#i'm getting my goddamn gwimbly ghoul gun
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Vaginismus: Terzo x Fem!Reader
A/N: Stg if I ever see this purple fucking freak darken the doorway of my mind, I'm going for his kneecaps. He will never be able to slut about on the floor again, and then what will he do? Thanks, y'all, for being so patient as I almost daily had a meltdown over the structure of this. And HUGE thanks once again to @angellayercake for being my ever-patient beta with amazing input and ideas!! I hope I did our bastard boy some kind of service.
Word Count: 8.8K. Sorry, this bad boy is a hydra: For every sentence I deleted, more words would come in its place
CW: Reader has a vagina, hurtful comments from past relationships, reader's mental state is kinda fucked at a few points, hints at extremely uncomfortable interactions to "make the relationship work". Sooo...Vaginismus and its delightful conditions, I suppose. Oh, and a hint of Google Translate Italian. I'm sorry, I tried referencing @/foxybouquet's ever so helpful guide the best I could but alas, I am still a moron. MDNI
Papa III was a notorious flirt, even by the standards of the sexually liberated Church of Satan.
Everybody knew this, from the Clergy to Sister Imperator to the ghouls to his many, many lovers. And yet, when his sights finally fell upon you, everyone knew: Something in him had changed. At the very least, his methods sure had.
Secondo raised a brow when he first saw his brother lightly jogging up to you in the hallways, panting for you to wait up. Primo sported a knowing smirk when he watched the normally suave man sheepishly inquire about the meaning behind certain flower arrangements. Quite the departure from his usual bouquet of red and white roses, the older man couldn't help but note.
A startled Copia quickly became suspicious when the brother that tended to tease him the most came to his office one day, armed with top-shelf juice boxes and nutty chocolate bars â just the starting price for whatever info he was willing to give his dear old fratello about his new favorite Sorella.
The ghouls had a field day whenever they came upon the old man either sulking or even swooning over how a recent interaction had gone. One even swore they had scrounged through his wastepaper basket (don't ask, itâs not worth it) and found crumpled up drafts of sonnets. Sonnets!
It was the Siblings, however, who seemed to take the most notice of his antics. And, unfortunately, the most offense.
Certainly, plenty of the congregation had received a bouquet or two from their beloved Papa Terzo. Many had been wined and dined, and some were even whisked away for a night of passion and excitement in a glamorous metropolitan hub. Terzo had gotten around, and he would probably continue to get around until he either died mid-orgy or until his dick fell off. (And even if the latter did happen, it probably wouldnât slow him down. Not until his fingers and tongue followed suit, anyway.)
It was cyclical: You would be an interest for a week or two before your time would be up, and you would part ways as he turned his attention to another, leaving you with memories of a whirlwind dalliance to reminisce about for years to come.
This was simply something that was understood and accepted without much of any animosity amongst Siblings. This was just how things were. Or at least up until now.
They must have noticed there was something about the way Terzo pursued you. For starters, nobody could ever recall a time when the man actually needed to really pursue anyone, let alone to the extent and care he currently displayed.
They could tell when a peer was actively trying to heighten the tension, turning their back to him but still glancing over their shoulder to shoot a heated stare. An invitation for him to keep it coming. Really putting the âplayâ in âplaying hard to getâ. But generally speaking, most of what Terzo needed to do was snap his fingers and whichever Sibling or ghoul he had his eye on would eagerly crawl into his lap and then into his bed.
Maybe they saw a shine in his eyes that wasn't there when they had him. Or maybe they thought he leaned just the slightest fraction of an inch closer to you than he ever did with anyone else. Or maybe they swore his voice sounded different when he spoke with you. Lighter, but not out of an upturn in pitch to sound friendlier. It was more like it carried less weight. Almost as though he felt less burdened by some unspoken thing. Some thing he never cared to share with them.
Granted, you didn't help matters by actually enjoying the odd conversation or two (or over a dozen) with Terzo. (And by "odd", this meant the animated discussions that borderlined two-person seminars on subjects like the Hays Code, or how viewing certain films through a gendered or queer lens could enhance the suggestion of the story.)
And anyone who spotted you alone on the quad sharing a snack would've been convinced you were on an impromptu picnic, rather than the fact Terzo had found you and offered you pickings from his secret snack pocket.
Sure, it was just a sandwich baggy of cheese doodles, but the point still stood: You had Terzo's full attention, his intrigue, his consideration, his snacks, and you hadn't done a damn thing to deserve them! Any interaction between the both of you, every awkward joke, every instance of eye contact, every exchange of a genuine honest to Satan smile, had the Siblings of the abbey biting and clawing at the walls in envy.
You did your best to appear unaffected by it, preferring to keep your head down and say as little as possible when around them. Nothing to suggest you felt superior to them (not that you did anyhow). Regardless, you were fairly certain that, if it were up to them, they would bring back human sacrifice for the sole purpose of getting you out of the picture.
Thank Satanas, then, that none were present to witness the latest event.
There Terzo stood, his normally focused and powerful gaze fighting hard to be maintained. It was abundantly clear that he wanted to look anywhere but at you. Still, he resolved to keep that nervous on his face. His gorgeous, paintless face.
It was startling to say the least. Actually, no, scratch that: To truly say the least would be to just stand there, gaping like a goldfish as you failed to find the right words â any words â that truly encapsulated even a fraction of what you felt. Which, for better or for worse, was exactly what you found yourself doing.
After all, almost nobody outside of his own family had seen Terzo without his papal paints. They may as well have been tattooed on him the moment heâd perfected the design all those years ago! Not even the paramours heâd collected since then had gotten a glimpse of his bare face, despite the many opportunities theyâd had from the nights spent in his quarters. The mystery as to why this was left plenty of room for speculation and imagination, creating a juicy mystique that Siblings and ghouls loved to salivate and chew on.
Admittedly, you yourself occasionally wondered what his deal was, but you ultimately chose not to ponder on it. If Terzo liked how he looked in makeup more than he did without, then that was his business. Honestly, it never even really occurred to you to ask him about it even as the two of you grew closer.
But as you took in the visage before you, you felt you had a good theory going: If Terzo went about the Ministry like this, heâd never know a momentâs peace again!
"Is . . . Is it . . . okay?" he asked quietly. Okay? Okay!? Satanâs taint, if it werenât for the very apparent tension, you mightâve thought the man was teasing you! The man looked like an old movie star, all debonair and dashing!
The fight to respond in a timely (and coherent) manner was difficult, but you managed to stammer out, âMore than okay.â You gulped down some shakiness. âY-youâre very . . .handsome.â
Internally, you cringed at how wobbly youâd come across but thankfully that seemed to be enough. The warmth in your cheeks intensified as the nerves in his smile carefully evaporated, along with a slight tension in his shoulders.
Unfortunately, the consciousness did not remain, and almost immediately you found yourself delegating focus to other things. Like the beauty mark that lay just beneath the right corner of his pleasantly pink lips. Lips that were saying, ââ if you would be interested, of course.â
You blinked. Were you interested? Wait . . . Interested in what, exactly?!
âY-yeah, sure. Iâm down,â you chirped before you could stop yourself.
While you tried your damndest not to look mortified or embarrassed, Terzo looked delighted. Possibly even elated.
âOh, eccellente!â he clapped his palms together before offering you a mix of a nod and bow. That sharp characteristic of his eyes returned once more, pinning your form as he purred, âI look forward to it.â
Oh, fuck. âCanât wait!â you replied. Of course, now the concept of urgency settled in.
As you walked back to your room for the night, you knew three things to be certain: The first was that that face of Terzoâs would likely be making many appearances in your dreams tonight. The second thing, branching off this, him showing you his face was a sign youâd let things get far too far.
And the third thing? You had to put an end to your exchanges ASAP.
Sure, youâd peppered this into your thoughts many times before, but after this? This moment of extreme vulnerability on Terzoâs part? No more peppering: It was time to actually pile in everything you had and outright reject Terzoâs advances. No room for stuttering or bending or swaying or swooning and second-guessing!
You repeated this like a mantra over and over, praying that the resolution would still be there in the morning. And it was â but only after you took an icy shower. Youâd been spot on when you anticipated that gorgeous, gorgeous face invading your dreams. What you hadnât counted on, though, was the nature of what all went on:
Snowflakes catching on his lashes as you ice skated on a pond (the power of dreams erasing his waking world clumsiness); his lips smiling around a forkful of the pasta youâd just cooked together; his broad nose nuzzling lovingly into your hair during a quiet night in; those entrancing eyes focused on the movie playing before you as his arm settled warmly around you. It gave you further comfort as you pressed into his side, so perfectly slotted that it was as though you only ever belonged there, right next to him.
You regretted disregarding the alarm bells that blared at the start of this whole nonsense, and now look where that got you: You needed a cold cleanse just because you saw a manâs unpainted face! You were worse than a pent-up Victorian! Did you really want to prolong things until youâd start to "feel" those smirking lips pressed against the column of your neck, or âfeelâ those large hands skirt along your form, leaving a deliciously pleasant fire in their wake?
Certainly, that mightâve made for a good nightâs sleep in theory. But in reality? It was a nightmare in the making!
It was bad enough just wanting to do all those dreamy things and more with the equally dreamy Papa. But that, of course, meant the "more" part would eventually come around. After all, your waking life already wasn't too terribly far off from the things that went on in the dream.
Your days weren't filled with skating on the pond or chatting over romantic dinners but at this rate, they very well could be a possibility. In an ideal world, the wait for these things to happen would be filled with anticipation. But the sad, shower-cold reality was that this wait was weighed down by dread and predictions of what was to come. After all, for all Terzo's patience and kindness, even he had limits. Sometime soon, his patience with your inexactness would run out and he would come to collect. Experience told you that was just how it was.
You may not have had a pursuer as passionate as Terzo, but youâd had enough instances that ran about the same: There was that high, that thrill in an almost honeymoon period-like chase. Then there came the actual vulnerability where youâd tell them of the conditions that came with a relationship â the conditions that came with you. And yeah, theyâd start off insisting that nothing about that changed how they felt about you . . . But then theyâd realize your condition would outlast their gimmick.
You felt your face twist with displeasure as sentences of the past began slipping through the cracks and into the forefront of your mind.
âYou canât be serious.â
âCalm down already.â
âJust relax already.â
Then came the pain (both kinds); the giving up; and then you were right back where you started: Alone together, with a body that hated you that you hated right back. The only real difference would be how much your weariness increased, making you more and more reluctant to play along with the idea of any potential romance. Meanwhile, to them, it was a game: You were just playing hard to get, that was all. But youâd surely stop when they and they alone were able to conquer you, to cure you.
Did you really want to wait around and see Terzo become like that?
Your stomach twisted at the thought.
No. Absolutely not. You werenât sure your heart could bear it, much less your body. Besides, if word got out that heâd shown you his face, then itâd be all over for you. Youâd rather incur the wrath of rejecting what many would kill for than face what might happen if they learned how far youâd gotten by doing nothing at all. At least with the former, there was a chance the Siblings let you keep your bones intact.
You had a plan as you prepared yourself to step out and face the day: Keep calm and function as normal until the chance to say those simple words hit you: âTerzo, I am not interested in you in any way, shape, or form. While you are attractive, I am not attracted to you. Please leave me alone from now on.â
A devastating lie, perhaps, but a necessary one. One you would need to deliver by tonight.
But hey, the day was still quite young. There was plenty of time for you to find the courage, right?
. . . Well, you didnât find it in the hallway when you heard that oh-so familiar, cheerful call of, "Buongiorno, Mia Sorellina !", prompting you to pick up speed and disappear down a different corridor. Nor was it there when you caught sight of a black flutter of robe. It couldâve been a wandering Cardinalâs cassock but you werenât prepared to stick around and find out.
And even though you spent nearly the entirety of afternoon mass, head bowed, praying for the Dark One to simply grab the strength and shove it into you, you didnât feel any more emboldened. Apparently, your body meant it when it didnât allow for anything to enter it â intangible things included, it seemed.
You groaned inwardly from both disappointment and discomfort as you lifted yourself off the kneeler and back into the pew. There was also the added stressor of feeling sets of multiple eyes on you: From Siblings stewing in envy; from ghouls who wanted to take a gander at the Sister who had flirty Papa III wrapped around her finger; and, worst of all, from Terzo himself.
The one time you dared to look up at his seated form on the altar, you caught a hint of a small smile directed at you.
You tried to return it, at least enough to suggest to him you were fine and happy to see him despite your earlier actions, but the sorry attempt lost any pretense of pleasantness when your eyes got caught on something: Even in the sea of his dark robes, you could make out the dull shine of leather gloves poised in his lap. Helping them to stand out more, however, was how each fingertip was adorned with a golden nail.
Correction: A golden claw. The fine barbs would fit right in on the hand of a ghoul or perhaps some other dĂŚmonic creature.
Normally you were fascinated by the accessories but in your increasingly unwell state, these gloves intimidated you. It was like you had been reduced to a fearful prey animal and all you saw was a threat.
A thought, sharp as those gilded talons, slashed beyond your imagination and into the walls of your most sensitive place. They pierced and drilled into the intimate area just long enough for you to know they were there â both in your mind and your body â shanking their way into a place nothing was meant to enter, let alone something so dangerous.
Although a primal need to defend yourself shot through your nervous system, you were too incapacitated to do much more than body-jolting inhale. Your only defense, you had long-since learned, was to freeze. Your brain buzzed in an unpleasant manner as you started to come down from the imaginary fingering.
âYouâre overreacting,â scoffed the voice of a past partner. âItâs just a finger.â You hadnât spoken to them in years, but the disregard in their voice remained fresh, further embittering you to the fact that that was what managed to creep into you rather than the bravery you so desperately needed.
You had to pray once more that Terzo hadnât noticed anything. A change in your already shifty demeanor, the way your legs twitched inward but not out of lust (not when Primoâs sermon was focused more on wrath today), or how your bodyâs momentary lurch. Much like your prayer for strength, though, you suspected this plea went ignored. You didnât need to look up and see Terzoâs smile falter to think that.
The moment Papa Primo dismissed the congregation, you made quick work of the camouflage offered by the uniforms of habits and lace.
When a quick glance back allowed you to catch sight of a confused-looking Papa Terzo, you forced yourself to swallow the pathetic truth: You were never going to find the courage to even say sorry, let alone that you no longer wanted to see him.
What you did find â or rather, what found you â was an overwhelming torrent of grief and frustration as you flung yourself into your room and back into the bed where your day had started with a massive hitch. You shoved your face into your flattening pillow and hoped there was just enough down still left in it to muffle up your screams. And tears. Belial, you told yourself you wouldnât cry over this sort of thing anymore. Over anyone. You shouldâve been used to this type of thing by now, so what was the use in wasting energy like this?
What was the point in dwelling on how nice it all was, how nice Terzo made you feel, or how you secretly looked forward to your conversations, no matter how bizarre or intellectual? You gained nothing but the label of immature whenever you indulged in the schoolgirlish feeling of letting Terzo accompany you in the halls. Indulgence might have been encouraged by the Church, but not when it hurt or disrupted the paths of othersâ own pursuits.
There was absolutely no way what you had done wasnât going to inevitably end in pain of some kind, be it physical on your part or mental and emotional on Terzoâs.
But then again, maybe . . . Maybe you didnât have to do this after all? Maybe you could make peace with where things were headed. You wouldnât be able to let him inside of you in the traditional sense, no, but surely that just meant that you would just have to . . . adjust things? Yeah . . . Yeah, maybe that could work . . .
Maybe I could earn his love in other ways? Prove that Iâm not ungrateful and wonât waste his feelings? Intrusive visions of you âearningâ that love projected onto the walls of your mind. Under more pleasant, more normal circumstances, some of the ideas wouldâve been a delight for you in some way. Par for the course of a healthy relationship.
But the possibility that these might be the only ways to grant you worthiness, to allow you to deserve Terzoâs attention and love, to deserve Terzo . . . It felt tainted. It felt like an even worse lie to perform. It burned like a poison through your mind and heart before becoming incorporated with all the other pains rising to the surface.
The knock at your door was a welcome distraction, but only long enough for you to forget the possibility of it being Terzo on the other side.
You contemplated pretending that nobody was home before a muffled voice said, âI can smell you through the door, yâknow.â Ah. A ghoul. Better in that it wasnât Terzo, but worse in that you couldnât avoid them. To your chagrin, the trek from your bed to the door wasnât nearly long enough to look presentable or like you hadnât been crying.
You could practically feel their eyes through the mask, studying your tear-stained ones as they smelled the salt that had settled on your cheeks. Nonetheless, they continued ever professionally with, âPapa III has sent me to come retrieve you.â From the way they barely contained their tailâs amused wagging, it was clear that they were getting a rise out of the insinuations of the invitation.
You may as well have been off to the gallows (or worse, Sisterâs office) with how dour your disposition was. Being a part of the Emeritus line, Terzoâs chambers were further away from your humble digs in the Siblingsâ quarters. Still, it felt as though there wasnât nearly enough time from your door to his for you to concoct whatever it was you could say or do. Which, to be fair, wasnât really much to begin with anyway. You were screwed, your fate sealed the moment the ghoul knocked on one of a pair of the large, wooden doors.
âEntrare,â the roomâs occupant answered. Your heart beat icy pumps as you and your escort obliged.
Youâd never been inside Terzoâs quarters before, not that you hadnât been invited. Granted, the first few times had been in the very beginning, before heâd realized that his usual tricks werenât going to work on an unusual suspect. He never brought it back up again, even as the two of you appeared to grow more comfortable with one another.
It was a shame, then, that you were too possessed with anxiety to properly take it all in: In another, more pleasant mental space, you would have adored the large, framed vintage posters that decorated the rich purple walls, or giggled at just how much purple and gold this guy actually used in one admittedly spacious but still single space.
You couldnât properly see it, being in what appeared to be more of a lounging area (really, how big was the average Emeritusâs room compared to the lowly Siblingsâ quarters?), but you could just make out what appeared to be a bedroom down a small coridor. From what little you could see, there was a bed made of rich, dark wood with a velvety canopy.
Dramatic, but fitting for someone like Terzo, you mused in a split second of clarity before the gravity of the situation returned with ten times the weight as before. After all, here you were, standing in the boudoir of the man whom youâd been avoiding all day. Avoiding because youâd failed to do your due diligence and warn him against pursuing you. And there was his damn bed right freaking there â !!!
That prey animal instinct from mass began to skitter back as you instinctively began to look for ways out of this. Maybe you could leap out that Satanic Tiffany glass window? Youâd be killing two birds with one stone if you did: You could get out of a confrontation, and the action would surely unnerve Terzo enough for him to draw back, right?
However, the make-believe agility and will to do so quickly dissolved out of you the moment you heard the voice youâd been avoiding all day once more. âGrazie, Wisp,â he addressed the ghoul. From the sounds of it, he mustâve been in a room off to the side, away from view. Despite Terzo not being visible to them, the ghoul still offered a bow in respect before taking their leave (though not without their nosiness prompting them to sneak one last look into the room).
You winced in sync with the door clicking shut, the soft padding of footsteps on the plush carpeting thundered in your ears as Terzo made his appearance. Even though he made sure to keep some space between the both of you, you still felt increasingly like a trapped animal.
As much as you wanted to cast your eyes down and pretend to be intrigued by the fact that the flooring was black instead of some shade of purple, acting as though nothing was amiss was your best course of action. Even if you felt your breathing hitch both with uneasiness and infatuation over the fact that, yet again, the manâs face was bare of his usual paints. It did, however, carry a small look of concern. While you felt guilty, perhaps him being worried would be easier to work with than him being outright upset?
You tried to predict the sort of things a concerned Terzo might say and what responses would be appropriate when you noticed something else about him: His clothing. You didnât expect Terzo to be lounging in his own living space in his robes but even then, he tended to favor going about in his suit. This was the first time youâd seen him in anything that could be considered casual and not relating to his position as a Papa. The first time youâd seen him in pants that were actually tailored, actually! It was questionable if a menâs blouse made from what mightâve been silk could qualify as âinformalâ, but your brain was currently unable to drum up that inquiry.
Instead, it was too busy focusing on how the top was being worn: With only the top two buttons undone, the edge of what was more likely than not an absolute thicket of black chest hairs was visible. (If you were a stronger person â a better, more functioning one â you wouldâve absolutely braved that thicket like a safari explorer.)
You gulped, realizing that maintaining eye contact was going to be harder than usual. If you were quicker about keeping your wits, you mightâve tried to speak up first. Maybe with a âHi, Papa. How âbout that afternoon mass, amirite?â But Terzo beat you to it.
â. . . How are you?â he inquired. Surprisingly, there wasnât even a hint of accusation in his tone. âAre you doing alright today?â
Iâm anxious to the point of sickness and contemplating vandalism with your window, you wanted to say.
ââM alright. Just tired, I guess,â you shrugged. Judging by the way Terzoâs lips pressed into a thin line, he probably didnât believe you. However, if there was anything youâd learned in your time together, it was that Terzo wasnât exactly the type to prod. It was easy to assume from the flamboyant persona that he was far nosier than he really was. But the unfortunate and lovely reality was that Terzo trusted you. Worse was that he trusted you enough to both see his true face, and to tell him how you felt when you were comfortable. Your stomach dropped when you remembered the fact youâd been crying before this. Were your eyes still reddened and puffy? Did he notice?
âVedo,â he replied before slowly crossing his arms. "Well, if that is the case, then perhaps we must do a bit of a raincheck for the evening, yes?â
Your brows lightly twitched in a nonplussed fashion. It was then that you finally noticed the full scope of the room you were in. It was more like a den than an actual lounging area, complete with a TV on a DVD loading screen and a couch sat before it.
You forgot to blink as it hit you. This was what Terzo had been referring to during his face reveal yesterday: He was asking you to watch a movie with him! And you, in your lovesick stupor, had agreed wholeheartedly to it!
Logic (and a sense of cowardice self-preservation) would have dictated that you leap at the opportunity to leave. You needed time to regroup. Maybe make a sacrifice to Satanas in the hopes that that might win you some courage to do what needed to be done.
But before you could commit to it, you reminded yourself: You needed to act unbothered. Youâd already aroused suspicion in Terzo as it was. If Terzo thought you really wanted to watch a movie with him, as you had outright stated, then you needed to watch a movie with him. All you had to do was sit down at a reasonable distance and appear completely invested. Too invested to possibly think about how you wanted to tangle your fingers into his chest hair. Or how you absolutely shouldnât want to do that at all.
âN-no, Iâm good!â you insisted a little too eagerly. âI can stay up, Iâm not that tired.â
He quirked a brow but questioned no further. âIf you insist. Come: I have a small setup.â
The setup being an oddly-shaped popcorn bucket (why . . . did it look kind of like a pope hat?) filled with cheese doodles and a bottle of red wine to be shared between two glasses. You took only the smallest handful of doodles to be courteous but turned down the wine under the claim that you were trying to cut back. The reality was you couldnât risk letting alcohol lubricate you into either melting down or melting into his lap as you both settled in.
The Man Who Laughs, read the title card. A name just vague enough to sound familiar though you didnât really know a thing about it. When Terzo briefly explained that its main character, Gwynplaine, had been the visual inspiration for The Joker from Batman, you expected some early horror flick. Perhaps being treated to an hour or twoâs worth of a spiteful man seeking revenge and wreaking havoc on the innocent. Odd choice in what you could only describe as a movie date, but you were already in too deep and far too high-strung to comment.
But as the film progressed, you found yourself surprised. Not only because the plot was far from what youâd predicted, but also because you also hadnât been expecting a sense of solidarity. Sure, youâd never been a stage performer whose disfigurement made him a laughingstock to the pauper and nobleman alike. But nonetheless, Gwynplaineâs plight resonated with you. Something about being an introverted, soft-hearted person who feared their worthiness of love was thwarted by something they had no control over.
When youâd settled on the couch that evening, your goal had been to merely pretend to take the movie in. But the tenderness exhibited by the filmâs two main love interests made that all but impossible for you. You now existed in a strange and uncomfortable middle ground: Too invested to keep your wits, but too aware of how uncomfortable the relation was. If this were some vintage horror flick, there mightâve arguably been a chance to hide any visible anxieties as suspense-born fear.
But between the âsmilingâ man swooning into the beautiful Deaâs touch, to him hiding into himself when his insecurities got the better of him, you just kept being reminded of your own circumstances, and how Terzo had given you his full face when you couldnât even give him the truth.
A wave of self-directed disgust began to boil in you, causing you to briefly tic. Otherwise, though, you remained stiff. It was a fair film, after all, and it was a shame that you were corrupting yet one more thing that was dear to Terzo by equating it with your own problems.
But inside you were the beginnings of a norâeaster of biblical proportions: Deluges depicted you forcing yourself through your fears in a pathetic effort to prove to him he could still love you; the voices of failed relationships past split through your mind like thunderclaps; even the howling winds sounded like your whimpers whenever you trapped yourself in the bathroom, determined but failing to conquer Q-tips and dilators and even your own pinky finger. The flood they all created sloshed and battered about your insides and squeezed at your lungs, brutalizing your mind.
Just relax already, they said.
Youâre just being difficult! they had accused.
Quit holding out! they demanded.
The film became less and less visible to you as you tried to steady your breathing and cling to something inside. Please, Dark Lord, great Old One, you prayed once more. Did you want silence? Freedom? For the moment to end, or for everything to pause? You couldnât tell with all this noise. Please â
Forget it.
Despite being born from the storm, it hung over it, breaking through everything and silencing all. Even your prayer felt muted compared to how deafening the command sounded in your head. The voice did not belong to the Dark One, however. It didnât even belong to the other Big Guy. You knew this voice, actually. It had been years since youâd last seen or heard from its owner, but you still heard it nearly every day since. And they always said the same thing every time:
No one is going to put up with this if you can't fix it!
You fought to contain any reaction from reaching the surface, but you failed: You shuddered. Violently so. You had to quickly cover it up with an overcorrection of tensing, but you thought youâd managed.
You didnât even have time to make up an excuse when you caught Terzo moving from the corner of your eye. He was getting closer â no: His arm was getting closer. Angling to wrap around you.
There shouldnât have been anything intimidating about the idea of Terzo, coming at you with 30% of his hairy chest out, possibly aiming to get some over-the-shoulder action. Unfortunately for you, at this point, you were beyond intimidated. This was made clear with your reaction of jerking away, emitting a gaspy, yelpy whimper you never knew you could even make.
And for a moment, everything but the film froze.
It was an odd juxtaposition, the swelling orchestral music playing as you both just stared at one another without a single hint of romance. You truly were like Gwynplaine now, hands covering your mouth as your eyes stared wide. Terzoâs own eyes being wide was rather commonplace, but the way he stared at you now made you feel uneasy. It was almost as though those big eyes of his were suddenly seeing everything in high definition, able to see now see every crack in the structure that was you.
The soundtrack couldâve played on for an eternity before his low voice quietly spoke above it.
âMia cara. . .? Are you okay?â He sounded even more uncertain than he did yesterday when he asked you about his face. When you failed to respond, he tried much softer: â(Y/N).â
Your breath hitched, icy and cold in your burning throat. You could count the times heâd used your actual name on one hand. Nearly all of them had been during the very beginning of your interactions. Back when he was trying to prove the extent of his interest. Otherwise, it was always a term of endearment: âMia sorellinaâ or âTesoro mioâ or âPiccina miaâ and so on.
Always âmio/aâ. Always his, even when you had no right to be. But now, as he stared at you, having to resort to using your actual name, he mustâve been starting to realize that . . .
Even though it had done you no favors this entire evening, you let panic guide you to spring into action. You stammered and struggled for words as you tried to make yourself untense.
âI-Iâm â Iâm sorry, I was just so enthralled ââ Did that word even fit here? âI was really into the movie, the sudden movement startled me and ââ But it wasnât so sudden, was it? âIâm really sorry, I just ââ
But you just what? You did not know, and it was extremely apparent the more you talked.
âI thought you were cold,â Terzo gently reasoned once your words tapered off. At this, the arm youâd feared was coming to corner you shook gently. In his hand was the edge of a throw blanket youâd been leaning against. âI was going to offer you some cover. I thought youâd been stiff this entire while, and then you shuddered, so I . . .â
His movements were notably slower now. Felt the need to be more careful, even if all he was doing was reaching for the remote to finally pause the ongoing show.
His eyes were less wide as well, but what they left in their wake was a firm yet troubled stare. It wasnât meant to make you feel so afraid, but the feeling was there regardless.
â(Y/N),â he stated carefully. âIf you are not comfortable, then I need you to tell me. I am a big boy, I can understand boundaries. If Iâve been moving too fast or made you uncomfortable in any way, I ââ
âThe problem isnât you, itâs me,â you interrupted. God. Satan. Whomever had stuck around to witness this travesty. Being the truth didnât make it seem any less lame. And judging by how Terzoâs demeanor shifted into being unimpressed, he clearly thought so as well.
âTo be brutally frank, Sorella, I was hoping for a bit more . . . honesty.â The delivery of that last word faltered somewhat, but it was more than enough to provide a healthy punch to your gut. Actually hearing Terzo express disappointment towards you was far more devastating than anything your mind could have concocted. Heâd already implied on multiple occasions how heâd often found himself on the shorter end of a seemingly mutual trust. Now you were just another person whoâd failed to uphold their end.
While true, something in you felt the need to still fight back.
âNo, you donât get it,â you hoarsely insisted against the tightening of your throat. Your fingers immediately set to biting into your arms as they crossed.
âThen help me to!â he finally demanded. âYouâve been acting strange ever since yesterday, so what? Is it me after all? My face? What?!â The frenzy, while warranted, made everything inside you curl inward. Everything suddenly felt too big, too loud for the decreasing space inside you. Your lungs couldnât expand enough, and you could practically feel the hurricane inside you banging at your eyes to be let out. Your teeth sank into your lips just as your nails sank even more into your arms. Anything to bite back and fight back what was quickly becoming inevitable.
He must have realized what heâd done, or perhaps he just used his eyes to see you practically shrinking. His expression uncrumpled into something more tender and apologetic, but creases of quiet frustration remained.
âCara. (Y/N),â he corrected, his more patient voice from before returning. âI apologize for my outburst. Really. I do. But . . . Please: What is going on?â
If you opened your mouth, you were fucked.
âI cannot fix things if you donât tell me what needs to be fixed.â
Soft like dynamite. The dam splintered, it cracked, and then it collapsed entirely. Your body was never one to take things in or hold them, after all.
âYou canât fix me . . .â It was quiet and light and it weighed down on your insides like no other.
Terzoâs brows gathered. â. . . Perdono?â
âI said you canât fix me, okay?!â you repeated, your sentence made jagged and uneven by its sobbing delivery. The sudden explosion left the normally calm Papa taken aback. His lips parted, surely about to question what you could possibly mean, but the flood was unrelenting as it poured from your eyes and lips.
âIâm sorry! I lied! I lied, I lied, I lied, okay!? My body doesnât work, okay, itâs fucking broken, and I knew it all along but I couldnât tell you because Iâm a f-fucking coward a-and Iâm s-s-elfish â And â !â But this point, though, your throat far too tight and painful to even try continuing. Besides, youâd said all of what mattered, right? That youâd lied to him by omission, that you were broken, and that you were a goddamn selfish coward for pretending otherwise.
The truth hurt but you deserved this pain, having only yourself to blame that you were experiencing this on this manâs couch instead of in the privacy of your room. Everything in you screamed to get up and run back there, in fact, but you lacked the will to do anything other than stay put in a near-blinding fit of crying, probably fucking up the sofa with all the tears you were leaking onto it. You mightâve stayed that way even longer if it werenât for a sudden nudging at your knee.
Apparently at some point during your pity party, Terzo had taken the opportunity to get up and . . . retrieve a box of tissues? Not leave? Or call for a ghoul to come and get you? Actually, that made a bit of sense: He was too much of a gentleman to kick somebody out while they were crying, no matter how awkward the circumstances.
As much as the punishing part of you wanted to reject it, the suffocation of your snotty nose was intolerable. You accepted the tissue box and dug in until your face stung with how much you had to wipe at it.
Terzo meanwhile resumed his seat, making sure to allow you space as you let out whatever nonverbal emotion you needed to let out. He didnât force you to talk â not that you could, remaining a coughing, hiccupping mess even as the emotional tempest began to recede.
In fact, he himself didnât say a word until youâd managed to work yourself down to pathetic, wet sniffles and tremors.
â. . . You know youâre not broken, right?â he asked. You almost didnât hear it about you
You sniffled, perplexed. Terzo watched patiently as he continued, âLook: I donât know exactly whatâs going on. But what I do know is that you make me laugh. I like talking to you. I like talking with you. I just. Like you. So clearly, something about you must work, si?â
You shook your head. No. No, thatâs what they all said. Maybe not like that, but they all said one of two things:
Either they claimed this didnât bother them and that they could work with your condition, only to later realize they couldnât keep up the lie; or they would ask to go your separate ways. He hadnât done the latter yet, but after everything youâd put him through, he at least deserved specification to make that decision.
âNo, I mean,â you took in a deep, shaky inhale. Mostly to calm the discomfort. âI mean. My body â It literally doesnât â I have a condition, Terzo.â You paused just enough to let the words sink in â for the both of you. It never got easier to say no matter how many times you said it. âI canât have sex. Not in a normal way, anyway. So, like. No penetrating or whatever. Not even, like, a tongue. Shit hurts so I donât â I canât bother with it. And like.â You twisted your fingers. âThat feels kind of antithetical to the whole âliving deliciouslyâ vibe or whatever youâre supposed to be promoting. So . . .â
So there. That was it. In a sick sort of way, you did feel somewhat of a weight lifted. The heavy, gross feeling of rejection still sat within you, but you had a familiarity with it. In time, it, too, would fizzle back into the recesses of your mind. You could . . . live with it there . . .
â. . . So what?â Terzo practically huffed, barely fighting back a smirk, one you couldnât tell if it was from his own words, or in response to the stunned expression you now wore. âFirst off â and forgive me for missing any point â but you do realize that the whole of that whole âliving deliciouslyâ shit comes from making choices, right? If sex is what youâre talking about, I donât necessarily need sex. Is nice, yes, but. Itâs not my whole fucking life, you know.â
. . . Well, no, but . . . To be fair, that rockstar persona certainly made that easy to not consider. Before you could argue this, he continued.
âSecond off,â Terzo held up two fingers. âYou do realize sex is more than just insert-dick-in-pussy, yes? Your Papa is . . . Well, he knows he is no blushing virgin, we shall say. No offense.â (At this, your expression blanked. Bemusement was superior to distress, though, you supposed.) âBut do you really think that I think there is only one way to make sex count? Cara, per favore: Sex is sex! So long as everyone is having fun â and consenting! â then what is there to worry about?â
âE in terzo luogo,â he added a third finger before giving all three a wiggle, âdo you really think that I would do all this if all I wanted was a quick fuck? I mean, think about it, piccina. Give me more credit.â
Well, when he put it like that . . . Your cheeks and ears burned less from humiliation, but from a much softer breed of embarrassment.
âWell . . . no . . .â you admitted. âB-but going back to the choice thing â I thought the idea was to make choices that donât hurt anybody.â
He nodded with agreement. âQuesto è vero. But here we are. And no one got hurt, si?â
You bit your lip, âBut . . . I lied to you. I wasted your time, and â â At this, Terzoâs hand rose, signaling for you to shut your yap.
âIâm gonna stop you right there, dolcezza,â he spoke, his features tame but stern. âYou did not waste my time. Okay? I gave you my time. And I wouldnât ask for a moment of it back. And do you know why?â He didnât even allow you enough time to make a snarky response: âBecause I chose to spend it with you. Even if Iâd known, Iâd choose you. And why would I not? Sei una bellisima compagnia, and I already love what we do together, even if itâs not fucking. Now, have I thought about us fucking? Yes! Often!â (You felt your blush deepening at his rather blunt confession.)
âBut I have also thought about things we have talked about; things I would like for us to talk about; things I would like for us to do â besides each other, I mean. But it hereâs a fourth thing.â
No fourth finger this time. Just him offering you his hand. You felt every particle in your abdomen squish and flip over the simple gesture, but curiosity made you pushed through to accept it. Even as his other hand came over on top of yours, any trapped feeling you mightâve had mere moments before never came forward. If anything, you felt . . . here? And for as buzzy as âhereâ felt, you didnât want to run from it.
Terzo gave your hand a grounding squeeze as his eyes remained locked with your own. âIâm never gonna do something that hurts you. Alright?â he swore. âAnd if I do? Then I need you, I beg of you to tell me. Because if you donât want to do anything, then we donât do anything. We do nothing but enjoy one anotherâs company. That is plenty enough for me, dolcezza, I can promise you this. Do you understand?â
You gulped. You didnât even realize your eyes had widened until you found yourself needing to blink back a fresh, much smaller batch of warm tears. You could practically feel your mind scrambling, trying to reference past experiences that could help you work off of this. Maybe proof he was lying, an argument you could present â something to make this all make sense!
But it found nothing of the sort. No one, in all those times, had ever offered a third thing, let alone one where you felt like you had an actual say in how things went.
Should . . . Should you nod? Could you be trusted to make the right decision here? You nodded. It was uneasy and uncertain, but the smile it gave Terzo seemed to be the proper answer.
âGood girl,â he affirmed. Oh. Yep. That was the right answer, you decided with a jittery exhale.
âNow!â Terzo exclaimed before giving the back of your hand a gentle pat and releasing it. âIf itâs alright with you, I would like to finish our movie. Call me a firm nerd but Iâve waited all night to hear your thoughts on this, no joking.â
The change in atmosphere was dizzying as Terzo readjusted himself into a more comfortable position, as though you hadnât just bared your soul and literal intimacies to him and had him respond in the most genuine and affirming way possible. Not as though it were nothing, but more like it was just not nearly as distressing as what youâd prepared yourself to face. With the storm settling and the fog of anxiety clearing, it became increasingly apparent just how discolored your thoughts had become by your past experiences. Of course Terzo wouldnât be so rigid about sex: It went against everything he stood for, everything he was!
Of course, complete acceptance on your end wouldnât be immediate. But you could work with this. Though, there was admittedly one last concern you had before movie night resumed.
âB-but.â You stopped short as Terzo turned his attention back to you. You had to remind yourself that the nerves you felt now were nothing compared to before. You could do this. âBut . . . What if I . . . do want to do something?â
A bushy brow at the insinuation.
âN-not now! Not immediately,â you clarified. Suddenly the fringe of the throw blanket required your attention as you began fidgeting with it. âI just . . . You know.â You gave an awkward shrug and glanced up at him, a look of pleading twinkling in your eyes as you hoped he understood what you meant. Not any time soon, perhaps, but . . . Some day? You watched as the right corner of his mouth, the one where that darling beauty mark lay, rose up into a smile.
âThen, cuore mio, we talk about it,â he answered simply. âAnd, if you still want to âdo somethingâ after?â He leaned in, the warmth of his smile heating into a devilish smirk.
âWe do it. Whatever that may look like for us.â
You nearly blacked out when the bastard had the audacity to wink at you.
He then clicked play, shifting back into place as Gwynplaine and Dea came back to life. By the time youâd managed to regain your composure and refocus on the movie, Dea was cradling Gwynplaineâs tearful face in her hands. Assuming you hadnât missed anything, this was the first time the poor soul had actually ever let her touch his face in all its deformed glory. And judging by her jubilant reaction, Dea couldnât have been happier.
Good for him, you quietly delighted. It was absolutely what he deserved after all that time spent torturing himself over nothing. As you resituated yourself back into the cushions, you briefly noted how the voices from before, while still there, were much quieter. They lacked the power provided by the storm, and any time one of them seemed to try and get louder, youâd hear Terzoâs voice smother it out.
Iâd choose you, he affirmed.
Good girl, he praised.
You know youâre not broken, right? he reminded.
It gave you goosebumps, though not the kind that the throw blanket could pat out. But you had a theory.
It seemed that the Old One had finally chosen now to put some courage in you. Better late than never, you supposed as you began to inch closer and closer along the couch until you could feel the heat radiating off Terzoâs body. The proximity in itself was thrilling enough, but the boldness didnât stop there.
You tested the waters, leaning a little further into him, only for his arm to calmly come around you. Whatever space that remained was quickly closed as you felt yourself being tugged and cushioned into his side. You had only a nanosecond to catch the barely-contained smile on his face before you practically melted into place. Terzoâs touch, his scent, his warmth, his everything flooded into you, filling you with a simultaneous calmness and a vigor you hadnât felt in years.
Your dream from before had been right after all: You belonged here, right next to your Papa.
#the band ghost#ghost band x reader#papa emeritus iii x reader#papa emeritus iii#papa emeritus x reader#papa terzo x reader#cw vaginismus#terzo x reader#papa emeritus iii x fem!reader#terzo x fem!reader#papa terzo#papa emeritus x fem!reader#stg if Copia gives me any hassle even vaguely similar to what i had to go through with this asshole#i'm getting my goddamn gwimbly ghoul gun#fun fact: i could not for the life of me recall Terzo's speech patterns when i needed them most so i took to youtube#and instead kept having to pause because i kept blushing at the stupidest shit he'd say#it's the Voice man#anyway go watch The Man Who Laughs if only to see a dog named Homo#and to see Conrad Veidt be an absolute babyboy who is disgustingly smitten with Dea#i would've picked a sluttier movie but honestly that movie made my heart so slutty
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