told you she was listening.
“My family… we lived closer to the surface. Not Piltover exactly, but better off than here.” You paused, fingers tightening around the glass. “It didn’t last.”
Sevika raised an eyebrow, but she didn’t interrupt.
“My father—he gambled. Drank. Made enemies.” You swallowed, the memories stirring like dust in your chest. “And when the debts piled too high, when they finally came to collect, we lost everything.”
You shook your head, forcing down the lump rising in your throat.
“Did you hear about the fire around 19 years ago? Whole neighborhood burnt down, barely any survivors,” you hummed gently, not daring to meet her eyes, Sevika humming softly in response.
Sevika’s expression hardened, her eyes narrowing slightly. She knew the story, or at least pieces of it. Everyone in the Undercity had heard rumors about the fire. But hearing you say it—connecting yourself to that tragedy—shifted something in the air between you.
“Yeah,” she said quietly, her voice gruffer than usual. “I heard.”
You nodded, swallowing hard as you pushed past the lump in your throat. “That was my neighborhood. My family.”
Sevika’s gaze lingered on you, unblinking and sharp, but she didn’t press. She let the weight of your words settle.
“There was nothing left,” you continued, your voice hollow. “The ones who survived… we scattered. Some made it out of the Undercity entirely. Some didn’t.”
Sevika didn’t move, didn’t speak, but the flicker in her eyes betrayed her thoughts. She understood loss. Maybe too well.
“I came here because it was the only place left,” you said, swirling the last drops of your drink. “I thought maybe I could disappear. Start over. But you don’t really get to do that, do you?”
Sevika finally broke her silence, her voice low and steady. “No. You don’t.”
For a moment, the two of you just sat there, the hum of the bar around you fading into the background.
“So that’s it?” Sevika asked after a beat. “You’ve been running ever since?”
You shrugged, a bitter smile tugging at your lips. “What else is there to do?”
Sevika leaned back, her metal arm resting against the counter with a faint clink. “You fight,” she said simply.
You snorted. “Fight for what? This place?”
“For yourself,” Sevika replied, her gaze steady. “For the people who can’t.”
You blinked at her, caught off guard by the conviction in her voice. It was different from the Sevika you thought you knew—the woman who pushed people away, who acted like she didn’t care.
“Don’t act like you’re not already doing it,” she added, nodding toward the alley you’d been watching earlier. “Those kids? They’re looking at you like you’re their savior, whether you like it or not.”
Your chest tightened, and you looked away. “I’m not anyone’s savior,” you grumbled, swirling your glass again.
“That’s what I thought too, for a long time,” Sevika replied, her eyes softening, her words seeming to bring back memories or talks she had. “I was raised to be tough, never be soft, don’t let anyone take advantage of you,” she muttered, “I guess it worked per say, I’m feared, respected, all things you want to be in a place like this.”
You watch as her shoulders sag slightly, exhaling heavily as her eyes closed for a moment, “but I lose people, people who didn’t deserve to be in a place like this, people who made mistakes but I was lucky enough to see what was behind the masks they wore.”
Sevika’s words hung in the air, heavy and raw, like a wound laid bare. You’d never heard her talk like this—never seen her drop the armor she always carried. And yet, here she was, letting you glimpse something deeper. Something real.
You swallowed, the lump in your throat growing harder to ignore. “And did it help?” you asked quietly. “Being tough? Pushing people away?”
Her eyes snapped back to yours, sharp but not unkind. “Sometimes,” she admitted. “But mostly? It just made it easier to pretend I didn’t care when I did.”
The confession struck a nerve, and you felt your walls starting to crack. You’d spent so long convincing yourself that caring was weakness—that survival meant keeping your distance. But was it really any better than being alone?
“So what changed?” you asked, your voice barely above a whisper.
Sevika let out a dry chuckle, though there was no humor in it. “I lost too much,” she said simply. “Kept telling myself it wasn’t my fault, that this place—this life—wasn’t meant for happy endings.”
She paused, her gaze flickering toward you. “But then you showed up.”
Your breath caught. “Me?”
“You’re stubborn. Reckless. You don’t know when to back down, even when you should,” Sevika said, her lips curving into something that almost resembled a smile. “And you remind me of someone I used to be.”
You blinked, unsure whether to take her words as a compliment or a warning. Maybe both.
“Is that a good thing..?” You ask, your head tilting with the question.
Sevika smiled, not a big one or for long, but it was a genuine smile, with the way that the corners of her eyes crinkled and how her slightly chapped lips seemed to stretch with the act— your heart buzzing slightly at the sight.
“Depends on who you ask I guess, if you ask me, it’s the worst possible thing to happen to me, I’ve got a street Rat stuck on me like it’s caught in a trap, and yet you keep trying to get that cheese that you think is there.”
You couldn’t help the laugh that escaped you, soft but real, the tension in your chest easing just a little. “Well, maybe the cheese is worth it,” you shot back, your lips curving into a smirk.
Sevika raised an eyebrow, her smile fading but her amusement lingering in her eyes. “You think so? Even knowing the trap could snap any second?”
You shrugged, leaning back on your stool. “Life’s full of traps. If you’re too scared to take a chance, you’ll never get anywhere.”
Her expression shifted, her gaze lingering on you for a moment longer than felt comfortable. It wasn’t judgmental or cold—it was something closer to respect, though Sevika would probably never admit it outright.
“Brave or stupid,” she muttered, shaking her head.
“Probably both,” you admitted with a grin, raising your glass to finish the last drop of vodka.
For a moment, the two of you just sat there, the hum of the bar wrapping around you like a threadbare blanket. It wasn’t much, but it was enough to make you feel… not alone.
“As much as a pain in the ass you tend to be,” Sevika sighed, “I have to admit you seem to at least have a brain in your skull,” smirking softly as you roll your eyes.
You lift your glass to your lips, swallowing down the rest of the vodka, trying your best not to let it show that you hated the sting of it falling down your throat. As you exhale, setting your empty glass down on the counter you glance at Sevika, taking in how much more relaxed she looks. Her shoulders don’t sit as squared as they used to, her sharp and cold eyes seem to have melted a bit.
You couldn’t help but let your gaze linger, studying the woman beside you. This was Sevika, the same woman who had pushed you away without a second thought, who had built walls so high even you couldn’t see over them. And yet here she was—softened, even if just slightly, by the fragile truce between you.
“You know,” you started, your voice light but tinged with sincerity, “I didn’t think I’d ever see you like this.”
Sevika raised an eyebrow, though there was a faint smirk tugging at her lips. “Like what?”
“Relaxed. Human,” you said, leaning your elbow on the bar as you turned to face her more fully.
She let out a dry chuckle, shaking her head. “Don’t get used to it, kid. This place has a way of reminding you why you can’t stay soft for long.”
“Maybe,” you replied, your tone thoughtful. “But isn’t it exhausting? Always keeping people at arm’s length?”
Sevika didn’t answer right away, her gaze shifting to her metal arm as she flexed the fingers absently. “It is,” she admitted quietly. “But it’s safer that way.”
“For who?” you asked, your voice barely above a whisper.
Her eyes snapped back to yours, sharp and guarded, but you held her gaze. For a moment, you thought she might shut you down, might throw up the same walls she always did. But instead, she sighed, her shoulders sagging slightly.
“For everyone,” she said.
“That's a load of bull,” you scoff, Sevika sighed begrudgingly as she shook her head. “Look, Sevika, I get it, you're a big and tough woman, you've gotta keep that exterior appearance sharp and clean–” you sigh, “but at least try and relax and be genuine with me? Come on, I was nice to you before you even had a chance. I'm ruining my reputation here,” you whine half heartedly.
Sevika let out a dry laugh, her lips quirking up at the corners. “Ruining your reputation? You think anyone’s impressed by you drinking cheap vodka and pouting at me?”
“Hey, I’m plenty impressive,” you shot back, leaning back on your stool with an exaggerated smirk. “I’ve got street kids worshiping me, remember? They think I’m a legend.”
Sevika arched an eyebrow, her smirk growing. “Yeah, a legend at whining, apparently.”
You rolled your eyes but couldn’t fight the small grin tugging at your lips. “You’re deflecting,” you accused, pointing at her.
“And you’re annoying,” she countered, but there was no real heat in her words.
“Annoying enough to get under your skin, though,” you teased, taking another sip of your drink. “Which means I’m doing something right.”
Sevika groaned, pinching the bridge of her nose, but you caught the way her shoulders relaxed just a little more. “You don’t let up, do you?”
“Not when I think there’s something worth fighting for,” you said, your tone softening just slightly.
Her eyes flicked to yours, and for a moment, she looked like she might argue. But instead, she sighed again, shaking her head. “You’re a pain in the ass, you know that?”
“Yeah,” you said with a grin, raising your glass in a mock toast. “But I grow on people.”
Sevika snorted, shaking her head but not denying it. “Don’t push your luck.”
“Wouldn’t dream of it,” you replied, though the playful glint in your eyes said otherwise.
The conversation lulled for a moment, the two of you settling into a companionable silence. The hum of the bar faded into the background, and you found yourself watching Sevika as she absentmindedly traced the edge of her glass with her metal fingers.
“Look,” you said after a beat, your voice quieter now, “I’m not asking for a miracle or anything. I just… I think we’ve both had enough pretending for one night.”
Sevika’s fingers stilled, her gaze lifting to meet yours. There was a flicker of something in her eyes—hesitation, maybe. Or vulnerability.
“Yeah,” she murmured, her voice low but steady. “Sure.”
You smiled, the corners of your mouth twitching upward in a way that felt almost foreign. “See? I knew I’d get you to admit I was right eventually.”
“Don’t get used to it,” Sevika muttered, but there was a softness to her tone that took the edge off her words.
“I would never,” you said again, but this time, your voice was sincere.
As you giggled at Sevika’s hesitance to let up on you, a hand naturally lifting to cover your smile as you tried to stop your little giggle fit.
Sevika’s eyes lingered on you for a moment longer than she intended. The sound of your laughter—so genuine, so unguarded—echoed in her chest, stirring something she didn’t want to name.
She told herself it was just the vodka, the dim light of the bar, the way you always seemed to pull her into these situations without her realizing. But as her gaze traced the curve of your smile, the way your eyes crinkled at the corners, and the faint flush creeping up your cheeks, Sevika felt her resolve waver.
No.
She wouldn’t.
Couldn’t.
But gods, did she want to.
She wanted to memorize the way your laughter filled the air, to see that smile again and again, to be the reason for it. It was ridiculous—dangerous, even—but for a fleeting moment, she let herself imagine it. Imagine what it would feel like to have you by her side, not as an annoyance or a distraction, but as something more.
The thought alone made her tense, her metal fingers curling into a fist on the counter.
“You’re something else, you know that?” Sevika muttered, her voice gruff as she leaned back in her seat, trying to mask the swirl of emotions tightening in her chest.
You paused mid-giggle, your hand dropping as you glanced at her. “Is that a compliment?” you teased, tilting your head with a playful grin.
“Don’t push it,” she replied, but her tone lacked its usual sharpness.
Still, you couldn’t miss the way her gaze softened, just for a second, before she looked away.
“Sevika…” you started, leaning slightly closer.
“Don’t,” she interrupted, her voice quiet but firm.
You froze, confusion flickering across your face. “Don’t what?”
Sevika sighed, running a hand through her short hair. “Don’t make me care more than I already do.”
The words hit you like a freight train, and for a moment, all you could do was stare at her, your heart pounding in your chest.
“What if I want you to?” you asked softly, the words slipping out before you could stop them.
Sevika’s jaw clenched, her eyes darting to yours, and for a moment, you saw the vulnerability she tried so hard to hide.
“It’s not that simple,” she murmured, her voice barely above a whisper.
“Fine, have it your way.” you hum unapologetically, reaching over and stealing her glass and swallowing down what was left of her own vodka.
Sevika had made sure to get you back to your little hideout in one piece, given you weren't the greatest with alcohol given how your pace stuttered or you came to a complete stop to balance yourself.
She helped you climb up the fire escape to your little cave,steading you with a firm hand on your back as you stumbled up the fire escape, her metal arm clinking softly against the rungs. You muttered something incoherent about being "perfectly fine" and "used to this," but she ignored you, her lips quirking in quiet amusement.
When you finally reached the top, you gestured grandly to your “hideout,” as if it was a palace. The reality was far less impressive.
The small space was wedged between two buildings, half-covered by a rusted piece of metal acting as a makeshift roof. A few blankets and pillows were scattered on the floor, a small stash of food tucked into a corner along with a battered lantern. It was functional, but it wasn’t much.
Sevika’s eyes scanned the area, her expression unreadable. “This is where you’ve been living?” she asked, her tone carefully neutral.
You huffed, brushing past her as you tried to reclaim some dignity. “It’s one of my spots,” you said defensively, waving a hand. “You know, in case things go south.”
Her gaze lingered on you for a moment before she crossed her arms, leaning casually against the wall. “Doesn’t look too secure.”
“Oh, please,” you shot back, your cheeks flushing. “It’s fine. I’ve been here for years, and I’m still standing, aren’t I?”
Sevika raised an eyebrow, clearly unimpressed.
You crossed your arms, mirroring her stance. “What? You gonna start critiquing my home decor now?”
A smirk tugged at her lips, but she held her tongue, sensing that any more teasing would push you into a full-blown tantrum. “No,” she said simply. “It’s… cozy.”
You blinked, caught off guard by the lack of sarcasm. “Cozy?”
“Yeah,” she said, shrugging as if it wasn’t a big deal. “It works. That’s what matters, right?”
You stared at her for a moment, unsure if she was mocking you or being genuine. But the softness in her eyes—subtle as it was—told you she wasn’t making fun of you.
“Well, uh… thanks, I guess,” you mumbled, rubbing the back of your neck as you avoided her gaze.
Sevika pushed off the wall, her smirk returning. “Don’t mention it. Just don’t expect me to climb that fire escape again anytime soon.”
You snorted, feeling some of your embarrassment ebb away. “Noted.”
She started to turn toward the exit, but then hesitated, glancing back at you. “You good here?”
“Yeah,” you said quickly, nodding. “I’m good.”
Sevika nodded, her expression softening for just a moment before she made her way back down the fire escape.
You watched her go, your heart still racing from the night’s events. As you turned back to your little hideout, you let out a breath, trying to shake off the lingering warmth her presence had left behind.
“Cozy,” you muttered to yourself, rolling your eyes. But despite your best efforts, a small smile tugged at your lips.
Okay maybe it was immature for you to have a crush on a woman twice your age, who had no interest in you whatsoever, and who would've probably ripped you limb to limb by now ...if she hadn’t inexplicably decided to tolerate your existence. Maybe even like it, though you weren’t going to push your luck assuming that. Still, it was hard to ignore the way Sevika seemed to linger around you lately, as if she was trying to figure out what made you tick—or why you hadn’t annoyed her enough to leave yet.
It wasn’t like you had any grand delusions about her feelings. Sevika wasn’t exactly the soft, romantic type. She was gruff, distant, and intimidating as hell—everything you definitely shouldn’t be drawn to.
But there was something about the way she looked at you sometimes. Like you were more than just another street rat scraping by. Like maybe, just maybe, you mattered.
Of course, that was probably just your overactive imagination. She was twice your age, far more experienced in life—and in surviving this hellhole. You were nothing more than an amusing distraction at best.
Still, it didn’t stop your heart from doing that stupid fluttery thing whenever she leaned in just a little too close. Or the way your stomach flipped when she smirked at you, that rare and fleeting expression that made you feel like you’d done something right for once.
You groaned, flopping down onto your makeshift bed with a dramatic sigh. “Get a grip,” you muttered to yourself, running a hand through your hair. “She’s way out of your league. Not to mention, probably plotting how to make you useful—or at least tolerable.”
But even as you said it, your thoughts drifted back to the way her voice softened when she talked about losing people. The way her gaze lingered on you a second too long when she thought you weren’t looking.
It was stupid. Childish. Dangerous.
And yet, you couldn’t shake the thought.
Because no matter how many times you told yourself to let it go, there was still a small, stubborn part of you that wondered what it would be like if she did care. Even just a little.
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smartsxylacy · 22 hours ago
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GUYS ITS CANON TRUST ME WERE GETTING THIS IN S5
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Staying at a motel on the way to Nevada.
I love this theory so much I had to draw it bc its so real and true and it happened!!!
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legbird · 1 day ago
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hello tumblr. toxic old man yaoi
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yyeojj · 2 days ago
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emukasa week day 2: aliens!!
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letsraisealittlehelltrds · 2 days ago
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The Cheater Boys
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Adam Sheffield, Micheal Eborall and Toby Poole as Greaseball, Red Caboose and Electra (Starlight Express Bochum)
🎥 : Unknown
📅 : March 15th 2015
Feel free to use / repost elsewhere - Just like or reblog if you use please! I’m open to any requests! Will do any musical, movie or show that is reasonable :)
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fermentedgutz · 5 months ago
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god, why is HE third-wheeling on our cryptid hunt…
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