#or in his teens when he worked at the local tavern and excelled at it
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wvrlock · 1 year ago
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// No thoughts only Fallahan being able to navigate social situations with absolute grace and having a great time with it. Fal lighting up the room when he walks in. Fal having this magnetic presence that makes strangers open up and feel at ease around him as if they've known him for years
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lassieposting · 6 years ago
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quite a while ago someone else @bubblemoon66 put her dead men backstory headcanons in the tag and it was a great idea so here are mine
GHASTLY
- ghastly is an only child, which is a tragedy because his mom had an overabundance of motherly love and not nearly enough children to pour it into
- when he was born his parents were living in a big, mostly-mortal city in kerry, where his dad had a successful tailoring business. he didn’t have a particularly fun time there, and he was a very lonely child, but his mom taught him how to fight so he could see off the local kids who picked on him
- shortly before ghastly hit his teens, his parents saved enough money to move to a mage community outside dublin. his father still had the tailoring business, but it was smaller with a far more select clientele. they moved into a small freehold on the outskirts of the community where they were primarily self-sufficient - they had a vegetable garden and an old carthorse and a cow, maybe some chickens - so the money from the family business was able to boost them from “working class” to “comfortable”. 
- ghastly’s mom pretty much immediately picked up a job as a barmaid in the local tavern; she was highly sociable, knew everyone, and was well known for knocking rowdy or aggressive patrons on their asses
- ghastly was homeschooled by his father, who taught him how to manage the family business as well as all his tailoring skills. he can read and write and is good at maths. his education didn’t really go much further than that, though, so when it comes to things like philosophy or science he’s a bit lost and he didn’t start learning languages other than irish and english until he joined the war effort
ERSKINE
- erskine is the oldest child and only boy of a very wealthy family from galway, a port city. 
- his family’s money is very new - erskine’s father was a street rat who started working the merchant ships as soon as he was old enough for them to take him, just to get food in his belly and somewhere to sleep. he spent several mortal lifetimes scrimping and saving to buy his first ship, and gradually built up a thriving import/export business. 
- erskine’s mother came from a family of lesser landed gentry with too many daughters and not enough funds to make good matches for all of them. erskine’s father gave financial aid to the family, and in exchange his bride gave him new social connections. 
- he has three younger sisters. they’re all within 20 years of one another, so they grew up fairly close and he was taught from a young age to look after and protect them
- unfortunately the upper classes didn’t think much of erskine’s family, and they got a bit of a reputation as overambitious social climbers. erskine was sent to prestigious schools and then to university, but he never quite fit in with boys who came from a background like saracen’s or skulduggery’s. he remained very touchy about this into adulthood
- he didn’t actually intend on joining up to fight - he was highly academic, excelled at his studies and wanted to go into politics, a profession that would’ve been completely closed off to his father. he originally signed up as a junior aide to then-lieutenant colonel corrival deuce. but it turned out he was good at soldiering and enjoyed it, and hopeless introduced him to ghastly and skulduggery, and he ended up wanting to fight more than write reports and attend meetings. 
 SARACEN
- saracen is his parents’ only child and a spoiled aristocrat
- like skug, he was basically raised by an army of wetnurses and nannies and tutors. unlike skug, his family didn’t have a military history and his parents were vehemently opposed to him joining the sanctuary’s army, since he was their only son and heir. 
- saracen’s power is innate. as a child his parents were able to secure the best possible tutors in elemental and various branches of adept magic, but he didn’t take to any of them. but he always had a talent for knowing things to unnerve the servants. 
- he had the best education money could buy, but he was never a very good student. he was bright enough, but inclined to be lazy and more interested in socialising than studying. his writing is horrendous. he spent most of his time at an expensive french university partying and sleeping around
DEXTER
- dexter is one of many middle children of a very poor family and grew up in poverty in south dublin. 
- his mom was a washerwoman and earned pittance, and his father was more often than not shitfaced on the floor of the local tavern, and they had something like twelve children, of which dexter was maybe #7 or #8. a fair few of his siblings did not live past childhood. 
- he started working very young; his mother would kick them all out of the house for the day after they’d eaten breakfast, so he would spend his days roaming the nearby streets and would carry letters for a penny or distract the police for any of a number of dodgy locals. 
- his family were sorcerers, but of the “squib” sort - his mom only lived to about 200 and his father less than that. dexter was an unusually powerful anomaly, and also the only energy thrower in the family. one of his older brothers was an elemental and one of dexter’s earliest memories is watching his mother cook dinner over a fire his brother held in his hand, because they had no money for firewood. 
- he once pickpocketed a shiny trinket from a wealthy young gentleman in the street to give to his mother. when he joined up to fight, she gave it back to him and made him promise to return it when he came home. saracen did recognise the trinket on a mission several years later, but he let dexter (and dexter’s mother) keep it.
- he hadn’t even had his surge when he signed up to fight. he joined with two of his brothers, both older than him, and he was the only one who always came home. a few younger brothers also followed him into the army some years later. 
- on missions, when he got to That Age, his squad would give him extra food from their rations to make sure he was strong enough to live through the surge when it happened. 
- in 2019, he has two sisters and a younger brother still living, though all three of them have moved out of the dublin area and he only sees them a few times a decade. 
ANTON
- at some point shortly after his birth, some eldritch monstrosity attempted to possess him and use him as a conduit into this world, somewhat like the jitter girls. he has no idea why it failed to come through entirely, but it ended up trapped inside him as the gist. 
- anton has no idea who his parents were; they left him on the doorstep of a foundling home as a very young baby after the attempted possession, so he has no memories of them. he assumes they were god-fearing mortals, terrified of the devil inside their child. 
- he grew up in a religious home for orphans, and once the gist began showing itself regularly they started trying to exorcise the demon from him. the gist wasn’t all that fond of this experience, which just made the mortals more afraid of him
- he was a very quiet, almost silent child, very shy and withdrawn, and didn’t make friends easily with the other boys. he was very bright, though, so he was educated with the plan that he’d go into the clergy. 
- in his teens, though, he had a crisis of faith and decided to leave the church and the orphan home, and wound up working a sequence of dead end jobs, whatever he could get his hands on. during this time, he happened to cross paths with a mage, who recognised magic in him and introduced him to the sorcerers’ world. 
- he’s never met anyone with the magic he has, so his control over the gist is practically all self-taught. 
- he ended up signing up for the war in the hope that he would finally fit in somewhere; his gist is good at killing, and maybe if he made himself useful he’d finally get to be around people who didn’t look at him like he was a monster
LARRIKIN
- larrikin was raised by a group of travelling players who migrated around the country, so he has a real mess of an accent. they were a very close unit - so much so that larrikin was not actually sure which actress he belonged to and called almost all of them some variation of “mother”, as did all the other kids in the group
- as an adult he’s a consummate actor and can put on accents and mannerisms very convincingly, and tends to blend in easily to any group of people
- even as a very small child, he was very gregarious and outgoing and loved being the centre of attention. 
- larrikin would thrash literally everyone at the game of faces - he regularly changes his backstory and will put on different accents and shit when he meets new people, purely for the fun of it
- he was an accomplished petty criminal; pickpocket, poacher, fence, shamelessly cheats at cards. he’s been to prison multiple times but never seems to stay there long and always evades a hanging. he eventually signed up to fight after being “politely invited” to do so by a magistrate
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btgalaxy · 5 years ago
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Berlin (m)
masterlist
» a/n: there’s literally not a fluff thing even remotely about this fic, and from now on every friday we will be updating with new stuff! - admin lottie
» genre: angst
» word count: 6.9k
warnings (for this and upcoming parts): assault, drugs/alcohol use, violence/gore, profanity. this is purely fictional and not intended to reflect the members’ true personalities. otherwise enjoy!
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Part 1:
The smell of cigarette butts danced in the air in wanton puffs of smoke, reaching the blue-pink of your lips grotesquely quick. You drained your glass of brandy with unrelenting haste, delving into a fantasy of old-time Berlin, with your feet on the table and liquor burning like ashes in your throat. You’d arrived but four days prior to your retreat to the sombre tavern in Lichtenberg, the feeling of youthful excitement still fresh on your fingertips, now tracing the outline of a German proverb carved with a knife into the table top: "Nur die Harten kommen in den Garten."
You were naïve. You didn’t believe in the atrocities that could take place over 96 hours and how mercilessly fast the pace of city life is. You came from a small, everyone-knows-everyone kinda village, and never experienced the bitter cold that bit at your skin when not hidden by your cushty fireplace and friendly farmer next-door. The realities of demise and decease and other such perturbation were concealed from you for years and years, under the segregation of country life. You didn’t know how a person could leave you feeling empty and worthless. You didn’t know the haze of marijuana could send you into a spiralling attack of anxiety and terror and pure hysteria. You didn’t know that the blood drained from a corpse to the lowest body part and pooled there till it stained the skin only a few hours after the death, and you didn’t know that the foul, rotting smell could linger on your clothes and your flesh and around the house for days afterwards, no matter how fervently you may wash yourself, skin raw and bleeding. You didn’t know it clung to you like moss on a damp wall. You didn’t know any of this.
It was drugs you were first exposed to, the pungent green smell invading you from the bench of a run down bus stop by Brandenburg Flughafen, foreign to you and so incredibly exciting. You’d never even seen any popular narcotic, bar on the tv shows you watched on your phone down in the local café in a corner booth away from any wandering eyes — your mother hired a technician when you were in your pre-teens to censor any ‘explicit’ or ‘inappropriate’ broadcastings, and the whole town of 267 knew of your credulity and innocence, thus seemed to have a silent agreement not to allow you to experience anything ‘harmful’.  You had to hide to try and experience things; it’s no wonder you left for a scene of sex, partying and amphetamines.
“You smoke?” A voice rasped from beside you, sucking in a breath through his teeth after choking out another huff of the joint.
You barely flickered your eyes to look at him, so far out of your comfort zone you could barely form a coherent sentence. He looked brazen, with luminous mint hair and hooded eyes, drained of life beneath the tendrils of smoke scorching through his nostrils like handmade clouds. Between his fingers was the thing you were most scared of, there, right in front of you. It was finally real, finally happening. There was no friend of your parents to switch the channel or take away the book or suggest you research a different subject, he was there, in front of you, real, happening.
“Sure.” It tumbled from your mouth before you could consider any further, hand effortlessly lunging slowly forwards to pry the smoke from his hands, and you held it between your thumb and your forefinger, as if you’d done it a million times before.
You remembered the first time you discovered drugs exist — Pulp Fiction, you believed it was. Mia Wallace inhaling some white substance up her nose? You couldn’t fathom at the time that someone would react that way to a powder. It intrigued you, beyond belief. Then at school in year 10, that assembly where you were taught of all the gruesome effects drugs can impose on your organs, and all the side effects they could have. You know how when you’re forbidden from something, when you’re constantly instructed not to do something… you know how it makes you oh so more desperate to do that very thing? That feeling was stirring inside of you.
The blunt felt scary in your hands, scarier than you imagined. It was strange the way it rolled down to the crease of your knuckles so easily, the sound of the rolling paper ruffling slightly and resonating through you in a chorus of anticipation. It came even easier to your lips, closing them around the filter and gently sucking in for a few seconds.
You ripped it from your mouth and began coughing violently.
It was like it was burning down your throat, your voice deepening as you tried to cope with the feeling of it coating your oesophagus like hot wax being poured generously into your mouth, gliding down your tongue and plugging your windpipe. It didn’t ease up for at least a minute, gunk rising up into your jaw relentlessly, and you spat it out in desperation to rid yourself of the scorching it brought.
“So you don’t smoke then?” The man smirked, retrieving his joint back from your curled digits and holding it back between his own lips. He took a stainless-steel lighter out of his pocket, engraved with the acronym MYG on it, relighting the end and promptly puffing out again, the smoke tapering into the air to form other strange shapes.
“I wanted to try,” you choked, finally regaining the ability to speak with a still coarse throat.
He tilted his head slightly, “Why you in Berlin?”
His question unnerved you. You didn’t answer. You instead burrowed through your hand luggage for the scarce remains of a bottle of water, unscrewing the cap and letting the meagre sips trickle onto your tongue to offer some brief soothing to your dizzying head.
He laughed, “You run away from home or somethin’? You don’t look like the typical Berliner.”
“I didn’t run. I left,” you exhaled, wetting your lower lip with your tongue, eyes fluttering shut, breath heavy.
He laughed, again, “That’s what they all say.”
Looking back on your first meeting with Min Yoongi, you didn’t ever really like him. It wasn’t that you were scared of him — well, you were a bit scared, but even after everything you felt the same way. You didn’t like the way he spoke, and you didn’t like how he acted like some nonchalant, borderline careless druggie with no real feelings or emotions. He was an effortless liar, and you valued honesty. He could be condescending and cruel and manipulative. He wasn’t someone anyone should trust.
He sat next to you on the bus. You didn’t ask him to, but he did. He didn’t speak to you, just sat there smoking his joint till it burnt out and he rolled another. God, he made it look so easy. Like it didn’t singe the pink flesh in his cheeks, or like he couldn’t feel the way it thrusted down him into his lungs, just waiting there, or how it drove into his brain and made him high as hell. He would’ve certainly excelled in a career of acting, with that beautiful façade he employed. He pretended he felt nothing. Later, you would find that was not the case.
You were travelling to Kreuzberg. Apparently, there were lots of cheap hostels there to put you up during a measly financial situation, popular to other youths that went to Berlin with little to no money. It was the perfect way to blend, to be the typical traveller that was relatable and approachable. You wanted to make new friends, meet new people. You thought Min Yoongi might be your first, at the time, and perhaps he was, perhaps you did consider him your first friend.  You glanced fleetingly over at his side profile, admiring the way he grit his jaw and the curved slope of his nose. He was handsome.
You never had a boyfriend back at home. You had friends that were boys, sure, but they were shy and most were strictly catholic and didn’t want to risk any undue temptations. You especially, because you hemmed your skirt a couple of inches higher than the rest of the girls at your school — a scandal at the time, you were labelled as a slut for at least a week which speaks a lot of the town’s standards. When the headmistress did her rounds at the end of the week, she made all the girls kneel to ensure their skirts reached the floor. Yours didn’t, and the subtle scarring left on your hand from the thin cane certified you were to carry on hemming all your skirts till the teachers gave up. You liked a thrill like that, you liked being able to defy those condemning rules that society set. It felt freeing.
Kreuzberg wasn’t what you expected, as you gazed out the tinged window onto the paved roads, onto the buildings painted with colossal street arts; a worthy canvas of such mighty works. You briefly wondered how they managed to paint a few stories high, slathering colour onto the otherwise miserable red bricks, but you supposed that could be a good conversation starter for later. Instead, you tried to digest everything you were seeing; the people sat in cafés smoking, photographers on the street, backpackers, young people, old people, tourists, natives. Some you couldn’t identify if they were actually native Berliners or not, and others you could.
You got off at a stop in the heart of the city, and Yoongi followed. Of course, you didn’t know his name at the time, you only knew that he smoked and knew that you didn’t. You strode over to a nearby map of the tramlines to find a decent hostel.
“They’ll all be booked, y’know?” He commented, sighing as he finally put out his cigarette without pulling out another, “It’s summer in Berlin. It’s packed with people like you.”
You ignored him, unwilling to accept that was the case. You couldn’t book anything prior to your trip; it was all a bit last minute. You’d just decided you couldn’t stay it that damned town any moment longer, so booked a flight, packed a bag and there you were at the heart of Berlin, the city of new starts. Of your new start.
“I know a place you could stay,” he remarked, piquing your interest, “I gotta friend down by the Spree. He’ll put you up if you’re nice to him.”
You grazed your teeth over your lower lip in contemplation, conflicted with feeling like that was cheating, like you weren’t really doing it for yourself. You didn’t want other people to still be controlling you, like at home.
“I don’t even know your name,” you quipped, making eye contact briefly before diverting them away, finding yourself struggling to look him in the eye for longer than a few seconds.
He pulled his lighter from his pocket, pointing to each letter as he spoke, “Min Yoon-Gi.” He sounded out each syllable with an amused glint in his eye, and you thought it was strange the way he became suddenly much seemingly friendlier.
“I’m Y/N,” you responded, glancing around awkwardly. You didn’t like that introduction. You felt uncomfortable.
“He lives by the bridge.”
You really were so naïve. You allowed a man who’d given you a joint at a dodgy bus stop to take you to his friend’s place to stay for a few nights, and you barely questioned it. God, you couldn’t have imagined what kind of a hell hole it really was. But at the same time it was exciting, it was new. It was everything you’d never experienced and craved like a captive desperately labouring for an escape. So you got on a tram to the river with Min Yoongi, and you followed him to a worn down terrace house on a street corner, both thrilled and terrified; you’d never felt more exhilarated.
The bricks were dark crimson, stained with mould and the rotting pieces crumbled away like ashes. It was lifeless and cold, and it felt as though it had been lived in over a thousand years and seen a hundred deaths. There was a bra hanging out one of the windows, and the other was smashed and covered with a strip of cardboard that had a picture of a blender on it. Yoongi ambled down the front path like it wasn’t the most harrowing place you’d ever seen, like it didn’t tell you to go back and find a hostel, or even as far as to travel back home and live your life the way it was. But that’s what made you follow him.
His knuckle rapped against the ivy oak as green paint chippings fell to the doormat that had an image of a cannabis leaf in the centre, with cigarette butts smothered into the bristles as well. He kept knocking, till a man with silvery hair pulled back the door.
“Fuckin’ stop, I was tryna roll, you prick,” he spat in Yoongi’s face as he spoke bitterly, immediately stalking off back down the corridor towards an archway.
Yoongi trudged inside with his shoes on, “I’ll find Jimin.”
You thought Jimin sounded like a nice name. Like someone happy and energetic; you thought you could make another friend.
The interior of the house was nothing less than expected; barren of any decoration or paintings or even some basic household items. It felt so vacant, like the people that lived there never really lived there — perhaps that’s because they were never really living. Everyone in that household was dead from the moment you got there, and maybe that’s why you don’t feel sick at the thought of what you did, rather just that it happened. And it was done and a part of history that couldn’t be changed.
You followed Min Yoongi to the kitchen, piled with dirty dishes and cutlery, empty packaging strewn across the cheap surfaces and abandoned beer bottles on the table. It smelt like weed, and the silver-haired man that opened the door to you sat on one of the counters with a filter amid his teeth, pinching the rolling paper between his thumb and index to bring it into a skilful turn.
“Where’s Jimin?” Yoongi asked, pulling back the off-white refrigerator door to take out a beer as you hovered uncomfortably in the doorway. It’s a horrid feeling, standing in a stranger’s house in a strange city with a strange person you’ve only just met. You felt like you were in a movie.
The man nodded his head in the direction of upstairs, focusing his gaze still on the tobacco in his hands.
“Stay here,” Yoongi ordered, making you grimace as his figure stalked back past you into the corridor.
You looked back at silver-hair, sliding the filter into the tip of the roll. Honestly, he didn’t look like a smoker. But then, what would you know of what smokers looked like? He muttered a curse when he patted his empty pockets, looking back at you.
“Got a lighter?” He inquired, and for a second you were taken aback.
You told him, “No. I don’t smoke.”  He groaned at you, jumping down off the counter and began rummaging through all the drawers. You could see inside they were all filled with junk, spilling out onto the floor as the man whipped each one out and left it open as he went onto the next. Your parents would’ve hated someone like him in their house. They used to lock you in your room without food or water until it was immaculate, and only then were you permitted to eat. You remember you tried to defy them once, refuse to do it, but after six hours in the blazing heat of summer and no water you were beginning to feel dizzy from the dehydration and submitted to their order.
He found a lighter on the table under a newspaper. You didn’t expect anyone in that house to pay attention to the news, let alone buy a paper. He leant against the counter and lit the end of the fag, putting the lighter down with a sigh.
“How’d you know Suga?” Silver-hair asked, head lulling back to breathe up towards the ceiling.
“Suga?”
“Yoongi.”
You remained uneasy beneath the doorframe, “He told me he knew a place I could stay.”
“You wanna stay here?” He laughed all of a sudden, holding the lit cigarette unnervingly close to the wooden counter.
“I’m Y/N,” you announced, pursing your lips.
“V.”
“V?”
“Or Taehyung. Whichever.” It fell quiet between you both again, and you enjoyed the brief escape.
He trudged over to the table to shake the beer bottles, seeking one with a little liquid left inside, “You drink?”
You shrugged. You’d never drank before. The teachers at school told you drinking was a temptation that brought about sinful consequences that would never be suitable for young girls like you. Drinking was limited to a sip of wine during Mass and should not otherwise be pursued. You didn’t really like the taste anyway, but you were curious what drunk felt like, what such sinful intoxication felt like. It at least sounded dramatic.
Silver-haired Taehyung found a fuller bottle, bringing it up to his mouth to take a sip before smacking his lips together and passing it to you. You retrieved it cautiously, sloshing about the stuff inside before having a taste yourself. You discerned a yeasty and bitter flavour, but you continued to drink. It was better than smoking.
“You speak German?”
“Not really, no.”
“But you wanna live in Berlin?”
“You speak English.”
“You think you’re gonna be hangin’ around with me?” He laughed, making your face flush with embarrassment, and perhaps a little of the beer now stirring in your stomach. You took another long gulp.
“You look like a nun.”
You didn’t own any revealing or fancy clothes. Your parents wouldn’t even let you wear jeans for a few years, deeming them improper. It’s one of the things that had seem to stuck with you; your apathetic attitude towards your own attire. You’d just learned not to care, so a baggy, waffle-knit jumper and black trousers was just something you put on to leave the house, really. Something that covered you up and your parents weren’t going to question as you left them.
“How long you gonna be stayin’ here?” He quizzed, taking another long drag.
You shuffled awkwardly, “Only a few days I think. As soon as I can find someplace else, and some work.”
A voice resonated from behind you.
“You can stay here as long as you like, babygirl.”
The first thing you thought was: Park Jimin was short. Shorter than your average thug. But a thug nonetheless.
His hair flamed orange like a fox and his teeth were slightly stained. And the tattoos were everywhere; inscriptions across his bare chest; Aztecan patterns looping around his arms; playing cards littered across his shoulders; a tiny diamond inked just beneath his left eye. He wore black sweatpants that hung low on his hips to reveal a tiny trail of hair and small looped earrings in his lobes. He scared you from the second you met.
Although short, he still had a good few inches on you. And a hell of a lot more muscle. You immediately felt an anxiety begin to consume you.
He sauntered towards you with his crotch forwards as you looked at him, coming to place his hands on your waist. He seemed to look you up and down with an insatiable look, or maybe it was amusement, you couldn’t tell. It was a fierce gaze, that you naturally desired to squirm away from as he pressed himself closer to you, lips curling up into a smirk.
“Babygirl, aren’t you a sight for sore eyes.” His Cheshire grin reached his eyes, crinkling up at the corners, “You wanna stay here wi’ me, huh?” One hand crawled to your arm, tracing his fingertips up and down the skin making you shiver.
You swallowed, “I don’t have anywhere to stay.” Your voice wobbled uncontrollably, as did your entire being in his predatory arms.
“That’s no problem at all,” he pulled the hand from your arm and up to your chin to bring your face towards his, “No problem at all.” You screwed your eyes shut and held your head as close to your chest as possible as he pressed a kiss to your lips, uncomfortably softly to make you quake. You wanted to scream in his face for him to get away from you.
He pulled back, chuckling, “I think you’ll get along just fine here, babygirl.”
He and Taehyung left promptly after that without so much as a second word to neither you nor Yoongi, only leaving you with his musky scent in the air and phantom touch on your lips. You were glad he was gone.
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The floor of your room was carpeted, but you didn’t want to take off your shoes due to the questionable stains that were sprinkled across it. You had a bunk bed, but Yoongi told you nobody would come in to share without warning, and there was a chest of drawers with a Yoda Bong on it, just sitting there, staring at you. You had an en-suite too; the bottom of the bath was stained yellow and the toilet had no seat, blackened with mould around the rim. The sink was clean enough in comparison.
You swallowed, lifting up the duvet of the bottom bunk to peer underneath, eternally grateful that it seemed rather untouched.
“Nobody really used this room,” Yoongi told you, arms folded across his chest, “Nobody wants a bunk bed.”
“I don’t mind,” you countered, plonking your backpack and hand luggage onto the floor beside the bed. “And he’s not going to make me pay?”
“He has parties most nights anyway, so it’ll be noisy. You won’t be able to get much sleep,” he admitted nonchalantly, turning to pick up the bong on the side.
You sat down on the edge of the mattress, the springs inside prominent and digging into your behind. You’d not expected much when you left, but you had hoped for something better than that. There was no cushioning, nor did it resemble in any way the duck feather mattress you slept on at home. It was entirely new.
You pushed your mouth to the side awkwardly as Yoongi lingered, “Do you stay here too?” Your meagre attempt at small talk seemed to be enough of an invitation for him to come and sit next to you on the bed.
“I crash with Tae most of the time,” he said, slumping down beside you and falling onto his elbows as he gazed onto your back.
You could feel the way he stared.
You turned to look at him, “How do you know Jimin?”
“Everyone knows Jimin,” he said, with his shooting eyes still unwavering, but now focused on your chest, “He and I- we have a mutual agreement.”
“Agreement?”
“You a virgin?” Your eyes widened at Yoongi’s curt interrogation, blunt and outright, making you feel embarrassed enough to squirm away, swallowing back the discomfort with crimson cheeks. He laughed, loudly, unbelievably amused with your mortification.
“I’ll take that as a yes then,” his chuckling faded out into a piercing look, and you felt it burn on the side of your face and in your peripheral, “Are you scared?”
“No.” Yes, you were, actually.
“You’re sure?” He leant forwards to sit upright, a smirk pinching the corners of his lips as his hand landed on the outside of your thigh, moving inwards.
You turned to look at him, now somewhat adamant with whatever the hell you thought your intentions were, “I’m not scared.”
He licked his lips, before he leaned in to kiss you. He tasted like the beer you’d just been drinking, and he was quickly laying you onto your back and pressing on top of you into the springs of the bed before you could protest.
There was a brief few seconds where you didn’t realise your eyes were open, watching Yoongi’s head rock back and forth as his tongue delved into your mouth, but then you squeezed them tightly shut, trying to follow with his pace. It was fast and intense, and you could barely keep up when your lips began to dry out.
Moments later and the reality of what could happen suddenly hit you, and you shoved him off of you with all the force you could muster. The back of his head hit the wall with an ominous thud. You wanted new, but you didn’t want whatever this was.
With one hand now holding the back of his head, his eyes immediately snapped up to look at you, blazing with fury, “The fuck?”
“I’m sorry,” you whimpered, breathing heavily, “I couldn’t.”
You could see his nostrils flaring slightly. For a moment you were really scared. Like really scared. Of what he might do.
Thankfully, he shuffled to the end of the bed, readjusting the crotch of his trousers slightly.
“Whatever,” he grunted, “Shit kisser anyway.”
It reminded you of your first kiss with a boy on holiday. You met him on a cruise ship. His name was Tom. You were both 14 and he said you were the most beautiful girl he’d ever seen. You swooned instantly- rather charismatic for a spotty teenage boy. He kissed you on the last day, and he said he would keep in touch. But, of course, he didn’t. Maybe if he had things might’ve been different.
As Yoongi left the room, you heard him grumble, “Fuckin’ virgins.”
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“Mornin’, babygirl,” Jimin sang as he strolled into the kitchen, entirely bare except for his skin-tight grey briefs, outlining his crotch. He came over and kissed you uncomfortably slowly on the cheek, then sauntered over to the fridge to take out a beer. It seemed all they did was drink and smoke. But that was what you’d left your home for. You wanted these experiences. Didn’t you?
“Good sleep?” He asked, perching against the counter with his Cheshire grin.
You swallowed a mouthful of Honey Cheerios you were surprised to find in a cupboard beneath the sink, “I slept well.” You didn’t try to continue the conversation, you didn’t want to.
He did anyway.
“You gonna go sightseeing today or some other shit you religious girls like to do? Go to a fuckin’ church or some shit?” He’d seen the crucifix necklace you wore and was a million times more intrigued by you; and by intrigued you mean humoured.
“I wanted to go to the town and eat Bratwurst.” It was the first to-do on your agenda. Your parents were vegetarians, so you only ate meat when alone with your friends or other relatives — quite frankly, not very often at all.
He nodded, “I assume you need a tourguide, babygirl?”
You froze for a moment, before slowly tracing your lower lip, “I don’t- I think I-“
“We already have plans,” Yoongi interrupted you, buttoning up his plaid shirt as he ambled carelessly into the kitchen. Jimin glanced at you, looking thoroughly entertained, before returning to watch Yoongi, taking another gulp of his beer.
“Suga, I gotta job for you later.”
“I left my wallet upstairs,” Yoongi ignored him, jogging off till you heard his footsteps on the stairs.
Jimin sniggered from the side, watching you with his slanted eyes taking another mouthful of cereal. He loved to look at you, watch you. It was like you were his own personal form of entertainment, and he couldn’t get enough. You weren’t like the usual travellers that came through him, usually aggressive or a druggie or an alcoholic or- or just anyone considered some kind of a delinquent. But, God, you were pure. You were naïve. You were untouched. You offered something different to his usual girls, something new.
Suddenly, he was behind you, hovering above your shoulders.
“I saw him go into your room last night, babygirl,” his hands slithered malevolently down your biceps, skin rising into goosebumps at his touch.
He began to whisper in your ear, “Did you like it when he fucked you?”
“He didn’t,” you insisted, frozen in place staring down at your bowl of cereal.
He hummed, amused, “Babygirl, don’t lie to me. I’m not a man you lie to.”
“I swear,” you gulped, the fear beginning to churn in your stomach.
He nudged closer, his hand slinking down further and onto your waist, but as he inched closer you snapped your hand down to stop his arm, even surprising yourself.
There was a second where he just scowled at your hand, attempting to cease his advances, but then he violently ripped his arm back, yanking you up by the chin to bring you close enough you could hear the way his teeth grit in his jaw, dirty breath wafting up your nostrils and you had to repress the gag biting at your throat.
“Babygirl, if I can’t have somethin’, nobody can,” he snarled out, shoving your face to the side and leaning in to clamp his lips over your throat where he sucked the skin red and raw, as you held your lips tightly shut and tried to repress any tears.
Crybaby. They’d called you crybaby. When you were about ten you suddenly lost the ability to hold back your tears. At films, books, being scolded, being praised — even over things that had nothing even remotely to do with you. You’d cry. And you were inconsolable for hours. So all the kids at school started to call you crybaby. Then, when you were about sixteen you suddenly found a new emotion inside you — a stronger one — anger. So whenever you wanted to cry, you’d get angry. Anger didn’t need tears, anger needed a scream into the pillow and a punch to the wall and it was enough. Everything was channelled into this unrelenting fury towards your parents, your school, your friends. Even the word crybaby was enough to set you off. When you wanted to cry, you’d become angry instead. So as Jimin sucked a deep magenta bruise into your flesh you clenched your fists and you squeezed your eyes shut; angry.
He retreated seconds later, still grimacing as he took his thumb starkly across the raging bruise, “Don’t fuck anyone in my house.”
It’s a shame your anger didn’t fuel your confidence. You nodded meekly in response, fists still quietly clenching as he stalked out of the room, leaving you emptily.
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“I’m not paying for you,” Yoongi announced, waiting behind you in the street stall line as you held your hair next to your neck, attempting to conceal the large, unwarranted bite.
“I have money,” you countered, nervously tightening your lips as you took another step closer.
You didn’t know why he even offered to go out with you. He was miserable.
“You seriously wanted to come all the way here for a fuckin’ sausage?” He groaned, pulling a cigarette box from his pocket and fumbling to open it before resting one between his teeth.
You cowered slightly, “I wanted to try it.”
“Such a cliché,” he mumbled, fag still between his lips as he patted his jeans in search for something.
“Shit, I didn’t bring my lighter.” He wrenched the small pipe from his lips, “Get your damn sausage, I’ll be in Maysie’s.” You didn’t know what that was, but you still nodded as if you did.  
You didn’t like the Bratwurst. You thought it tasted too… too meaty. And it was a bit spicy too.
Maysie’s was a bar that was open 24 hours and filled with mainly young people sat around circular tables drinking. There wasn’t a bouncer, and IDs weren’t checked. Yoongi was sat with a girl with a pixie cut and a bald man with sad eyebrows.
You approached them wearily.
“Yoongi…,” you murmured, in a futile attempt to pry his attention away from the bong that sat breezily on the table, as if it were the most normal thing.
He coughed a bit as he pulled his lips away from the tube, covering a hand over his chest with his chin lowered slightly as he fought the rising phlegm, “Sit.” You sat on a chair next to the girl, and it felt comfortable to be next to her. At least, more comfortable than you had been since you arrived.
“This is Y/N,” Yoongi remarked uninterestedly, immediately bringing his attention back to the pot on the table.
The girl offered her hand, “TK, and this is Sadly.” She gestured to the bald man with the slanted eyebrows.
Sadly. What an apt name for his features.
You shook back, “Do you live in Berlin?”
“Only as of recently. Sadly’s a native,” she smiled warmly, “You come here to get away from your parents?”
“To get away from my life.” You returned her smile, liking the way she spoke to you.
She shook her head understandingly, “I get it.”
You spent the day with your two new friends and it couldn’t have been more exciting. You went to Checkpoint Charlie and the art gallery then sat and ate pretzels by the Spree. You drank black coffee and they offered you a smoke, which you politely declined. You felt you could with them, they didn’t pressure, and you weren’t scared. Yoongi moped nearly the whole time, and you felt angry that he kept trying to ruin the day and cut short your time with them.
Sadly taught you some German, predominantly the phrases “Kann ich das kaufen?” and “Ich hasse Pferde”. You didn’t really know what the second one meant.
The two of them shared a house together, and they lived in Lichtenberg. They’d only come for the day to visit Checkpoint Charlie and buy some drugs off of Yoongi. It was at this point you understood why his nickname was ‘Suga’. You didn’t think he looked much like a drug dealer — he didn’t have any tattoos.
“I heard Jimin’s having a party later,” TK said, biting off a chunk of her bread.
“He always does,” Yoongi responded, curt and dismissive as you’d only ever seen him be.
“I imagine Y/N’s invited, with that big-ass hickey on her neck,” TK laughed, and your hands automatically split to your neck, covering the bruised side. You’d forgotten.
“At first I thought Suga had done it, but Jimin’s far more likely to have,” she carried on, and you couldn’t look anywhere except for your lap. You noticed that Yoongi stayed quiet, and you couldn’t decipher what it meant. What any of anything meant. If he liked you, if he didn’t, what happened yesterday. You just didn’t know.
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The air was so clogged it was suffocating. You dizzily made your way through the people crowded in the kitchen towards the cupboard with the cereal, aka the only food you knew was safe to eat in that house, and tried to shove your way back through the sweaty bodies when Jimin spotted your retreating form.
“Babygirl!” He laughed, happily.
He trotted over to you with his Cheshire grin, “Babygirl, I haven’t seen you since this morning.” He smiled, pushing your hair off your shoulder to admire your bruising.
He leaned into you, “Won’t you join us for a drink?”
His breath smelt like whiskey this time, like an old man. He sneered at you, burying into the crook between your neck and shoulder.
“I’m quite tired,” you responded, subtly turning away from him.
Unexpectedly, he nodded his head, pursing his lips slightly, “Course’ you are. Had long day, huh?” He ran his tongue slyly over his lips, eyes unconcernedly wandering to your chest, peaking out a bit from your vest if you peered over at the right angle. Which, of course, he did.
“It was,” you exhaled, “I’ll go to bed.”
“I might see you later, then.” God, you hoped you wouldn’t. You nodded docilely.
In bed, you couldn’t shut your eyes for longer than ten seconds in fear that drunk Jimin would stalk in and pin you to the mattress when you weren’t looking. He’d already been drinking, and only God knew what he became when he was drunk.
You wriggled and switched positions infinitely, but sleep never came. Instead just the writhing urge to pee, which you attempted to suppress in fear of the bacteria on the loo, but your bladder was about to burst. You knew you’d never fall to sleep needing to go this bad, so you eventually succumbed and got up to your feet from the bunk.
As you approached the en-suite, the sound of soft moaning resonated. Soft moaning and quiet grunts from behind the door. You could only hear it muffled, so you pressed your ear gently to the wood. It was squelching and slapping and other vulgar noises that vibrated through your eardrums like a coffee mill. You let out an uncomfortable breath.
The scream that pierced through the air was all instinctive. The door had opened to reveal Taehyung holding a woman on the sink with her legs high and parted, and himself situated between them, pounding into her turbulently. Of course, they immediately stopped and began frantically covering themselves as you looked on, frozen.
“Fuckin’- fuckin’- Y/N get the fuck out!” Taehyung roared, but your feet remained planted on the ground, as if vines had wrapped around your legs and held you to the floor, immobile. The pair were fervently picking up the strewn articles of clothing as footsteps approached behind you.
“What- what is-“ Jimin’s voice ceased when he pulled the door back further to see into the bathroom, with Tae and the stranger now relatively covered.
His chuckle rang like poison, “Babygirl, you scared me.”
“She fuckin’ scared us!” Taehyung shrieked, eyes wide and nostrils flared. He looked livid.
Jimin simply laughed again, “She’s a baby, V. Don’t yell.” You wanted to be sick. You thought you might be.
As the two of them sprinted past you and out of the room, Jimin smiled, “I think you need that drink, huh? How ‘bout that?” His voice was mocking and you felt like a child, but you still agreed. You were too shaken to do anything else.
He guided you downstairs to the lounge, with battered blue sofas and a coffee table with a lamp and nothing else, except for the people sat on the floor passing round a joint. He made them move aside so you could sit near the door, and you didn’t want to look at the brunette beside you, guzzling down vodka like water.
“Babygirl, you ever smoked?” Yoongi chuckled from the other side of the room at that, looking darkly amused. Jimin squinted his eyes back, making the diamond tattoo on his cheek crinkle.
“How about a brandy first?” There was a plastic cup on the table which he passed to you, with burnt orange liquid sloshing about inside. He smirked a bit as he ushered it to your lips, and you instinctively held his wrist as he tilted it upwards, pouring a generous gulp into your mouth.
Why did everything burn?
You struggled to swallow it, and as soon as you did you were gagging embarrassingly. The small crowd laughed at your straining, face contorting with disgust. Your grandfather loved a glass of brandy at Christmas, and he always considered it a treat, so you’d expected it to be sweet and warm, as he’d described to you as a child. You thought it tasted like perfume you’d sprayed the wrong way.
“Good girl,” Jimin coaxed the cup back to your lips to make you finish the rest of it as you continued to gag and nearly spit it up. It came as a relief to see the liquid was finished when he pulled it away, entertained as if you were a showcase.
“Babygirl, you really are somethin’, eh?” He smirked, “Now, hows about a smoke?”
He taught you the way to do it. He said: inhale for three, hold for three, then exhale. You still weren’t very good at it, but you felt it this time. You felt the lethargy hit you hard enough that your head began lulling side to side, back and forth uncontrollably as the group fell into laughter at your disorientation.
“There we are,” Jimin cooed, before turning to look at Yoongi with a satisfied grin, “Suga, what do you mean she can’t smoke?”
Yoongi grunted, “It’s all an act. She isn’t a virgin anyway.”
You straightened up your head with significant struggle as Jimin responded, “She isn’t?” He looked you up and down with a frown, as if not being a virgin made you worth less.
“She fucked me yesterday.”
“No I didn’t,” you denied, shaking your head slowly, eyes squinted in your drunken haze.
“Don’t lie, Y/N. Jimin doesn’t like it.”
“I don’t lie.”
“You’re a fuckin’ slut, Y/N. Stop playing the virgin.”
You couldn’t find the anger in you to prevent it, the tears. The fucking endless tears that just streamed from your eyes relentlessly and unstoppably. They were all laughing. All the strangers laughing at you as Jimin frowned and you felt scared; so so scared, and you didn’t want to breathe or be seen, you wanted to hide and cry. You wanted to cry and be away from there.
You left, jaggedly and disturbed.
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