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Not So Happy Holidays (Judah)
Christmas is one of the few days of the year that makes Judah feel warm. There could be a blizzard outside and twelve beers coursing through his dadās veins, but Judahās heart remains thawed. Despite the grief thatās been breathing down his neck since first grade, heās managed to be lucky enough to avoid the seasonal depression that burdens so many people. He knows his mom wouldnāt want him to mourn on her favorite day of the year.
Under the tree in his living room sits a box covered in gold fabric. Itās filled with letters to his mom. Every year, he adds something new. Sometimes itās a collection of the poetry heās written over the year, sometimes itās raw scribblings he bled over on the nights where all he wanted was to cry to his mom.
This year, itās a carefully crafted paper crane. At the start of the year, he began a list of everything he wished he could tell her. When Arlo went on an origami kick over the summer, heād tried to teach Judah. The only thing that worked out for him was a crane, albeit a rather wrinkled one. He spent hours practicing to make this one perfect, and everything he wanted to tell her is tattooed across every inch of the paper.
Tucking it in among the other papers, Judah feels the warmth in his chest blossom. He takes another moment to just look down at the collection before he closes the box and stands.
And, whoa.
His vision tunnels, and he grasps for the doorframe that heās lucky is directly to his right. It takes several long seconds for his eyes to start working again, but his head is still spinning. He feels almostādrunk?
He swore after his last hangover that heād never touch another drink. So far, he hasnāt, so thatās not the problem here. He starts asking himself what could be wrong, but his body gives him an answer before he really wants it. It comes in the form of nausea seeping over him like lava.
Pressing a fist to his lips, he forces himself to swallow against the rising feeling. Itās all so strange. He felt fine a few minutes ago. Right?
He tries to remember the morning and gets the sinking feeling that his love for Christmas has been cloaking a bone-deep exhaustion and lack of appetite all day. Maybe heās reading into it too much, but his head has begun to throb. Or was it already? Itās all a bit much all of a sudden, and he finds himself retreating to his bedroom without a second thought.
He retrieves his phone from the bedside table and pulls up Aunt Joās contact.
When are you guys heading over?
He stares at his phone and waits for the delivered to change to read. The sudden urge to climb into bed and never come back out claws at him, but he knows that would never fly. His dad is right downstairs, and if Judah doesnāt come down before long, heās sure heāll notice. He doesnāt need things going downhill before theyāve even had dinner. Itās not like he doesnāt want to see his granddad or his aunt, the problem is just that he sort of feels like throwing up now, and he doesnāt really want an audience if he can help it.
With that in mind, he trails over to the bathroom and locks the door. Being in such close proximity to the toilet makes him feel even worse. He remembers the last time he got sick, and how long heād spent draped over the murky water praying heād just die.
He needs this one to be quick. With shaking hands, he braces himself on the tank of the toilet and forces a cough. His stomach presses upward uncomfortably, but nothing comes up. Another few coughs certainly takes him close to gagging, but apart from some watery spit, nothing makes it into the toilet.
He straightens up with a quiet, frustrated groan. How is it that his stomach was nearly flying out of him downstairs but wonāt budge in front of a toilet?
His phone buzzes on the countertop beside him. He picks it up. Itās Aunt Jo.
Heading over in a minute, Iāll see you soon!
Heās simultaneously relieved and disappointed. If he just had a few more minutes, he might be able to get whatever wants out out. As it is, heās screwed.
āJudah,ā his father calls from the stairs. Double screwed.
He collects himself just enough to walk out and call out an answer. His head aches with the echo of his own voice.
āThe hell are you doing up there?ā
āForgot my phone, Aunt Jo was texting me. Theyāll be here any minute,ā he answers, trying not to bristle at the tone of his dads voice. He should be used to it by now, really.
āThatās just great. Get your ass down here and finish up in the kitchen.ā
āYes sir,ā he replies, wanting so desperately for things to calm down before they get here.
He only allows himself five more seconds of private misery before starting down the stairs. As he rounds the corner, the smell of the food heād been cooking just earlier suddenly has him lingering close to the sink in case the nausea overwhelms him.
He finally takes the ham out of the oven and makes every effort to avoid looking at it. One spare glance at the mashed potatoes has his stomach churning badly. For a moment, he wants to just give up. He wants to throw up, go to his room, and sleep for the next few weeks.
Instead, he takes the iced tea heād brewed earlier out of the fridge and sets the pitcher on the counter. The effort has his arm aching for no good reason. Thankfully, thatās the last of what he has to do.
āCare to explain why youāre just standing there instead of setting the table?ā His fathers gritty, slightly slurred voice drawls behind him. So much for being done.
āIāll do that now.ā
His father just hums, low and dismissive. Itās clear from both the collection of bottles in the trash and his eyes that heās already downed more than enough alcohol.
Judah gets that the holidays are hard when youāre missing someoneāhe gets that. He also gets that thereās a reason why Granddad stayed with Aunt Jo overnight after he flew instate instead of here. What he doesnāt get is getting piss-drunk every year and acting like youāre not. Itās certainly not convincing.
With a sigh, Judah ignores the way his head is starting to spin, gathers four plates, and places them on the table. He goes back for silverware and napkins, and then he dares to tell himself heās done everything. Thankfully, before his dad can berate him about anything else, thereās a knock at the door. He instantly feels better.
His father beats him to answering the door, and Judah watches the painful exchange of his relatives pretending that theyād missed each other. In reality, Judah really has missed his grandad. After all, heās the closest thing Judah has ever had to a father figure.
He almost feels well as his grandad hugs him. He can smell the same cologne heās used for the last few decades. It reminds him of every last good year of his life. Itās almost hard not to start crying.
But instead, he pulls away, stepping toward his aunt and letting her wrap him up in her arms tightly. He really does almost cry then, tell her how awful he feels, but he somehow manages not to.
They say the same bullshit about how are you and what have you been up to and how are things in Colorado, but Judah starts to tune out. No matter how nice it is to see them again, he can no longer ignore the churning wake in his stomach.
His father gives him a look, and he knows immediately he has to go get the food. They settle in at the table while he goes to retrieve it. When heās brought everything to the table, heās more than happy to sink down into his own chair.
However, heās much less happy about having to load up his plate with food he absolutely doesnāt want. Aunt Jo had brought some casserole and fruit, so he goes mainly for those. He pales at the mere idea of eating ham and buttery mashed potatoes.
āSo, how was school this semester, Jay? Are you excited to graduate next year?ā His aunt asks.
He manages to swallow a mouthful of casserole and wash it down with some tea so itāll hopefully stay down. He wracks his brain to try and think of anything positive to say. In reality, heād barely scraped by in calculus and avoided almost everyone he could. The idea of graduation is exciting, but the idea of college applications makes his stomach churn a little harder.
āYeah, for sure, um. Well, my history teacher took us to that museum downtown, it was pretty cool.ā He clears his throat. Itās thick with nausea. āI had some classes with Arlo, so that was good too.ā
He prays he wonāt have to say anything else. With so much food in front of him and his dadās eyes burning into the side of his head, heās so dizzy he can hardly stand it. Another wave of nausea passes through him then, worse than the last.
āIs that the same boy I met last time?ā Granddad asks before taking a big bite of ham. Judahās stomach gives a violent turn, so he only dares to nod. āMm. He seems like a good kid. Thereās not too many of those anymore.ā
āYeah,ā he breathes. An uneasy chill breaks out across his skin. He wishes Arlo was here.
The fireplace crackles in the silence that follows. Judah chokes down a few more forkfuls of his dinner. Mom wouldāve known how to keep things light.
āYou know, I was thinking maybe you could come see me in the mountains soon, kid. I bet youād really like it.ā
Judah feels a pang of guilt for not having visited in so long, but then again, he hasnāt really been allowed to do much at all. His dad nods, says itās a great idea, but Judah knows thatās a load of horse shit. The second Judah brings it up later, itāll be shot down in a fiery blaze.
āThat would be amazing, Granddad, thank you. Iād love to.ā
Thankfully that sparks some stories about Colorado, and his guestsā attention is mercifully directed away from him. Heās finished over half his plate now, and itās sitting like jagged rocks in his stomach.
If his head werenāt aching so badly, he might have a chance of listening to their conversation, but as it is, heās barely lucid. What shreds of energy he has left are focused on keeping his dinner where it belongs. He breaks out in a cold sweat.
When heās mostly cleared his plate, the ache in his stomach has almost tripled. Heās taking small sips of tea to keep things flowing in the right direction. The gestureās effectiveness is dwindling exponentially.
For a couple minutes, his father disappears from the table with the excuse that heād left a candle burning in the other room. Judah knows that means heās going to go chug another couple of warm beers, but heās smart enough even now to know better than to hint at that.
He tries desperately during that time to look even slightly engaged in the conversation. Nausea pools in the pit of his stomach, blooming toward his throat. Heās freezing, though he can feel the heat radiating from his palm where itās resting on his leg.
His father returns, and Judah doesnāt miss the way he has to grip the table while heās sitting down to keep from swaying. Embarrassment flames hot up the skin of his neck. He takes another sip of tea.
Only this time, he canāt seem to swallow it. He sits there, stone-still, willing his body to obey. It takes several long seconds, and the tea is warmed from saliva when he finally gets it down.
His stomach churns dangerously in response, his body suddenly flushing hot. He feels the blood drain from is face in an instant. He gets the awful sensation of his dinner sloshing up thick toward his throat, and he has to goānow.
āExcuse me,ā he interrupts, pushing away from the table.
āJudah,ā his father says. He ignores it. He knows heāll pay for it later, as if heās not already paying for his own existence now.
By the time heās halfway up the stairs, heās stifling gags against his sleeve. A wash of watery spit flows over his tongue, and he heaves his way through the hallway. His stomach lurches with finality as he passes the threshold of the bathroom. Heās only just made it through the doorway when a good portion of his dinner comes splattering out onto the tile and bathmat.
He locks himself inside the bathroom and prays no one heard him get sick on the floor. His dad would kill him. If this doesnāt kill him, that is.
The second his knees hit the cold tile, heās vomiting again, blushing the clear water below an ugly shade of beige. Heās doing his best to be quiet, but being violently ill isnāt exactly what youād consider a peaceful activityāespecially when the food coming back up hasnāt even had time to digest.
Thereās a brief moment where he stops, thick spit hanging from his mouth. He gets a few seconds to breathe, but then his stomach is churning all over again, and he knows the worsened aching means itās working hard to bring everything else up heās eaten today, too.
Heās begging the universe please not again, but all it sends back a resounding yesāagain.
Some air comes up with a sudden retch, and then he sprays the back of the toilet with the beginnings of round two. Heās sort of surprised no one has come to see what heād hurried away for, but heās more grateful for that than anything. At least his father is maybe distracted.
As he continues to heave uncontrollably, it becomes evident that, yes, heās already throwing up the sandwich and leftover pizza heād eaten for lunch. The nausea ticks back up a few notches at the idea of something sitting so long inside of him and now coming back up with no chance of stopping it.
By the time his stomach ebbs to a gentle churn, heās trembling wildly and so dizzy he could faint, but he has bigger problems. Half of his dinner is still splayed out thick across the floor to his left. He dares to look at the damage and has to whip his head back around to the toilet to be sick again.
He makes sure heās done, and though he doesnāt feel all that much better, itās a comfort to know heās not at risk of emptying his full stomach at the dinner table. The throbbing in his temples has also dulled a little, which heās certainly not complaining about.
He tries to make quick work of mopping up his vomit with toilet paper and spraying the bathroom with his cologne to hopefully mask the sour, sick smell should anyone walk by. He washes his mouth out at the sink and sees that his skin has gone an unnatural yellow-grey. Heās covered in sweat. Thereās no way he can play this off, but heās going to have to try.
His legs shake as he leaves the bathroom, and he attempts to steady them while he goes down the stairs. His stomach gives a hollow moan. The lingering nausea has him swallowing repeatedly as he approaches the table again.
There are three pairs of eyes on him, each laced with varying levels of concern. His father mostly just looks annoyed. Judah tries to pretend like it doesnāt affect him.
He clears his throat. ļæ½ļæ½Sorry, I uhā¦,ā he rasps, raw and sore. āI really needed to make a call.ā
āJude, you look awful, hon. Are you okay?ā
Judah tries to perk up a little at that. Heās sure itās not working.
āOh, yeah, itās just Arlo. His, um, his cat passed away earlier today, and I promised Iād call him before it got too late. He was pretty upset, soā¦that was hard.ā
Judah prays his aunt doesnāt remember that Arloās cat died over a year ago. Thankfully, if she does remember, it doesnāt show.
āOh no, on Christmas morning? Thatās really tough. Iām sorry.ā
āYeah, me too,ā Judah breathes, hoping theyāll just drop it and move onto something else. Death tends to do that.
And it does. Their attention drifts away from him again, and he can relax a little. He spends a few minutes just collecting himself. His eyes are aching along with his stomach and head, longing to shut and stay shut.
He lets them drop for just a few seconds, and when he opens them again, he finds himself looking at the remnants on his plate, which is just about the worst place his eyes couldāve landed. The smell suddenly hits him again, and the memory of being sick along with the sight of everyone still eating what heād just had to violently throw up brings on a nausea he canāt ride out. Suddenly, heat is exploding in the back of his throat, and bitter vomit fills his mouth with a muted gush.
He doesnāt bother excusing himself this time, and heās not going to make it to the bathroom, so he settles for the kitchen sink. He spits it all out, a string of curses repeating over and over in his head. Heās not done.
In hopes of covering the sound and washing out the sink at the same time, he turns on the faucet full blast. His bile-tinged breakfast makes a reappearance all over the stainless steel. His legs are barely holding him up as he curls over the edge of the sink with another heave.
āOh, Judeā¦,ā he hears behind him. Itās Aunt Jo. His heart drops. Heād tried so hard. āI knew you werenāt feeling good.ā
Her hand runs across his back, and he vomits again. His stomach is already so sore, his head spinning. If he doesnāt stop puking soon, heās going to faint.
āAlright, now what the fuck is this,ā his father bites.
āHeās sick, Chris, give him a break,ā Aunt Josie retorts. She never backs down when it comes to him, thank God.
āProbably just wasted. Little piece of shit stole my liquor not even two weeks ago.ā
āOh yeah? Well being drunk doesnāt give you a raging fever like hisāyou would know.ā
At that, Judah retches more violently than he has all night. Heās scared for his aunt, and this argument has his nerves sharp, his insides knotting tighter. He remembers the beating heād received upon his fatherās discovery. He vomits from the very pit of his stomach.
Aunt Jo is still rubbing his back, so his father hadnāt lunged at her immediately. That makes him feel marginally better. He hears footsteps and then a door slam, and the relief of his father being gone is tangible. Still, his vision is blacking out around the edges, and heās feeling so weak that he could collapse.
With one final, choking retch, heās left panting over the drain. Aunt Jo uses the pull-away faucet to wash everything down, and then she brushes back some of the sweat-matted hair from his forehead. He could start sobbing if he werenāt so dehydrated.
āHe okay?ā He hears a deeper voice say. His grandad is standing in the doorway of the kitchen when Judah dares to straighten up. His father really is gone. He hopes he isnāt driving that drunk.
āGot sick to his stomach. I think he has a pretty bad fever,ā she replies.
āMāokay. Really sorry.ā
āDonāt be sorry, Jay. Throwing up is not something you have control over.ā
āShouldāve just stayed in the bathroom,ā he murmurs, whole body aching.
āJude, how many times have you thrown up today?ā
He hums. āOnce earlier. I tried to make it through dinner, but I just started feeling so sick, I didnāt mean to waste all that food,ā he murmurs, the tears that wouldnāt come earlier beginning to well up. āIām sorry.ā
āJudah, itās okay,ā she insists, pulling him in for a hug. Her hand draws over his back.
Granddad comes a little closer. āIām sorry youāre feeling so awful, Judah. Your father has no right treating you the way he does.ā
Judah stays silent at that. The less he talks about it all, the better. Talking about it hasnāt done him any good in twelve years.
āI think I need to lay down,ā he finally murmurs, aching and exhausted.
Wordlessly, Aunt Jo begins to lead him upstairs. His fever comes back with a vengeance, swelling into a thick fog in his head. His body pulses with pain and fatigue. Tears keep slipping down his cheeks without permission.
His mouth feels fuzzy, his limbs full of static. Consciousness leaves him like draining blood. An angry ocean of darkness curls around him.
Whoever came up with the phrase āfever dreamā certainly made it sound too pleasant. Itās more of gut-wrenching nightmares, terrors unimaginable in wakefulness. Heās drowning. Heās drowning, heās drowning, heāsā
Heās looking at Arlo. Chest heaving, hot tears collecting under his chin, he stares at the boy beside him. He must still be dreaming.
āItās okay, Judah, youāre alright. Itās just me,ā he reassures quietly.
āYouāreā¦,ā Judah starts, unable to form any other words. His heart meets his stomach in his throat.
āYeah, itās okay.ā
Heās shaking, drenched in sweat. He can barely remember a thing. Arlo flicks on the lamp beside them and sits carefully on the edge of the bed.
āAre you, um. Do you feel any better?ā
Judah brings a trembling hand up to wipe the tears off his face. The question wakes him up a little. Memories start to trickle back in, hazy and uncomfortable to remember.
All of a sudden, heās feeling every bit as miserable as beforeāprobably worse. With a groan, he rests his head in his hands, the room swaying dangerously under him. His stomach wrenches tightly.
āArloā¦,ā he starts. I donāt feel good. Get me a trash can. Move so I donāt puke on you.
He canāt get the words out.
āYeah?ā
His stomach pitches, floods full. Spit gathers warm under his tongue. He shuts his eyes tightly and feels a drawn-out rush of liquid pass his lips and cascade down his shirt into his lap.
āOh shit,ā Arlo blurts, and Judahās pretty sure thatās the first time heās ever heard him curse. Heāll tease him about it later. As of now, heās a little occupied with violently emptying his stomach.
Thankfully, Arlo retrieves the trash can and gets it back to him before he has to be sick again. The smell and the feeling of puke soaking through to his legs sends his stomach reeling worse. Heās buried in the trash can, splattering his insides all over it, over and over.
If heās not imagining it, Arloās hand is carefully brushing across his back. If this is a dream, itās much less awful than the ones he was having before. Heād take puking over drowning any day.
As the fog begins to clear from his mind and his stomach stops lurching, he begins to think maybe itās not a dream at all. He ignores his embarrassment for now and wipes a sleeve across his mouth. Itās going to have to be washed, anyway.
āWhat,ā he barely manages, swallowing. āWhat are you doing here?ā
Arlo shifts his weight, blinks. āYour aunt called me. Um. She said you were getting really upset and sick and kept asking for me.ā
Judah frowns. He searches for the memory, even a trace, but he canāt remember that at all. Then again, he barely remembers the walk to his room, let alone anything after.
āOh.ā
āYeah. And uh, she said sheās sorry to hear my cat died?ā
That he does remember. His cheeks flush hot. There isnāt really a solid, logical explanation for that one.
āI needed an excuse for bailing from the table to go puke, soā¦I just couldnāt think of anything else to say. Iām sorry.ā
āOh, itās okay. I figured maybe it was a fever thing.ā
Judah shakes his head. Silence grows thick. Heās heavy with illness.
āIām really sorry youāre so sick, Jude.ā
āItās okay, I feel a little betterā¦,ā he replies, unsure if heās really telling the truth or not. āThank you for coming. I wanted to see you, but not exactly like this.ā
āI knew I couldnāt just stay home knowing you were feeling so bad. Besides, I still owe you for that night at my house,ā Arlo replies, his own face growing crimson.
āWellā¦thank you,ā he quietly repeats.
āYouāre welcome. Um. Let me help you with this.ā
Judah goes to refuse, but then he realizes just how much of a mess he made and how little energy he has to do something about it. So, silently, he allows Arlo to take the trash can, pull back the blankets, and carefully take his shirt off.
āI should showerā¦,ā he murmurs, feeling much too exhausted to even think about moving.
āYeah. Do you need help getting there, or like, clean clothes or something?ā
Judah nods, eyes falling shut. He lets them linger there for a long moment. He feels Arloās tentative hand on his bare back, and he opens them.
āHere,ā he encourages, slowly helping Judah out of bed.
They cross the room just as slow, finally making it to the bathroom. Judah sits on the toilet lid with a groan. Arlo turns the water on.
āWhat clothes do you want?ā
Judah shrugs just barely. āAnything.ā
āOkay. Youāre not gonna pass out or anything right?ā
āProbably not.ā
Itās not a super comforting answer, but Arlo only lingers a bit before retreating to the bedroom. He returns with a t-shirt, some boxers, and some sweatpants. Judah thanks him, and he leaves again.
Judah is alone in the bathroom then, steam beginning to fill the air. He canāt find it in himself to get up for several minutes. When he does, his vision turns to static, and he grips the countertop beside him. The room spins.
He turns quickly toward the toilet, lifting the lid and gagging up a few streams of bile and stomach acid. When he feels finished, he undresses and steps into the shower, immediately sinking to sit in the tub. He hugs his stomach, letting the water just fall on him.
It feels really nice. Heās not freezing for the first time in a long time, and his headache almost retreats entirely. There, under the steady water, he suddenly remembers his father.
Surely he isnāt back home or Arlo wouldnāt be here so late. The thought of him still being out there makes his stomach twist with anxiety, and yet, he feels like he can finally breathe. Itās a feeling heās never quite been able to shake when his dad is out somewhere drunk with no contact.
He leans forward and throws up a little. Heās too sore to really retch, so whatever watery nothing comes up is weak and comes out all on its own. He wonders briefly if heāll ever stop puking.
He stays in the shower until the water starts to run cold and make him dizzy again. It takes more effort than heās willing to admit to climb out of the shower and dry off. He dresses slowly and realizes heād forgotten to flush the toilet.
He does, then washes his mouth out. The last thing he needs is to wake up with his mouth tasting like puke again. With the reminder that Arlo is probably still out there, he musters up the energy to leave the room.
His bed has been stripped, and Arlo is sitting in the chair by the window, looking down at a book Judah has never picked up from his own bookshelf. When he walks in, Arlo looks up.
āHey. How do you feel?ā
Judah shrugs. āLittle better. Threw up a couple more times.ā
āSorry.ā
āSāokay.ā
Arlo closes the book and sets it down. Judah stands there, wet hair clinging to his forehead. He shivers.
āSo um. I told your aunt what happened and she went to wash everything. She brought you some medicine and stuff.ā
Judah looks at the beside table and sees a fresh trash can, water, pills, and some crackers. His stomach rolls uncertainly.
āOh. I donāt know if Iāll be able to keep them down.ā
āYeah, I told her you probably wouldnāt be up for it, but itās there if you want.ā
Judah nods, then promptly heads for his empty mattress and collapses down on top of it. He curls onto his side with a sigh. Arlo is looking at him quietly. Judah finds it in him to smile.
The room has gone dark now, only illuminated by the orange light of his small lamp. Arlo smiles back at him.
āYou donāt have to stay. Youāve seen your fair share of me puking.ā
āI know I donāt have to stay.ā
Judah hums, exhaustion overtaking him. He feels safe. Itās the first night in weeks that heās not afraid to shut his eyes.
āArlo.ā
āYeah, do you feel sick?ā
āMāokayā¦tell me about your Christmas,ā he murmurs.
As Arlo laughs a little and begins to talk, the world around Judah warms. He hums again, tries to listen. Something inside him gives a gentle pull, and sleep takes him before the minute is up.
āāāāāāāāāāāā
Authorās note:
Hello everyone! Sorry for the giant absence, I havenāt been feeling very uhā¦inspired? I love Judah, and so do some of you guys, so I thought Iād bring him back. It felt nice to know him again! Let me know what you think and I hope you all have a wonderful week!
#sickfic#emeto tw#sickie#emetocommunity#emetophilia#vomit tw#stomachflu#stomach ache#hurt/comfort#sickfic writer#sickboys
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Erm....cringe alert AGAIN
more fake trainspotting tweet EL OH EL because it's so barren on the TS fandom that I saw tumbleweed
(also someone wanted to be tagged when I made a new one so here goes š @sparrowluvr )
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if i had a penny for each time i got obsessed with a film where a guy named simon lays on the grass with their "friend", and are about to commit a crime... id have two pennies, which isnt a lot but it's weird that it happened twice
#by āfriendsā i actually mean lovers#these films have the same vibe in a weird way#trainspotting#dinner in america#sickrent#mark renton#simon williamson#sickboy#patty dia#simon dia
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Art fight attacks 4 friendz šļøāļøšŖ½
#body horror#angelcore#devilcore#zheani#deftones#anthro#furry#furry art#art fight#team werewolves#art fight 2023#edgy art#vent art#gel pen art#posca art#weirdcore#sickboy#menhera kei#mallgoth#gothcore
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.Trainspotting (1996) + T2 Trainspotting (2017).
[Song: How to Disappear Completely - Radiohead]
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i'm watching t2 trainspotting and they really wanted us to believe that begbie was also a childhood friend of mark and simon. who was in their class in primary school. by using "oh he was just held back" as a reason for why he's so visibly older. held back....by ten years??
#trainspotting#t2 trainspotting#mark renton#rentboy#sickboy trainspotting#simon Williamson#franco begbie#begbie#flashback to 5 year old renton learning his abcs with 15 year old franco#this just adds to the chaos of trainspotting tbh lets not question it
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Stay With Me (WIP) | Excerpt
It was 15:00, Mark was doing the dishes that Simon forgot about, grumbling angrily to himself in the empty flat.Ā
- If he wasnae gonnae come home the least he could dae is the fookinā dishes āe left. āS bad enough Ahām standinā āere āay fookinā 15:00 daeinā the dishes while āes oot gettinā āis dick wet. Like Ah dun have needs. Fookinā prick.Ā
He heard the fumbling of someone trying to unlock the door but didnāt turn around, instead he focused on the dishes. The door opens and he can hear someone walking in, but continues to ignore it. The footsteps come closer, still Renton doesn't turn his head or acknowledge the man at all. The footsteps stopped a bit closer than Mark expected but he still kept his eyes on the sink. He could feel breath on the back of his neck, he could tell Simon was standing to the right because of how his breath was hitting the back of Markās neck. Mark scrubs harder.
Renton stops when he can feel Simonās hands on his shoulders, but he doesnāt look. He closed his eyes. Simonās hands snake their way down to his waist and rest there. Mark grips the sink firmly, his eyes still closed as he takes a deep breath.Ā
āDonāt.ā
Simon ignores him, his hands slipping beneath his waistband and resting on his hips.Ā
āSimon.ā Mark says tightly, āNot tonight.ā
Mark takes Simonās hands in his own to stop the touch
āNot-... Not when you smell like her.ā Mark couldnāt look at his so-called ābest mateā
The words felt like a slap across the face, but Simon knew he deserved it.
āRents-ā
Mark covered his face and turned away
āI cannae right now.ā
Simon could tell by the way he spoke that he was beginning to cry.
āMark.ā the blond attempted to rest his hand on Markās shoulder, but the redhead walked away into his room,Ā
āIām sorry.ā He muttered, before shutting the door.
Simon slept on the couch that night, he got shtifaced and passed out, because he felt like shit for making Mark cry. He was an asshole, but he didnāt like making Mark cry, at least not when they were having this agreement. He woke up dazed and confused, it was still dark, it didnāt seem to be morning at all. Simon felt weight on him, when his eyes adjusted he saw Mark. The redhead was straddling him, his face was flushed and his eyes looked a bit off.Ā
āYe awright, kin?ā
Renton looked away coyly, grinning a bit but looking nervous
āAh didnae mean tae-ā he hiccups, ātae wake yewww.ā
Simon can smell the vodka on his breath, but more importantly, he could feel Mark pressing against his cock.Ā
The blond doesnāt challenge Mark, he doesnāt question him, instead he allows the pleasure to consume him. The redhead was grinding on him, both of them in a state of drunken ecstasy; their hearts were racing, almost in time with the other and their breathing going ragged. Simon grabs onto Rentonās hips, his head thrown back as he groans - if Si had to keep his cock contained any longer his erection would surely burst the button on his pants.Ā
āFuckinā hell, Mark, gis us a ride, ye tease.ā Simon groaned
āYis want me tae sit on it?ā Renton raised a brow, āSay Ahām yer favorite.ā
Simon grabbed Markās chin with one hand, his thumb lightly tracing Markās bottom lip, his eyes met Markās and they hold a dark intensity to them that made Mark feverish.Ā
āYouāre my favorite.ā
#sickrent#sickboy#simon williamson#rentboy#ewan mcgregor#sick boy#simon david williamson#mark renton#trainspotting#wip#ao3#ao3 writer#ao3 fanfic#fanfic#fanficition
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Spud <3
#trainspotting#ewan mcgregor#spud#sickboy#begbie#mark renton#chooselife#90s fashion#britpop#scotland#born slippy#grunge#90s aesthetic
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Inktober 2024 - day five ''binoculars''.
Trainspotting - Sickboyās Philosophy of Life scene.
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The song referenced is āSunshine on Leithā By The Proclaimers
Recently T2 Trainspotting has been my biggest obsession! And since i also like The Proclaimers i was like āyeah this definitely needs to be a drawing ā so I made this between breaks because you knowāschool takes a lot of my time nowadays with 12th grade.
But also, Idk why i like it so much! I picked the movie because Ewan Mcgregor was in it but ended up being captivated by the aesthetics and characters, the gritty and brutal 2010s vibes too. Overall, it also reminded me of The Punisher. Also because of the psychological aspect of it and dark humour. Idk what to say, this was truly a peak movie. 10/10 and I really donāt give off good grades when it comes to movies because iām very picky. But there is something so human about it and so flawed, violent yet beautiful about it. I canāt reccomend it enough.
#t2 trainspotting#trainspotting#trainspotting fanart#mark renton#simon sickboy#sickboy#sickrent#sickrent if you squint lol#trainspotting 2 fanart#art#digital art#my art#digital illustration#artwork#fanart#The proclaimers
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Sick Boy (Trainspotting) by Scarlet Spider
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Currently Reading/Almost finished
Dead Menās Trousers by Irvine Welsh
This is the fifth and final novel in the Trainspotting series
#booklr#currently reading#dead menās trousers#irvine welsh#trainspotting#mark renton#sickboy#francis begbie#spud
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CRINGE ALERT!!
Fake Trainspotting tweets because I crave more content than what is being made
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MACHO
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sickboy 1996
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