#i was supposed to upload it on halloween but i fucked up trying to schedule it and posted it instead djkghdf
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WAIT.................................. THE VAMPIRE SONIC AND SONADOW COMIC GOT ME LIKE WAAAAAAAAAAAAAA I LOVE YOUR ART SO MUCHHH<333
THANK YOU!! <3
#i was supposed to upload it on halloween but i fucked up trying to schedule it and posted it instead djkghdf#ask
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Babes in Chuckletown
OHO BOY, am I angry.
I was in the middle of a very long chapter in my fanfic when my computer randomly decided to restart, costing me NOT ONLY a very long chapter, but the ENTIRE THIRTEEN-CHAPTER DOCUMENT. I thank god that I uploaded it all to AO3 up until the thirteenth chapter (which is going to be a pain the ass to rewrite), but now I have to go in and copy-paste, re-bold and re-italicize everything.
So that’s how my Halloween is going. Excuse me while I cry.
Anyway. Please enjoy this one-shot I’m making up on the fly about Arthur having no choice but bringing his small child to Ha-Ha’s because he has nobody to watch her. Me being in an angry mood helps me to channel Hoyt’s ... Hoytish-ness. Hoyt was definitely an asshole in the movie, but I feel like the lines “I like you, Arthur” and “I’m trying to help you” flew under the radar in light of his dickishness.
I’ve been wanting to write this for a while, I just have no conceivable idea where this would logically fit into my fanfiction, so I gift it here. I’ll let this be a birthday present for the incredible @funsizedshrimp, since they seem to love my Carrie Fleck as much as I do and I absolutely should return the favor for all the lovely art they gift to me. I love you lots, you wonderful person you.
__________________ ______________ __________________
“Hey Peanut, can you do me a favor?”
Arthur’s voice was soft, nearly indecipherable. The pudgy hand that had been grasping at his shirt collar suddenly pushed against him, exerting the energy to be able to lift her head up.
One bleary eye opened to look at him. Her cheek was rosy from her uneasy resting spot on his collarbone. Neither the time nor the place allowed for such coddling, but he continued to rock her on his hip uneasily.
“Mm?” she questioned.
“Can you put a hand over your ear?” he asked, softer still. “Daddy has to talk to someone and it might be a little loud. Not suitable for a baby’s ears.”
Although Carrie grumbled something that only he could decipher as “Not a baby,” she conceded. The sharp bone in her ear pressing against his collarbone hurt, but in the magical age where she began repeating every colorful phrase she heard from the television, he couldn’t risk anything.
Taking in a wavering breath, clutching the bag in his hand tighter, Arthur opened his boss’ door.
“Oh, how fucking nice of you to ... what the fuck is this?”
Hoyt looked up from his stack of documents -- chiefly the words complaint, absence, and Carnival bore into his head from a yellow slip on his desk -- to see Ha Ha’s resident hooky flinch in protest. What he first thought was an overgrown ragdoll, he realized with some incredulity was a toddler, pressing its head into Arthur’s neck.
“You brought a fucking kid into my shop?” he asked, voice rising.
“Hoyt ... please --”
“Please what? This should be good.”
It gave him no pleasure to watch Arthur be so hopelessly awkward, dropping the paper bag in a vain attempt to hike the kid further up on his person. He knew the guy was going through a rough patch with the wife. That it happened on Hoyt’s dime, though, made him hard to sympathize with.
Fumbling for something to do besides stand uncomfortably and rock his daughter into a sleep that she couldn’t attain, Arthur sat in the green chair across from Hoyt’s desk. He positioned Carrie to be able to rest easier in his lap. At a groggy whimper, his hand instinctively pressed against her arm, hoping it would keep her semi-warm. He didn’t know why Hoyt kept the AC on at all hours of the day.
“Well aren’t you a real mother hen,” Hoyt observed, devoid of anything Arthur could recognize as a positive emotion. “What’s it doing here?”
“I ... I had no other options,” he blurted out. “I can’t afford another day off work, but I have nobody to watch her.”
“Do I look like I’m runnin’ a charity ward, Arthur?” Upon further thought, “You didn’t bring her through the locker room, did you?”
“Nobody else is here,” he said quickly, realizing how bad that might’ve sounded once it reached his own ears. “And I made her close her eyes.”
Two scraggly grey eyebrows rose in vague surprise.
“Your mistake, not mine.”
Arthur felt the tips of his ears burn, unsure if he guessed correctly what Hoyt was referring to. Carrie may have been a surprise, but she was no mistake.
“How are you supposed to keep track of the kid on assignment?” Hoyt questioned, flitting through the ever-expanding pile of papers on his desk. “You’re booked for Amusement Mile today. That’s fuckin’ dangerous.”
Awkwardly, Arthur cleared his throat, feeling unable to meet Hoyt’s disbelieving eyes. His fingers rubbed Carrie’s arm up and down. She burrowed further into the crook of his neck, keeping her hand dutifully over her ear as promised. Her face was hidden from view by a crop of blonde hair -- the little veil he had left that kept work and home as two separate realities.
“I - I, um ...” A giggle got caught in his throat, as thick as a billiard ball. He forced it down. “I was wondering if I could keep her here. Just ... just for --”
“What?”
“Just for today, a -- and tomorrow, I’ll be sure --”
“Are you stupid?” Hoyt cuts in, and Arthur’s hand moves from his daughter’s arm to the small hand over her ear like a reflex. “You’re not serious, are you?”
“W -- well, Randall brought in his kid a few w -- weeks ago ... I thought maybe ...”
“Randall’s kid is twelve already, not three.” Hoyt heard a soft mutter of “she’ll be five soon,” as if it would sway the argument in Arthur’s court at all. “What the hell are you thinking in that fucked-up head? No relatives, no friends?”
“Nobody,” he said, and it surprised Hoyt that he hadn’t seen Arthur ... quite so sad before. He’d been sad, sure, but not pitiful. He couldn’t be more pitiful if he was dressed as Carnival doing this begging. “My -- my wife just left, I don’t know where she is. My in-laws are on vacation in Burbank and my mom is in the hospital. The neighbors won’t take her and -- and the preschool is closed ‘cause of a rat infestation. Hoyt, I’m ... I’m begging you.”
Something about the sight was so pitiful, so unfunny in his desperation, that Hoyt narrowly refrained from cutting back with My mistake for thinking you’d have friends.
“Mmf, Daddy,” the source of the frustration croaked. “My arm hurts. Can I put it down?”
“Yeah, Peanut,” he said quietly. The hand slid out from underneath his warm palm and found its way around his neck once again. A thumb brushed away a few strands of hair from her face, unveiling a curtain for her to view this strange new room.
Hoyt almost let slip a surprised “holy shit” as the kid’s head rose to look around the office, wide-eyed in her wonderment, but he thought better of it. But holy shit, did she look like Arthur, in eyes and face shape at least. Slap on a greasy brown wig and she could’ve been a pint-sized clone.
“A jack in the box,” she said quietly, pointing at the dumb clown statue out of his sight in front of his desk. “Daddy, jack in the box.”
“Yeah, Carrie, I see.”
Hoyt bit his lip, at a loss. It was always harder to turn a kid away when he had a name and a face to set to them. Until then the kid could’ve been a delusion for all he knew, the way Arthur talked about her like there was no god damn tomorrow. Who on this green earth would ever think to --?
Ugh. Fuck.
“You owe me, Arthur. Big time.”
____________________
Nine in the morning rolled around to a relative calm. The kid was, to his relief, quiet and weedy for the most part, like her quiet, weedy father. A long stretch of silence ensued -- half-hour? Two hours? He didn’t fucking know -- where the rhythmic punching of the time cards from the locker room and pen (or crayon) on paper substituted for awkward and mindless conversation he didn’t want to indulge in.
His only indication that she was there at all was the knowledge that his door hadn’t opened since Arthur hurried out to get ready and dropped her in Hoyt’s proverbial lap (had it been a literal instance, he might’ve tossed the kid through the window on reflex), and the occasional kicking of leather sandals and bell bottom pant legs barely visible from his vantage point.
“Hey, don’t get any crayon on my floor,” he warned, wondering internally if she made up for in mischief what she lacked in outward annoyance.
“I won’t,” she replied, too high and cheery for nine in the morning. “I draw pictures to stop Daddy being sad.”
Well isn’t that just fucking lovely. But he had a schedule to amend.
He could send Arthur to the kids’ hospital in Randall’s place -- the kids seemed to really respond to Arthur better ... god, why did Randall have to be such an obnoxious prick of a clown with the kids? It was getting harder and harder to place him--
The rustling of paper and a soft grunt made him look up. Hiding her face from his view, the kid was holding up a drawing of ... colored dots? Big whoop.
She pointed to a bright green one, taking up the center of the page.
“That’s -- that’s my daddy at work,” she explained. He raised a brow. Quite a likeness. “And that’s me, with an ice cream.”
Her little pointer finger trailed to the scribble next to the green -- a flurry of yellow and brown and pink. Was that what she’d spent the last hour on?
“What’s that then?” he asked before he could stop himself, not realizing any words had left his mouth at all until the cap of a chewed blue Bic pen tapped against a blue scribble, neatly tucked away in a folded corner.
“That’s my mommy,” she explained, as casual as though he’d asked for the time. Oh. “She’s taking a break.”
He nodded, not trusting himself to say something he might regret in the hours to come. Before coming to the realization that it was not his business nor his time to care, a question flitted through his mind if Arthur had told the kid about her mom at all.
“I got work to do,” he settled. “Read a book or something.”
____________________
Hoyt never thought he’d ever be disappointed to have a knock on the door that wasn’t Arthur.
“C’min,” he said distractedly.
“Hoyt,” Gary said. “Barney needs the key to the storage closet. Forgot his shoes at home.”
“Second time this week,” Hoyt tutted. Standing up, he allowed himself a stretch that popped his back in several satisfying places, and reached for the key under the strip of tape marked STORAGE. “Tell him this had better be the last damn time.”
“I’ll try.”
Their eyes, as though having just materialized in the room, landed on the girl, still lying on the floor but looking up at Gary, saying nothing. Gary’s face softened.
“Oh, hello,” he said amiably. “Is this your daughter, Hoyt?”
Don’t ever say something like that again --
“Nah.” He shook his head and sat back down. “Arthur’s kid.”
A moment of recognition passed where Gary’s eyes lit up like a damn Christmas tree. His smile grew wider.
“So this is the Carrie we’ve heard all about,” he exclaimed, sticking his hand out. “Pleased to meet you, Miss Fleck.”
At the lack of response, Hoyt looked over the desk. A blonde crop of hair was unmoved, and even quieter than she’d been before.
“Didn’t your daddy teach you not to stare?” Hoyt probed.
“She’s alright, Hoyt,” Gary countered, keeping his eyes on the girl. “She’s still very young.”
No time like now to teach ‘em not to stare
“Thanks, Hoyt,” Gary continued. At the door frame again, he smiled once more at the kid. “It was very nice to meet you, Carrie.”
The door closed. As if cued by the click of the lock, she turned quickly to Hoyt.
“He was small!” she whispered.
“Yeah, and you’re rude.”
“How rude?”
“It’s fuckin’ rude to stare at him ‘cause he’s short,” Hoyt snapped, pulling yet another litany of papers in a barely-together manila folder from an overstuffed desk drawer. “He doesn’t stare at you ‘cause you’re a girl.”
“But that was scary.”
“There’s a lot scarier guys to be on the lookout for, kid.”
“Who?”
Your daddy, for one.
“I don’t wanna be rude,” she said quietly, beginning to stand. She swiped a bit of dust from the knee of her bell bottoms, putting a nagging word in the back of his mind to sweep the office soon. “I wanna be like my daddy. He’s nice.”
He looked at her briefly before returning to his papers again. Crudely and off-tune, he made out that she was attempting to whistle the Andy Griffith theme.
Andy Griffith. Sheriff Barney Fife. God damn you, Gary.
The back of a blonde head was cast in varying shades as she stood in front of the window slats, drawing a little pointer finger over the sharpie-marked letters. MIME. WHITE FACE PAINT
I have no doubt you’ll be exactly like your daddy. Good luck with that.
____________________
Two o’clock gave Hoyt his first opportunity to get a real look at the Fleck girl. That still felt weird to say.
“Here,” he said stiffly, digging into his back pocket to produce two dimes. “Go down the hall ‘til you reach the Pepsi machine and get us two sodas. It’s lunch time.”
She swiped the dimes from his hand. The contact of nails against his palm made him shiver more than he expected. She felt startlingly real.
A few hesitant steps later -- and he really had to question how poor Arthur was that she looked at the dimes like she’d never seen them before -- she turned to look at him. The pink clip holding her bangs back suddenly bobbed on her head.
“Daddy not let me have soda,” she said.
“Your daddy’s out working. Skedaddle.”
“But what if he come and sees?”
She was lucky her little girl charm made up for the annoying inconsistency of her grammar. If there was one thing Hoyt hated, it was inconsistency.
“We got two hours ‘til you gotta worry about that.”
He looked down again, swiping a red mark through Randall’s name. Another complaint from a kid’s parent from the latest birthday party. God damn --
A clanking made him look up, and sigh. She couldn’t reach the door handle.
“Every paper I can’t sign ‘cause of lookin’ after you is coming out of your daddy’s paycheck,” he threatened, standing to open the door.
The kid was made all the more startlingly real, assaulting his senses as he had to grab her arms and push her forward to get her to stop gawking at the animal statues and props in the storage closet that swallowed the hallway. At least the locker room was empty.
What the fuck are you thinking bringing her here, Fleck?
Leaning against the opposite wall, he watched with waning curiosity as she rushed over to the machine, concluded she was too short to reach the buttons, and pulled over a yellow chair (the uneven wobbly one that grated on his nerves to hear scraping against the ground in uneven increments) to stand on. Licks of curls rested on her shoulders, reminding Hoyt of her mop-headed father.
Rushing back to him, she triumphantly handed him a blue Pepsi can, keeping the Mountain Dew for herself. Eh, he’s had worse.
“Stay,” he said gruffly, unsure of what else to say. He was more accustomed to dogs than kids, but felt satisfied by her listening skills when she climbed into the yellow chair next to the black trunk-table.
Two minutes later and he found himself in the impossibly weird scenario of not only having lunch outside of the comfort of his office, but tossing a banana to a kid who, by all the laws of nature, should not really be allowed to exist. Cute as she may be, to see physical proof of Arthur Fleck’s sex life made it hard to look at her for more than a few seconds.
Hoyt looked anyway, a little annoyed at her inability to open the soda can with her frail little finger. Weak like her damn dad. He swiped it, opened it with a secretly satisfying hiss, and watched her take a great sip. Scrunching her nose -- thank god for her, it wasn’t like Arthur’s -- she stuck her tongue out in derision before reaching over to set it on the table.
Hoyt switched the cans. He hated Pepsi anyway.
He also hated bananas, and the leftover couscous his wife made the previous evening. Mentally he made a note to pack his own damn lunches from then on.
So the banana went to the kid, less out of concern for her eating and more as a means to stop any bellyaching from either her or his wife later.
“So your dad doesn’t let you have soda,” he found himself asking. Why his brain was unable to catch up with his mouth, he wasn’t really sure.
Through a mouthful, she shook her head at him. Swallowing down a sizeable bite, she said, “The sugar bad for my heart.”
“Hmm.”
“My mommy let me have soda, though,” she said, perkier now in a way that made him feel a little rigid. “She likes Coke.”
Hoyt held back a snort of derision and surprise. There were funnier things to mock Arthur about than his wife hitting it big and leaving. Coke was for the rich, he knew. Poor people ... drank Pepsi, he supposed, looking at the kid and the soda can again.
She seemed much more content with the Pepsi can. Metaphorical? Maybe. He was never one to think of analogies -- nor did he really care.
At the sound of the entrance banging open, her eyes widened and she went red. Her hands stayed firmly around the soda can as her proverbial cookie jar.
Whatever jaunty tune Randall was whistling as though he wasn’t twenty minutes late was cut short upon making eye contact with the kid. Hoyt saw something that looked friendly, but not in the same fashion that maybe Gary had in mind.
“Didn’t realize you paid for ‘em so young, Hoyt.”
An inexplicable burning sensation flared in the tips of Hoyt’s ears.
“It’s Arthur’s kid, now fuck off,” he said quickly. “And you’re late.”
“Car broke down again.”
“Well get it fixed, or don’t let it break down on my time.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Randall sighed, breezing past them with his nicotine-smelling clown suit in hand, chief of the parents’ complaints.
The girl’s eyes trailed after the huge man, staying on the hallway long after he’d left. She leaned in just after he took in a mouthful of cold, crunchy couscous.
“What did he mean?” she asked quietly.
“Don’t ask questions.”
____________________
Hoyt’s leg bounced, eyeing the clock out of his peripheral. If Arthur believed Hoyt was letting himself be saddled with the kid for one minute past four o’clock, he was really out of it.
The kid was getting restless, and relentlessly annoying. She surprised him with her expert knowledge on blowing up and tying balloons -- of course Arthur would teach her that, what a valuable life skill -- but the inefficient scraping of two ends of a tightly-woven balloon into a barely-decipherable balloon animal made him wanna pop the thing right in her face. God damn, why did he keep a pile of them within her reach?
She made a snake, she declared. Or a worm.
Upon reaching for another one, it came with an unnecessary avalanche of wormy friends as the corner of a plastic bag scattered a cluster of colored balloons on the carpeted floor.
“Shit,” he grumbled, rounding the desk to collect them. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw her put back the one she’d originally grabbed. “You’d better hope your dad has money to pay for new balloons, kid.”
“Shhh ...” His eyes narrowed at her, watching her lean down with him to collect handfuls -- albeit smaller handfuls -- of long balloons. “Shit. Shit, shit, shit.”
____________________
Two minutes to four, Arthur came into the office, looking like a man on a mission. It was to his visible relief, Hoyt noticed, that the kid was happy and very much alive.
“Daddy!” she exclaimed, hopping from the chair to take aim around his pant leg, leaving her picture book on the ground. A hand stroked some hair behind her ear and she smiled sappily up at him. “I drew you pictures and -- and I made you a balloon snake, but it popped.”
Groaning, he pried her arms away and bent down to her level.
“Were you good for Hoyt?” he asked, the faintest smile threatening to split on his face. Eight hours of work would not stop him from enjoying how soft her hair was, or how she smelled like cherries when she hugged his hulking, sweaty form.
“Just aces,” Hoyt smiled cloyingly, twisting a pen cap between his fingers. “Get a sitter for her tomorrow or don’t bother coming in.”
“That good, huh?” Arthur questioned, groaning again in achy protest as he stood up. “I’ll find a sitter for her, I promise.”
____________________
Three hours and two much-needed baths later, Arthur was finding a familiar rhythm in twirling his best girl around their little living room, not minding that he got lost in the mask he wore in front of her. Their old turntable warbled and scratched, but he scarcely noticed.
Carrie didn’t smile at anybody the way she smiled at him. He hoped she knew the flip side to that was true as well.
Que sera sera
Whatever will be, will be
The future’s not ours to see
Que sera sera
“I talked with Mom on the phone today,” he mentioned, watching her face brighten into a widening grin. “She said she wants to meet up with us to take you to lunch on Saturday.”
“Is she come back?” she asked. With her left hand enveloped in her father’s, she shifted her right arm so it rested against his chest and she could lean back to look at him. His face fell slightly.
“No, Peanut, I don’t think so. But you’ve been doing so well with school ‘til it closed, I thought you could tell her all the new rhyming words you learned. You learned what rhymes with bit, didn’t you?”
Her eyes traveled up to the ceiling, scrunching her nose to remember.
“Split,” she concluded, aglow in his proud smile. “Now you.”
“Befit. You?”
“Uh ... grit.”
At a very inelegant dip, which sent her into shrieking giggles as she felt her ponytail brush the floor, he said, “Banana split.”
“That doesn’t count!” she laughed.
“Oh, really? How does it not count?” he humored.
“Cause I said split! No cheating!”
“Then tool kit,” he smiled. “But now you have to think of two words.”
“Quit, and ...” She stopped to consider. “Oh, I learned one today! Shit.”
____________________
“Hoyt?”
“What do you want?”
Arthur looked from the paper in his hands, to the area of space between his person and the paper, filled in by the sight of his feet doing an awkward little soft shoe. Should he even question Hoyt about this? He was as honest as he could be, but something about this didn’t seem to add up.
“It’s just, uh ... my paycheck seems higher than it should be?”
“Is that a problem?”
“Well, no, but --”
“Then what is it?”
A nervous sweat started to form at Arthur’s hairline.
“It’s just that ... I did the math, and -- and it looks like you paid me for one of the days I didn’t work.”
“Are you tellin’ me you don’t think I did my math right? Go get a fuckin’ bank job if you think you know better.”
“So ... I’m -- I’m fine if I deposit the two hundred from the check?”
“Your money,” Hoyt grumbled, signing away another mindless paper. For being a clown business, he sure did have a shitload of paperwork. “Pay your rent, buy a hooker, some booze ... a snazzy divorce lawyer.”
Turning, Arthur felt something air-light in his chest, still disbelieving of the good fortune.
I can pay the rent, he registered. I can pay the rent and I can buy Carrie some new toys.
“Hey, how’s the little ankle-biter, by the way?”
He turned again, slower.
“What?”
“Kelly, the -- the kid you brought in on Monday. Raised hell in my office.”
“Oh ... Carrie?”
Arthur looked down at his shoes again, smiling. Staying with his mom and her newly-broken arm, bellyaching about wanting Hoyt at her babysitter again because “Nana can only make TV dinners.”
“She’s just aces.”
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November Syndrome
Imagine that you're a freshman. You're away from home for the first time, out from under the thumbs of veganism and expectations for high achievement that were previously foisted upon you. You have no sense of obligation other than avoiding being yelled at by parents and school. No discipline. No idea how to schedule anything. No sense of organization or time management. The only reason you ever got anything done before was because you had been emotionally beaten into submission by your higher-ups.
What happens? You go crazy. End of story. For the first two months, you go to every party and social event on campus, then, come November, you go bonkers over how much work you have to do, but you don't actually do any work. Instead of working, you escape into things like writing fanfiction, playing Fortnite, or something else unrelated to your studies. It's almost like you evolve into a master procrastinator.
Worse, you don’t even notice your lack of discipline until there’s no one saying “no” to every one of your ideas. As a premed, one of the courses I had to take was called "Computer Science for Scientific Applications". It sounded better than it was. It involved having to hand-write code. On top of that, we had to write in pen! It sucked. My handwritten braces looked like sideways boobs. It was just awful. What really sucked was that I write in cursive, so I did my code in cursive. The professor was not pleased when I handed my assignments in. Our assignments were graded based on whether or not they worked. We don't know until we hand anything in if it works. We don't test the code ourselves, he runs it for us. He put our assignments were put through a scanner, and the scans would be put through a piece of software that would convert the text on the image of the page into actual text. The text that it scraped would then be entered into the IDE for the language in question. Usually for freshman computer science, the language was Java, but our steam (recall I was in premed at the time) did Javascript. The only sort of editing that had to be done to the code once it was scanned and in the IDE was typically spacing related/missing character (the software was good but not perfect).
How was your assignment scored? If the code ran, you passed, and if not; you failed. And I failed my assignment (I only did one) because my handwriting always created a ton of problems for the transcription software. It was kind of a weird program. The software had an auto-detect-language-and-translate feature. Sounds cool, but because of my writing, it thought that I was writing in Hindi and it would "auto-translate" my code. Since the translation module for the software was not that good, stuff got mistranslated…a lot. I remember on one of my assignments, I wrote something in the comments and it got garbled into "radish boots". Ever since then, my nickname amongst my friends in CS was Radish Boots. I didn't hand in any more assignments for that class after that.
See, that's how it starts. Something very small, very unexpected like that. That's how you get the idea that your assignments are optional. And that was all it took to turn me into a master procrastinator.
Once I got the idea that assignments were optional, I just really let myself go. Within three weeks, I went from "good student" to "crappy student" to "how the hell did they get into university?" With no actual work weighing me down, I went ahead and participated in every campus social event ever. Paint-your-own flower pot day at the library? I was there! Fitness event? I was there! Halloween party? Take a guess? I kid you not, I was acting like one of those guys in a college movie. Rather than studying, I went to social events. It was great, except for one little thing. Turns out (and I learned this at board game night), people find people who act like they're in college movies really annoying.
Anyway, the incident that happened at board game night was related to something that happened in chemistry. We had one of those semester long group projects where they put you in groups of seven or eight people. One of the people in our group (Anne, I believe it was) was at the event, and she gave me an earful. Not going to lie, she was really mad that I wasn't doing any work. That's bad enough on its own, but she was angrier than I had expected her to be because we lost five people in the group (four of whom died in rapid succession in some bizarro chain reaction):
last Monday, Laura died of obesity related complications
last Tuesday, Alejandro took up jogging to avoid dying like Laura. He got hit by a bus
last Wednesday, Kevin became afraid of the outdoors (thanks to what happened to Alejandro) and sought refuge in playing video games. Come the weekend, he died of a blood clot from playing Starcraft for 62 hours straight
on Sunday, Melissa shunned all technology (because of what happened to Kevin) and went off to rough it in the woods. She died eating poisonous mushrooms
and yesterday, Michiru dropped out because she couldn't handle the pressure of doing the work of the people that died
Now, our group only had two people, and we had to do the work of seven people. Actually, scratch that. Since I wasn't pulling my weight, poor Anne was stuck doing the work of seven people. Understandably, she was fuming with me, and more than a few swear words were uttered. Anne made a point of saying that if I didn't step up in times of crisis, I had no business being a doctor. I would have agreed, but I had my first taste of freedom in my life. There was no one telling me how I had to respond, so I did what people in movies did: I told her to fuck off.
I don't blame Anne for being so ticked with me. After all, she was doing the work of seven people and I was being a coward, hiding behind a mask made out of lies and excuses. No one likes that.
And then, it happened. November rolled around. The amount of stuff that was past due was insane. Seriously! I missed literally every single assignment that wasn't a test (actually, I think I might have missed a couple of tests, too). I made the mistake of buying into the delusion that assignments were optional, and I ended up paying for it.
I needed to get my shit together and do work, but I couldn't. It went beyond lack of discipline. I never built a workflow, and now I couldn't, for it was too late to dig myself out of the hole. And so, instead of doing the work I needed to do, I did a bunch of irrelevant crap. I had run out of time as a procrastinator, but I acted like things were OK. The reality was, they weren't. My situation with school was beyond dire. Worse, I lied to myself about how it wasn't a big deal. Rather than own up to anything, I escaped into a world of playing video games, writing crappy fan fiction, and other bullshit that would in no way help me get on top of school. November called, and I didn't answer. I couldn't. I was stuck where I was.
I know that I sound like I am repeating myself a lot, but I really want to emphasize how I still didn't get my ass in gear even though things had gotten to the point that I really, really had to buckle down and actually do a ton of work to just pass. More specifically, I wanted to emphasize how much stupid fan fiction and creepypasta I read and wrote during that period. I don't know why I gravitated to creepypasta. I think I was trying to hide the fact that I was a coward, afraid to face the consequences of my procrastination. Liking works of fiction involving surreal horror and demented episodes of beloved childhood cartoons somehow must have translated in my mind to not being afraid of anything. Regardless of how the logistics of that excuse supposedly worked, I ended up being a creepypasta addict.
And that bled into my fanfic writing. I know because I tried to write this ridiculous JumpStart fanfic. It was supposed to be a creepypasta/fanfic (like the infamous Cupcakes), but it just came out incredibly stupid. The concept that powered the story was the little animals from the early elementary JumpStart titles (Frankie the dog, Eleanor the elephant, Pierre the polar bear, CJ the frog, etc…) acting like the folks on South Park. For instance, Frankie the Dog was "Kyle", CJ the Frog was "Stan", Eleanor the Elephant was "Cartman" (albeit with a hidden softer side), and I don't remember who was "Kenny" (I think it was Pierre the Polar Bear). Anyway, the actual story was this thing with vampires. The story was that, at some point, Eleanor got bitten by a vampire (and consequently, turned into a vampire). At the same time, Pierre (I think) was in the hospital with some pretty heavy duty muscular dystrophy, and CJ was trying to persuade people to fund stem-cell research in the hopes that they could save Pierre. However; Frankie thought CJ's thing was dumb and said that they could get Eleanor to bite Pierre so he'd turn into a vampire, thereby curing him of his muscular dystrophy. The only problem with that was, well, Pierre would be a vampire. Eleanor ends up being conflicted by the whole thing, and that's the conflict that drives the story.
I remember some time after I posted the first two chapters online wanting to have a twist ending (I'd written about 75% of the story by this time). I didn't know whether I wanted to do "you think it's the future but it's really the past" or "you think it's the past but it's really the future". I guess it didn't matter, because I noticed that I had only two hours left before the submission deadline for my biology term paper. After trying to convince myself that no, I wasn't dreaming this, I wrote the bare minimum of what I needed to write to fit the guidelines for the term paper disclosed on the webpage; then uploaded the results to turnitin.com, fingers crossed that I would at least pass.
Except I didn't. Not only did I not pass the term paper, I didn’t even hand it in. I found out the next day that I had actually uploaded the fourth chapter of my dumb-ass JumpStart fanfiction (and it was a scary chapter too...it was the flashback to when Eleanor gets bitten by the vampire). The prof was not impressed. Let's just leave it at that.
You have no idea how badly I screwed everything up. I managed to get a flat zero in every single course this term. The only exception was CS, where I wound up getting only 2%. Bottom line is that I failed everything. Yes, everything. My only shot at academic redemption is the final exam.
Even still, it might not be enough. As of this writing, I have less than twelve hours before I go in to write the exam. This is bad. I can't sleep even though I'm exhausted. I have to stay up and work. I need to sleep, but I can't. I'm stuck. I've made this bed, and now I'm going to die in it.
No, really. I feel like I'm going to die.
When I first started cramming, I was fine for the first hour and a half. After that, though, I started seeing static in my field of view. The static thing lasted for a couple of hours until it progressed to seeing shadow people. Or, at least I thought they were shadow people. They weren't even remotely humanoid. I was seeing weird, shadowy spider things. They looked like giant tarantulas, all four of them, and they were coming for me. Just before they got me, they vanished.
They were gone. They were 100% all gone. It was like it never happened. No static, no ghost spiders, nothing. Crisis averted. Back to work.
Nope. It's not that simple. The minute I went back to reading the textbook, I could feel my heart race. I tried to highlight stuff and write down key points, but I couldn't, since my right arm is numb. I switch to writing with my other hand, but that doesn't work. I can't write with my other hand too well. Worse, the minute I get the hang of writing with my other hand, I start throwing up like a volcano. After that, it's over. I can't study if I'm throwing up every three minutes. Even if I weren't throwing up the way I am, I wouldn't be able to focus on studying right now. I can barely form coherent sentences, much for your time like to undarastamnd the impotence of teh book biology and chemistry. Chemical biologrehcal flerbut connection ffrhhAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
AAAAAAAAAA!
@the-writer-s-hideout
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18 victuuri for the halloween challenge
The character ends up locked in another reality where everything around them is just a bit ‘off’, as well as the fact that no one seems to recognize them. Then they meet one other character who does remember them, and appears to be going through the same thing.this was a hard one to decide what to do for … tw for panic attack! otherwise not particularly scary. more fluff than scare.
Mornings are supposed to have a rhythm. The alarm goes off; Victor grabs it, and depending on his mood, the schedule ahead of them both, or the day, he either proceeds to take Makkachin out for a morning run and then comes back for a shower, or he nuzzles closer and breathes soft, increasingly sloppy kisses across Yuuri’s neck and his shoulders.This morning the alarm goes off until Yuuri has to reach for it, until he knocks his phone and his glasses off their nightstand trying. He grumbles a complaint for Victor’s benefit and tries to go back to sleep.
Five minutes later the alarm goes off again. “Victor,” Yuuri whines, to no answer, which piques his curiosity. He opens his eyes to navy blue sheets, expecting white, and the bed’s oriented the wrong way, and come to think of it this isn’t even his house.
“Victor?”
He wanders through an empty living room and an unfamiliar kitchen, getting increasingly short of breath. “Vitya? Makkachin?”
Yuuri throws back the curtains. Detroit looks back out at him.
Don’t panic don’t panic don’t panic don’t panic
He looks down at his hands; the engagement ring twinkles back at him, and Yuuri stares at it, palms trembling, until he decides to settle for calling Victor. He’s not sure what he’ll say: Hi Vitya. I woke up in Detroit this morning, did we happen to go to Detroit?
His phone’s lock screen is usually a picture of Victor and Makkachin, on the beach in Hasetsu. Today it’s an old picture of Vicchan.
Victor’s number is not in his phone. The vice around Yuuri’s chest seizes up as his brain folds up into static. Don’t panic, Yuuri thinks at himself, panicking. He hits the floor, sucks in huge and ineffective gulps of air, and suddenly there are two slender hands framing his face.
Phichit Chulanont’s kind eyes come into focus. “Yuuri? Yuuri, what – it’s okay, breathe. Breathe.”
He’s in a doctor’s office taking a spirometer test. “What do you mean, anxiety?” Celestino asks, while Yuuri breathes deeply in, and deeply out. He’s the first one Phichit called, once he got Yuuri upright in the flat. Phichit, what am I doing here? Yuuri’d wanted to know, confused, because even this house is foreign to him; when he lived with Phichit it had been in a shitty, miserable dormitory room and not a decently-sized two bedroom flat. I mean, you’re up really early, Phichit had shrugged, and then he’d gotten increasingly worried. Yuuri, you live here. “Yuuri, I’ve known you for years and you’ve never once had a panic attack,” Celestino says, which prompts Yuuri to scan his face. He’s always known the Italian to be big and bold and perhaps even pushy, but not once has Celestino ever been malicious. He has a good heart, and there’s no lie in his eyes.
“Well, what about my anxiety?”
“Anxiety?” Celestino laughs and shakes his head, although he’s got a curious look as he watches Yuuri finish the breathing test. “I think you hit your head a little hard trying to come up with that new program last week. You’d think with five world championships under your belt, you’d know how to cut yourself some slack.”
“I … what?”
All the tests come back normal. There’s nothing wrong with him. Phichit drives them back to the apartment in a car he insists is Yuuri’s. Yuuri isn’t sure when he had the time, interest, or money for buying an Audi.
He watches a city where everything looks the same fly by his eyes, twists the ring around his finger. Back at the house he finally takes notice of the details in what’s supposedly his room, artifacts of a life that isn’t his. The photo on his nightstand isn’t from Barcelona, for one thing. It’s a picture of him and his family in a place he recognizes as Sochi.
They’re standing in front of the Olympic rings. He’s wearing a gold medal that he’s seen and held before: one of the two of them that Victor has, at their flat in St. Petersburg.
He googles ‘Victor Nikiforov phone number.’ The first result is a dentist office in Topeka, Kansas. Out of desperation, Yuuri clicks on the website. That Victor is definitively not his Victor.
He goes through all three pages of results before he gets taken to anything useful: a mailing list about Russian skaters. He tries to run what he finds through google translate, and the phrases all come out wrong.
Knee surgery?
When Yuuri goes to sleep, he tells himself that this is a horrible dream, and that he’s going to wake up to Victor resetting their alarm. Even if he isn’t in the mood to curl closer, Yuuri’s going to pull him back into bed and kiss him until he chases the wrongness of this entire scenario out of every inch of his own skin.
By the third day, he’s starting to lose hope.
He’s read his own Wikipedia article to get up to speed on his life. He is Yuuri Katsuki, five-time world champion. He lives in Detroit, where he trains with his coach, Celestino Cialdini, and he keeps a roommate – not out of necessity, but friendship and habit. There are whole forums devoted to his magazine spreads: enigmatic world-champion, Yuuri Katsuki, they say, as though he were actually a mystery. He’s watched his own interviews on YouTube, as cool and collected as he was in Barcelona right in the middle of his record-setting free skate, speaking with a calmness that Yuuri has never once felt.
“I think I just need a break,” Yuuri admits to a worried Phichit, and he books the next flight to Hasetsu with this other Yuuri Katsuki’s money; money Yuuri himself has no recollection of ever earning.
Victor isn’t there, either: Yuuri called his sister to ask if there’s been any foreigners at the inn on day 2. Well yeah, idiot. We get them all the time now, thanks to you. It wasn’t Mari’s fault that Yuuri’s heart leapt into his throat. It’s a couple from Australia this month. Why the hell do you care?
He kisses the ring when he wakes up and before he sleeps. He’s taken it off of his finger and stared at the other half of a snowflake inside more than once.
Sharp-eyed Minako catches it on his hand and wants him to explain himself immediately, but Yuuri won’t take it off. “It’s a good luck charm,” he says, which wasn’t convincing when he proposed the first time around and sure as hell isn’t convincing now.
He skates Stammi Vicino, Non Te Andare over and over again by memory at the Ice Castle Hasetsu. Doing so, he can almost feel Victor nearby, can imagine what it’s like to reach out and touch his face.
“Hey, stop that!” Yuuko’s voice chases the ghost of Victor Nikiforov away from Yuuri’s imagination. She’s getting on to the triplets. “That’s Yuuri’s new choreography,” she insists. “You can’t just video it.”
That’s when he remembers: Victor commissioned the music. For all Yuuri knows, he’s the only one on earth who knows this song.
“No,” he murmurs, and skates back to the start. “Let them film it.”
Minako’s the one who finds the video on YouTube first. It’s uploaded from a Russian account and it’s only got one hundred and fourteen views when she finds it, which just begs the question exactly how far in YouTube’s video results she’d gone, sitting around and drinking to pass the time at the shop. She still sounds a little tipsy when she bursts into Yu-Topia waving her phone. “Get a load of this, Yuuri,” she quips, and tosses the device at him with little to no warning. “Some Russian amateur’s skated some weird homage to you.”
Yuuri nearly drops the phone. “He’s calling it Yuuri on Ice.”
He hears Yuri Plisetsky’s voice, grousing in Russian that Yuuri can just barely make out: it’s something about you shouldn’t be back here, you moron, the doctors told you no skating.
It’s the next voice that takes his breath away, along with the figure on the ice.
Victor.
It’s Victor.
There’s no music in the video for where the piano strain is supposed to be, of course not; in this place, it’s another song that doesn’t exist, but even at this resolution, Yuuri can see it, the gleam of gold on his hand as Victor reaches.
Yuuri watches the whole thing, crying, and then chokes back a laugh at the end, when Yuri Plisetsky’s shock rings loud and clear: Victor, what the fuck was that?
“Minako-sensei,” he says carefully, scrubbing at his face while she looks at him like he’s grown additional heads, “… have you ever been to St. Petersburg?”
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