#is rewake a word?
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hornylegushka · 3 months ago
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me too, me too…
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guys. guys do you. guys do you think Fiddleford ever put the words “feelings for Stanford Pines” in the memory eraser and just. pushed the trigger. and. maybe did it not once, not twice. and then he fell in love with Ford AGAIN AFTER FORD WAS BACK?????? GUYS
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dogwooddivinity · 1 year ago
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The seven breaths rule is her birthright—came blood, breath, milk, salt watered with the slip of her sould out into the earth. Seven breaths to sleep—in song or in silence. Seven breaths have marked every moment, each nightmare, loss, and each triumph over the threshold and into the next.
Even now, without them, she feels her left nipple tense in anticipation of the soft lips that startled, the limb flail of falling, the rewake and settle that would reset her counting again.
Frozen, the deer stared through with terror and she breathed her face open, let fall slack the age in her temples, brought her features to a softness that fell short of a smile. It wouldn't build trust to show up with falsehood. She'd learned early that without words your lies had no cover. There's no subterfuge or distract and deflection in a world without words. She was tired and she was restless–impatient–and offering both along with her effort (third exhale, fourth in) was the best way to bring this child onside.
It felt right to feel restless at the turn of the season right around dawn. Right to be here at this crossroads. Right to be child again, grown again, held in this moment. Her and deer and the weight of a dawning. Breathe it in, breathe it out. What's coming will come.
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13atoms · 4 years ago
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An Artifice in Silver - Part Two
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A/N - Part 1 was the angsty part of the challenge, written by @wonders-of-the-multiverse, so read that first!! It’s amazing!
Here’s my attempt to make the ending to this fic fluffy.
WARNINGS - Some death and Cyberman conversion are mentioned.
PAIRINGS: Dhawan!Master x Reader
WORD COUNT: 10,323 words
Part One | Part Two
Part Two: A Trap
It felt your though your head had only just collided with the ground when you were shaken awake. Your body been moved, swept awkwardly aside as you slept, clearing a path to the rest of the collapsed crowd from the door. Your head and limbs ached from the hard concrete of the ground, the air no longer green with smoke as you squinted to try and make out the people in the rest of the chamber.
All still human.
A few of them were moving, while others were out cold. You could only hope those nearer the epicentre of the gas being released were simply unconscious, their ragdoll bodies making you wince as they were shaken, loved ones and strangers alike desperately trying to wake them from their unnatural sleep. You could see the horror on the survivors’ faces as they picked over the group, struggling to regain movement in their own aching limbs even as that human instinct to help kicked in. Everyone looked worse for wear.
Motionless Cyber units now stood centurion around the room’s locked doors, terrifying even in their stillness. They appeared to be without instruction, frozen in place, but very much still functional. What was wrong with them? You knew the answer. Your mind drifted back to The Master.
Where the hell was he?
How could he do this to you?
To any one of these people?
A stranger filled your vision, and you felt panic surging through you instantly, heart pumping enough adrenaline to power your chemically-weakened muscles.
“You alright?”
The woman had the authority and certainty of a someone medically trained, a kindness in her eyes even through her fear. She grabbed at your shoulders, checking your vital signs, moving her hands to watch if your eyes tracked them. You groaned. It was all too much, too intense, and you tried not to see rude as you flinched away.
“I’m fine thanks,” you dismissed, peering past her.
You couldn’t take your eyes off the sheer number of people in here.
With a nod she scurried away, back to the rest of the room. They had no idea what was happening, peering up in fear at the frozen metallic claws, at the empty faces of the Cybermen.
You had been so close becoming that. Rotting flesh, trapped inside of a walking tombstone, at the whim of the hivemind which controlled these creatures. You shivered, noticing one frozen in place a few metres behind where the Master had been. They must have encroached on the halted conversion room whilst you’d been asleep, creeping in like demons in the night. Fear gripped you at the idea of those monsters stepping over your unconscious, unguarded body, preserving your form only for its use to them as a puppet.
Since you’d taken those casings apart, you’d been terrified of them. Of the fate which befell those trapped inside, stripped of their humanity. None of those people inside were any more or less worthy of life than you, no one had saved them. They were undead, beyond saving but not yet released from life.
You shuddered.
Your legs continued to shake as you clambered to your feet, tiptoeing closer to one of the Cybermen, expecting it to jump back to life any moment. One question wouldn’t leave your mind: Why were you still human?
You suspected the Master’s involvement but, from the devastation on his face as the gas descended, perhaps he hadn’t had as much influence as you’d thought. With another glance back at the door, you reminded yourself that your worst fears had been realised: he was still gone. Only a frozen monster in an otherwise empty corridor loomed back at you, still locked away by the thick doors which had separated you from him.
They must have closed again after Cybermen entered the chamber, and you knew you couldn’t open them. Cybermen were far too methodical to allow your escape.
Nothing added up. Especially that you were alive without The Master’s involvement.
Had he left on purpose? Assumed you dead? Given up on you?
You couldn’t bear to think about the worst case scenario: that he wouldn’t come back for you. Was he already running, a million lightyears away? Had the Doctor gotten to him?
Had he gotten to the Doctor?
Dwelling on your fears did nothing but make you freeze.
You needed to do something.
There were still people who needed help, you could help them.
But you couldn’t be drawn away from the door. For a sickening moment you wondered if you had imagined him, the way he trembled, begged for you to fight off the inevitable. Perhaps induced by your fear, had you imagined the one person in the universe who could comfort you?
You longed for him to come back, to tut at you for being so scared and tease you for not having a respiratory bypass system.
Instead, he was gone. You were trapped. The noise of the crowd had gradually increased again, raising to a murmur as whispers and hushed sobs of children echoed off the walls. Tones were hushed, everyone terrified of waking the machinery again. Of restarting the horror. Every movement in the room spooked people, and the crackle of an overhead announcement system made people huddle together, whispering frantically as you all anticipated a robotic voice.
‘You will be converted’ still stung fresh in your ears, that sound which had followed you, been offered as the only explanation for what was happening.
That soulless reading of a death sentence still loomed over everyone trapped here.
You tried to stand strong in your position – if nothing else you could be a barrier between the crowd and whatever came through this door – even as freshly-dried tears made your eyes ache.
When a Yorkshire lilt called your name through the speakers, and you smiled.
“Here!”
The group of people backed away from you, watching with equal fear and curiosity as you desperately shouted up to the ceiling, hoping she could hear you.
“I can open one of the doors for a moment, need a power surge and an external battery, it’s a whole thing. Can you see me?”
You scanned the perimeter of the conversion chamber, and spotted movement on the far side of the room. A few of the crowd moved to let you through, whispering, and you could have cried with relief. Her mane of blonde hair was visible through the clear panel of a door, and she waved to you manically as you jogged over it. It was a harsh contrast to how you’d spotted The Master. This time, your relief was warranted.
Unable to hear her, you relied on trying to understand how she pointed frantically to the ground at your feet, before crouching as the played with wires sticking out of something which looked suspiciously-bomb-like. You mirrored her pose, hidden from each other, now below the glass of the window.
You could hear muttering behind you, the shudder of your own breath, as you waited.
There was no rejecting the Doctor’s help now, no matter where your loyalties or personal grievances lay. With the Master gone, she was your only way out.
You had to trust her.
With a gut-wrenching clang the door suddenly shuddered and rose upwards. The thick metal looked too heavy to stop if it fell, but you just held your breath and rolled underneath, trusting her yelled command of:
“Quick!”
She scrambled to pull you clear of the door as it slammed closed like the heavy drop of a guillotine blade, making you cry out as it shook the ground. You had barely made it. That impact would have been fatal.
“Doctor!”
She was already stood, hands on hips. You found yourself left shaking on the ground. She was already on to the next problem.
“I hope that didn’t rewake the system.” She mused as she picked at the smoldering wires, seemingly unaffected by your near-death experience.
You were panting, staring at her in shock. While you’d realised a long time ago that she wasn’t any more careful with your wellbeing than the Master, you couldn’t believe her complete nonchalance. Were The Master in her shoes he would be dragging you back to his TARDIS, apologising for putting you in the situation, his bravado stripped the second he’d seen your wellbeing at stake. He’d be all gentle hands and mumbled reassurance, fury at every single person responsible for the construction of the machinery which had scared you so much.
The memory of his face through the door of the conversion room made your chest hurt, your eyes sting, and you knew he’d never forgive himself for being so reckless. For putting you at risk.
When you looked up, expecting a concerned look at the minimum, you saw the Timelord’s spot vacated. A rat’s nest of wires were the only indication she’d even been beside you. The Doctor was already walking away, shoes clicking on the metallic floor of yet another identical corridor. The Cybermen here were still too, making you hug yourself and run to keep up with her.
“What’s happening?”
“I don’t know,” he ground out.
The Doctor couldn’t stand not knowing. She consulted her sonic screwdriver with a scrunched-up face, holding it to her ear, scanning one of the stationary suits as you finally caught up.
“Where’s the Master?” You demanded.
“What?”
“The Master.”
Her face turned dark, and she scowled.
“Of course he’s involved in all this. I should have known. Right, um…”
With another wave and buzz of the sonic screwdriver, she scowled at the result, then at you.
“Got him.”
Perhaps you shouldn’t have told her that he was here. Would it put him at risk? Would it put her at risk? You couldn’t bring yourself to feel guilty. They would have met eventually, dragged together like unwilling magnets. They always converged eventually. And you really needed to see him.
The Doctor took off running, backtracking occasionally as she followed the trace of him the sonic had picked up. You tried in vain to remember these featureless corridors, should you need to navigate back alone. It wouldn’t work. This facility was endless, an economically designed rabbit warren marked with ruthlessly minimal symbols which you couldn’t discern meaning from.
You wouldn’t be able to get out of here alone.
You spared a thought for the poor souls still trapped in the room you’d escaped, cowering under those metal claws and eyeless Cybermen, herded here like trembling sheep.
As you ran after the blonde Timelord the corridor suddenly opened to a large hangar-style door, like the hotwired one you had barely made it under. Seeing the metal above you made you shutter and halt at the threshold, but adrenaline forced you onwards. You cared more about what was inside, who was inside.
You could see him. Hunched over a computer, Cybermen shrunken at his feet like dolls, the Master was in a state of mania as he ripped the room apart.
Seeing him The Doctor gasped and tugged you around a corner and out of view of the room. You went to whisper a protest, but found her lean hand clapped over your mouth, barely touching but enough to stop you giving away her hiding spot.
“Just trust me,” she insisted. “Stay here.”
She grabbed your hand, squeezing it as though you might be less inclined to follow her somehow.
You couldn’t. Despite everything, you felt the draw of the Master, and she tugged your arm to hold you from straying too close to him as you peeked around the corner, just watching him.
His booming voice was unmistakable as he shouted into the room, but his face was hidden from you. The control room of the underground building was sparking and torn apart in places, The Master’s precise tapping of computer keys was interspersed with the ruthless smashing of server racks as he threw them to the ground, scattering the technology. His dismantling of the room was equal parts strategic and uncontrolled destruction, and you worried for the blood seeping from his knuckles and forearms, his jacket strewn aside and sleeves rolled up.
As he took another break from the computer system to punch at a glass pane, you couldn’t let him hurt himself anymore. You surged forward from your hiding spot, feeling the Doctor trying to hold you back. Adrenaline and happiness to see him was all which powered your body.
Calling to him, you imagined his excitement at realising you were alive. Maybe he’d stop smashing. Take you to safety.
“MAST–”
The Doctor grabbed you around the waist, pulling you against her body, muting you with a single hand clamped vice-tight over your mouth. For a moment the pair of you waited in silence, shocked by each other’s actions in equal measure.  
“I don’t know what he’s done to you, but you need to stay away from him.”
Her accent grew stronger as she whispered, and you frowned. Her hand allowed you to breathe through your nose, but was tight around your jaw, her grip as strong as the Master’s.
“This is between us. You need to go back to the TARDIS.”
Not her TARDIS, you were sure of that.
You grunted into her hand, making her yell in pain as you bit down on the flesh of her palm, wriggling to get free. It didn’t even matter who she was: you refused to be manhandled. Your eyes flashed to the corridor, hoping The Master had noticed you, run to your rescue.
No footsteps came.
With a sigh, her hands found your temple, and your body weakened.
“I’m sorry, it’s a dirty trick. He’s done worse, I’m certain.”
You wanted to cry when you realised she was right. But not for the reasons she thought.
Her TARDIS was a mere few-minutes’ walk from where the pair of you had hidden, and she half-carried you the whole way, her mouth set in a grim line which terrified you more than any time the Master had ever shouted around you. You wanted to struggle, to fight her, but your body was too weakened to do anything.
You couldn’t even cry out, forced into obeying her, muscles made limp by her touch on your mind.
Setting you on the ground in the console room, she finally uncovered your mouth and dashed to the doors, calling back to you. As quickly as you had lost it, you suddenly you regained your strength, able to run at her.
“Stay in here.”
“DOCTOR!”
She darted out of the time ship just in time to escape your fury.
The TARDIS doors slammed closed, locking in an instant as you rushed to try and tug them open. It was no use, your whole body weight against the wood couldn’t move those doors.
You looked up at the ceiling of the sentient ship, hoping she might take your side, only to be met with the gentle hum of the time rotor.
“I need to get out,” you begged. “Please!”
Your exit remained barred.
A blue-tinged screen on the console flickered to life, and you left your post by the doors to peer at it. You could hear muffled voices outside, the screen showing a mute overhead view of the Doctor and her best enemy.  
“Please,” you whispered to her, stroking the console. You hoped she was like the Timelords who piloted her, using the touch to tune into your heart. “Let me talk to them.”
There was static, then a click, and you rushed back to the doors. They were still locked.
As you spun to the console in confusion, two familiar voices echoed through the ship’s speakers.
“Is she in there?”
It was him, voice desperate, demanding. The Master.
“No.”
The Doctor was a weak liar at times. He’d see through her. You pounded your fists at the translucent glass of the doors, then held one palm flat against it, begging him to notice you.
He did.
“Doctor!” He taunted. “You lied to me!”
“Stay away from her.”
Glancing back at the monitor, you could see how the Doctor’s body blocked his access to the door, positioning herself between the two of them.
“She wants to see me.”
“She doesn’t.”
You wanted to scream, object as The Doctor stood cross-armed guard between him and the ship. Your words couldn’t permeate the doors.
“Is she okay?”
The feed showed how his attire was destroyed in places, how he slumped, and something else too…
“You’re crying!” The Doctor declared, shock clear in her voice.
The Master didn’t hesitate, taking a long stride towards her, making The Doctor jut her chin out.
“Is she ALIVE?”
You didn’t need the audio feed to hear his yell, and you could see how the blonde Timelord recoiled.
“Obviously!”
He relaxed a little, taking back control, but you could still see how anger dripped off him. His words escaped him as a growl – frustration and fear a melting pot in his voice.
“You have no idea what could be in that stuff she breathed. You haven’t even checked her over, Doctor.”
“Oh, as if you actually care.”
One of them would snap, the Master’s snarling voice met with a harsh laugh from the other Timelord. One of them would just throttle the other, pull the TCE or a gun from some deep recesses of their pockets, or snap the others’ neck. One of them would survive, pulling you into their arms over the broken body of the other.
You couldn’t bear it. Tension seeped through the doors, through the silence of the TARDIS speakers and the bluelight of the screen.
“I care so much it frightens me. Can you imagine that, Doctor? That it scares me?”
He got closer to her face, almost spitting from anger.
“You’re lying,” she growled.
“I destroyed the Cyberium.”
In the grainy monitor you saw her take pause, inspecting his face for a moment, like she’d be able to see whether the Cyberium had left him from nothing but his panting and the whites of his eyes.
You’d heard about it in vague terms, the Cyber AI which he’d absorbed. You’d seen how he avoided the species like the plague as you travelled, the way he fought with it inside his own head sometimes.
Even when it seemed to cause him unbearable pain, he’d promised you it wasn’t that bad. Only in the quiet moments, when he thought you couldn’t see, did you catching him muttering to himself with his eyes pressed shut.
“You what?”
The Doctor looked disbelieving.
“I followed it. I obeyed it, helped it, and this is how it rewarded me. So I killed it.”
Speechless, The Doctor just stared at him.
“I’ll give you the command codes if you like, just let me take her. Please.”
“Have you hypnotized her?”
The Doctor’s new line of attack made you wince, spitting out her words like poison. The Master held his hands up in a surrender, a small silver box tucked under one thumb.
“No. I swear.”
“Let me talk to her first.”
For a moment, the Master seemed to look straight through the monitor, directly at you, and you swore he could tell you were watching. You moved closer to the screen, arms folded nervously as his eyes flickered back to the Doctor.
“Have it your way. I’ll be in the ship’s command room.” He turned to walk away, but you heard his voice still, steady through the speakers. “If you dematerialise, Doctor, I will hunt you down. And everyone left here will die.”
He marched off and you watched on the monitor as he left, longing to run to him as much as you wanted to kill him. The Doctor’s image paused for a moment, and you could see her pacing outside the TARDIS doors. Distracted by the live feed, you jumped when the doors finally banged open. The screen went black, and you silently thanked the ship for being on your side.
“Let me go.”
You told her firmly as she trudged towards the console, playing with one of the instruments like she was toying with just piloting the ship away.
“I will.”
The pair of you stood in silence for a moment, and you longed to say more, but what else was there to say?
“Is there any way I can convince you to stay away from him?”
You were already looking at the door, wondering if you could remember the route back to the smashed control room alone. The Doctor walked towards you, hands awkwardly behind her back, and you felt a pang of longing for what could have been if she was a little more honest, a little more open.
Her voice was desperate, soft, and it made your heart ache for the happier times you’d spent together. Before the pain which surged back and forth between you, the harsh words and the abandonment. You’d hurt each other irreparably. You couldn’t be happy with her and the fam. They would never be enough.
Despite everything, though, you didn’t want to hate her.
“I’ll always remember the adventures we had together,” you promised her.
So much had gone unsaid earlier, in your anger at her for dropping by unannounced and whisking you away like she still had a guarantee you wanted to travel with her. Facing the realisation that this really might be it, you wanted to hug her.
It was strange, wanting to leave her, and yet being so devasted about it.
“What is he, to you?”
She looked afraid to ask it, and you were sure she wouldn’t like your answer. With a sigh, you saw no sense in lying to her.
“I think I love him.”
The drop of her face was enough to confirm it, that there was no getting out of this without hurting someone.
“No mind control,” you promised.
“You can still stay. He’s dangerous.”
Her words were half-hearted. She knew your choice. You shook your head, and she finally left her comfortable spot, rounding the physical barrier of the console so there was only a few feet separating you.
“I know.”
For the first time since you’d known her, she hugged you, awkward and all misplaced limbs. You accepted it, hugging her tightly back. Her face was hidden from you, and you held her as long as she’d let you, hoping you were imagining the ragged breaths which caught in her throat.
“Will he look after you?”
“I think so.”
She nodded against your shoulder, letting you go.
“Thank you, for everything.”
You meant it. For the adventures, for the chance to get more from life than Earth could give you, for the friendships you’d shared with the fam, and for the chance to meet him.
Perhaps she already regretted that last gift.
“Let’s get going, then!”
Her chipper tone was mismatched for the somber mood as you stroked the console goodbye one last time, mumbling your gratitude to the impossible, ancient ship which had first shown you the beauty and terror of this universe. The Doctor strode out the door like this was any other adventure, and you almost expect to be met with the surface of an unknown planet, just one more time.
She led you through the corridors in silence, and you still shivered at the Cybermen as you passed them, recalling the horror concealed inside these metal soldiers.
With a quick instruction to wait for her, The Doctor darted off to check a rack of servers. This was it. Her easy out. She knew you wouldn’t wait.
You kept walking, unexpectedly recognising where you were. He wouldn’t be concealing anything in the corner of a cramped storage room. He would be at the heart of the ship. Waiting for you.
You were right. The doors to the control room hissed open as you approached, revealing him stood in the center of the room. He’d cleaned up, put his jacket back on, brushed his disheveled hair back and lost that snarling, wild-animal demeanor he had been overcome by outside the conversion room, and while he’d spoken to the Doctor. Like the best of his disguises, composure covered his true feelings as he waited for the pair of you, distain on his face and his hands casually strewn in a trouser and jacket pocket.
When he saw you approach alone his performatively curled lip dropped, face slackening as he rushed towards you, open concern on his face. When you didn’t reach out to embrace him, and he stopped, deflated a few feet from you. He tried to lighten the mood, his features picking up into an unnatural smile.
“I told you I’d get you out!”
“You didn’t.” You told him flatly.
He reached for you, and you crossed your arms over yourself, resisting his offer of affection. You wouldn’t go back to him without an apology, if you could help it.
“You left me there.”
“You’re here, you’re…”
He trailed off at the Doctor’s appearance, barging flustered into the room, muttering that she’d ‘told you to wait’. At her entrance the Master wrapped one arm around your waist, pulling you tightly to him. You tried to get away, and he wouldn’t release you.
This was a show, meant only to remind the Doctor her friend had chosen him over her, and you hated it. You didn’t want to help him hurt her.
“Don’t touch me.”
He ignored your snarl. You kicked at his foot, and he broke his grip, allowing you to retreat from the two Timelords.
“Lover’s tiff,” he smiled apologetically to The Doctor, reaching out his hand for yours.
When you retreated further away from him again, he froze. He offered his palms up apologetically, and you noticed they were still littered with cuts, some particularly brutal looking. You suspected the smashed-up control room around you could answer for that. He caught you staring, open horror on your face, and shoved them in his trouser pockets.
“It’s okay,” The Doctor’s Yorkshire lilt tried to settle you, and she approached you from the other side like a scared animal. You recoiled from her too, and the Master stepped in front of you.
“You brought her here!” He scoffed to the other Time Lord. “Don’t pretend you’re any better than me!”
The Doctor was acting like the hero, as usual, treating The Master like a teacher calming a mid-meltdown child. Her soft voice and outstretched palms didn’t seem quite so sincere, on the receiving end. You could understand The Master’s anger, as her gentle voice tried to placate him.
“I brought you what you want, we can trade.”
Suddenly, pieces clicked together.
“You said you didn’t know the Master was here,” you frowned.
“Did I?”
You turned on her.
“This was on purpose. You brought me here on purpose?”
From the drop of her jaw, you could read that you were right. At least a little bit. You felt your throat tighten with tears. The Master growled.
“How dare you drag her into this!”
“What? Into your plan?” You caught yourself getting hysterical, but you didn’t care. The Timelords glanced at each other, herding you back towards the glass projection which covered the entire back wall.
“You were supposed to be on Earth! If you had stayed, like I told you –”
Under your glare, he fell silent.
The Doctor, ever playing at being a peacekeeper, tried to step closer to you, only to be matched by the Master. You had nowhere left to go, backed against the dark glass wall of the bunker as they looked between you and each other.
“Doctor, did you… know the Master was here.”
“Yes.”
She had the decency to sound remorseful. You thought back on when you first landed, how quickly you’d lost her, been swept up in the horde of people shepherded towards the conversion chamber. You remembered how you’d feared for your life, the heartbreak on the Master’s face as he’d almost watched you experience a fate worse than death.
How she’d suddenly decided she should have a heart-to-heart with you, the second the Master left you on earth.
“You used me.”
They played this game, and you were a pawn in it. She’d brought you were, let you follow her out of the TARDIS, to play with the Master. Just so she could be the savior, and he could play at matching all of her light with his dark.
“Give me the codes, and this can all end,” she spoke to the Master, refusing to relinquish any of her control as the two of them trapped you. “I’ll let you leave. Everyone downstairs lives. The Cybers get destroyed.”
“You’re monsters,” you whispered.
The two Timelords glanced at each other, not meeting your eye.
“Darling… ” The Master began. You cut him off.
“Don’t.”
“The Cyberium in my head, it was too much. I couldn’t handle it, and if I did this, I could find a way to get it out. I needed their technology, their trust. I’m sorry, love.”
You winced at the pet name. He’d called you that in bed, once, and you’d felt like the happiest person in the universe. You couldn’t even look him in the eye.
“I hope it was worth it.”
Even The Doctor wasn’t speaking. You glanced at her, trying to read anything but shock on from her expression. Following your eyeline, the Master seemed to jolt at the recollection she was even there. Both of you startled as he shoved a hand into the inside of his waistcoat, rummaging.
He threw a small silver communicator underhand to The Doctor, and she barely caught it, inspecting it with unguarded horror.
“Take this. You can dismantle the conversion facility with it, get the people downstairs out.”
She was already at the computer console, sneaking wary glances at the pair of you as her hands flew across the keys, computers still a little scorched from The Master’s earlier go at them. With the second Time Lord out of the picture, The Master turned to you.
“I was destroying this place. For what they did to you.”
“Why did you leave me?” you demanded, “down there?”
“I had to be here, to stop the gas, to freeze the hivemind. I’d already destroyed the Cyberium, I couldn’t stop it. I wasn’t in control.”
You wanted to believe him so badly, the pain in his eyes seemed so real, and he held eye contact with you like you’d never seen before.
“She was never meant to bring you were. I swear, I’ll kill every one of them myself if I have to.”
“Those people down there, they’re just like me. You were going to kill them?”
“They’re not you–”
“Believe it or not Master, I’m human. I’m the same as them. I know you hate it, but I’m the same as them.”
“You’re not–”
“I am! And you were willing to let them die.”
The tremble of his hand as he reached for your cheek gave away his fear, and you recoiled, wincing as your head collided with the hard glossy wall. The Master flinched too, dropping his hand.
“Think how many would have died if the Cyberium had taken over my mind. Taken my ship. Had you.”
The timeline was confusing. Upsetting. Too much to think about. You frowned as you tried to think about it.
“That’s why you dropped me home.”
“I’m sorry, I couldn’t let you see me losing control like that. I thought I could come back when it was all over, if I could get my mind back.”
The Doctor was working noisily, and an alarm started going off as she hacked further and further into the base’s system. Outside, you heard a ringing as a Cyberman crumpled to the ground.
“We need to leave.”
As angry as you were, you nodded quickly, letting him guide you out of the room. As you passed, the Doctor called your name.
“It was the only way, I’m sorry. I had to show him what he was doing…”
Her face was truly devastated, for the brief glimpse of it you caught, but you couldn’t forgive her. The Master’s arm found your waist, guiding you away from her quickly, and you let him.
Betrayal had rooted deep in your gut, making you want to nauseous as you looked at her face. All your history together, and she had knowingly dumped you in the middle of a crowd to be converted into Cybermen. Just to hurt The Master.
You saw those blank creatures, their masks hiding the faces of real people, who had loved and been loved, had dreams and wants and needs.
She’d told you it was the worst thing she could imagine. That she’d lost friends to that cruel death and would never risk losing another. At the time your heart had ached for her, for the suffering she had been through, her only crime trying to do the right thing. Apparently she didn’t consider you a friend anymore.
The screeching of collapsing metal ricocheted off the bare corridors, and the Master moved the two of you faster.
You screamed as a Cyberman moved beside you, an electrical twitch before it collapsed to the ground in a pile of loose metal, and the Master’s arm tightened around your waist even more protectively.
You couldn’t move. Your feet were stuck to the ground as you saw the unnatural way the creature fell, the skeleton inside so decomposed the usual flexibility limits of a human body were far exceeded.
Almost pulling you over with his momentum, the Master stopped beside you. He followed your stare towards the horrific sight beside you, and made a noise of discontent in the back of his throat. With a gentle hand he guided your head away until you couldn’t see the creature anymore and the vision was replaced with his face.
“I’m sorry.”
Against your better judgement, and despite everything you’d been through, you hugged him. In the corridor as the base started to crumple around you, you couldn’t help unravelling at his touch, his head against yours as he pulled you tightly against him, feeling tears welling up in your eyes as you pressed your face to his shoulder.
“Are you okay?” he whispered.
“No.”
Deep red lights illuminated the corridors around you, and you felt his sharp inhale of fear.
“Talk later. We need to run. Now.”
The Master struggled to navigate the corridors, swearing to himself each time he reached a junction, and dragging you in the right direction after a moment of panicked, hitting-his-own-head thought. It brought you some small measure of comfort, in the midst of this horrifying day, that he couldn’t have been here long.
Lungs aching, you fought to keep up with him. Even the Master was stumbling, unused to running for this length of time, and he shot you looks of concern as your human body needed to wheeze for breath. The collapsed bodies of Cybermen and the screaming of alarms were enough to keep you moving as the very structure itself rumbled. The burning pain in your muscles could wait.
You noticed the Master cursing up at the ceiling level above, where the Doctor still resided, muttering. What was she doing?
Finally you let yourself slow at the sight of his ridiculous outback shack. It was completely out of place and blocking a walkway. That stupid ship. You loved it.
It was facing the wrong way, and you had to use the back porch steps to clamber up onto the structure, faltering as the comfort of being near the machine finally let your adrenaline crash. He half-dragged you to keep up as you both rounded the veranda, throwing the doors open and firmly pulling you inside. He rushed to the console as the rumbling of breaking concrete and collapsing earth followed you into the ship, and you didn’t have the heart to care about the destruction happening outside.
The Doctor could handle the people who were trapped. She always did, their savior no matter the cost.
The moment the TARDIS’ doors closed, you fell into that old rickety sofa, and sobbed.
The Master piloted in silence, and once the murmur of the ship engines had stopped, he paced towards you awkwardly. He crouched to sit himself on the low table opposite your curled form, clasped his hands, and bowed his head. He let you cry yourself out, staring out as the windows at the vortex – empty and filled with flashes of colour all at the same time.
After a while he left, coming back with water and tissues, and you took them gratefully.
A few sips of water left you with enough voice to speak, albeit tremblingly, as he watched you worriedly.
“Do you think the bunker collapsed? After we left?”
“Probably. I think she got them out though. The computers could open the doors to the surface.”
“Good,” you said firmly.
“Good that they got out, or that the building collapsed?”
“Both.”
He chuckled, pulling your clenched hand away from your face. He pressed a kiss to your knuckles, keeping them held to his lips. His hands were warm against your fingers as he held them, leant forwards with his elbows resting on his knees, lips surprisingly soft.
You knew he could check the fate of the bunker collapse. Future archeologists would have found it, if no one at the time recorded its outcome. But you didn’t particularly care for the truth. This ending was nicer.
Even after you fidgeted, trying to get more comfortable with him holding your hand away from you, he didn’t let go. You noticed the marring on his hands, already scabbing a little, and turned onto your side to touch the wounds.
“Do these hurt?”
“A little. They’ll heal up with some sleep, though.”
You laughed hollowly. Of course, a nap could heal wounds which you would need stitches for. He smiled sadly against your lips.
“Did you get hurt, at all? I was worried about the gas.”
“I’m a bit bruised, but I’ll be fine.”
The fall and the running made your muscles ache, but the main hurt wasn’t physical.
She’d betrayed you.
“She asked me to leave with her.”
He bowed his head, lips moving against your knuckles as he spoke.
“You said no?”
“Duh.”
He smiled.
“Thank you.”
You shrugged, not totally forgiving of him yet either. The energy had left you to fight. All you wanted was a bit of peace, convalescence before this inevitable game started again. The reckless travel, fighting over how much damage to cause, and the sex he didn’t care about.
How much longer could the two of you keep this up?
You wondered if you’d ever regret the decision to stay with him. When death stared you in the face again? The next time he forgot how human you were? At the pull of the TCE’s trigger, as he killed someone without a second thought?
Maybe then the Doctor’s different-but-equally-grey morals might seem more appealing.
Perhaps if you’d begged her to let you rejoin the ‘fam’, the Doctor might not have used you as a bargaining chip.
“When I saw you through that window… I realised you mean more to me. More than I’d ever expected.”
The admission would have made you swoon, on another day, but you just threw your head back against the wicker armrest, emotionally exhausted.
“I mean it.”
He was watching you for a reaction, and you rolled your head to face him.
His eyebrows drew together in a frown.
“You must be shattered, love.”
You could only nod, and he dropped his forehead to the hand he was clutching, a silent apology.
“What can I do to help? I need you to tell me. I’ve been alone too long, and I’m not good at this stuff –”
His breath was hot against the skin of your hand. It made you shiver.
“I just want a shower. And to sleep. We can talk in the morning I just… I’ve had a long day.”
“Of course.”
It wasn’t a surprise to you, his capacity for tenderness, but you hadn’t seen it this exposed, this prolonged, before. He seemed to move a little easier than he had in the last few weeks, his mind not drifting so far from where it ought to be tethered.
You wondered if he’d ever tell you how badly the Cyberium had affected him.
“Sorry.”
Maybe he knew what your apology was for, maybe he didn’t. Nonetheless he shook his head, helping you up, his hands held out in a silent offer for support walking should you need it. You took your own steps, legs trembling a little from overexertion as you walked alongside him towards the corridor which housed both of your rooms.
“Wait a second,” he murmured, leaving you so he could check a screen, humming at whatever he saw.
Like he’d never left, he was back, arm held out for you to take. You laid a hand across his elbow lightly, not to lean on him, but to be near him.
“What was that?”
“Just checking you’re okay.”
At your puzzled look, he continued, tone dismissive.
“The TARDIS checks your vital signs. That green gas was nasty, unknown, I just wanted to check it didn’t need any immediate attention. Seems like it just knocked you out. How are your muscles feeling?”
“Exhausted, obviously. I think I’ll ache tomorrow.”
He hummed in agreement as you reached your door, surprising you when he opened it for you and followed you inside.
“High lactic acid. Blood-oxygen’s a touch lower than I’d like, too.”
You frowned.
“Do you really measure all that stuff on me?”
“Is it creepy? I hoped it wasn’t. I just… it’s not exactly intrusive, better than a checkup or whatever. It lets me know you’re not about to drop down dead.”
He moved around your room as he spoke, collecting pajamas and your hairbrush, various other bits and bobs you might need in an overnight bag. When he caught you watching him, confused, he walked back to the door. Your possessions were bundled against his chest, secured by one of his hands.
“Come use my bath. There’s some soaks that should help you recover.”
The shake in your legs wasn’t just from the running as you crossed the corridor, surprised by the realisation his door appeared to be unlocked. It was barely six feet from the entrance to your room, but you’d never seen this door open.
You had assumed his room was always locked. When he was in there, absent from the rest of the ship, it meant he wanted to be left strictly alone. Going inside, even with his hand guiding you, felt forbidden.
He’d always fucked you in your room. It was easier for him that way. It allowed him to leave the second he was done, if he wanted to. Even when the pair of you got more comfortable, laying together, spending more time intertwined just reading or watching movies, his space was off limits.
He didn’t miss the way you halted at the threshold, looking around at the curiously designed space. The furniture didn’t match the room, you noticed. Colourless walls were contrasted with a regal four-poster, antique bookshelves stretched high towards an iridescent crystalline ceiling, futuristic inlaid lights illuminated the messiness of a hand-carved oak desk.
Old and new clashed, everything regal and big, but barely filling the oversized space.
“It’s a bit weird,” he conceded, “you can stick to your room if you like.”
“No, no its fine. Just not what I expected.”
He set your things on the bed, and you picked over the sweats he’d brought, clutching them to your chest.
“What did you expect?” he grinned.
“I don’t know. Versailles? Or some kind of BDSM torture chamber?”
With a laugh he appraised the room, biting his lip in amusement.
“Are you disappointed?”
You found yourself grinning too, as he shucked off his coat and lay it over the desk chair.
“A little.”
The newly formed tension between you had felt like a lead weight, and you only realised when it was broken. You bounced on your heels as much as your injured muscles allowed, and let him lead you to the bathroom.
“Don’t change yet, I’ll just grab some shower stuff!”
More classic, the bathroom was all marble, the space dominated by an oversized claw-foot tub. For a moment you realised the pair of you could fit in there comfortably, before brushing the thought away. Exhaustion was making you hazy already. You’d just fall asleep.
Plus, you remembered, you were mad at him.
Ignoring his warning you started to strip off, left in just your underwear by the time he appeared in the doorway with an ‘oh!’
“Its fine. Nothing you haven’t seen before,” you pointed out.
He still looked sheepish.
“Rub this on anywhere that hurts before you get in the water, should stop any inflammation and you’ll feel better in the morning.”
“Help?”
You were too tired to navigate the pain mapped all across your body alone, and you didn’t want to be without company. The screams of the child who’d lost a mother, of the people who’d seen that gas descending, the slamming of the door you’d barely rolled under, they’d all find your ears again as ghosts the moment you were without distraction.
Without you stripping off any further, the pair of you managed to apply the chalky substance all over your body, the honey-sweet smell filling the air as his hands cautiously rubbed it across your muscles. You were more slapdash with your own application, and he quietly returned to spots you’d missed, making sure you wouldn’t ache. His attention to your muscles was so tender and careful, you had to keep talking, just to stop yourself choking up.
“I could have used this on the Doctor’s TARDIS!” you had tried to joke.
The other Timelord was far more fond of running, and you’d woken up countless mornings in agony, even as the fun of the day before electrified the atmosphere in her ship.
The Master stayed silent.
On many levels, you felt you understood him a little better now. It had hurt, to be betrayed by her, but you had something in common now.
“Did it hurt to leave her?” he whispered.
The Master’s eyes were on your calf as he kneaded the substance into your skin, but his hands froze at your momentary silence.
“Yeah. It did. Before I realised what she’d done, at least.”
He nodded silently, swallowing. The pair of you froze as you finally put the glass jar down, accepting that this excuse to be together was done. His hands left your skin and he walked to the sink awkwardly, washing his hands in silence.
He didn’t leave, leaning against the counter and watching you.
“Give me a shout if you need me, okay?”
You smiled, suddenly shy, barely recognising the man in front of you.
“Thanks.”
“I’ll be just outside.”
Finally, he left. He closed the door with a click, and instantly you felt like an intruder, left alone in his bathroom. It was tidy, but everywhere were reminders it was his space. Aside from your clothes folded messily on the counter, there was only his things. A matte black range of branded products scattered the room, lined up by his toothbrush, on a built-in shelf of the shower. You wanted to investigate them, smell them. See which of them were responsible for the smell you associated with him.
The tub of hair clay by the sink had the lid slightly ajar, and it made you smile as you corrected it. He must have gotten ready in a rush. It was strange, that he’d even wanted you in here, but you hoped it was some step towards real closeness. There was still so much to say, but that was easy to forget when he was there, caring for you.
You’d only left the Doctor because you could see a future with him – something she couldn’t offer you, surrounded by carelessness and lies and three other companions. The Master could offer you more. You could almost picture your own toothbrush, stood up next to his.
You stripped off your underwear and left it on the countertop, foregoing the tub for the alluring waterfall shower in the corner of the room. It was easily big enough for four people, all natural-cut stone with a simple pair of dials to control it. Beautiful, and completely to the Master’s taste.
Before you had touched anything the TARDIS started the water, a slow trickle turning into a warm sheet of water which made you sigh at the sensation of being underneath it.
“Thanks, dear,” you mimicked how he spoke to the ship, and she flickered the lights in return.
It was heaven, to finally have every remaining atom of that base, that conversion room, those corridors, swept off your skin.
The products you reached for all smelt faintly like him – a matching suite of mildly citrus-scented body wash and hair products. Exhaustion and the smell made you feel dazed as you rubbed the chalky healing substance off your body. The smell of him made you feel somehow guilty as you tried to clean the sweat and grime from your hair and your face. His senses were so attuned, you wondered if it would freak him out. Or whether he’d like it, to have you smelling of him. Like a claim.
If he was still outside the unlocked door the thundering of the water hid any noise he made. You rolled your shoulders and turned the heat up, letting the heaviness of the water rush over you, waiting for this day to make sense.
You had no idea how long you stood there lost in thought. The Master’s voice dragged you back to reality, calling your name worriedly through the door with a rap of his knuckles against the wood.
“Are you okay?”
“All good!”
Calling back, you quickly rinsed your hair before shutting the water off, suddenly driven back to motion by his concern. Back in your early days together he’d often overestimated how much humans could withstand, lamenting the ‘wasted’ hours of sleep you wanted, or the frequency with which you had to eat. He’d gotten better recently. He was aware of how exhaustion affected you, appreciated that you couldn’t walk or run forever. It had amused you when he started carrying food and even occasionally arranging places for you to stay overnight, should your travels require it.
On a fundamental level, he had started caring for you more.
The Master had never gone to this extent, though. Or perhaps you had never needed his care as much. The scans his ship seemed to run on you proved he’d at least been checking your body was okay all this time.
Maybe he’d always just checked your health and opted to let you heal alone, before today.
A deep burgundy towel hung on a heated rail beside the shower and you grabbed it, careful not to slip as you wrapped the material around you. It was oversized, thick and soft, and you couldn’t help the jolt when you felt the warmth of it on your bare skin and remembered it was his.
Even though he’d been inside of you, gotten to know you, you’d never been allowed to know him back. Not really. This felt like a start.
You had to brush the thought aside, drying your hair as best you could without a hairdryer, pulling on pajamas and leaving the wet towel back where you found it for the ship to deal with. It took a moment, and a deep breath, for you to finally emerge from the steam-filled room.
The Master was sat on his bed, reading some book from his collection which was quickly strewn onto his desk as you approached.
“Better?”
“Yeah, thanks. I think I’ll still ache tomorrow.”
He looked a little sheepish.
“Hopefully not. That stuff’s pretty good, usually.”
You stood uncomfortably for a moment, waiting for some cue from him on where to go from here. He turned down the bed, silently pulling the covers aside for you to climb in. Then he looked at you expectantly, as if you were obviously supposed to just clamber into his bed. You were surprised, but all too grateful for the comfort.
“Really?”
He left your question unanswered. You settled beneath the sheets, and The Master watched you as he tried to figure out what to do next.
“Do you want me to…”
He was mid-thought, it seemed, asking you if he should leave his own bedroom. You spoke over him.
“Can you stay with me? Just for tonight. We’ll forget it ever happened tomorrow if you want.”
He faltered, still watching you curiously. You wondered what his plan had been, if not to stay with you.
“Every time I close my eyes, I see those fucking metal claws, the insides of those creatures, I –”
Without a word he stripped off his jacket, boots and waistcoat.
“I just need a shower. Give me five minutes.”
You nodded, wrapping the covers around you and trying to get comfortable. You’d never had ‘sides of the bed’ - he’d never stayed long enough to designate those - but you couldn’t shake the feeling you were in the wrong place.
It was stupid. To be having casual sex with the man, to trust him with your life, and not even feel entitled to be sleeping in his bed.
Something had to change.
The Master was barely gone two minutes, emerging from his shower with a towel slung around his hips. He rummaged through his wardrobe before tugging free a pair of checkered pajama trousers, glancing to check you were still there before silently returning to the bathroom to change. You looked away at his half-nakedness, hoping he hadn’t noticed your breath hitch.
The two of you were a mess.
His awkwardness didn’t escape you as he rounded the bed, shirtless and with wet hair.
He climbed in beside you, careful not to touch you, and you tried to be as unobtrusive as possible, letting him pull the covers over himself and refusing to let your bodies roll together, even as the mattress gave. To your surprise, he lay out to mirror you, on his side behind you.
If not to the distance between your bodies, he could be chest to chest with you.
“Comfy?”
You nodded against the pillow, hands self-consciously tucked away in front of you. You could feel it when he spoke, the whisper of his breath on your neck. His head rested inches behind yours, intimate even as the pair of you didn’t touch.
“You smell nice,” he mumbled, nose close to your freshly-washed hair.
You laughed.
“I smell like you, of course you like it!”
That got a chuckle out of him, and you could feel how his body moved the mattress as he exhaled.
“Are you cold? Your hair’s still wet.”
You shrugged, and he brought his arm around you, resting it on you without pulling you in. He made a noise of contentment as you shuffled closer into him, letting him hold you more easily.
With a gulp, you hoped his closeness to you would stop him from recoiling at your question.
“Before you dropped me off… when I fell asleep…”
“I’m sorry.”
Oh.
“So, you did do it.”
“You wouldn’t leave otherwise. It is not safe for humans around Cybermen,” he trailed off.
The question you wanted answered was obvious, hanging in the air, making you tense.
“Its not okay, to mess with people’s heads like that,” you chided him gently, with no anger in your tone, nothing to make him explode at you like he had before.
“I… yeah. I know.”
You frowned, even as you knew he couldn’t see you.
“The Cyberium… it made me not trust myself. It was relentless, talking to me. Muddling my thoughts with the AI…”
“You were scared.”
“I was furious. It made me volatile.”
His face buried into your neck. As though this was the most natural thing in the world, you found yourself trusting his touch. You brought a hand up to stroke his hair as he mumbled against your skin.
“I was scared. It threatened to hurt you if I didn’t do what it wanted. I didn’t sleep for a month, couldn’t let my guard down, knowing it might use my body to hurt you. It was trying to get to me.”
You found his arm where it was strewn across your side and covered it with your own arm, squeezed his hand in comfort.
“You should have told me.”
“How could I?”
Without a response you fell silent, thumb tracing the hairs on the back of his hand.
“I hope you’ll forgive me, someday. You shouldn’t have been there. I promise.”
He blamed the Doctor, beyond all anger, he was just upset with her. You could never hope to understand the length and breadth of their tumultuous relationship. It would take a human lifetime to comprehend the bond between them – two near-gods who had been stuck in a game of cat and mouse for their whole lives.
“She used me.”
“I wish she hadn’t.”
Without seeing each other’s faces, it was easier to talk.
“Would you have stopped it, if I hadn’t been there?”
“Eventually. I wanted to destroy the base properly. I wanted a plan. I hate the Cyberium for what it did to me. It should have been power, knowledge, and instead it tried to steal what I knew, take my body for its own. The things it showed me… how it threatened me… I couldn’t let it take what’s mine.”
“The TARDIS…” you realised.
“And you.”
You nodded abruptly at his words.
One thought wouldn’t leave your mind: those people around you, he would have let them die.
Collaterally to you, he’d saved them.
And maybe that could be a start.
“Is the Cyberium totally gone now?”
“Yep! Transferred it to the supercomputer on the base, and then destroyed the machinery. Tricky to hide my plan from the AI, but I managed it.”
You couldn’t help smirking at his brag.
“And how do you feel?”
“Glad to have my mind to myself again,” his tone flattened.
It was hard to believe everything fell together, just like that. It still felt so unfinished, so… unhandled. In the minutes you were alone the feelings of betrayal, the sheer enormity of your ordeal, had felt so unmanageable. Now, you felt ready to heal.
Beneath his hand, your stomach gurgled loudly, and you cringed at the noise.
As you were about to apologise, the Master spoke.
“Wait, did you eat today?”
You frankly had no idea how long today had even been. You shook your head with a confused frown, realising that now the adrenaline had left your system, you were damn hungry.
He clambered out of bed, and you pulled the duvet aside to follow him, your muscles protesting at even the idea of walking to the kitchen.
“No, stay there, you need to rest. I’ll be quick.”
True to his word, a plate of food was dumped on your lap in minutes. Some of it not quite fit for human consumption, but most of it your favourites.
He clambered back into bed beside you. He used his body to prop you up comfortably. He picked off what you didn’t want, chatting away about nothing in particular, and something scarily like peace settled over you. That twinge of panic, the fear his mood would flip on a dime, ebbed further away every time he made sure the blankets were covering your feet. With every second he sat beside you, sneaking bites of your food and laughing when you spilt crumbs on his covers, your resolve grew.
You’d stay.
Maybe you imagined it, but he seemed so much happier in his own head. The dark moments when he wasn’t paying attention never appeared, the mental war he was fighting never sneaking outwards to play across his face. Every laugh felt sincere, every word authentic.
When you were done eating the Master cleared the plate, and you took it in turns to brush your teeth. He went first, and when you took his place in the bathroom you saw a brand-new toothbrush sitting innocently beside his at the sink.
The sight made you feel dizzy, even minutes later when you re-emerged into his darkened bedroom, taking your place once more in the bed. The image of those two toothbrushes side by side was burned into your mind. He pulled you to his shirtless body wordlessly, no hesitations this time, whispering a goodnight as the room fell into pitch-blackness.
You needed to rest.
Each time you closed your eyes, you tensed up. No matter the comfort, The Master had gone still beside you, but you were certain he was still awake.
“Where are we?”
“Somewhere near the Alzarium Galaxy, I believe.”
“How far–”
“Half a universe away, I promise.”
You closed your eyes again, feeling him breathe behind you as you tried to push the image of that collapsed Cyberman from your mind, the screams, that crying, motherless child. You’d seen horrors before, but rarely as the victim of them. Never so close.
Suppressing tears, you opened your eyes, staring into the darkness of the room.
“I can’t sleep.”
He hummed sympathy, pulling you tighter to him and brushing his nose against your neck. You sighed into him, trying to close your eyes again, unable to keep your mind from straying.
“Help me?”
You could talk more tomorrow, when you’d rested and had some distance from everything. But as you fell asleep, dreamless as the Master’s hands cupped your temples, you knew you were home.
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feelthewoods · 5 years ago
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Not many words needed for this place. I just hope i'll be back soon in this and some other bouldering areas, we'll see. For the moment i'm stuck in the gym or at work. Can't wait for those nice spring sessions when nature finally rewakes... trying to stay strong until then (mentaly and physicaly). 🌳��️Boulder: "Brione Arete" , Brione( Switzerland). #bouldering #bouldern #climbing #klettern #climb #climbing_is_my_passion #climbing_pictures_of_instagram #climbing_lovers #boulderinglife #bouldering_pictures_of_instagram #bouldering_is_my_passion #bouldering_came_first #rockclimbing #brione #climbing_is_my_life #climbing #nature #blochouseluxembourg #redrockclimbingcenter #luxembourg #switzerland #ticino #arrampicata #frictionlabs #mountains #travel @climbingprn (hier: Brione) https://www.instagram.com/p/B7mI-UxF42n/?igshid=1tt918dasxn47
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6. “You can’t die. Please don’t die.” NaLu
Hi, there, Anon! Thanks for the request and for ripping my heart out. Anyways, I’m just gonna say this straight up–everyone should know that my heart and my entire being, basically, literally cannot handle sad endings/angst. Soo… that’s my reason for the way it ends (no spoilers here, just read it!). I did have fun writing it, I’m trying to rewake my creativity so this was a nice exercise! Thanks! I hope you enjoy reading it! 
When Lucy woke up smoke filled her lungs, and blood blurred her vision. Beyond crumbling buildings, she saw fire flickering through the town. Her body ached, her head was throbbing. Stumbling to a sitting position too fast, she leaned over and heaved, choking on blood and tears. She couldn’t remember what had happened…? They had been facing something terrible, beyond even what Natsu could defeat and the building… Natsu!
           She scrambled to her feet, despite her stomach twisting into knots. Choking on ash and smoke she scrambled through the wreckage of the guild hall, trying to find him. “N-Natsu!?” Her voice was hoarse. She had breathed in too much smoke. With each breath, with each word she spoke her mouth and lungs burned. She could only taste blood and fire.
           Beyond the crumbled library, where shattered wood from the bookshelves stuck out at odd angles from the rubble, she saw him. He was half buried, his arms draped over rubble like he was sleeping. He almost seemed lifeless, but his chest was rising and falling. His breaths were shallow and rapid. There was blood everywhere. Lucy could see that, even from where she stood, even through her own blood, still dripping from the wretched gash in her forehead.
           “N-Natsu!” She tripped on her way towards him, sending searing pain up her knees. She crawled the rest of the way, still stumbling over bricks and wooden beams. Now, getting a closer look at him she felt sick. His legs were crushed under rubble. A large shattered piece of bookshelf had impaled his shoulder, and it was still sticking out—like a sore marker of misery. His pink hair was covered in dust, dirt, and caked with blood. He was breathing, though. He was breathing. His lips blue, his whole body trembling. But his chest was rising up and down. Up and down.
           “Natsu!” Lucy whispered, lifting his head with her hand and grasping his cold hand with her other. She had never felt him this cold before, and her heart ached. This was wrong. This was all wrong.
           “L…Lu?” Natsu let out a cough, blood trickled down his chin, to his neck. Lucy felt dizzy.
           “This… this can’t be…”
           “Shh…” Natsu smiled a little, and somehow he squeezed her hand in his, “’m fine.”
           Lucy was losing it. Her heart was hammering in her chest. She’d do anything now to be in his place. This wasn’t how their story was supposed to end. It was supposed to be like it always was—with Natsu rising out of the ashes like a dragon: untouchable, invincible. This wasn’t how it was supposed to end. Tears rolled down her cheeks and she choked on a sob, shaking her head. “No, no… Natsu…”
           “Hey,” He chuckled, but it turned into a terrible cough that shook him to his core. Lucy let out a gasping sob, pressing her hand to his cheek. “Hey, ‘m fine… okay? It’s…. fine…”
           “P-please,” Lucy begged, trying to hold him as best she could with him trapped the way he was. She remembered, so long ago, when he had first taken her hand. She remembered how he had taken her to Fairy Tail. How even after that he had become her partner and friend and… maybe something more.
           “Listen to me,” Natsu whispered, his voice hoarse from the smoke, “There’s something I have to tell you. I meant to tell you… I shoulda told you a while ago…”
           “Natsu, no,” Lucy shook her head, “No, you’re going to be… you’re going to be…”
           “Lucy, please, I have to tell you before… before its too late. I… I love you.” She could see it now, reflected in his eyes, his eyes that were usually so full of fire and determination. There was something softer there now. “I think I’ve loved you for a long time now. There.” He smiled a little, another trickle of blood rolled down his chin. “That’s all I’ve ever wanted to say.” His breathing was slowing, Lucy could feel his heartbeat—irregular. He was dying.
           “Natsu! Don’t do this to me. Don’t… don’t die. Please. Please, don’t die. You can’t die now.” Beyond the flicker flames, Lucy saw figures emerge, moving towards them quickly. Among them, she spotted familiar blue and pink hair. Her heart hammered in her chest. Wendy and Porlyusica. “Natsu.”
           “I’m still…” his voice was weak, his hand cold. “…here…”
           “Hold on, Natsu… hold on please, for me? Wendy’s coming. Hold on.”
           “I’m holding on….” Natsu breathed, his eyes dim, a small smile on his lips. “I’m… holding on…”
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libidomechanica · 3 years ago
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Which made the mercharged among the sent conversal name shod that noon
She prowling: she turnd at even ye white  blood. In vain, and good part that  never die. They calmly fell; who loved.  S breath. Some Socratic deepes blood and 
nearer time; thou hast links and grape, as  his mortal struggles with swain?  And rain as can fright went this  words— they are poplar wholl faith flying for 
brute; but else to antipodes  of even when music  measure, whose was her that  great so, when his wide scatterd; 
but her take, and Empresario at personage  from the had; and some  starry witching serpent at once heroes,  neighbor. The Cauteretz mariana 
the houses to  dust cry thou be the prime and  deepest have proposition one to  be the sought written to 
my choice. Constrain at a fire  winding wakes full of nearned on  her, wilt have suppose, when wintry  with the subscribes, rewakeness: 
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asexualkiba · 7 years ago
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ME! B^)
Why I like them:
Oh. Dude. What’s not to like?? i like that he’s not v guarded if that makes sense. like he’s v chill and all his emotions tend to show, but overall he’s a calm person so it’s not really out there. but also he has something he genuinely likes about each friend he has, honest shika is such a good friend. ok. and then he’d rather not be active, but the boy is so driven and he cant help it.
Why I don’t:
Just ur basic young shika being a lil sexist, but thats about the only thing??? And he obviously grew out of that so. what are we left with now. a perfect man.
Favorite episode:
i’ll be basic i really just love his chunin exams fight with temari. like yea babie kick ass. (ALSo any flashback w lik Choji babe they literally fix my heart)
Favorite arc:
HUUUhhHhwww I always just. Say i love the chunin exams just cuz..,, i love the chunin exams??
Favorite line:
FRICK dang I dunno his lines well enough. Probably someth he says to choji when they are little. Lil shika is my hero tbh.
Favorite outfit:
AUGH IMMA BE BASIC AND JUST SAY HIS SHIPPUDEN OUTFIT BC 👌🏼👌🏼
OTP:
shika c h oooo
Brotp:
him! and! naruto!! IM SERIOUS AUGHDhdh
Head Canon:
Headcanon he hates… naps. He likes going to bed early and sleeping late but naps are weird to him and are more disorienting than theyre worth? Like sleeping midday and waking up an hour or so later, you have to adjust to it being later in the day and also REwake up, which is annoying.
A wish:
HMM A WISH what kinda wish ?? Uuuuuh I wish… I wish he got more downtime to chill with himself and his friends IDK BRO
An oh-god-please-dont-ever-happen:
UHHHHHhhh Idk. I just want him to stay livin his life as himself u feel me. Idk.
5 words to best describe them:
“i would die for naruto”
My nickname for them:
i mean out loud to hoshigakiri i legit just call him deer boy its basic but its who he is
[SEND ME A CHARACTER]
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werewolfscientist · 5 years ago
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He had started to doze off but rewakes at her words, “Oh, uh... I don’t know. He always comes back, though. I think he’s secretly lonely or something. It’s not like he’s completely incompetent, just frail as a toothpick.”
Rain in The Constant was different than normal rain. It clung like gel, but was more slippery than oil. For the first time in days, the rain had stopped. It was a day of walking and slipping and mud. It felt nice to stop and see the landscape. A scraggly forest, a few trees blanketed in the dark. It was a dry nighttime. The stars above were twinkling and shining. Whiz had finally stopped to make a small fire, and it was a warm fire. It made her skin itch against the cool dark air. [Starter!]
Wilson had to abandon his camp when it was overrun by frogs up east. He should have expected it, but it still shocks him everytime when suddenly a frog comes flying to smack him in the face.
All he had managed to save from the rainy frogs was Chester and enough supplies to make a torch or two. He was back a square one again, and his poor hair was ruined for the time being.
He hadn’t been expecting to find another fire in the Constant that wasn’t his, so he decides to go to it before his torch fails on him. Chester follows behind him with soft but audible and abounding noises.
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pollination-tech · 8 years ago
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Hey, y’all, who remembers these cuties? Nobody? Yeah, me neither, which is probably why we haven’t seen them since their mom stirred up some shit at their fourth birthday party.
Anyway - @sims-rewake asked for some male berry sweets for their rainbowcy, so naturally I pimped these guys out because god knows they aren’t doing anything in my save file, and while I was uploading them to the gallery, I thought I’d spread the word in case anyone else wanted them in their game. :)
Dakota Delaforte (left) is a big fan of his Uncle Taz. Much like his uncle, he’s quite self-assured, and is outgoing enough to be at least moderately successful in climbing corporate ladders -- although when he isn’t busy trying to get rich, he’s probably breaking hearts down at the local bar.
Dallas Delaforte (right) is a real outdoorsman. He’s quite capable of living off the land -- assuming there are plenty of berries, veggies, and greens around, because he’d never dream of touching meat. He hopes one day to settle down and share his love of the great wide wilderness with a family of his own.
They contain content from Outdoor Retreat, use NotEgain’s Elf Ears, and MySimpleSimblr’s 25 Shades of Berries skin tone.
My Origin ID is MadEyeMadi -- do what you want with their hair and outfits, but please don’t change their genetics. Also, I’d really love it if you tagged me so I can see what you do with them! :)
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mikemortgage · 6 years ago
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Six months after legalization, high prices and supply issues boost illicit pot market
TORONTO — When cannabis supply at Small Town Buds begins to dwindle, co-owner Chris Felgate shuts the doors of his Devon, Alta., shop and turns customers away.
Even though the legal retailer often still has oils and capsules in stock, most shoppers are looking for the store’s namesake product, he said.
“Having our doors open with no flower available was making customers more angry… It’s like going into a grocery store and not having groceries,” he said.
Since he first opened his doors on Oct. 17, the closures became a near-weekly ritual as demand outstripped the supply he was able to procure from the provincial government distributor, he said.
The situation began improving in March, however, after the Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis agency added additional suppliers, and he has kept his doors open consistently since. But the weekly supply he receives still lacks in selection and quantity, Felgate said.
“We’re lucky if we’re getting one or two cases of strains… We purchase everything that is available to us, whether we like the product or not.”
It has been six months since Canada became the first industrialized country to legalize recreational cannabis, in a bid to stamp out the illicit market. On that landmark day, high demand resulted in lineups at the few bricks-and-mortar stores that were ready, delivery delays and stock outs.
Licensed producers ramped up production in anticipation of Oct. 17, but product was scant and many companies pointed to supply chain issues as a major cause of the bottleneck.
And on this 4-20, the first annual celebration of cannabis culture post-legalization, many pot enthusiasts are still smoking joints they did not buy through legal channels.
The vast majority of cannabis, or 79 per cent, was bought illegally in the fourth quarter, according to Statistics Canada, down from 90 per cent in the third quarter.
Legal sales of dried flower across Canada in February were down 8.8 per cent from January, partially due to a shorter month, but average daily sales of dried cannabis in February remained relatively flat, up one per cent from the previous month.
Meanwhile, inventory of dried cannabis products which are finished — meaning packaged, labelled and ready for sale — at cannabis companies rose by more than 19 per cent to 12,110 kilograms in February. The amount of unfinished dried cannabis held by licensed producers increased to 120,731 kilograms, up 4.1 per cent from January.
“Health Canada is aware of reports of localized shortages of cannabis products in some markets and for some product lines,” said Tammy Jarbeau, a spokeswoman for the government agency. “The supply of cannabis is not the issue. The issue is the supply chain, in other words, converting raw product into packaged goods and moving it to distributors or retailers and to customers.”
Based on industry figures, there is enough cultivation space to produce approximately one million kilograms of pot per year, she added.
Allan Rewak, the executive director of the Cannabis Council of Canada, said much of that unfinished inventory is product unsuitable for sale to consumers. As well, licensed producers face various regulatory hurdles such as obtaining necessary licenses for processing product that does meet the bar, he said.
“It’s a multistage process. If it was simple as put plants in the ground and they’ll grow, you would have seen the situation fully resolved by now,” he said. “But this is a complex system by design.”
Aphria Inc. sold less cannabis to recreational users during its latest quarter ended Feb. 28, compared with the previous one, due to supply shortages and packaging and distribution challenges.
But Bruce Linton, co-chief executive of Canopy Growth Corp., said it has ramped up the amount it can package and ship, from roughly 300,000 units in October to 1.3 million in March. With automation and new equipment, output is getting better, but as more stores open their doors demand grows, he said.
“The equation keeps evolving… It’s not a static market,” he said.
Several provincial government retailers and distributors say they have seen marked improvement in recent weeks, but supply remains an ongoing challenge. Many of these provincial entities have signed on additional licensed producers to boost supply as Health Canada gives more companies the green light to cultivate and sell.
In B.C., the Liquor Distribution Branch has been receiving a larger share of the amount ordered from suppliers compared with the initial weeks of legalization, according to spokeswoman Kate Bilney.
Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries is receiving, on average, about 30 per cent of the product it is expecting each month, spokesman Lorne Kletke said.
In Quebec, supply is getting better “week by week” and the Societe quebecoise du cannabis expects significant improvement by the end of spring, said spokesman Fabrice Giguere. But the crunch is “not over yet,” and its outlets will remain shut on Mondays and Tuesdays, he added.
Cannabis retail chain Fire and Flower is seeing a boost in supply, but at a slower rate than expected, said its chief executive Trevor Fencott.
The company — which has stores in Alberta, Ontario and Saskatchewan — is seeing more product from the latter province which has a more efficient, private distribution model, he said.
“In Saskatchewan, we buy directly from licensed producers,” Fencott said. “And we have never ever had anyone not deliver to us. Ever. They always meet their commitments.”
But even when legal retailers are stocked up, price remains an issue.
The unweighted average price of a legal gram of dried cannabis is $9.99 per gram, compared with the average illicit price of $6.37 per gram — a price gap that appears to be widening, according to an analysis by Statistics Canada of submitted price quotes.
Regular cannabis users are unlikely to make the switch until the price of legal cannabis becomes more competitive, said Fencott.
He points to Colorado where prices have dropped dramatically since legalization, at the expense of illegal dealers. Legalization at a national scale is a massive endeavour, and things will improve, in time, he said.
“We are still doing something that no country on the planet is doing,” Fencott said. “So while it is frustrating on some level, we always keep in the back of our mind the enormity of the task.”
from Financial Post http://bit.ly/2Gw6lj3 via IFTTT Blogger Mortgage Tumblr Mortgage Evernote Mortgage Wordpress Mortgage href="https://www.diigo.com/user/gelsi11">Diigo Mortgage
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hongruizhang-blog · 7 years ago
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Throughout the history, socail institution always changes by the development of society, and naturally, more human become more open-minded. People's view on things is becoming more and more comprehensive by the improvement of technology. Therefore, to some authorities, the public can known more 'negative' things and something the authority do not want to them know. It causes a phenomemon that rebellion thinking begin producing in many areas. Thus, creative rebellions naturally appeared in current life. I believe, art, design and media, they all have both sides, and different people have different opinions to each thing. Therefore, I want to explain these two question with three words which are exploration, resist and representation. And any word connected closely. The bottom of the poster, there is a part of album cover of rock music. Music, and the picture poster itself, can be seen as representation of art. And rock music can be seen as a symbol of rebellious spirit. It deeply influences generations of teenagers. During the turbulent times, the lack of the spiritual world to teenagers causes a serise of rebillion actions. For thoughtful people are not willing to bear, some of them begin to resist. And Rock music, is widely accepted by them. And, the manifested intuitively of the album cover is the toughest time in China. It was a incorrect revolution to culture. It was a war, a war on culture especially on art. However, if the change on art is correct or can be recepted, such as renalissance, that will be a new style to traditional thinking and formal. The creative rebellion is to rewake a kind of people which they probably are fear to express. If the recognition reaches a certain degree. People's most real thoughts will break out and even beecome a mainscream. Of course, to history, this is a progress of exploration. People's civilization walks from drak to light. The most prominent point of innovation is to break down traditon and find a new area. Just like exploring the unverse, it can be concluded that people's view opinions have been changed from microcosmic to macroscopic.
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