#somehow it all looked even worse in color so a simple flat it is
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i dont remember who but someone asked me if Jellie and owl Grian hunt together and the answer is no. They would however compete for the prey
#they also could have a relationship similar to the one my cats have#where one hunts just to hunt and the other plays/eats the prey later#which is a bit gross but its funny#artwork#desert duo#goodtimeswithscar#grian#no idea what scar skin that is btw it was meant to be s8 but the chair is s9 elf one#hermitcraft#rip scars clothes. holes from cat claws and owl talons#oh speaking of the wheelchair please forgive me. it looks bad i tried and i failed again#somehow it all looked even worse in color so a simple flat it is
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Diary of a Junebug
When life disappoints you, lose yourself in an aquarium to remind yourself that the world isn't such a bad place
Aquariums can be nice to look at, especially when you want something simple that still gives you a much needed change of scenery. I havenât been to one since I was young and probably not able to really appreciate them the same way grown adult me would. I mean, itâs nothing groundbreaking, just really cool to look at, and thatâs good enough for me. Thereâs nothing wrong with appreciating something just because it looks nice and not something youâd see every day - I guess thatâs the main appeal of aquariums.
For me, I think the main appeal is just seeing all the different creatures, the colors, and just watching them swim around. It may not look like much, but I find it kinda fun. In a childâs imagination, an aquarium is like another world, and I was that kid who imagined herself living in there. Funny to think that as an adult, I sometimes find myself doing the same and itâs just as fun.
This trip was kinda something we put together last minute, which seems to be the thing when I meet up with the Epiphany. Simply put, we needed something that was chill while somewhat engaging enough to get ourselves out of a rut and take our mind off things. Iâd say the aquarium did its job.
Iâve been feeling out of whack after spending a week stuck in bed knocked out by a virus. It started with a cold that made me use my inhaler more than usual, which is not a good sign. After a few days, I went to see a doctor, who told me that I wasnât having an exacerbation, so thatâs a relief. However, because I have asthma, they prescribed me an antiviral to reduce the risk of complications. Had it not for that, then itâs just the usual bed rest and drink lots of fluids.
By the time I saw the doctor, some of my symptoms had resolved itself, aside from the coughing and occasional shortness of breath. The medicine, on the other hand, thatâs what really knocked me out. They warned me about the side effects and how that should not keep me from taking it. Yeah, it was bad, but I pulled through. I figured that I was better off feeling terrible now than pay for it later if, worst case scenario, I wind up in the hospital. Sometimes you just have to drag yourself through it.
One side effect I noticed right away was the persistent bitter taste in my mouth that made a lot of things taste bad, like water. Then came the upset stomach, which made matters worse. Tea helped for a bit, but when that became too bitter I put together a drink that was basically honey, hot water, and oat milk and lived off that. I was told to try to stay hydrated, which I think really helped a lot when I was unable to eat, bit it wasnât easy.
Ugh, that was awful, though nothing compared to the headaches that came on later. That, and the brain fog in general from being sick just killed me. I tried taking something for the headaches, but that didnât help, so I tried to sleep through it. As someone who is somehow incapable of taking naps, that was kinda tricky even though I was exhausted, though I managed to get a tiny bit of sleep here and there.
So I was basically flat out on my back for a week because of that damn medicine. But so did many other people who took it and made a full recovery. Iâm not 100% yet, but I feel a lot better, so thereâs that. Yeah, I can see why some people stop taking it after a couple days, but thatâs not a good thing. Well, at least the ordealâs over. Getting sick is not fun at all.
On the bright side, I managed to make some good progress on some of my knits before the brain fog and exhaustion overtook me. First was my basic raglan cardigan, which Iâve been putting on the backburner to focus on finishing my kompeito cardi, which came out amazing. Iâve managed to get one wear out of my kompeito - or confetti, as my family calls it - before getting sick and got a lot of compliments about it. After having mixed feelings about my cabled cardigan thatâs a size too small, Iâm glad to have another finished project that I feel really proud of.
As for the basic raglan, I finished one sleeve and got started on the other one. I figured that since I had one done already, why not just start the other one? Hopefully thatâll sort of combat second sleeve syndrome, as well as give me a better idea of how long I want the body to be. I think on the picture it looks kinda cropped, and Iâm not sure if I want that. At least I know for sure that I have plenty of yarn to add extra length - maybe an inch at the most. At least with the body itâs just mindless stockinette, which Iâll save for days when I want to turn my brain off and just knit.
My main WIP is the long awaited and hyped Blissful Cardigan. Itâs a saddle shoulder v-neck cardigan thatâs really popular and has been on my to-knit list for a long time. Iâve never done saddle shoulder before, which is one reason why I kept putting it off. Along with trying out a different construction, itâs also my first venture into mohair. So far, Iâve been liking the result, though sometimes I have to be careful to make sure Iâm holding both yarns together since itâs easy to accidentally miss the mohair, especially if Iâm knitting somewhere thatâs kinda dark.
Knitting with two yarns held together isnât a huge learning curve, my main concern was not knowing how Iâd like the mohair. The brand for both the yarns are very popular - for good reason - and Iâm glad to say that it is not scratchy at all. I actually have no idea what my sensitivity level to wool is, but since I donât like high necks like turtlenecks, Iâm assuming that I wouldnât do well with yarn thatâs really scratchy.
Iâm only on the sleeve increases part of the yoke, which thankfully doesnât require as much math as the first part of the yoke since you just knit even on the purl side. The first part, the set up, has you doing increases on the purl side, something I donât do often, and Iâm still eeeh on make 1 right purls. Theyâre just so fiddly to work with, but Iâll deal.
I like that the yoke is engaging and that the pattern has clearly written out the rows for each size in a separate chart so you can keep track of everything. I find that Iâm not a fan of at the same time instructions because itâs easy to get lost and mess up your numbers, so thatâs a plus for me with this pattern. Also, itâs fun learning a new construction and seeing how it all comes together.
Then comes my third WIP, which will have to take top priority since itâs a gift knit. Itâs a the Hibernate v-neck pullover for my mom, something she always wanted in her wardrobe. I had her feel the mohair and merino combination of my Blissful before settling on the same yarns and she liked it too, saying that she wanted something kinda fancy. Mohair really does add a level of luxury to knits and now Iâm afraid of falling into a potentially dangerous rabbit hole. Of course, I wanted one of my own, and there happened to be a big sale, so I got the yarns for both of us.
The base color my mom chose was unicorn purple, a soft and pretty light purple, paired with marzipan, a very light grayish beige. Itâs cool to see how using a different color mohair adds something to the merino without looking too marled. For my own sweater - which I wonât be working on for a while - I went for marzipan as my merino base and cream for my mohair because I could use more neutrals in my wardrobe.
Since my mom is a size smaller than me, I hope that Iâll get it done a bit faster. Iâm at the beginning of the yoke, which is a compound raglan. The first part of the yoke, like the Blissful, involves raglan increases on the purl side. Thankfully, there wasnât as much of that and it looks like all the purls will be knit even rows from now on. Like with the Blissful, the Hibernate also puts detailed charts for the raglan increases. Stuff like that takes a lot of time and effort to add, so I really appreciate both designers doing that.
And like me, the Epiphany also got sick and were knocked out by the same virus and medicine. Laufey got hit first, followed by Jewel, then Fionna, Jiangyi. Meiying, Landry, and Hongxia. Yang and Della only managed to avoid it because they were out - more on that later.
Since Meiying, Jewel, and Fionna were also in the high risk category of developing serious complications, they were also given the medicine, which they all complained about too. Well, misery loves company, so at least we were able to let off some steam complaining in our group chat about the side effects, especially about that persistent bitter taste. Again, better off to feel like shit now and have that go away than have it bite us back in the ass later. At least we all know now that the medicine did work or else we wouldnât be up to going out today.
While everyone was sick, Della was summoned back home for what will probably the last time. After the dissolution of the Eagle Stellarons, things have been going downhill over there. The political instability has gone bad to worse with the possibility of war down the line as the former Stellarons are willing to destroy everything just to maintain their status. Yikes, this is why people like Della are willing to put their lives on the line to stop them from abusing their power.
Knocking down a corrupt and powerful faction will always have devastating consequences, sort of a last resort kind of thing when all other possibilities of reform is just impossible. Yang said although the Stellarons act like they rose from a noble cause, the truth is that they have always been self-serving from the very start. In other words, under their rule, if you have money and status, you can get away with anything while the common folk have to pay the price for your whims.
Some individuals, like Della, are in a difficult position because of their families. Thereâs this inside joke about the members of the Epiphany surviving at least 30 attempts on their lives - 30 being a super low estimate on purpose considering that most people wouldnât even have 5 murder attempts in their lifetime. Thanks to her father, Della sidestepped at least 15 assassination attempts this year. She said if it wasnât so fucking serious, it would actually be funny in an incompetent way.
Like, seriously, who do these people think they are? This guyâs daughter rightfully criticizes the government and he brings out the snipers because he wonât accept that heâs complicit in many crimes. Della always had a difficult relationship with him, especially after he made it clear that he would rather have her dead than accept that she was struggling with severe mental health issues. When he found out that she was gonna testify, he flat out said in court that he was gonna get her killed. Still, some people chose to ignore that, even after the murder attempts began. Not surprisingly, they would say that she brought it on herself - anything to excuse the former Stellarons of any wrongdoing even though theyâre boldly committing crimes in broad daylight for all to see.
Sheâs long accepted that her fatherâs a lost cause, and his failed attempts at assassination makes him more of a joke than a serious threat. Seriously, how desperate can someone get? To think this ultra powerful commander is soooo threatened by his daughter because sheâs willing to call him out on his bullshit that he doesnât hide the fact that heâs trying to put a bullet in her head. Despite the real danger he poses on her life, Della sees him as nothing but a pathetic coward who throws a temper tantrum when things donât go his way.
Her mother, on the other hand, is her main source of disappointment. Yang was hoping that sheâd stay true to her word and commit to the fight the whole way. However, she, like many of her colleagues, ended up backing out once shit really hit the fan. Just as he feared, a lot of them cared more about protecting their standing with the former Stellarons than looking out for the civilians whose lives are now in upheaval due to the growing instability. Damn, that is a letdown, especially after so many of them preached about how important it is to look out for the common folk.
Yang says the most frustrating thing about Clio is how she seems to only care about the issues when itâs convenient for her. The main reason why she finally decided to testify against the Stellarons was because she feared for her daughterâs life. She knew that if Della stuck with the Stellarons, there was no doubt that she was going to be killed, and she did not want that for her daughter, who she felt deserved so much better. But when it came to doing the actual dirty work, meaning putting her former subordinates on the spot and publicly denouncing them while doing everything in her power to undo the damage they did, she suddenly decided that she would rather stay in their good graces than become their next target of ire.
While Yang says thereâs no doubt that Clio values Dellaâs life, once she realized what she will lose by turning against the Stellarons - prestige, influence, respect, all that good stuff that comes from being a commander - she was unable to let go, to accept that the things she fought for are no longer hers. And Dellaâs not the only one disappointed in her, so are the civilians who thought Clio was by their side, which makes it worse. To fill their hearts with empty promises that will never be followed through, to deceive those close to you into believing that theyâll always be by your side when you need them - nothing is more cruel than dangling hope on a thin thread just out of reach, only to snip it away moments before you can catch it.
And on top of that, Dellaâs citizenship has finally been revoked, something she knew was gonna happen eventually. She was actually surprised that it took them that long to finally get around to doing so. Like Sara, Della has long severed her ties with her homeland once shit started going down, and she has no desire to return, if ever. While sheâs cautiously optimistic that the people will rise up against the former Stellarons, thereâs just too many painful memories for her over there. In the few times sheâs returned since traveling with the Epiphany, so much has changed because of the ongoing tension that it was no longer the place she remembered.
It sounds like a lot, but Della says sheâs kinda over it. She still hopes to help the civilians any way she can, especially with rumors of war looming on the horizon. She hopes it doesnât go down that route, though situations like these are always unpredictable. Yang reassures her to put her faith in the people, to listen to their voices, and support them when they need it - thatâs what it means to be an ally. Sheâs done her part, now she just needs to keep her word and follow through on what she says, even if it means making her an enemy of her former colleagues. That was a price she was well aware of paying when she stepped up in court and she will never forget that.
I admire her for staying true to her word. I canât imagine it being easy in her position, risking everything to ensure that other people will have a future to look forward to. Admitting that you were wrong for being a member of a faction that served to oppress and control the general population, playing a major role in spreading their lies and turning a blind eye to the injustice around you. To open your eyes to the world around you and being brave enough to say, âThis is unacceptable, I need to do something about it.â She didnât do all of this to become a hero, she did it because she needed to do the right thing.
After the week weâve all had, going to the aquarium was the perfect remedy to clear our minds. Sometimes you just need to lose yourself to fish swimming in the water, maybe even imagine yourself as one of them. It wonât solve your problems, but itâs nice to have a bit of an escape to help you break out of a rut before running back into the swing of things.
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Allison Chapter Eleven
(Disclaimer: The Song the Fortune Teller sings is Rabbit hole by AViVA and some words have been replaced to fit the story better. I in no way own the song or anything.)
Just follow the pink mushrooms.
Simple enough. Allison had followed the Twiddle Sisters instructions and started for the south side of the small town of Enchanted Vil. but now she was very much worried. The Queen was after her? How many people knew that? Was there other people searching for her or guards? Was she being watched right now by someone? Was she even safe? Did anyone know the 'human' was her?...Well other than the sisters and Marsh and Hatter, but she had a feeling they wouldn't tell anyone. Hatter and Marsh lived way to far from the castle it seemed, wherever the castle was, and it sounded like the sisters would rather NOT associate with the Queen or anyone who knows her by the sound of them. She tried not to look suspiciously at all as she headed south of the small village and the houses started to become fewer and fewer. And the people and magical beings started to also become fewer, from the large town square to just a few people here and there as she walked by. She kept looking back over her shoulder every few seconds to make sure no one was following her and as to not seem suspicious, she pretended to be looking back up at the sky that was slowly changing in colors again from that light blue sun-less day to the silent night. With the way she was going there wasn't any cobblestone roads beyond the last few houses who hugged the edge of the tree line where the think woods started up again. She didn't like the thought of trudging through tall grass with her stockings getting wet from dew again, but the thought of someone capturing her was far worse. So with one last look behind her, there wasn't anyone there thankfully, she squeezed between two wooden small homes and popped out the other side heading deeper into the unknown forest again. Now what did they say? Glowing pink mushrooms? She could barely see her own hand let alone the ground. What if she ran into a wild animal like a bear or a snake? Her grip on the umbrella became even tighter at the thought of that and gulped. Looking around even faster searching for any pink glowing things as she stepped along the dark forest-
"WA- OOF!!"
Tripping over a small log, she fell flat onto her stomach, thankfully not letting go of the umbrella. But she groaned before slowly lifting her head up. She really hated not having any light, but luckily this pink nightlight was here to help her see-.....PINK NIGHTLIGHT!! She blew the hair out of her face and shook her head, shooting up to her feet and staring down to where she fell...and smiled. THERE WAS A GLOWING PINK MUSHROOM!! And another one was a few feet away from it followed by another and another, and another until there was a trail of glowing pink fungi going off deeper in the middle of the woods. She didn't hesitate to start following them at a brisk pace with a smile on her face. Deeper and deeper into the woods she went, and darker and darker it got. She wasn't sure how long she had been at this but this world's strange moon was climbing higher and higher into the skin at least showing it had been half the night. She was starting to get tired and yawned every few minutes. Her body started moving slower and she was starting to feel sore again from all the walking she's done for the last few days, but didn't stop even first her vision was starting to become misty....Wait a second. That wasn't her vision she blinked more and found her self suddenly surrounded by fog...Whitish purple fog. ...She blinked and swiveled her head around and around again. No signs of glowing pink mushrooms, or any other light source. It wasn't as dark anymore but now...Somehow she had gotten lost in her sleepy state. Great! Just what she needed. The slight panic set in and- She yelped and whirled behind her and came face to face with a white mushroom that came up to about her shoulders. ...Mushrooms. Didn't the sisters say that the Fortune Teller was rumored to live in the Misty Mushroom valley...or whatever this place was called? Somewhere with fog and mushrooms. Allison blinked yet again and looked around gripping that umbrella of hers. Well..This was the place. Now the big question was, which way to go now? There wasn't anymore glowing things and every direction looked the same....Well she came this far, she turned in the direction she had originally been walking and kept going straight. Even if she didn't find this Fortune Teller she'd at least eventually get out of this misty maze one way or another. So she started walking forward.
Deeper and deeper into this misty valley she traveled without any lights, or sounds, or any sense of direction. Where the world was she heading? And how long had she been at this? More yawns came through as she walked along passing mushrooms and getting more and more tired by the second. Until a deep rumble of a chuckle sounded out- She jumped with a small gasp and whirled behind her brandishing her umbrella like a sword ready to hit someone over the head with it...But no one was there. Still on edge her head swirled around her in all directions keeping her eyes out for anyone...but there was still no one there....Maybe her tired mind was playing tricks on her.
"Rabbit hole!~," that same deep voice sung out and two more verses of 'rabbit hole' echoed around her making her jump more and look around wildly. Where was that voice coming from? "I could say I help you.~ I could say I aid you.~ But underneath all I plan to do, to do is lead you.~ You could make a breakthrough.~ Watching others wait til I lead you and they can initiate you.~ No one understands me.~ Too scared to command me.~ Walking through an empty wonderworld of others dancing.~" She blinked and looked behind her. The main noise of the voice came from that direction. "No one understands me.~ Too scared to command me.~ Walking through an empty wonderworld of others dancing.~"
Like all the other people she's heard sing so far this man, she assumed it was male by the tone of the voice, was pretty smooth but unlike Chesire's this voice was deeper and had a serious underline to it despite that cheerful singing. Could it be-....She blinked. And began to slowly walk towards the source of the loud voice.
"I'll lead you into my home.~ You'll be deep in your thoughts.~ Fall inside the rabbithole again!~....I'll lead you into my home.~ You'll be deep in your thoughts.~ Fall inside the rabbithole again!~" The voice suddenly boomed out- "RABBITHOLE!!~" Again two echoes of 'rabbithole' sounded back as she slowly walked catiously to it. "Rabbithole again!~ Rabbithole!!~" More echoes. "Rabbithole again!! RABBITHOLE!!" Again more echoes. "Rabbitholes again.~"
Allison made sure to keep her umbrella in a 'ready to swing at anything' position as she ever so slowly approached the loud voice. She wasn't taking any chances with this new voice, especially after learning their was a queen after her behind.
"I won't wait to help you.~ I will not forsake you.~ I'll wait as long, as long as it takes you.~ You will say you need me.~ Say you don't beleive me.~ You can try but you will never, never, never doubt me.~ No one understands me.~ Too scared to command me.~ Walking through an empty wonderworld of others dancing.~ No one understands me.~ Too scared to command me.~ Walking through an empty wonderworld of others dancing.~.....I'M to late to be left alone.~ To bad to say I don't know.~ Too late to turn back time.~ ....NOW FALL INSIDE THE-"
She yelped at the sudden loud change in the voice and she guessed her startled yelp must've made the voice cool it as she looked around frantically again.....Before sucking in and letting out a deep breath. Before continueing towards it again.
"I'll lead you into my home.~ You'll be deep in your thoughts.~ Fall inside the rabbithole again!~....I'll lead you into my home.~ You'll be deep in your thoughts.~ Fall inside the rabbithole again!~" The voice suddenly boomed out- "RABBITHOLE!!~" Again two echoes of 'rabbithole' sounded back as the voice repeated the verses again. "Rabbithole again!~ Rabbithole!!~" More echoes. "Rabbithole again!! RABBITHOLE!!" Again more echoes. "Rabbitholes again.~"
She was starting to wonder what was up with all these strange characters singing so much to random people?...Not that she was in any place to judge. She couldn't sing to save her life.....But OH. How she would have to soon as she would later find out.
"I have been waiting, You.~ I have always been waiting.~ I will always help you out.~ 'Cause you cannot escape here.~" ....She froze....How did that thing know she-...."I have been waiting, You.~ I have always been waiting.~ I will always help you out.~ 'Cause you cannot escape here.~......I'll lead you into my home.~" The voice boomed out even louder and it sounded SO close. "You'll be deep in your thoughts.~ Fall inside the rabbithole again!~....I'll lead you into my home.~ You'll be deep in your thoughts.~ Fall inside the rabbithole again!~"
She looked around wildly for the source of that noise, how was it able to know she was lost in here?!
"RABBITHOLE!!~" Again two echoes of 'rabbithole' sounded back as the voice repeated the verses again. "Rabbithole again!~ Rabbithole!!~" More echoes. "Rabbithole again!! RABBITHOLE!!" Again more echoes. "Rabbitholes again.~.......I have been waiting, You.~ I have always been waiting.~ I will always help you out.~ 'Cause you cannot escape here.~"
Allison still looked around. Even as the voice echoed out and faded away and she wondered if it left for a moment. ...
"Hello, Human.~'' She jumped and looked around wildly for the source of the voice, but still didn't see anyone there. "I've been expecting you. My sticks fortold your arrival. Though I wasn't expecting you so soon."
...Sticks? What? She shook her head and kept looking around holding that umbrella out. "I-I'm n-not looking for trouble!" Her voice stuttered out and she wished it didn't. "I-I'm just looking for someone called the F-F-Fortune Teller."
"And you found me."
She froze. "....Are YOU the fortune teller guy?"
"Correct. Now if you would please turn around."
.....Confused, Allison did so and stopped. Her eyes widening as her hair blew around from the magical blast. Like magic, the mist parted in a tunnel and on the other side of the tunnel was the entrance to a cave. Allison just stood there stunned and amazed at the entire thing as another deep chuckle picked up. A dull pink light lit up from inside the cave.
"Oh human so small and meak.~ You have permission to come inside and take a peek.~" The light flickered on and off with the deep voice as it chuckled again as she still stood there staring. "That means you can come in. To see me that lies within."
That was permission for her to enter, and she did after a few long moments of standing there suspiciously, as she slowly walked the tunnel began to close behind her as Allison got closer and closer to the cave and the light within it. As soon as she stepped within the entrance the tunnel of mist sealed up back behind her and she looked behind her in surprise,...before continuing to walk into the cave deeper and deeper as the light grew and grew. Oh so now there's light. the light came from mushrooms that shown brightly as she walked along and didn't stop until she was at the very end of the cave entrance. ..And stared wide eyed. The light she saw before came from a crystal ball sat upon a small table, and ontop of the table was a dark pink table cloth. Beside the table on either side of it was matching giant chairs obviously tailored to his much bigger size, matching the colors of the tablecloth perfectly. Hanging from the ceiling was tiny bottles filled with who knows what. Some of the labels red: Tongue of Griffen, Tooth of Wolf, Unicorn Horn Dust, some unlabeled glowing liquids, etc. Father towards the other side of the home was just a somple plain giant bed and a little ways from that was a giant shelf of empty jars waiting to be filled, and a cauldron over an unlit fire pile. Other than all that, the cave was very ordinary and empty. A. GIANT. MOTH!! Was sitting there at the table staring at her with a smile. Two of his hands holding a glowing white ball and A third holding some kind of smoke pipe, as his free hand held his head. The air had a very sickening sweet smell like too much sugar, and dark pink smoke encircled him like the mist outside as he sat there studying her. The giant fluffy antenna on his head twitched again as he chuckled at her, before taking one of his four hands and reaching to take another drab of that sweet smelling smoke, while gesturing to the giant chair in front of him.
"Come in. Sit down please. I've been expecting you, Miss." She still stared at the glory that was the moth man,..but without thinking walked closer as he watched, and she coughed a few times from the pink fog swirling around them, before she slowly sat down across from him. Her sore muscles finally getting some kind of relief from the long tired walking she'd done for the past two days. And he smiled friendlier. "No need to be frightened. My crystal ball has told me you would be needing my help, and it's rare I get visitors."
"....Y-YOU are the fotune teller?," she asked still stunned.
He chuckled. "Yes, I thought I already said that. You may call me Fortune. And what might your name be, Human?"
"....A-Allison?"
"Well, Allison, It very nice to meet you. Now what have you come seeking me for?"
....She finally seemed to snap out of it and blinked up at him. "OH! UH-..R-R-Right.Well-" She rubbed the back of her neck as she stared up at the patient looking moth..and coughed again. "I need to get home!"
"Ah. You're searching for a rabbithole back to the outside world aren't you?"
Her face lit up with a desperate smile. "YES!! Yes, that's exactly what I'm looking for. D-Do you know where I can find one?"
His smile slowly went into a thin line as he hummed. Reaching the smoke pipe over to suck in and slowly breath out another plume of smoke. "The thing you seek, I know where you can find. But getting to it will be harder then you think. For you see, there are a few ways in but only one way out, and that one way is the queen's magic mirror in the castle keep. ...You will be sent from where you last entered, but you'll have to venture INTO the Heart Queen's domain to get to it."
She stared mouth agape at him. She had to....GO INTO THE QUEEN CASTLE?! THE SAME PERSON WHO WAS CURRENTLY TRYING TO IMPRISON HER?! WAS HE CRAZY?! "WHAT?!," she shouted gawking at him, "How-....What am I supposed to do now?!"
He only hummed and gaze back down to the shiny white orb. Seemingly reading something on it and looking back to her. "There's a way in you see, but a friend's help you desperately need."
She blinked. "A friend?"
"Yes, and a helping hand I will give you for these troubling time. But you must leave right now if you wish to meet him in time." Her face dropped as he leaned to the side reaching under the table. MORE walking? Great. Just what she needed, as if she wasn't tired enough from the entire thing. Where was she gonna be sent THIS ti-...Wait, did he say meet him? Him who? He leaned back up with something in his one free hand and uncurled his fist. Inside it moving around was a tiny little glowing white butterfly. "Follow the butterfly and do NOT stop until you reach the circus tent it brings you too." His nudge his hand and the small tiny creature fluttered around and came to stop hovering near the entrance of the cave she came in as it waiting for her. She blinked and looked back to him, and he made a shooing motion with his hand. "Well? Off you go, on your way. If you don't hurry you won't ever get back home. Trust me, you won't have any other chance if you don't take this now."
....There wasn't any room to argue with that logic. So no matter how much her body yelled at her not too, she tiredly forced herself up and turned to the fluttering white glowing insect. As she stepped closer and closer to it, it began to flutter away back down the glowing cave's entrance and she tiredly followed after. Getting back home was going to be harder than she thought.
"Good luck to you, Miss Allison. You'll need that determination to get home."
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Alomost there.....ALMOSTTHEREALMOSTTHTHEREALMOSTTHERE!! The sun peeked up over the sky but it was still fairly dark with the ongoing storm. Persistant, wasn't it? The crackling of the last of the giant shards of glass crackled and shined as it went back together, the cracks sealed back to normal until the very last peice was sealed back together and floated towards the mirror. Where it looked like one last peice was missing like a piece out of a big puzzle. And he was about to fix it. Thunder and lightning cracked across the sky as the cat's badly shaking paws aimed the scepter at the mirror and strained his magic one last time as it crackled back into place along with it's shiny counterparts. The glass crackled as it sealed back into place, and finally after two days and hours of exhausting his magic and body, the magic mirror was complete. He dropped to his knees in exhaustion but smiling. He did it.....He FINALLY fixed the thing. He chuckled and knew he couldn't stop now. Standing back on shaking legs, he wobble ran towards the mirror, almost tripping a couple times before jumping.
The smiling cat disappeared into the portal with a few ripples going across the reflective surface like water. Leaving the taunting storm behind him.
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against the odds
summary: miscommunications suck, yet it's somehow worse when people over communicate
pairing: adrian chase x gn!reader
genre: hurt/comfort, angst to fluff, established relationship
contains: swearing, 70% arguing 30% make up, one purposeful run-on sentence, soft!adrian
word count: 1k
a/n: this is my third time posting this pls donât let it flop
What started as visiting Adrian at work (not Fennel Fields, but the other job) leads to the two of you at odds at the back of the building. Still in his suit, but maskless, Adrian paces in circles in his spot, never once stepping closer than a yard from you. An invisible barrier stands between you, brought on by the heated words youâve shared in the past twenty minutes.
This isnât the best place to be arguing. With how youâre both flailing your arms and screaming at the top of your lungs (and the colorful fabric on Adrianâs suit), youâre a sitting duck. Yet, even that is the least of your and the teamâs concerns, who hear every word from the office. Your blazing eyes and raised voice, louder than it ever has been in your life, are enough to scare whichever Butterfly is watching you nowâor, at the very least, confuse them.
Both you and Adrian are seeing red. One of the qualities that connects you is your determination, and stubbornness, which works against your favor now. Neither of you can step down, nor do you think you can after digging yourself so far into this hole. At this point, Adrian, whoâs still loopy from the mission of the day, is spewing nonsense to keep himself afloat. But the one thing he absolutely cannot handle, the thing that leaves him defenseless, is your sudden silence. Arms crossed over your chest, brows pinched, but emptiness in your eyes. He should know better than to fall into this trap, but Adrian has to fill in the tense void with something, hoping youâll understand part of what heâs saying.
âLook, this is our super secretâlike top secret CIA level shitâheadquarters and I canât have civilians waltzing in here or else the Butterflies will totally figure us out and we cannot have that happening because it ruins everything we worked for here which is bad on all of us especially me since I promised I wouldnât fuck things up and-â
Adrian sucks in a deep breath. âIdonâtwantyouhere!â It comes out fast, but strained. His eyes are squeezed shut, like a child who has just admitted their worst secret. In a way, it is. For weeks Adrian had been throwing excuse after excuse about his whereabouts despite you knowing about his double life. You swore on your life to keep it a secretâeven if the police came and threatened to cut your pinky toe offâbecause you knew how much it meant to Adrian. All he wanted to do was make a difference. And you hoped in turn of hiding this, heâd spare you the worry about what was to come next, but even that was too much. Or, he didnât trust you enough. He didnât trust the person he ate, slept, and fucking lived with.
Adrian finally goes quiet. He peers through the large frames of his glasses, trying to assess your flat expression. It gives him no hint as to your thoughts. Even so, he can tell heâs hit a nerve, and concern begins to carve itself into his features.
âYouâŠYou donât want me here,â you say in a softer tone, a heavy contrast to your screaming earlier. Itâs a statement. In those drawn out seconds, youâve processed what Adrian has said and taken it as a truth. Thereâs no question to it, not that you feel there is. He said it, plain and simple, and his ramble only supports it.
âDoes that mean you donât want me at home, either? In fact, you donât want me around you too, do you? I bet it compromises your identity to have me around. Isnât that right, Adrian?â
He opens his mouth, but no words come out.
âWere you trying to keep me as another one of your secrets? In the name of âjusticeâ or whatever bullshit youâre gonna throw at me next?â
Adrian utters nothing. How can he when all heâs said has been the wrong thing? Another wrong word, a few misspoken syllables, and it falls apart. Though, the string heâs been holding onto, that slimmer of hope that maybe youâll read his mind and see what he truly means, is slipping with each step you take away from him. But not everyone is a superhero; not everyone is going to understand what he needs without spoken words.
âYouâre the last thing I want to lose.â In a moment of panic, his final secret comes to light. âI donât want to lose you at all. Do you know how much thatâd fucking kill me?â
You turn back around and take slow steps in his direction. âAdrianâŠâ
âI keep secrets because Iâm afraid. Isnât that funny? Vigilante, theâwell, vigilanteâgets scared. Really scared.â He laughs solemnly. âI really, really like you. Fuck, Iâm in love with you. I canât imagine what Iâd do without you.â
Somewhere in the midst of his words, Adrianâs taken your hands in his. Youâre close enough to see yourself in his glasses and the tiny teardrops sparkling in the corner of his eyes.
âIâm sorry I was such a dick. I shouldnât have kept you in the dark.â
With your anger quelled, you can look at Adrian clearly and see truly how much he means it all. Thereâs a pang in your chest when the desperation becomes evident on his face, deep yearning heâs forced himself to keep, for good reason. You realize how much heâs tortured himself to keep you safe, to stay quiet in the face of his colleagues about the best thing heâs ever had, which is the hardest thing heâs ever had to do.
You lean your forehead on his, laughing softly when your nose bumps into his glasses.
âYou mean a lot to me, too, Adrian. And, fuck, I love you, too. Iâve been waiting to hear those words, you know?â
His entire being lights up with joy. âReally? You mean that?â
You nod. âIâm sorry for yelling at you. That was a dick move, too.â
âThen we can be dickheads together.â
You both canât help the fit of giggles that arise. Adrianâs nudging your nose with his, and you fulfill his silent plea with a sweet, long kiss to his lips. Somewhere in the distance, thereâs probably a chorus of awws from the office as they watch the scene unfold. With the broken, graffiti-covered brick walls encasing you, and the ominous woods looming from behind, itâs far from being out of a fairytale (not to forget youâre practically putting on a show). But for now, you can push that aside, and keep falling in love with your hero.
#adrian chase x reader#adrian chase x you#adrian chase fanfic#adrian chase imagine#vigilante x reader#peacemaker fanfic
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Words: 5,340 Pairing: Daryl Dixon x Reader Reader pronouns: she/her Era: Hershel's Farm Warnings: Language, domestic violence, fear and anxiety A/N: Here with some Protective!Daryl for ya'll! Summary: When Daryl finds the reader outside in the rain in the middle of the night, he gives her a dry place to sleep, but the next day it causes problems with her asshole of a boyfriend.
Your name: submit What is this?
Daryl couldnât sleep. Heâd tossed and turned restlessly in his tent and finally decided to get up and do a perimeter check just for some goddamned thing to do to pass the time. A heavy rain was falling and it bothered him not being able to hear anything over the deluge.
He shouldered his crossbow and sheathed his knife, grabbing his flashlight from its place next to his cot. He slipped out of his tent and started through the maze of tents. Thatâs when he saw you. It looked like you were sincerely hoping he wouldnât, like you were trying to blend into the tree trunk you were leaning against, sheltering as much as you could beneath the oak, obviously somewhat wet from the rain and shivering slightly.
Darylâs brow drew down over his eyes and he headed straight for you. âWhat the hell are ya doinâ out here alone in the dark in the middle of a damn thunderstorm?â
You didnât answer but you did raise your eyes to his, hugging your arms more tightly around yourself. He watched another shiver wrack through you. The archer frowned. âWhy ainât ya in with your guy?â he asked, jutting a thumb in the direction of the tent you shared with your boyfriend. Daryl didnât like him at all... Frankly he thought the guy was a controlling piece of shit, and he had a hunch that he might be worse even than that.
You avoided his eyes again. âWe, uhhâhad a fight,â you murmured. Daryl could easily read the embarrassment and shame on your face.
âThat donât explain why youâre out here in the rain,â Daryl drawled.
You continued to avoid his eyes and didnât answer. He could think of a couple reasons why youâd be out here instead of inside the dry tent, and neither of them were good. Either heâd kicked you out or youâd left because you were afraid of him, afraid of what would happen if you stayed. Either way, there was no way in hell Daryl was gonna let you spend the night outside in the cold autumn rain.
âYa ainât stayinâ out here in the rain. Câmon,â he said, nudging his head back in the direction of his own tent. He turned to lead the way and glanced back over his shoulder to see you hesitating to follow him. âIf ya stay out here all night, all soakinâ wet like ya are, yer gonna catch yer death. Câmon.â
This time you followed him, still shivering.
Daryl held the tent flap open for you and you stepped inside, your arms still wrapped tightly around yourself. He followed and zipped the flap closed on the rain and night. When he turned you were standing awkwardly in the middle of the tent. Daryl set his crossbow down and clicked on the lantern next to his cot. He replaced the flashlight and pulled off his jacket. He held it out to you.
You gave him a questioning look.
âI can see ya shiverinâ. Take it. Canât have ya gettinâ pneumonia. Weâve already gone through too many of Hershelâs antibiotics.â
You accepted it from him. âThanks,â you said.
He watched you pull it on, anxiously chewing his bottom lip as the fabric swallowed up your frame. He sat down on the floor across from you and pulled his knife out and his sharpening stone, just for something to do. He needed to busy his hands, because with you in that small space with him he was suddenly feeling nervous. âMake yourself at home,â he said, nodding toward his cot on the opposite wall.
You sat down on the edge a little gingerly and watched as he drew the blade of his knife across the stone.
He kept his eyes fixed on what he was doing but his deep voice broke through the pattering of the rain on the tent. âYa wanna talk about it?â
You shrugged deeper into his jacket. It still held the warmth of his body and it smelled like himâmusky leather, campfire smoke, and the outside air. âI donât know,â you admitted.
The sharp noise of his blade punctuated the silence. âHe kick ya out or⊠did ya need to get out?â This time his eyes flickered up to your face.
He watched you gulp, but you held his eyes. The warm lantern light threw the angles of your face into sharp relief. Your eyelashes cast long shadows on your cheeks.
Darylâs light blue eyes moved back down to his hands. âSâalright. Ya ainât gotta say.â
You bit at the inside of your cheek and couldnât help another shiver that ran up your back. The archer looked up at you again immediately, concern furrowing his brow. He set his knife aside and climbed to his feet.
He unzipped the flap of the tent and stepped out. He met your questioning gaze with a nod. âIâll be right back.â
This left you alone in his tent for a short time, just the hammering of the rain to keep you company. Your eyes wandered around the contents. It was a little unkempt, with clothes piled haphazardly in one corner and the edges of the canvas floor cluttered with tools and random items. There were half-finished crossbow bolts piled on a box that was serving as a side table, but something beneath them caught your eye. You gently brushed aside the wooden shafts and carefully lifted what had drawn your attention. It was delicate and brittle but you recognized it immediately as you carefully laid it out flat on your palm.
One day in the summer you had been collecting firewood for the group, eager to do something useful and needing some space for a while. Youâd come upon a vine bursting with crimson flowers and as youâd stood and admired it, such a simple but beautiful thing, youâd watched hummingbirds flitting between the blossoms.
Wanting to know the name of the plant, youâd plucked a bloom and brought it back to the archer to identify. Heâd taken hardly a glance at it before telling you its name. âCoral honeysuckle,â he drawled. âYa can crush the berries and use âem on bee stings.â
âCoral honeysuckle,â you repeated. âThere were tons of hummingbirds on it.â
He nodded. âMhm. They like the nectar,â he said, holding the flower back out to you.
âKeep it,â you said with a smile, âas payment for your identification services.â
Darylâs heart jumped at the smile on your face and he twirled the bloom between his fingers as he watched you retreat back toward the group.
This looked like the very same flower you had picked. Heâd obviously pressed it underneath something to preserve it. The vibrant red petals were only slightly muted in color. Heâd kept it all these months? You puzzled over this as you replaced it where youâd found it and arranged the crossbow bolts over it again. It was hard to ignore the warm feeling growing right between your lungs, threatening to spill outward.
A few minutes later, Daryl came into the tent again. There were raindrops on his shirt and caught in his hair. He had a small mug clutched in his hands and you could see spirals of steam rising from the surface. He extended it toward you and you accepted it, puzzled as you looked inside.
âTea?â you asked, looking back up as Daryl settled onto the floor again.
He nudged his nose up at you in a nod. âMhm. I dunno if itâs any good. I think itâs some ginger-lemon thing Maggie brought to help with Loriâs nausea. But itâs hot. And youâre still cold,â he said. He felt nervous under the bewildered gaze you were giving him.
This man had just gone out into a thunderstorm to heat water for you and bring you tea simply because heâd seen you shiver. Not to mention that you were wrapped in his coat and he was sheltering you from the storm when your own boyfriend hadâhis voice broke your train of thought.
âI told ya. Canât have ya gettinâ sick.â Daryl picked up his knife again and went back to sharpening it.
It was silent for some time as you sipped at the tea and watched the archer work on his knives diligently. You didnât know that he could feel your eyes on him and it was driving him crazy. His body seemed to respond to you like you were a drug and he was an addict. He did his best to keep it under control. After all, you were technically spoken for, even if the guy was a complete douchebag at best.
But finally you spoke, setting the empty mug aside and sitting farther back on his cot, pulling your boots off and folding your legs under you. âCan I ask you something?â
âMhm,â he hummed, grabbing the next knife that needed sharpening from its sheath.
âWhat do you think ofâof my boyfriend?â you asked. Your cheeks immediately flushed. You felt stupid even asking the question. You already knew the answer and you knew where this conversation would lead. You knew what you needed to do, but you were afraid to do it. Did you really think someone else saying what you thought out loud was going to somehow give you the courage to go through with what needed to happen?
Darylâs hands froze and he looked up at you, his eyes narrowed and fixated on your face for a long moment. He averted them back down and resumed his work again just as suddenly as he had stopped. âDonât matter what I think.â
âIt matters to me,â you said quietly.
The silence between you was suddenly thick, like a stagnant room full of humidity, the air heavy. The raindrops on the tent seemed to surround you and insulate you from everything else, from the rest of the world. The atmosphere was almost intoxicating, disorienting.
Eventually, Darylâs blue eyes lifted again and fell on your face. He sighed heavily. âYa really want to know what I think?â You nodded. âI think ya deserve better.â
Your heart skipped a beat as your eyebrows lifted in surprise. Youâd expected Daryl to call him an asshole. You hadnât expected that stated so explicitly. And you really didnât expect him to go on.
âEither he threw ya out of your own damn tent into a thunderstorm in the middle of the night, or ya had to get out because being outside in a thunderstorm in the dark was a better option than beinâ in there with him. What kinda man is that?â He scowled for a moment as he thought about how much he wanted to drag the guy out of your tent, give him a few good punches, and leave his ass in the rain. He turned back to his knives.
You were silent, consumed by your thoughts, but eventually you yawned and Daryl looked up immediately. He systematically put away his tools and then he grabbed some balled up clothes to use as a pillow. He also grabbed his poncho. His eyes lifted and met yours. âYa take the cot. Iâm good down here,â he said.
âOh, you donât have toâIâll goââ
Daryl let out a scoff. âWhat are ya gonna do? Go sleep out under that tree?â He shook his head and settled down on the floor, leaning back onto the makeshift pillow and draping his arm over his eyes. âWasnât a question anyhow. Just get the lantern when youâre settled in.â
You couldnât help smiling at him on the floor where he was stretched out under his poncho, a knife right beside him. You watched his ribs rise and fall with his breathing a few times and the butterflies in your stomach made you realize that you were most definitely in trouble⊠in more ways than one.
You clicked off the lantern and laid down on his cot, still wrapped in his coat. You slept peacefully until morning.
_ _ _ _ _ _
You woke early as the orange glow of the sun struck the tent walls and you shot up straight at the sound of Daryl stirring.
He nudged his nose up at you in a greeting and you gave him a small smile. His heart jumped at the sight of you in his jacket, on his cot, that sleepy smile and your tousled hair. He tried to ignore how many times heâd fantasized about this very scene, but with a slightly different context where that was right where you were always supposed to be.
âHey,â you greeted him.
He stood and shouldered his bow. âIâm gonna go hunt. Ya ainât gotta get up yet. Sunâs barely up.â
You bent and started pulling your boots on. âItâs alright. Iâm already up.â You slipped his jacket off and laid it on his cot. âThanks,â you murmured, tucking your hair behind your ear and trying to smooth the strands a little self-consciously. âFor everything last night.â
He shrugged and chewed his bottom lip a little anxiously. âSânothinâ.â For some reason this made you smile and he thought your cheeks grew a little pink.
âYou always downplay everything you do. You shouldnât,â you said kindly, standing up. âIt was way more than nothing.â
Daryl gulped and simply opened the tent flap and stepped out. You followed him and gave him another small smile as he nodded at you one more time and then headed for the woods.
You decided to do some of the morning chores since you were already up and set about gathering more and restacking the fire wood and doing some preparation for breakfast. You grabbed the water canisters and headed toward the well to fill them. You were filling the second container when you heard footsteps in the grass behind you. You turned to see your boyfriend striding straight toward you. Your stomach churned.
âMorning, Y/N,â he said, coming to lean against the side of the well. His affect was flat and you were immediately on edge.
You avoided his eyes and didnât say anything, just continued your work.
He reached over suddenly and pressed the pump handle down hard to stop the flow of water and your eyes shot up to his face. His expression was dark.
âYou know, itâs weird. I got up while it was still dark and went out to look for you. Even went up to the house, but,â he shrugged, âyou were nowhere to be seen.â
You stared back at him, your heart starting to rush a little in your chest.
âAnd I just wondered to myself, âWhere could my girl have gone?ââ He moved toward you, drawing himself up to his full height.
You stared up at him, gulping at the nervous tightness in your throat. âSeeing as you threw me out, I figured you wouldnât care or come looking,â you said, reaching over and lifting the well handle again to start the flow of water, a little surprised at your own boldness to talk back to him in the way you did.
He immediately slammed the handle back down. âWell, I did. And imagine my surprise this morning when I saw you coming out of Darylâs tent.â
You gulped.
âAs soon as you found an excuse you just went running straight to that dumb redneck, didnât you? Huh? How long have you been sneaking around behind my back? Did you have a good fuck last night?â He was right in your face now and you recoiled.
âIt wasnâtâIt wasnât like that. I didnât! It was storming. All he did was get me out of the rain. Heâhe slept on the floor. I just slept on his cot! Thatâs it,â you said, urgently grabbing the water and trying to rush back toward the tents and the group, sensing sincere danger not far away.
But your progress was stopped when he grabbed your arm and spun you back around. You dropped one of the water containers which spilled its contents onto the ground. âYou really think Iâm gonna believe that? How stupid do you think I am?â There was rage burning in his eyes. âWe have a fight and you think you can go fuck whoever the hell you want? Do I have to remind you who you belong to?!â He was yelling at you now and you tried to pry his hand from your arm. His fingers were digging in painfully.
âIâve never cheated on you! I wouldnâtâplease!â
He sneered. âWhy the hell should I believe that?! Huh? Youâre mine! I donât want to see you talking to another man. Hell, if I even catch you looking at that redneck again, youâll pay for it.â
His grip on your arm felt like it was tightening by the second. âI swear nothing happened! Youâre hurting me! Let go!â you pleaded, feeling your eyes going wide with fear.
He growled at you through his teeth. âI can do whatever the hell I want. Iâll break your arm if I want to,â he said viciously, starting to twist your arm behind your back painfully. You couldnât help crying out, but that was the wrong thing to do, and you knew it.
The next moment you felt a blow across your jaw and tasted blood in your mouth. You fell to the ground, splayed in the dust, narrowly missing cracking your head against the cobbled stone of the well. Your vision was black. You could only hear a high-pitched ringing in your ears.
The blackness dissolved slowly and you climbed desperately to your feet, but another blow landed across your cheek and you fell hard against the stone well this time, your back colliding painfully with the jagged edges of rock. You had an arm up to shield yourself as you tried to orient yourself again, waiting for your vision to clear.
You were waiting for the next blow to come, steeling yourself as best you could, but it never landed. The next thing you knew Daryl had barreled out of nowhere and he had your boyfriend on the ground beneath him, landing blow after blow into his face and body. âYou piece of shit! Ya think hittinâ her makes you a fuckinâ man?! Iâll kill you if you ever lay a goddamn hand on her again!â
You watched in stunned horror. The rest of your group members were tearing across the field toward the commotion. Theyâd heard the yelling and your surprised scream and raced to get to you. Rick and Lori were in the lead and suddenly they were there. Lori grabbed you and helped you to your feet, her face white as a sheet as she looked at you, wrapping an arm around your shoulders and supporting you in your daze, leading you slightly back and away from the melee. When you glanced back over at Daryl you saw that he now had his crossbow aimed right at your boyfriendâs head. His chest and shoulders were heaving and every muscle in his arms were tensed. Rick was trying to talk him down.
âDaryl. Daryl, this isnât the way. Letâs just calm down and weâll decide together how to deal with him,â Rick was saying softly. âJust put your bow down and weâll deal with him.â
The muscle in Darylâs jaw twitched as he clenched his teeth. âThis bastard deserves to die,â he growled.
âI know. I know⊠I see what he did. But weâll talk about this and decide on it together. Alright? Letâs just calm down for a minute.â
It took everything he had, every bit of willpower not to pull that trigger and end the bastard right there. And if you hadnât been watching, he might have done it. But he didnât want you to be afraid of him too. Daryl lowered his bow and Rick pulled him off your boyfriend, who was cowering on the ground with blood pouring down his face from an obviously broken nose. His eyes were already swelling shut.
Rick grabbed him by the front of his shirt and hauled him to his feet. âYou are cominâ with me,â Rick growled, dragging him away toward the barn.
Daryl ducked his head, his chest still heaving with exertion, and spared a glance in your direction. Your bottom lip was split and you had a hand pressed over the left side of your face, concealing the already blooming bruises from that assholeâs fist landing on your jaw and cheekbone. His heart ached, his stomach twisted, and he turned and stalked off after Rick.
You avoided the looks of pity and shock that the rest of the group was giving you and did your best to hold in your tears of pain and humiliation. You focused on Lori as best you could.
âOh my God. Come here, honey. Let me look at you,â Lori said, moving in front of you and pulling your hand away from your face. Next, she noticed that your back was bleeding in a few places where youâd hit the stones and you winced as you tried to straighten up completely. Spots of crimson were staining your shirt. âOh, Y/N. Iâm so sorry. Come on. Letâs go clean you up. Come on.â She wrapped an arm around your shoulders again.
You felt like you were going into shock. You were disoriented. Lori led you up to the farmhouse and called out to Maggie and Hershel as you entered. They both rushed into the front room.
âOh my God. What happened?â Maggie asked urgently, her eyes going round with horror.
Lori gave her a look and Maggie seemed to understand. There had been suspicions going around the group that perhaps your boyfriend was laying his hands on you occasionally, and they all seemed to now be confirmed.
Lori led you to sit down on a chair in the dining room. The vet-turned-doctor examined your face and determined that, luckily, no bones were out of place, but that you likely had a fractured cheekbone and a concussion, not the mention the injuries to your back and your split lip.
Lori guided you to the bathroom and started the bath tub filling with warm water. âAlright. Climb in there and Iâll be back in to help clean up your back, alright?â she said gently. She left and shut the door softly behind her.
You obediently stripped your clothes off, in a daze still, and stepped into the tub, wrapping your arms around your knees, holding them tightly to your chest. Lori knocked a moment later and you murmured a âcome in.â She had a washcloth in one hand and sank down on the edge of the tub, immediately dipping it into the hot water and dabbing at the wounds on your back. The abrasions werenât too deep, but it looked like most of your back would be badly bruised.
You were grateful she didnât say anything. Youâd seen the expression on her face and that was enough. She sighed heavily and climbed to her feet. âCome on out when youâre ready. Hershel says you can stay in the guest room tonight. We want to keep an eye on you because of that concussion, okay?â
You nodded and rested your chin on your knees. It was right then when the tears finally started pouring down your cheeks and you gasped in a shuddering breath. âY/N. Iâm so sorry this happened to you,â Lori said, rushing right back over and kneeling beside the tub, smoothing a hand over your hair.
âI donât even recognize who I am anymore,â you said, rushing to wipe the tears that broke free from your eyes. âI think after everything fell apart, I just thought if I didnât have something to cling onto from before that IâI donât knowâthat I wouldnât make it. But then he just⊠changed. And it didnât happen all at once and I think thatâs why I didnât justâit was gradual. I almost didnât notice it and then all of a sudden he just wasnât himself anymore.â You hastily wiped at your tears again. âI feel so stupid and embarrassed and ashamed,â you admitted, unable to look at her.
âItâs not your fault. Itâs not your fault. And you have nothinâ to feel ashamed about. And itâs all over now, alright? Itâs over.â
You gasped in a shaky breath. âIf Daryl hadnâtââ
âI know,â she shushed you. âI know. But he did. Itâs all gonna be okay now, alright? Get cleaned up and Iâll be right outside in case you need anything.â
You gave her a grateful look and nodded. You sat in the hot water until it started to cool, your mind mostly blank. The adrenaline had worn off now and you were feeling every bit of pain. Your head felt like it was going to split open and you winced at the sight of your swollen and bruised face in the mirror. You pulled your clothes back on and ventured into the hallway. Lori was standing there with some clean clothes for you and she led you to the guest room and set them on the bed.
âGet changed into those clean clothes and then you need to rest. Hershelâs orders. He wants you in bed. We need to be careful because of that concussion.â
You thanked her again and nodded. You discarded your bloodstained shirt and dirty jeans on a chair in the corner and pulled on the new outfit before climbing under the covers. You couldnât stop the tears from flowing out again and you squeezed your eyes shut against the pounding in your face and head.
Outside, the group was gathered to discuss what to do with your boyfriend. Daryl couldnât stand still and was pacing angrily in front of the house. He looked up as Lori came out and the screen door slammed with a snap.
âHow is she?â Rick asked, his face dark with concern.
âAlright, considering,â Lori said, slipping her hands in her back pockets. âConcussion. Bruised and swollen. Abrasions over half her back. Hershel thinks her cheekbone is fractured.â She caught Darylâs eyes and gave him a knowing look.
âOh my God,â Andrea said, exchanging a look with Carol, whose eyes turned down toward the grass.
Daryl swore under his breath and resumed his pacing.
âWell, what do we do?â T-dog asked. âWe canât just keep going on like everything is normal with him in camp. Heâs got to go.â
âThe question is how,â Dale said.
âThat bastard ainât even deserve to still be drawinâ breath,â Daryl drawled. He looked at Rick.
Rick sighed heavily. âYeahâŠâ
âI mean, I agree with Daryl, man. I donât want that guy around any of us,â Shane said.
âWhat if we just take him out and leave him? Drive him way out and drop him off somewhere,â Rick mused.
Shane scoffed. âWe might as well shoot him in the head right now. Heâd never make it out there alone. Thatâs as good as killing him.â
Rick nodded. âI know, but it feels a little less like the blood is on our hands then... He has a chance.â
âHe donât even deserve a chance. Iâm fine with his blood on our hands,â Daryl spat. âIf I hadnât been over there huntinâ he coulda killed her.â
Rick sighed again, the weight of the decision obviously weighing on him, and he rubbed a hand over his face. âYeah⊠Letâs just take the day to think it over. We can decide tonight. And Y/N can have a say.â
The group nodded in agreement and dispersed. Lori went back in to check on you.
She knocked lightly on the door and you murmured for her to come in. âHow are you feeling?â she asked you.
âIâm fine,â you said, lying about how much pain you were in.
She nodded. âWeâre all going to figure out what to do about him,â she said. âYou should think about what you want to happen. He canât stay here, but as far as what that meansââ
âOkay,â you interrupted her. You rolled over and looked at her in the doorway. âIs Darylâ?â
She smiled a little and nodded. âYou want me to get him? Heâs probably still pacing on the front porch.
You nodded. âIf you could.â
âOf course.â Lori left and in a moment the archer appeared in the doorway.
You were in bed, your back to the door, but you turned and looked over your shoulder at the sound of his footsteps. Darylâs stomach twisted at the swelling and red welts on your face. âHey,â he said softly.
âHey.â You pulled yourself up in a seated position and Daryl came around and sank down on the chair pulled up at the side of the bed. âI just wanted to say thank you,â you said, unable to meet his eyes and instead running the edge of the sheet through your fingers, staring at it like it was the most interesting thing youâd ever seen. âAnd Iâm sorry that you got pulled into this messâŠâ you trailed off.
âI ainât,â he said forcefully. âIâm glad I got to beat the shit out that guy. I just wish Iâd done it sooner.â
You looked up at him and the glistening tears in your eyes made the colors in your irises stand out. His stomach flipped again at the sight of your injuries. âI feel so stupid. I never should have stayed with him.â
Daryl shook his head. âAinât that simple.â
You were grateful for his understanding. Daryl watched you struggling with some thought until you finally spoke it. âWhat if he gets out?â you asked, fear obvious in your eyes.
âHe ainât gettingâ out. I tied his ass up myself,â Daryl reassured you. âBut Iâll sit watch outside all night. Nothinâ is gonna happen to ya. Itâs over.â The archer stood but your hand shot out and gently landed on his arm. He froze at the feeling of electricity that crackled from your fingers.
âWill you sit with me for a little while?â you asked. âJustâuntil I can fall asleep.â
He nudged his nose up in a nod and sank back down, feeling nervous and chewing on his bottom lip. Daryl watched as you settled back down in bed, pulling the covers up over yourself and shutting your eyes, your long eyelashes fanning out against your cheeks. The feelings welling up in him were getting more and more difficult to deny, and he knew now wasnât the timeânot yet. You needed to get through this first. But Daryl wanted to show you how you did deserve to be treated, even as he dared not hope that heâd have the chance, that youâd feel the same thing for him that he felt for you. He wanted to protect you, take care of you. He wanted to show you how strong you actually were, even as he thought of how much you reminded him of that flower youâd brought him; vibrant, sweet, soft, delicate, but always climbing toward the light. And he was determined to help you see it.
#daryl dixon fanfiction#daryl dixon twd#the walking dead#twd fanfics#daryl dixon drabbles#daryl imagines#daryl dixon x reader#fanfics#writers of tumblr#twd drabbles#protective!daryl
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Reverse Flash
A backwards version of your favorite speedster comes searching for Barry, only to find you instead.Â
Word Count: 2403 Warnings: Crude Humor. Not proof read yet because Iâm too tired.Â
As per my latest fics, the gender of the reader is not specified.Â
.â«*ïŸïœ„ïŸïœĄ.â
.*ïœĄïœ„ïŸâ«*.
Barry was always nice to you.
Well, Barry was nice to everyone. I mean, his parents named him Barry. He was set up for a life of cheekiness before he was even born. But Barry was nice to you even after âthe incidentâ. Barry was nice to you when everyone else stopped. On top of that, Barry was being nicer to you than usual lately.
Probably because he and Iris were having a rough spot.
That was the only annoying thing. Barry liked you, and he was interested in you, but you were still second place. He was just using you. He wouldnât marry you, or feel a deep longing for you. Heâd just take you on ice skating rink dates in the winter and give you the best Valentineâs day of your life every year. Which is everyoneâs dream, you guess, but it wouldnât have been genuine, no matter what Barry managed to convince himself.
Barryâs little support team seemed to be on the same page as you (which was a first), which both added to and subdued your aggravation. All of them were in agreement of the simple fact: you were no good for Barry. Mr. Flash was the only one who didnât seem to get the memo.
In the very beginning, things werenât like how they were now. Team Flash or whatever the name was considered you good colleague, and they trusted you because Allen trusted you. You had been friends with Barry longer than anyone else there. And of course you were smart, and you handled annoying journalists and incriminating footage like it was nothing. But then youâd suggested using lethal force to subdue one of the Flashâs biggest problems. Thatâs when the air changed. Thatâs when people decided you should not now, not ever go on a date with him. It would throw off the whole rhythm of the team, probably Barryâs morals and possible the timeline. Lucky you.
Though flat out rejecting Barry might make it worse. You had been irritable lately. Maybe a little more sarcastic than normal. What if you snap, and then the team snaps too? And sweet little Barry is too kind to tell you off? God, you knew you were the worst, but the thought alone seemed like more than just âthe worstâ. It was like a tornado of stinky shit just barreling toward you, somehow simultaneously faster than the speed of light and slower than a turtle filled with rocks for organs.
And it was all definitely Barry Allenâs fault.
.â«*ïŸïœ„ïŸïœĄ.â
.*ïœĄïœ„ïŸâ«*.
So, thatâs why youâre here now. Stuck with watching Headquarters while all the speedsters go out and... speed. Who knows. Youâre out of the loop with the whole... speed demon thing. Youâre pretty sure they have a group chat without you. Fuckinâ nerds.
Your legs are stretched out to the desk in front of you. They cross over each other at the ankles, to the left of the big computer monitor thatâs supposed to display the heartbeats of the team but is instead displaying something from cartoon network. A near empty bag of Chinese food sits at your side, itâs contents littered across the table.
As you chew, you look around the room. Several suits in display cases curve against the wall in a half circle, illuminated by blue light. Some are burgundy, some are silver, and some are golden. And you could smash every single one of them right now.
But you wonât, and you donât. Not to say it isnât tempting- it is. You still donât touch the suits.Â
God, whatâs been wrong with you recently? Barry was your friend, and yet youâd been so annoyed with him. His flirting had only made it worse. Wally wasnât any better. He got even more annoying once thinking about how childish, yet powerful he was. All the Kid Flashâs were just temporary brats that never stayed, whether you liked them or not. And Iris wasnât a fan of you. That was fine, because you werenât exactly a friend of Irisâs either. So the most important part of your life that literally depended on superhuman existence and stopping crime was teetering because of pure social discomfort. Typical.
Youâre watching the screen that serves as the closest light in the room as you shovel the next bite of rice between your lips. Neon colors make the shadows across your face feel alive and electric. It makes the glow in your eyes more prominent, encouraged by the childish nature of the media. Youâve just finished a snarky personal comment and given yourself another bite of rice when he appears to you.
He looks like Barry. The only difference is that heâs the complete opposite.
Instead of scarlet, his speed suit is yellow with red and dark grey accents. They remind you of blood lightning at the seams. Even under his half mask, he seems so familiar but so much more defined than your friend. As he exits the slice of colorful air and thunder, the heels of his shoes skidding across the floor, the red glow in his eyes settles into a calmer thrum.
And youâre still frozen in place, eyes wide as you still yourself mid chew.
The yellow speedster settles his orbs on you. Theyâre intelligent, and in the reflection of the little light in the room you can see theyâre not red, but blue. And you? Youâre just a deer in the headlights.Â
âAw, youâre not Barry,â he groans in disappointment, standing straighter as his arms cross over his chest.Â
You finally continue your chewing, keeping your wide eyes on the intruder. Then you swallow it down. In your chest, your heart thump, thump, thumps with something. Fear? Not quite. Anxiety? Almost. Itâs something else. Something more... intuitive. And the way this man looks at you makes you think that he can hear it, even from where he stands. That he knows.
âUh... no?â
The man responds not a millisecond after youâve gotten the words out. âWhere is he? Whereâs Barry Allen?â
Woof. His voice is throaty and laced with sarcasm, even though heâs clearly deathly serious. But the vibrations send a funny spasm straight to that little place between your legs, making the nerves in your spine dance with alertness. Arousal. Barry was never able to do that, let alone with just the sound of his voice. Â
âDoing something?â you decide. âI donât know.â
The golden man cocks his head to the side, almost smirks, and takes a step forward. âHey, I know you.â His arms uncross. One raises and bends to point at you. âYouâre Barryâs tech support. I remember reading about you in his museum.â
Your brows furrow. Hurriedly, you clear the take-out box from your lap and begin wiping your mouth with the back of your hand. You drop your legs from their position on the desk to their normal position on the floor, knees bent. âUh... I beg your pardon?â
âYeah... Y/N L/N. Now I see it.â The man leans back on his heels and looks around the room. The red glow in his orbs burn away completely so itâs just him. âAh, so this must be before you defected, huh? Interesting.â
âPardon?!â you call again. Now youâre sitting forward, disbelief across your face.Â
Golden speedster smiles. It looks evilly distorted, even though itâs just a normal smile. It curves his face sarcastically. His hands fly upwards as if in surrender. âDonât shoot the messenger, Y/N. You know actually, youâre kind of a villain in my time. This is nice for me.â
âGreat, Iâll tell Barry when I see him,â you bite.
âThank you, sweetheart. Now how about you tell me where Barry is before I erase you from existence.â
âI donât know,â you repeat as the quick bolt of fear fizzles from your system. Your eyes trail down to his chest for just a quick second, but itâs quick enough to observe yet another difference between your familiar scarlet speedster and him. The circle surrounding the lightning bolt on his chest is facing the opposite direction, red, and that circle is filled with black. Itâs as if he were the complete opposite of Barry. A reverse Barry.Â
âYeah you do. Come on.â
You blink once, still in your roll-y chair.Â
Youâre not sure what to do here. On one hand, this guy radiates pure evil. You should really alert Barry or one of the other members of Team Flash. But for one reason or another youâve made no attempt to. Youâve got no clue who this dude is other than the fact that he seems more inclined to rip the fabric of time apart than anyone else. Thereâs no doubt in your mind he really will erase you from existence if you make one wrong move. But whatâs the wrong move?
On the other hand, Team Flash has been a bunch of dickheadâs to you. Barry has been ironically slow to the whole thing. Would it be so bad if you did make a wrong move? Not for you, but for your friends? Theyâd all die, wouldnât they? This yellow one would end them, and then what? Would it really be so horrible for you? You canât imagine mourning much.
âI donât,â you say again, slowly. âTheyâre in the city. I donât know where.â
The man seems to think for a moment, cocking his head back so the light behind the glass cases catches his sharpened features. âHmm.â
Without even blinking, now heâs in front of you. So close, you can smell him. Itâs not terribly strong, itâs just masculine. But itâs also flowery, with a dash of sweat from running. And then thereâs something more. Something... metallic?Â
Both his hands clutch the arms of the chair beside you, trapping you as you lean back reflexively. âDid you know that I killed Barryâs childhood best friend before he was born?â the man says lowly.Â
On instinct, you prepare yourself to say, âBarry doesnât have a childhood best friendâ. Then you realize why.Â
He continues. âWould you tell me where Barry was if you did know?â
You donât even think about it. Youâre true to your nature. âI donât know, would I?â
Blip! You wait to burst into a cloud of nothingness. To never have been born or even get to be a ghost. But fifteen seconds later youâre still alive. And from the way Barry talks about being a Flash, fifteen seconds is a long time for someone of that caliber.Â
The man is back by the cases of suits now. You can see his muscles through his suit. Theyâre more defined than Barryâs, thank God.Â
âI think you would. But itâs gonna be hard to do that when youâve got my fingers vibrating into your skull.â
âWhat?â
âItâs going to be hard to speak when my fingers are inside you.â
You cup a hand against your ear. âHuh?â
âI said-â The man stops. His eyes narrow, arms crossing over his chest once more. âOh, I see.â A short, dry- but genuine- laugh falls from his throat. âVery funny. Very, very funny.â
Suddenly, your eyebrows crease together in confusion. You place both palms on the arms of the chair for leverage as you push yourself into a stand, as if stirred by some great, important purpose. âWait. Did you say you were going to stick your fingers inside me?â
âI knew you and I were the same,â he drawls. He sounds entertained. As if in his eyes, missing Barry and meeting you instead was the best outcome he couldâve hoped for.Â
âCanât you just...â Your shoulders slump as you glance around. âJust kill Barry and get on with it?â
âAw, no. This is far more interesting.â
âFingers in my skull...?â you whisper, half to yourself. Then you look up to him with a snap. âYou are so weird,â you tell Reverse Barry, emphasizing it with a low point. âSo weird.â
âWant me to tell your future?âÂ
Again with the voice and the nerves in that special place.Â
âI gotta say, itâs kind of disturbing,â the man smirks. âYouâll love it.â
âWeird.â
Across the base, just two hallways away, something clicks. Itâs a familiar click. Itâs the click of the door opening.Â
Quickly, you glance backwards, then lean down to pause the show on the computer. You hadnât even realized it was still going. Once thatâs done, the man is still standing in front of you. That sinister and yet innocent grin is still dancing across his face, though his steely eyes are totally locked on you.Â
âWhat, weirdo? You know where he is now. Arenât you gonna go get him?â
âYou want me to so badly, donât you?â Reverse Barry whispers. You just give him a look.Â
âIâll be back for you.â
âI donât know what that means.â
And then the speedster is gone. Right on time, too, cause Barry jogs into the room not a second later.Â
âY/N?â
âYeah?â you turn around.Â
âDid I just... see someone here?â Barry points towards your end of the room in his scarlet suit. Huh. Reverse Barry was taller too.Â
âWhat are you on about?â you throw casually. âNobodyâs been here but me since you left.â
âAre you sure?â the Flash keeps pushing. You hate it. Pushing.Â
âYes, Barry,â you roll your eyes. âIâm sure. Oh, by the way, Barry. Did you have a childhood best friend?â
Barry frowns. âNo, why?â
You smile to yourself as you turn back away from him. The other speedsterâs footsteps are coming closer and closer. You can hear them echo off the walls.Â
âNo reason,â you answer with a smirk just as one of them enters the room, probably to give you crap again.
.â«*ïŸïœ„ïŸïœĄ.â
.*ïœĄïœ„ïŸâ«*.
Fun fact, Reverse Flash is actually my favorite villain in DC comics. Bro is vicious in the comics. I just hate all the live action versions of him we get. Lego DC Villains Reverse Flash and Injustice 2 are the best versions. Injustice 2 is my personal preference. Iâd like to do more with this but, who knows. Depends how this is received. #lol
#eobard thawne x reader#eobard thawne imagine#eobard thawne imagines#imagine#imagines#x reader#eobard thawne fanfiction#eobard thawne fanfic#eobard thawne fic#injustice 2 x reader#eobard thawne injustice 2 x reader#injustice 2 eobard thawne x reader#injustice 2 eobard thawne#injustice 2 imagines#injustice two x reader#reverse flash x reader#reverse flash imagine#reverse flash imagines#reverse flash fanfiction#reverse flash injustice 2#reverse flash injustice 2 x reader#injustice 2 reverse flash x reader#reverse flash
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taking the fall (3)
warnings: imprisonment, interrogation, injury, mild blood, panic and sensory overload, dehumanizing language, ambiguous motives, morally neutral/antagonistic janus, snakes mention
-
His guest wasnât eating.
Janus cast an irritated glance over to the terrarium, where the only âlifeâ that could be seen was a clump of thick foliage in one corner.
Heâd left the old fake plants in there as a taunt, but as soon as the tiny creature had ascertained that there were no snakes in the grass, theyâd immediately bundled every bit of shiny plastic greenery into a makeshift nest and hid within it. He supposed he should have expected it, from one as industrious as these tiny folk all seemed to be.
Regardless of his guestâs reticence, heâd been setting small dishes of food in there whenever he himself took his meals, giving them some time to adjust to the reality of their situation. It had been a couple of days, however, and every miniature entree looked entirely untouched.
His prisoner seemed to be on a hunger strike.
It added more evidence to his theory that he was being misled in regards to his guestâs identity. If they were actually a victim in all this, why bother keeping quiet and refusing to give the answers Janus needed? Why go so far as to not even eat, for people who allegedly wouldnât care if he lived or died?
No, things made much more sense if this was a gambit on the tiny peopleâs part, one of them volunteering to stay and play sacrificial lamb, distracting him for as long as the others needed. Their terror, their injury, their tiny bitter laugh, it could all be part of a ploy for pity on his end. Get him too invested in a puzzling prisoner while the others escaped.
The thought made his stomach drop unpleasantly. His opponents were exceedingly small, and he was one of the few who knew they existed. If they got away, heâd never see them again.
He couldnât afford that.
Pushing his chair back, he approached the terrarium, casting an assessing eye over the food set out in it. Some of it could sit out, and had been there overnight, the best time for his guest to eat without risking even seeing Janus. But no. Not a single crumb out of place to indicate that anything had been eaten.
âStill alive?â he asked dryly, rapping a knuckle on the glass once.
There was a long pause, and then one of the leafy stems sticking out from the nest twitched twice. This daily question and response was the only communication heâd had with his guest since that first afternoon, and even this small, silent answer had originally been prompted by a threat of Janus reaching in there and checking himself.
âI notice that youâve been refusing any sustenance,â he continued idly, and got nothing for his efforts. âPlanning to die before you can give up any secrets?â
No response. Janus sighed as though put upon, and slid the terrarium lid halfway off. There were still no meaningful movements from the nest, though it seemed to be subtly trembling. It was impressive that despite the dark clothing that his guest wore, he still couldnât make out exactly where they were even this close.
With narrowed eyes, he reached in and grabbed a few of the plastic leaves, tugging to pull the construction apart bit by bit.
He only caught the faintest flicker of movement before there was a sudden sharp pain in his index finger, and he yanked his hand back on reflex.
A weight came up with it, putting even more pressure on his wound, and it dropped as soon as his hand was just above the terrarium lid.
Seeing the dark shape attempting to scramble away, his other hand smacked down on top of it automatically, pressing it into the mesh with a small, muffled cry.
He glanced at his hand. There was a plastic thorn hooked in his thumb, the broad end chewed off and the point of it sharpened. His guest had attacked and used him as a makeshift lift in their escape attempt.
âOh,â he intoned, voice dark. âSeems like you have plenty of energy after all, hm?â
---
Virgil took in short, gasping breaths, barely able to hear whatever threatening thing the human was muttering as pain radiated through his leg.
It let up just slightly as the pressure of the hand on top of him eased, his face no longer pressed into the cold wire netting of the cageâs top. Before he could try and string two thoughts together, the fingers were curling around him like a hawkâs talons, lifting him up and sending another jolt of mind-numbing pain through him. He might have whimpered.
So much for that escape attempt. Heâd known it was a long shot, but his options had been limited after realizing that he literally couldnât stand on the injured leg any more. Theyâd dwindled further with every day he couldnât bring himself to crawl over to any food or water. Living outside, heâd survived on very little before, but it was a gamble every time.
He was flipped to face the light, the humanâs head in silhouette above him. He couldn't make out itâs words. Everything felt overwhelming, made incomprehensible by the pain and the dark spots in his vision. His face felt hot. Was he bleeding?
Things went blissfully quiet above him, and then he was being moved. He wondered if the human was about to kill him, and the thought sent a much weaker pulse of panic down his spine than usual. He hoped it killed borrowers before feeding them to itâs snakes.
Something soft and dark dropped over him, and he thrashed for a moment before his leg reminded him how awful an idea that was. So he laid still instead, letting his terror shake through him in waves, until he wasnât completely lost to it anymore.
Slowly, he lifted a hand, feeling at what was draped over him. Cloth, soft in texture and tightly-knit enough that not much light got through. Below him⊠a warm, living surface.
âAwake?â the human said, voice both closer and quieter than heâd ever heard it.
Another shudder worked through him, and he reached up to press his hands over his face, wishing none of this was real. His eye pigment had run, drying in tracks down his cheeks.
He wouldnât be able to reapply it. The locket he stored it in was left behind with the rest of his stuff, tucked away into his oversized pack and left at the opening into the humanâs home. It had probably already been torn through and picked apart by Mari and the other insiders.
The thought stung, somehow more personal than the nightmare of the situation he was already in.
âI believe I see now why you havenât eaten,â the human continued with a surprising lack of snark. It must have seen his leg. He felt a little sick just thinking about it.
What had felt like a low-grade fracture through the adrenaline had ended up growing worse and worse without treatment, until the injury was a solid lump of swollen flesh and ugly bruising that twanged with agony at even the slightest shifts. He wondered if the human was going to use it against him. It would make torture exceedingly easy on its part.
âContinue with the silent treatment, and you wonât get any actual treatment,â it said, now sounding exasperated.
After another stretch of silence, the hand beneath him moved and tilted, sliding him off onto a flat surface. Suddenly desperate to know what was going on, Virgil yanked at the cloth, dragging handfuls of it down until he reached an edge and could pull it clear of his eyes.
The light in this room was dimmer, but it still took him a moment to adjust. He wasnât in a snake tank, but on top of a low table in what looked like a sitting room, if he remembered the human terms right. The human was seated on the couch nearby, looking down at him.
âThere you are.â
---
The tiny person shot him a furious glare, rendered mostly ineffective by the dark tear streaks that were still smudged along their face.
Janus wished his earlier reflexes had been a little gentler. Heâd had a quite embarrassing moment of panic where heâd thought the grotesque worsening of their leg injury had been caused by his grasp, rather than simple neglect and lack of treatment.
Despite his patience, they didnât reply, continuing to just stare at him. He stood, ignoring the way it instantly made them begin trembling again.
âIâll be back in a moment. Feel free to move around and make your injury worse,â he instructed dryly, before turning and going to grab the first aid kit from the bathroom.
His thumb was still sensitive, the injury messily scabbed over with dried blood. Heâd pried the thorn out with his teeth easily enough, but with his other hand occupied by a prone tiny person and their hyperventilation fit, he couldnât properly treat it.
Upon his return, he saw his guest had abandoned his handkerchief and was halfway to the edge of the table. He rolled his eyes, and set the kit down before grabbing them by the shoulders and sliding them back over to the handkerchief.
âI was being sarcastic, you know,â he told them, and opened the kit to start cleaning his undersized injury. âIâll be very unhappy if my only source of information dies a completely avoidable death for no reason.â
âYeah, because I sure wouldnât want to make you unhappy,â his guest bit out, and then looked as though they were deeply and immediately regretting opening their mouth. Janus didnât know why; he personally took much better to sass than being stabbed.
âSo you do know how sarcasm works. Color me impressed.â
The tiny person actually hissed at him, like the worldâs most emo kitten.
âYes, yes, I feel very threatened,â Janus retaliated by prodding them with the edge of an open tube of arnica gel. âHere. For the bruising.â
After another long glare, his guest spoke. âWhat do you want for it?â
Janus raised an eyebrow. âCouldnât it be argued that I owe it to you, for allowing the injury to fester while youâre in my care?â
âYour care--!â his guest cut themself off, taking in a deep breath through gritted teeth. âTerrible hosting etiquette aside, you werenât the one who gave me the injury. Not your concern. So, what do you want?â
Janus wondered absently how tiny people qualified their hostsâ manners. He had certainly already failed by human standards, immediately imprisoning his guest and all, so perhaps it didnât really matter either way. He wasnât above taking advantage of a tiny personâs bartering honor system. âAnswer three questions.â
âI get to pass on questions I donât want to answer,â his guest countered quickly, apparently having expected this.
âYou get five passes,â Janus allowed. Seeing what they refused to answer would be informative in itself.
â... Fine.â With another glance at their injury, they grabbed the tube sharply enough that they almost overbalanced. âAsk.â
âWhere are the others living?â Janus asked, just to set the stakes high.
âPass,â his guest answered, not even looking up from their task. Janus rolled his eyes.
âWhy are you defending them?â he tried.
âIâm not defending them,â they shot back, vitriol thick in their voice. âI just donât want you to get what you want. Thatâs one question.â
âOuch. Iâm hurt, really.â Janus tapped his nails along the table idly. âWhatâs your name and pronouns?â
This did prompt them to look up, face pinching up in confusion. After a moment, they returned to their baseline expression of scowl and retorted, âThatâs two questions.â
âItâs one sentence, it counts as one question,â Janus lied smugly. They still looked close to passing, so he gave them a nudge. âUnless you want me to make something up? Iâm very creative, I assure you.â
âI use he,â he finally grit out, âand you can call me V.â
âFor Vendetta?â Janus mused, and received an utterly baffled look for his wit. âI suppose your movie repertoire isnât that expansive.â
âTwo questions,â V said flatly. âOne left.â
âYes, I can count.â Janus glanced at Vâs gel-covered leg. âYou have to rub that in for it to work.â
Vâs expression flickered to one of despair, but he bit his lip and started to slowly massage the gel in. Janus wondered at how easily heâd believed him.
âWhat do you call yourselves?â
âPass.â
âWhere did you live?â
âPass.â
âHow do I bait the others out?â
âPass.â
âWhy do you hate me more than the ones who allegedly put you here?â
Vâs hand slipped, and he winced and paused for a moment. â... Pass.â
There was certainly a grudge there. Too bad Janus had no idea what it could be about. Oh well.
He set a hand on the table, leaning over V. âWhen do the others plan to leave? As specific as you can get, please.â
âPa--,â V cut himself off, and Janus could see the moment he realized he had used up all his get-out-of-questioning-free cards. He patiently waited out the tiny personâs fit of frustration.
â... I donât know.â Janusâs smug grin dropped, but V continued after a speculative pause. âI donât think theyâll leave before the season's turning. The spring thaw has been slow this year, and theyâre-- not suited for it.â
Janus felt some of the tension drop from his shoulders. The start of summer. He had time, and the advantage of a weather forecast app. That was good news, even if heâd had to wrangle it out of his guest. He had time.
âHow interesting,â he said lightly, and capped the gel to put it back in the box. Vâs hands were clutching the edge of his coat tightly, as though guilty or angry. Or perhaps just stressed. âLetâs get some food in actual range of you, then, shall we?â
#sanders sides#ts virgil#ts janus#g/t#taking the fall#ttf#my writing#writing#borrowers#mind the warnings
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Social Anxious S/O
A/N: I hope you like it!! A little bit different than the first one but yeah,, enjoy!
Dabi:
He can somehow always tell when youâre on the verge of an anxiety attack. Cold, blue eyes will watch, let his eyes linger on the way you constantly fidget your hands, and heâs silent for a minute. Youâre always anxious in crowds- it took you a good minute to warm up to the League- so heâs sure that youâll come out of it. Heâll watch and wait, check on you more frequently and spread his legs a bit wider until the side of his boot is touching your shoe. Dabi will let you come to him.
Maybe it isnât the wisest decision, maybe itâs a bit cruel to make you- someone who canât breathe, who canât stop the yelling and spiraling thoughts in their head- but what else is supposed to do? Heâ never learned how to deal with these. Whenever he would have them, he would wait until he was exhausted to snap out of it or fall asleep and once he awoke, the problem was technically gone. It takes him multiple times to realize that what you want is comfort. Itâs times where you cling to his hand, where you bury yourself against his side, where you whisper his name in a such a broken whisper that itâs then that his body moves on itâs own accord and heâs pressing you close to his body, a slight rub of his palm on you until he canât feel the shaking.
He doesnât understand it, he doesnât get why you canât be in crowds, why most meetings leave you on the other end of a water bottle or curled up on the shower floor until your skin is wrinkled, how you sleep for hours and are hesitant to touch him. He wonât pry either. He waits for you to come to him, itâs cruel and selfish and he knows from the stern lectures given to him by Mr. Compress that he should at least try to find your triggers or ways to comfort you but then he sees how you reject his touch, how you look at him with almost sad eyes and he pulls away.
It takes a real bad attack for him to actually react. He can tell that itâs going to be worse than the usual anxiety that you get in meetings when your leg doesnât stop bouncing and how you keep looking to the exit. He presses the side of his boot to you and where you might have given him a smile, itâs replaced by a look of panic, a deer-in-headlights type of look and youâre gone. You run and when he finds you, slumped against a wall, shaking and gasping for breath, he holds his hand out and he offers to help. Heâll talk you through it. His already warm hands will rise, heâll have you describe it, tell you an old story he once heard, and itâs sloppy, but heâs trying.
He gets better. It doesnât matter whoâs talking- he knows he can get away with it, heâs important to whatever plan there is and a simple lecture doesnât do much other than wound a bit of his pride- but when he senses that youâre close to having that wheezing breath, all you have to do is cling to him and heâs already telling the person bye with the back of his hand as he takes you away. Dabi tries and thatâs important, heâll talk you through it, tell you some outrageous story from his youth that you donât know if itâs fiction or fact and at the end, heâll promise a hug through the night, hands that rub up and down your sides, leaving you warm until youâre fast asleep.
Takami Keigo:
A hero first, Keigo knows how to read the warning signs and how to pull someone back. But, heâs technical about it. Itâs rationalizing with you, making you tell him whatâs the worst that will happen and if thatâs even true, itâs him making you match his breath- hand flat against the air as it comes in a small wave to mimic a sucking breath. Itâs all standard material, things that one would read online or be told by their therapist. It doesnât scream Keigo, it politely speaks and introduces themself as Hawks, complete with a smile, kind eyes who hold you and try to make you relax and snap out of it.
While he might not be stopped at every corner, might be requested to take a few pictures, or even have to stop some petty criminal, he doesnât get that many stops in public. So, when out in public, he hardly knows the signs, he can only tell when heâs too busy talking to someone, and he can feel a feather between your fingers. A small smile will stretch his lips and thereâs a flash of concern in his eyes that lasts until he blinks when he feels the sharp twist and pull of his feather. Heâs quick to speed things along, pleasantly so, smiling and waving goodbye, grabbing you by the arm and making sure you both are out of peopleâs eyes when he pulls you to the side. His voice is low and heâll ask what that was about, make a joke about jealousy, until he sees how pained you look.
Sun-kissed eyes will darken and thereâs fear in them, making them foul for just a moment. He speaks and itâs controlled but thereâs another sharp twist of his feather that makes him wince and he realizes that that wonât work. He can try, and he will, but youâre shaking your head and you call his name, soft and broken, letting the feather fall to the floor under your feet and heâs telling you to name the color of his feathers. They arenât red, theyâre deeper than that, theyâre like that old candy you liked as a kid, and heâs making you talk, bouncing off thoughts and holding you, pulling you closer and closer until you slump against him and thank him.
There are still times where he reverts to Hawks, where he isnât Keigo but it still helps you, so he doesnât stop. He remembers your anxiety, he knows that you have it so whenever he has a meeting or conference or even just an interview, he doesnât make you attend. Any conversations that steer towards you are immediately steered away. He doesnât want to talk about you. You struggle enough with fearing people that you donât know will have opinions on you and adding to that during an interview wonât be good for you. So heâll smile, tell the people how he cares for you, heâll close his eyes and smile and then heâll talk about a restaurant you both visited and how good it was, heâll do anything to take the spotlight away from you.
He understands you. Keigo is good to you, holding your hand and shielding you with his wing when the crowd starts to thicken, offers to go home when he can see you suffocating under the eyes of everyone, and he says nothing when it was his idea to spend time together, to have a date cut short. Heâll learn, take you out earlier when the crowds are less, take you out on cloudy days, let his wing hover when the sky begins to flash and rumble. He cares for you, threading his fingers with yours, letting you hold a feather, have feather flutter over to you and tickle at your skin, leading you somewhere more remote than what the sidewalk has to offer, a feather sneaking down your shirt to feel the pulse of your heart and steady breath. Heâll come back to you, asking if youâre okay, kissing your knuckles and resuming your day.
#dabi x reader#dabi headcanons#dabi imagine#hawks x reader#hawks headcaons#bnha imagines#takami keigo x reader#takami keigo headcanons#keigo takami x reader#keigo x reader#bnha dabi#touya todoroki headcanons#touya todoriki headcanons#touya todoroki imagines#ive been thinking of cosmic horror lately#i think#maybe a fic tomorrow#or one or two hc#i have to think but i have some really nice fics waiting#and like im excited but ya know#things#okay bye!!#have a good day
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I Donât Belong Here â L Lawliet/GN! Reader
Summary: What kind of a story begins with the main character dying? Well, this one. L Lawliet has lived out his days on earth and finds himself in the afterlife. The Good Place, he is told by a neighborhood architect named (Name). One who shows him around his own neighborhood and introduces him to new people. But something doesnât add up, L notices. Does he really belong in the Good Place?
(I'd advise having knowledge on the TV show "The Good Place" if you wish to understand the majority of this clusterfuck. Although, if you wish to proceed regardless, go right ahead!)
Chapter One: L Lawliet, You Are Dead.
<>
Weclome! Everything Is Fine.
Everything is fine? Is that so?
The last thing L remembers is the ceiling. JustâŠthe ceiling. The fans twirling on the ceiling of the headquarter building and the cross hatching of the tiles. It was peaceful. Was he sleeping? If he had been sleeping, then how did he end up here?
Now, instead of the ceiling, he stares at a wall. Big, green letters stare back at him. âWelcome! Everything Is Fine,â they say. Something inside L is prickling, like something he is forgetting struggling to find its way to his brain. He wants to ponder it, but something about the words splayed out on the wall in front of him is telling him that he doesnât have to. Everything is fine, after all.
He only manages to tear his eyes away from the bold, sans serif font when the sound of a doorknob turning catches his attention. Huh. Has there always been a door there? If so he hadnât noticed it, which L thinks is completely absurd as he usually takes mental notes of everything in a room before getting himself seated. But there it is, a door he missed while transfixed on the somehow calming message on the wall, now opening to reveal...a person.
You stand in the doorway, simply smiling.
Now that Lâs attention has been drawn away from the mystifying message he can properly analyze his surroundings, and his new visitor. Heâs in a rather simple room, nothing but a few plants dotting the perimeter and a couch in the middle, which he is currently sitting on. And heâs sitting normally. Hm. That feelsâŠitchy. L inches a foot onto the couch in his discomfort of sitting with his bottom planted firmly on the cushions with both feet on the ground. Though he hesitates to bring both feet up and hug his knees to his chin as he normally would, because he senses that your sudden presence means he is about to be standing and following you into that mysterious room behind you. Like a doctor calling a patient into an appointment. Except in this case L has no idea what you are, and judging by your suit and comical, colorful bowtie, you are certainly not a doctor.
âL?â you ask, showing your teeth in a kind smile. âCome on in.â
And against his better judgement, he does. L was never the person to simply keep quiet and obey orders in a situation he does not understand. And there certainly is not a whole lot of understanding happening in his brain right now. He should be asking questions. He should be refusing you. He doesnât know you, you could be leading him to his doom. All this is possible but something about the way you smile at himâŠlike those big, green words, all he reads from you is âEverything Is Fine.â
The room that you lead him into doesnât look all that much like a death trap, but you can never be sure. Itâs a simple office, plants similar to the ones in the waiting room sit in pots in the corners and on the windowsill. The sun shines outside, seeping through the glass and illuminating the desk on the left as you walk in. On it are a few little trinkets, paperweights, and, right in the middle, a manila file folder.
You circle around the desk and settle yourself into the rollaway chair, gesturing to the sleek armchair across from you. âWhy donât you have a seat, hm?â
What is wrong with him right now? You ask him to do something and he justâŠdoes? What happened to his spine, other than it bending exponentially thanks to the way he sits?
No matter, there are more important things to think about right now. Like the fact that he might finally be getting some answers.
You open the file in front of you and skim whateverâs written, opening your mouth to say something when your eyes meet his. And then they drift down to his legs. You stare at him curiously with your mouth still agape for a few moments at how his knees are pulled up to his chin, eventually shaking your head and getting back on track.
âMy name is (Name), and of course I already know yours.â you say, folding your hands in front of you. âSo, how are you, L?â
How should L even answer that?
âIâmâŠconfused, mostly. How are you?â
Your eyes light up, as if you havenât been asked that in a while. âOh, well Iâm fine. Yâknow, busy, but fine! And, yes, Iâd assume youâd be confused, everyone in your situation usually is.â
âMy situation? What exactly do you mean by that?â Now that L has finally asked one question he canât seem to stop the ball from rolling âSpeaking of you, who are you exactly? Actually, never mind who, but whereââ
You hold up a hand. âAll of your questions will be answered, I promise. Thereâs just one thing that you need to know before we tackle any of that.â
âAnd what is that?â
Your eyebrows lift slightly, elbows digging into the surface of your desk as you lean forward. You look like youâre about to tell him that heâs fired. That his dog died. That some kid took the last of the strawberry shortcake and heâs going to have to settle for carrot cake. What comes out of your mouth is much worse.
âL Lawliet, you are dead.â
âŠ
HeâsâŠ?
Yes. Yes, he is. Thatâs why he doesnât remember how he got here.
Heâs dead. Huh.
L is perfectly content in not saying anything about this new little factoid, but youâre looking at him expectantly, and a little cautiously. Like you either expect him to punch you or burst into tears. L wonders if that fear is based on experience. How many other people have to told this to?
ââŠAm I, now? Thatâs a shame.â
You breathe out a sigh, which could be from relief. âYes, it is. But, not to worry! Because youâve ended up in the Good Place, L. Youâre going to be okay.â
âSo itâs called the Good Place?â L brings his thumb to his lips. âA rather simple thing to call it.â
You nod. âPretty self-explanatory, right? We didnât want anyone to get confused. There are just so many names for it on earth. Heaven, Valhalla, NirvanaâŠBut it all translates to one place. Here. And you get to be a part of it.â
âThat soundsâŠâ Before he can articulate his thoughts, a dilemma from earlier brings itself to the forefront of Lâs mind. âWrong.â
âIâm sorry?â
âMy memories are all wrong. Before this, all I can remember is the ceiling and nothing else. If I were to have died, surely I would remember it, yes?â
You take a gulp of air and pull the manila file closer to you. âWe take it upon ourselves to erase the memories of death if they are particularly traumatizing or embarrassing. Helps the residents adapt into a peaceful afterlife better, Iâm sure you understand.â
âYes, that is perfectly sensible. Although I may ask, what is an example of a death that is not at all traumatizing?â
âPfft, there hardly is one. Youâd be surprised how many memories we have to erase.â
âOn the contrary, I am hardly surprised. Iâm sure there are plenty of people who cannot accept the nature of their death, let alone the fact that they have died in the first place.â
You sigh, âYouâre tellinâ me. Most people come around once I tell them that theyâre basically in paradise, but some wonât even listen to me once I break the news. One person tried to convince me I was the dead one! Itâs justâoh, um, but thatâs hardly the point.â
âDo you ever tell someone how they died if they ask?â
Your expression hardens. âI do, but I like to know that theyâre certain before I tell them.â
âI am.â
Exhaling through your nose, you prop the manila folder up like a book, scanning the files inside. âAlright then. Letâs see hereâŠah, okay. So, unfortunately this oneâs pretty traumatizing, itâs not really one of those embarrassing deaths that some people get a kick out of, so brace yourself.â You look over the top of the folder as if checking to see if heâs braced himself. His expression and stance is unwavering, large eyes merely staring back at you patiently. âYou were betrayed by your colleague Yagami Light â also known as your adversary Kira â and killed by the Shinigami Rem at his request.â
Oh yeah. That.
The ceiling was not clear in view, no, there was something obstructing Lâs view of it. A face, staring down at him as his heart gave out right on the floor. Brown eyes filled with such cocky maliciousness, the upward tilt of lips L only knew to spout lies. It all equated to a side of Yagami Light that L knew existed but had never seen up until his final moments. It all added up to one final conclusion -- Yagami Light was Kira all along. L had been right. But the price of knowing that for certain is that, now, thereâs nothing he can do about it.
âIâm..Iâm sorry. I never know what to do when I have to tell peopleâŠâ you try, reaching across the table and planting a hand down in front of him. Not asking to hold his hand, not even expecting a reaction. Just showing that youâre there, and that youâre trying.
âItâs up to them now. Iâve done all that I could. I trust my successors.â
âIn catching the murderer Kira, right?â you ask, to which L confirms with a polite utterance of âyesâ. Obviously you know the answer. âI understand that is one of the many, many cases youâve worked on during your lifetime.â you scan your eyes quickly down what appears to be a long list in your folder. Do you have every detail of his life in those files? Every case he ever took? Hell, every day in his life? You set the file down flat in front of you and look at him with something L determines is admiration. âYouâve done so much good in your lifetime, L. Youâve worked so hard over the entirety of your life to make sure you left the world a little better than you found it. NowâŠwell, now you can rest.â
You can relax, you tell him. And it seems to simple coming out of your mouth yet somehow it still feels out of reach.
âI canâŠâ Is all L manages to say, his preoccupation coming across as dreamy and wistful. His mind is busy running a mile a minute and his mouth just canât keep up. L decides to test the words out on his own tongue to see if they still sound foreign, âI can rest now.â
Yeah, no, it still sounds like bullshit.
âYes! Well, after the tour, of course.â
âTour?â
You start to stand, straightening your colorful bowtie and circling around your desk to the door which you pull open. You donât exit right away, though. You stand next to the exit, waiting for L to follow you. While he works on untangling himself from his current position you clarify, âA tour of the neighborhood! Where youâll spend your afterlife.â
#death note#death note x reader#death note fanfic#the good place#the good place au#l lawliet x reader#x reader fanfic#x reader#reader insert#death note l#l lawliet
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the hunt
rating: lime/mature pairing:Â male vampire x gender-neutral reader features:Â touch starvation, safewords, biting, aftercare, cuddling warnings: blood, fear, being chased, dizziness length: 4240 words
Feeling isolated and craving physical intimacy, a college student agrees to be hunted and bitten by a vampire in exchange for a post-meal snuggling session. Based on this prompt submitted to @monsterkinkmemeââ by @the-color-of-sound-is-space
You were supposed to meet him at 11 PM, in the middle of Bartleby Park. Vampires were nocturnal and uncomfortable in the sun, so the hunt had to take place at night. But did it have to be this late?
It wasnât as if you were getting tired. You were something of a nocturnal animal yourself nowadays; college tended to do that to people. But the park was pretty creepy this late at night, eerily empty and unnaturally quiet.
You checked your phone again. 11:10 already. He was late. Had he been held up? Or could he have overslept? That thought wrung a quiet chuckle from you â a sound not at all reassuring to hear in the dark silence of the park.
The âheâ in question was a vampire named Roland that youâd met on the internet. You were meeting up so he could suck your blood.
For whatever reason, college towns tended to attract vampires. It probably had something to do with the vibrant nightlife, and the bars that never closed, and parties that only ended when the sun rose. Or perhaps it was the rich history of such places, in the old stone buildings and the musty library books. Or maybe it was just the students themselves: curious and open-minded, over-educated and sheltered and a little bit reckless.
In the modern age, most vampires obtained their food in the modern way: in bags, from blood banks or speciality clinics. But there were those who still swore by more natural methods. Many believed that feeding from the source provided physical and mental health benefits. For others, the desire to stalk, and chase, and bite, was simply too strong to resist indulging. Luckily for all, it was not as difficult to find a willing human victim as one might expect.
You discovered a message board that was dedicated to this macabre economy. Vampires would make posts looking for âpreyâ â humans willing or eager to be bitten. An arrangement would be made for a night of thrilling and dangerous roleplay, where the vampire played the part of the seductive predator, and the human, the helpless victim.
For most of the humans who posted on this forum, being prey was a kink. They enjoyed the thrill of the chase, and the pain of the bite. It was foreplay to them, and the evening inevitably led to sex after their partnerâs more pressing appetites were sated.
You became a little obsessed with this message board. You didnât think youâd mind being bitten; there was something kind of sexy about it. But you werenât really trying to get laid. What you really wanted was some quality aftercare, a perk that was frequently offered, requested, and discussed on this forum.
College had become something of a lonely experience for you. You hadnât meant for it to happen, and you werenât sure where youâd gone wrong. In your freshman year youâd made an effort to be social, starting a number of casual friendships, but none of them really stuck. You were still close to your high school friends, and you talked to them online all the time, but somehow the number of people with whom you had any physical interaction had dwindled down to zero.
It made you lonely in a deep, nagging way. You wanted a hug. You wanted to hold someoneâs hand. You daydreamed constantly about these things, setting up elaborate scenarios in your mind that led to someone safe and warm holding you for hours at a time. You felt like these fantasies were reaching a boiling point in your mind. And one night, after drinking several beers by yourself, you made your own post on that message board. You would let someone bite you (hunt optional), in exchange for an evening of snuggling (sex optional).
And that was how you met Roland. He wasnât the only vampire who replied to your post, but he was the only one who lived within easy walking distance. You agreed to meet at one of the campus cafes and discuss possibilities over coffee.
You recognized him immediately, although you were pretty sure he didnât recognize you. He was in one of your classes. You frequently spied him from across the lecture hall, tall and good-looking and unapproachable. Youâd always thought there was something a little otherworldly about him, but he mostly just looked like another student. Youâd had no idea that he wasnât even human.
And it turned out he wasnât as intimidating as he looked. He actually seemed pretty nice, even a little bit shy. Heâd never fed straight from the skin before â drinking nothing but bagged blood since he was turned â and he wanted to try it at least once. He wasnât trying to get laid either. Like you, he was much more interested in the aftercare, hoping for something like a cooldown hug once the deed was done. That suited you just fine.
The plan was this: You would meet in Bartleby Park at 11 PM. The exact location didnât matter, he said; he would come find you. This statement gave you an unexpected thrill. Perhaps the hunting part would be more fun than youâd thought. You would run, and he would chase you. If you screamed, all the better â although this did make a safeword necessary. You chose âcardboard,â the first word that came to your mind, which made him laugh. When he finally caught you, he would bite you on the neck and drink your blood. Then he would take you up to his apartment for first aid and spooning. Simple as that.
Only he wasnât here yet. It was 11:20 now, and you were still alone. Maybe he was having trouble finding you. Or⊠was he backing out? That thought stung. You suddenly realized just how much youâd been looking forward to this, and the idea of going home tired and alone made you feel more depressed than ever.
A branch snapped in the trees nearby, and your head whipped toward the sound. Your eyes scanned back and forth across the screen of dark leaves, trying and failing to uncover the culprit.
âRoland?â you whispered. You hadnât meant to whisper, but suddenly you were having trouble finding your voice. Your phone buzzed in your hand, making you jump. It was a text message from your friend:
âHow did it go?â
âHeâs late, Iâm still waiting,â you typed in response.
âOk⊠Text me again in an hour or Iâm calling the cops.â
Your friends had basically all agreed that this seemed like a bad idea. You were starting to wonder if they were right. You didnât know Roland at all⊠even if you knew where he lived and where he went to school. Even if he was cute and he seemed nice.
And even if Roland was fine, Roland wasnât here. It was late, and the park was deserted. Who knew what other weirdos were prowling around out here.
You were starting to feel genuinely anxious. Beneath the trees, the park was dark, the shadows unaffected by the dim light of the street lamps. What was the safeword again? Cardboard? That was it, right?
There was a rapid noise in the grass behind you â tff tff tff â like something rushing towards you in long leaps. That was the last straw. You launched into a flat-out run, heart hammering, breath coming in gasps.
A pair of cold, hard arms wrapped around you from behind, jerking you to a stop. You screamed at the top of your lungs, and then, almost in the same breath, shouted, âCardboard cardboard cardboard,â all in a rush; sure that the word would mean nothing to this person; that you were about to be hurt or worse.
But cardboard was the magic word. The arms disappeared from around your chest, and in a flash he was standing in front of you.
âIâm sorry,â he said, voice rough, âare you okay? Did I hurt you?â
And of course it was only Roland, the very person you had agreed to do this with. He was staring into your face, expression distressed, hands gripping your shoulders.
âIâm okay,â you wheezed. âIt was just⊠scarier than I expected.â
He was slowly shaking his head back and forth. He looked appalled. âFuck, I am so sorry.â
You didnât understand why he was apologizing like that, until you suddenly became aware of the wetness on your cheeks, and the ragged sound of your breathing. Were you crying? God, how fucking embarrassing.
âIâm sorry,â you said, rubbing tears from your eyes with the backs of your hands. âJesus.â
âNo no,â said Roland, âdonât apologize. I think I overdid it. ...And I was pretty late, that definitely didnât help.â
He was looking around now, frowning into the dark woods, and rubbing your shoulders absently. You were hyper-aware of his hands. They were like ice but every pass of them over your shoulders sent a rush of warmth through you. You felt extremely relieved that he was here, even though he was the reason youâd been so scared in the first place. You wished he would hug you â the desire for this was almost overwhelming â but you felt too dazed and embarrassed to ask.
His eyes met yours once again, and his hands slipped from your shoulders, finding their way into his pockets instead â the exact opposite of what you wanted.
âUhâŠâ he said. âDo you wanna just skip this part and go straight back to my place?â
A wobbly laugh escaped you, and you nodded weakly. âAre you still gonna suck my blood?â you asked.
âDo you still want me to?â
âYeah.â
He smiled at that. It was a small, almost shy smile, but enough to give you a good look at his fangs. They looked shockingly white and sharp in the dark.
He started to walk in the direction of his apartment, then paused; and looking back, expression uncertain, he held his hand out towards you. You hesitated for just one second. Then you placed your hand in his, and his cold fingers closed tightly around yours.
âIs this ok?â he asked.
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak. Your heart was racing again. When was the last time youâd held someoneâs hand? You never wanted him to let go.
Neither of you spoke. You wondered if he was feeling as nervous as you were. Youâd thought that the scary part was over, but what about what came next? How badly would it hurt when he bit you? Heâd never bitten anyone before, he said. How would he react to his first taste?
When you tried to picture it, all you could imagine were his lips pressed against your skin; and his hand cupping the back of your neck, holding you still. They were not unpleasant images. You felt your face heat up, and you were suddenly grateful for the darkness and the cold night air.
It was a fairly short walk. His apartment was a big single-room studio: TV and sofa in one corner, bed and bookcase in another. Rounded doorways branched off into a kitchen and a bathroom. There was a large white-curtained window in the west wall, and moonlight poured in through the glass, illuminating the plush carpet. It was cozy and uncluttered. Roland watched you look around, then looked around himself.
âMaybe in the kitchen?â he asked. He caught your eye, then glanced quickly away. âSo we donât get blood on the carpet.â
How practical. You followed him into the kitchen, forcing yourself to take even breaths as you went. Vampires were supposed to have excellent hearing. Could he hear how fast your heart was beating?
âWant some water?â he asked, opening a cupboard as he spoke. You peered over his shoulder, tickled to see that the only dishes he seemed to own were drinking glasses; no bowls or plates in sight. What would he need a plate for, after all?
He moved around you to fill the glass with water from the sink. He seemed to be avoiding eye-contact, and you wondered again if he was nervous. Somehow the thought made you feel more at ease. Boldly, you opened his refrigerator to examine the contents. Blood bags, and nothing else. Lots of them. Stacks upon stacks, in neat little rows. You couldnât quite believe it, even though it was exactly what youâd expected to find.
You didnât know what kind of face you were making, but you were afraid it wasnât good. You turned toward Roland and found him watching you, expression careful; glass of water forgotten in one hand.
âYeahâŠâ he said.
âNothing for me?â you asked, grinning, attempting to break the sudden tension.
He grinned back sheepishly. Then he pulled a little juice box out of the pocket of his jacket. It was the kind of thing they gave you after donating blood. You both began to laugh, and a warm, giddy feeling spread through you.
Roland moved closer and patted one of the countertops. âHop up here?â he asked. You obliged, although it was more of a scramble than a hop. Roland began pulling more small items from the pockets of his jacket, and setting them on the counter next to you: single-use alcohol wipes; a few band-aids; a little roll of gauze, and a roll of medical tape. It became clear to you that he really had intended to bite you in the park, and he had come prepared.
He was standing very close now, almost pressed against your bent knees. You longed to close the distance. You didnât move. Rolandâs movements also grew slower, more hesitant. Stalling.
âAre you nervous?â you asked.
âYeah,â he admitted.
âWhy?â
He looked you right in the eye, finally. His expression was serious.
âI donât want to hurt you,â he said.
âI donât think itâll be that bad,â you replied, although you werenât sure whether you actually believed that.
He frowned, and his eyes travelled down to your neck. He was biting his lip, and his fangs stood out starkly against his skin.
He handed you the glass of water. You drank it. Then you took his hand and gently pulled him closer, spreading your knees wider so he could stand between them. He swallowed visibly.
âIâm nervous too,â you told him.
âI know,â he said, in a hoarse almost-whisper. âAre you ready?â
âYeah.â
âTell me if you want me to stop.â
âSafeword?â
âYou can just tell me.â
You were both almost-whispering now, leaning in closer and closer. It felt an awful lot like you were about to share your first kiss.
With one hand, he pulled the collar of your shirt away from your neck, while his other hand slid up to cup the back of your neck. Your heart was hammering with excitement and fear, and his cold fingers felt good against your flushed skin. He lowered his face against your neck, and almost before you knew it his fangs were piercing the skin, creating thin twin wounds that ached immediately. You gasped and grasped handfuls of the fabric of his jacket. Honestly his teeth didnât hurt much more than a needle, but somehow the reality of it stunned you. He was really going to drink your blood. In that moment, for the first time, you really believed that Roland was something other than human.
His lips closed over the wound. His mouth was wet and unexpectedly hot, and his tongue moved rhythmically against your aching skin as he sucked and swallowed your blood. He made a low sound deep in his throat â the type of contented groan that a good bite of food might inspire. You had to hold your breath to keep from responding in kind.
This was erotic. You couldnât help thinking of it that way. Your grip on his jacket tightened, and you forced yourself not to squeeze your knees more tightly around his waist. You wondered if he felt it too. Was this exciting him at all? Or was this just a meal to him?
You couldnât have said how long this went on â it was probably minutes, though it felt longer â but eventually he stopped drinking and pulled away. Somehow a piece of gauze was already in his hand; he pressed it to your neck, holding it firmly against the bite. You stared at each other, both breathing unevenly. His cheeks, so colorless before, were now flushed.
He cleared his throat and licked blood off his lips.
âAre you okay,â he asked, voice rough.
âIâm ok,â you said, although you actually felt a little dizzy. You felt around for the juice box. âWas that enough?â
He nodded his head and grabbed the juice box, pressing it into your reaching hand. He seemed a little dazed. He tore open one of the alcohol wipes, and while you drank your juice he disinfected the bite marks. You hissed at the stinging pain, and he grimaced in sympathy. Then he taped a fresh strip of gauze over the bite.
âIt didnât hurt that bad,â you reported between sips.
âGood,â he said. But he was starting to look unhappy again, frowning as he watched you sip your juice. Your heart sank a little in your chest. Maybe he hadnât enjoyed this as much as you had.
âAre you ok?â you asked him.
He didnât respond at first. And then he wrapped his arms around you, pulling you close against him. You bit back a huff of surprise. He was no longer cold â drinking your blood had warmed his whole body.
âWhat is it?â you whispered.
He heaved an enormous sigh next to your ear. âYou just looked so scared in the park,â he said. You could feel the vibration of his voice against your chest. âI feel really bad.â
You didnât feel bad. One of his large hands was pressed against your back, warm and reassuring, and the other was cupped around the back of your head. Your chest was pressed flush against his, and he was warm and solid and worried about you. You gave up trying to resist the urge to touch him. You put your arms around him, and squeezed your knees tighter against his waist, pulling him even closer to you. You let your head fall forward to rest against his neck, but as soon as you closed your eyes, the room began to whirl around you.
âUm,â you gasped. âI think I need to lie down.â
âOh,â he said, a little catch of surprise in his voice. He pulled away. âUm. Let me, uh...â
Carefully, he slipped his hand under your knees, and gathered you up into his arms. You threw your own arms around his neck, shamelessly clinging to him as he carried you out of the kitchen with no apparent effort. He paused in the doorway and looked down at you.
âThe bed or the couch?â he asked.
âThe bed,â you said against his chest, hoping that this was not too bold. He didnât seem to think so. He carried you across the room, careful not to jostle you, and gently laid you down on top of the comforter.
âAre you cold?â he asked.
You nodded your head. You were quite cold, actually; another effect of the blood loss.
Roland stood and went over to a small closet, where he retrieved a stack of thick, warm-colored blankets. He shook them out and draped them over you in layers, and their warm weight made you feel better almost immediately.
âThank you,â you said.
âNo problem,â he replied. He stood by the side of the bed, unmoving. He seemed to be struggling for words. âUm⊠Do you still want toâŠâ
âYes,â you said emphatically, and you peeled back the blankets to make space for him.
He looked self-conscious, but he didnât hesitate. He crawled under the blankets, and carefully pulled you into his arms, settling your head against his shoulder. His body was still warm with your blood, and you pressed into him eagerly.
âIs this ok?â he asked.
âItâs perfect,â you said. You placed your hand flat on his chest, then sighed happily, which made him laugh. He laid his hand over yours, curling his fingers around it.
That was almost too much. Your chest felt fit to burst with it. You kept waiting to wake up, sure that you must have dreamt this whole thing. You still couldnât believe heâd drunk your blood. His teeth had been inside of you. And as much as that weirded you out, it kind of turned you on too.
You suddenly remembered that you were supposed to text your friends back. You shifted around, and Roland loosed his hold on you to let you pull your phone out of your pocket.
âIâm letting my friends know you didnât murder me,â you explained as you typed. Youâd meant it as a joke, but you regretted the words as soon as they were out of your mouth. âIâm sorry,â you hurried to say, turning in his arms to face him, and wincing at the pain in your neck. âI didnât really think you wouldâŠâ
He shook his head before you could say anything else. âItâs ok. Biting someoneâŠâ He ran a hand through his hair as he thought. âWell, itâs an inherently violent act. Some people get carried away. Your friends werenât wrong to be worried.â
âI feel safe with you though,â you said.
âOh. Good.â He ducked his head, and his cheeks turned the pinkest theyâd been all night. Your heartbeat stuttered in your chest. He was really adorable⊠You hadnât expect that, watching him from afar. You pulled closer to him, putting your arms around him and laying your head against his chest. He tucked the blankets more snugly around your shoulders.
âThis is really nice,â you said.
âYeah,â he agreed.
âHow did you like biting me?â You forced the words out before you could lose your nerve. You hoped you werenât making it awkward, but you had to know.
Roland didnât answer at first. Then he let out a breath, and slid one of his hands over his face. âNot gonna lie,â he said. âIt was way better than drinking bagged blood.â
âOh, good!â you said, laughing. âIâm glad. I was worried you didnât like it.â
âI definitely liked itâŠâ he said, still covering his face. âYou taste amazing.â
You felt your face turn bright red. There was a double-entendre in there somewhere, although you guessed it was unintentional. Iâd like to taste you next, you thought wildly, and once again, you found yourself wondering if you were the only one whose mind had wandered into the gutter tonight.
He seemed to sense your sudden discomfort, if not its source, because he uncovered his face and said, âIâm sorry, that was a super weird thing to say.â
You shook your head against his chest. âI liked it too,â you admitted. âWhen you bit me.â Then, still more softly: âI wouldnât mind if you did it again sometime.â
You heard him swallow. âIâd like that.â
You lapsed into a warm silence, untroubled and comfortable, and you basked in his presence like a cat in sunlight. You were aware of every part of him that was pressed against you: his chest rising and falling beneath you, and his hands pressed against your back, and his legs tangled with yours beneath the blankets, chaste but intimate, and ripe with potential.
You definitely wanted to kiss him. You opened your mouth to float the idea, but you were overcome by an enormous yawn. You suddenly realized you had no idea what time it was. It felt really late, but maybe you were just tired out from all the excitement.
âWas I falling asleep?â you asked.
âA little,â he admitted.
âI should probably get home,â you said, but then made no move to get up. You heaved a huge sigh. âI donât wanna go yet though,â you complained, âIâm so cozy.â
âDo you wanna stay here?â
You lifted your head to look him in the eye. âStay the night?â
âWe donât have to do anything weird,â he said, turning pink again. You stared at each other for a moment. Then he gently pushed your head back down to his chest, so that you werenât looking at him when he said, âI donât wanna let you go yet.â
âAre you sure?â you asked. As if you werenât already convinced. âI wonât throw off your day? I mean your night?â
You felt him shrug. âI was just gonna do homework.â
That drew a surprised laugh out of you. Youâd almost forgotten that Roland wasnât just your weird vampire hookup. He was your classmate too.
âDo you know that weâre in the same class?â you asked, playfully accusing.
âYeah,â he admitted, with a bit of a laugh in his voice. âI recognized you when we got coffee.â
That surprised you. âI thought I was the only one,â you said.
âI noticed you sitting in back sometimes.â His hand was still resting against the side of your head, and his fingers moved absently through strands of your hair. âI thought you looked cool.â
âGood,â you said, which made him laugh. You grinned against his chest. âI want to stay. Can I?â
âYeah,â he said, voice soft, and he wrapped his arms more tightly around you.
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#10?
prompt 10- recognizing the other's voice in a crowded room
so uhh u didn't specify this being a pairing, and it ended up jonmartin lol
this is like? an au where one of the domains of the lonely (and also maybe stranger) plays off the specific loneliness that comes with parties. u kno the one, where you have fun for about an hour and then realize that you're fundamentally isolated and you need a breather?
anyway
~*~
Upon opening his eyes, he is not where he last remembers being. He is not sure how long his disorientation will last, but considering he's standing up right, at the edge of a crowded ballroom, he suspects it may be the entire time that he's here.
He had fallen asleep on the couch, the TV blaring away on a program he didn't know any of the details of. It hadn't mattered what was playing, as long as it had some of the natural rise and fall of other people speaking. He had been severely mising that lately, those gentle rhythms of conversation, and trying to listen to an audiobook while staring at his bedroom's popcorn ceiling just wasn't cutting it. So, TV dreaming it was.
Oh, that could be what was going on. An elaborate dream, constructed from the sound of a scenario he hadn't paid any attention to. He didn't think he'd fallen asleep watching anything to spark this kind of dreamscape, but that didn't mean much. It'd be oddly lucid, for a dream. And oddly sharp. His dreams, much like his memories, were always somewhat clouded over, and never as colorful as reality. Even his grayest waking days, of which there were many, had colors more distinct than what appeared in his mind's eye.
Simple test: he could never read or write in dreams. The words always swirled and distorted, and he somehow lost all manual dexterity. He needed a book, or a pencil, or both. He began to wander the ballroom, and abruptly realized that this was a masquerade, everyone wearing elaborate costumes with animal shaped masks. Did he fit in? Did he belong? He hoped he wasn't in what he fell asleep in, the worn hoodie and sweatpants barely worth making a grocery run in. The outside world wasn't supposed to see him looking comfortable, but presentable. He liked to think that if he left the apartment appearing at least somewhat put together, maybe people would believe that extended to other areas of his life. That it would be easier to ignore the increasingly dark circles under his eyes, that his nice sweater had been getting gradually looser as the tool of everything literally wore him down.
Small mercy, he wasn't like that now. A glance down showed that he was, like the rest of the guests? Captors? dressed to the nines. He has a suspicion that his own elaborate outfit, dark blues with gold and pearl embroidery, was a part of it. It was not a mercy to blend in here, it was a design element. Standing out would result in being noticed, being noticed meant being seen as an individual, and they can't have that.
It is with that line of thinking that he suddenly becomes aware of the weight of the mask on his face, the restriction of his sight through eyeholes. Looking into a teapot that's been polished to a mirrored shine, he see that he bears the incredibly crafted face of a field mouse. It would almost be plain, if it didn't have matching embroidery to his coat.
Fitting, he thought. It made him look smaller than he was, and he had so often wished to go unnoticed. A fly would've also worked, but he imagines it would be rather hard to make that into a suitably beautiful mask. Either way, he was level with the rest of the crowd. Even believing it to be part of the trick, even knowing that the masquerade was meant to make you false, there was some level of comfort to it. He was not going to be seen here. Instead someone more handsome, more charming, more even with his peers was allowed to take his place, as false as they were. Best of all, that's what all of them would be doing here, the whole appeal of a masquerade in leaving behind the person you loathe most and can never be free from.
Seems lonesome, for a party. So structured around the theater of it all. You can connect with countless people, and you don't get to actually connect with any of them at all.
Oh.
Oh, now this made all made sense. Crave interaction, and get a warped version of it.
He could see the napkins, emblazoned with a name that he didn't recognize, presumably the host, and, in much smaller font, the company name. Every one of them was consistent.
Easy enough to receive the message. This wasn't a dream. This was a punishment.
Hmm. Well, no, punishment might be the wrong term. Punishment implied that it was a consequence, a direct cause and effect of doing something wrong, by someone's definitions of "wrong". No this was. Torture is too strong of a word, and again, has the problem of making this seem willful. Deliberate. And maybe it was, but more likely, whatever this was had just sort of happened. A cruelty that comes with being in the universe they all happen to occupy.
This wasn't a dream. This was a consequence.
He doesn't know how to get out of here. He can't see any doors, and exits. The only approximation of one is some giant frosted glass that seem like they might lead to a balcony. They're only on the other end of the ballroom, but that lengths feels impenetrable, like it spans for miles and miles of harsh terrain.
There's a few options available to him.
One: Try to fall asleep, and see if he can get back to where he started. Lowest effort option, but he's pretty sure he hasn't been this fully awake in months. Maybe years. Something about the environment makes it feel as though electricity sparks throughout his entire body. It's an interesting sensation, certainly, akin to anxiety taken to an extreme degree, yet it's not particularly conducive to sleeping.
Two: Make a break for it. He doesn't know if there's anywhere to make a break for, but he also isn't sure how high up this place is. Maybe the balcony is a viable option for escape. Or maybe he'll find a door that had previously been hidden from him. Hell, maybe he won't fully escape, but he'll find somewhere quieter at the very least. Somewhere that he doesn't leave him so thoroughly dazed. This is probably the best option, even account for the wall of people surrounding him. But.
Option Three: Join the Dance.
Inadvisable. Foolish, really. The best outcome is..what? Is there a best outcome? Worst outcome is he's dancing forever, until his feet wear down to stubs of bone, until he dies, until he cant remember anything but the dance. Never a connection with any dancer, all of them, eventually, a blur of activity and nothing more.
Yet, it's what he's going to do. He's not the most curious person he knows, that honor goes to a man that he's been in love with for years, but can't grasp any of the details of while he's here. That can't be good. What was his name?
Anyway. He's not the most curious, but he's hardly immune to a detrimental sense of interest. He wants to know what the dance is like. He wants to see the intricate costumes of the others stuck here, and see if there's anything behind the masks. He knows it will, inevitably, leave him lonelier. He knows, inevitably, that he does not care. At least this version of loneliness is more interesting than sitting in his flat, wondering whether having thin enough walls to hear the echo of his neighbors' voices would make things better or worse. So, when someone approaches, adorned in a shrew mask, hand outstretched to pull him into the fervor, he accepts.
The dancer is competent. Neither of them steps on the others foot, and he lets himself be led. Even better, the dancer is willing to talk. A man named Tom, his voice cheerful even as he confirms that he doesn't know how he came here either. Tom shrugs when he asks if this bothers him, saying if you're going to end up somewhere mysteriously, gliding across a ballroom with a handsome stranger is hardly the worst place to be.
It takes a second for him to register the fact that Tom's flirting. It makes him laugh, and it feels wrong in his throat. The sound is unfamiliar, almost belonging to someone else, but it's brief enough not to hurt. He'll grieve all the time he's lost later, for now, he says, "How would you know if I'm handsome with this mask? Or are you just making a flattering guess?"
Tom opens his mouth to answer, a grin on his features that suggest something playful and wry is about to come out, but then the song ends. They both know, somehow, that the brief rapport they've gotten to enjoy has come to an end. They swap partners, and as much has he would like a second dance, when Tom gets swept into the throng, he knows he won't be seeing him again.
The next dancer is at a higher skill level at him, which results in nerves encroaching on what limited ability he has. Perhaps the peacock mask should've been a tip off. He doesn't speak to them, more focused on trying to keep up. He doesn't regret that they'll only have one dance, but he is slightly remiss that his own costume doesn't have feathers after watching the way they move.
The dancer after that catches him for a slow dance. Her name is Shelia, and he's never seen such a dazzling smile. He tells her as such, and she tells him that she would tell him the same, but she hasn't actually seen his own, yet. He makes an attempt, and she tells him, "Oh honey, you're waiting for someone here, aren't you?"
When he states his confusion, that nobody comes to mind, or at least, that nobody is going to come, she shakes her head. Apparently, she can always tell when her dance partners have somewhere else to be, and she doesn't resent it, but it does mean she's not going to give him her number for after the night ends. He's amazed she believes this night will end, but it's a sentiment that seems far too rude to voice out loud.
He also knows that he doesn't have somewhere else to be. If he did, he would've never joined in.
The music continues, and so does he. He tries to get names, tries to get connections. He flirts with Mark, and Nadia, and Jamie. Those people are his favorite during the dances, but losing the also feels the most acute. Robert is his least favorite, even more so than the peacock, for how incredibly small the fox makes him feel. Nothing is even said, it's just the entirety of body language screams that Robert doesn't think he belongs here, that he's not worthy of the clothes he's wearing or the hall he's haunting. Ironically, he's right. He doesn't belong here. These clothes, these people, are not his. Only Robert is quite so skilled at making that seem like a bad thing.
About ten dances in, long past the point he should be winded, he realizes two things. One, there's no pain in his feet, no heaviness to his breathing, confirming once again that no aspect of this environment is natural. Two, is that he's actually had a path. Sometime in the spins and leads and follows, he had been making his way towards the center of the floor. He denies the next partner, likely the worst of a faux paus in this environment, but he needs a moment to stop. Taking in the scene, he has yet to find the source of the music, but he has found the host of this party.
There's nothing to physically show that he's the host. His costume isn't particularly ostentatious, at least not compared to the rest of them. He's not surrounded by a horde of people clamoring for his attention. He doesn't glow or sparkle or have a spotlight on him. The only reveal of his status is the fact that the second he looks at the man in the owl mask, fear floods through him.
Now he needs to run. He needs to leave, he needs to get out, he can't let the man in the owl mask see him, let alone approach him. Pushing his way through the crowd is a bad idea, will bring too much attention to himself. However, he's not in a state to think about that sort of thing, panic gripping his actions. As he shoves his way past one person, he swears ten more people tke their place, and he, oh so close to despair, is unable to tell if there's any actual distance being put between him and the owl masked man.
As he's about to start biting, clawing, screaming his way out any way he can, he hears something that makes him stop.
"Let him go, or I will make you let him go."
The statement is cold, filled with vitrol and determination. It should only make him more afraid. But as he turns around, he sees someone he never expected to be here, someone who has come here anyway. In an all black outfit, the man's face is covered with that of a cat's, but he has not a single ounce of doubt as to who it is. And he's facing off against the owl man, the absolute fool. He's facing off against the owl man, and Martin knows that it's on his own account. What the hell? He can't...he doesn't know what's going to happen to him, what exactly the owl man is going to do, but he can't let Jon get hurt. Begging his voice to pierce through the pandemonium of people and noise, he calls out, "JON!"
Jon finds him in an instant, eyes locking. They only have a second before the crowd pushes in, before the owl man reaches out, wing-like cape ready to wrap Jon up and snatch him away. Jon simply calls out, "Balcony!" before he's once again out of sight. Martin wants to go towards him, wants to follow the instinct to try and protect the one he loves, but going forward is impossible.
The tempo and volume of the music has swollen, and he's surrounded by hands reaching out, trying to pull him in. One of those hands, much to his surprise, belongs to Tom. He stares, uncomprehendingly, and Tom shoves his hand out even further in an act of urgency. He has to participate to make progress.
He holds on tight, all the basic skill of their first dance lost. It doesn't matter, as long as Martin participates, he is rewarded. When the next song begins to play, Tom strengthens his grip, and they manage to prevent the switch. In a manner of minutes, or perhaps hours, they make their way to the edge of the crowd. Martin can see those beautiful frosted doors only about 10 meters away, mostly unobstructed, and releases Tom from their dance. "Thank you. I seriously didn't think..just, thank you."
Tom gives him a nod, his expression much more solemn than it had been during their initial meeting. "After our first dance, I remembered my kids. A daughter and son. If they're out there, wherever out there is, I need to get back to them. If you can get yourself out, maybe there's hope for the rest of us, yeah? I think you might be a tipping point."
Martin had no idea if that was true. Sounded a bit too..center of the story for him. The hero, the chosen one, he was never going to fufill those roles. But. But he doesn't know what a denial would serve, and if he can go through those doors, who knows? "Yeah...yeah, maybe. I'll certainly try."
Tom clasps one of Martin's hands between both of his own, and with a quick shake, tells him, "That's all I ask."
In a blink, Tom has once again been swallowed by the fray, and Martin strides to his goal. He catches glimpses of the owl man out of the corner of his eye. Despite the sight making his heart race, the owl man never makes it to him, almost as if the dancers had forcibly blocked his path. Fascinating, isn't it, how a crowd can turn against someone in a matter of moments. Fascinating, isn't it, how a crowd can decide to help someone in the same span of time.
As Martin stands in front of the exit to the balcony, he has to take a breath. This could be a trick. A trap. A cruelty. If it is, he'll deal with it. If not, well.
Well.
The doors are heavy, but he's still able to push them aside. The sight outside is incredible. The stars are dazzling, brilliant, and numerous, resembling themilky way that Martin has only ever seen in pictures.
It's wrong. It's obviously wrong. Martin's never been anywhere remote enough to escape the effects of light pollution, and he's pretty sure a brightly lit manor isn't the exception to that rule. Yet, that's not what's bothering him about it. He can't quite articulate why, but the sky in general should be..different. Worse, maybe. Greener?
Jon is staring up into the night sky with a fascination that confirms Martin's suspicion. After he takes a step towards him, Jon turns towards him, and a smile appears that knocks the breath right out of Martin. When has Jon ever smiled at him like that? It doesn't make sense, feels like another trick of the party, but Martin decides he doesn't care, he'll enjoy it while it lasts. "I have to say, this is definitely one of the nicer looking domains we've wandered through. Always a plus when we end up somewhere without any bloodstains."
That's not... "Huh?"
With an aftertaste of a laugh and a shrug of his shoulders, Jon tells him, "Just that, for as much as I despise the loneliness, it does at least have cleanliness going for it."
He knows of the fears, at least, but the way that Jon is talking about them doesn't make sense. He's going to ask about it, try to get some clarification, but then Jon takes off his mask. There's more grey at the temples than he remembers, more eyes than the average person, and he's stunningly beautiful. Martin's always found Jon rather good looking, even when he didn't particularly like Jon himself (god, what a fool he was. Maybe what a fool they both were). Combined with the softness in the line of his mouth, the adoration in his eyes, it leaves Martin breathless, speechless, thoughtless. Feet moving of their own accord, he drifts closer to Jon. Once he's standing in front of him, Jon reaches up, then pauses, as if asking for permission. Half in a daze, Martin nods, then leans down. Ever so gently, Jon lifts Martin's mask off. The pinpoints of contact between his face and Jon's fingers almost burn, and he realizes that despite the electrified sensation under his skin, he's been cold this entire time. Mask fully off, Jon beams at him, and lets out a quiet, "There you are."
It's too much. It's the tipping point for him to go from enamoured back to properly baffled. "Jon, I don't..what are you doing here?"
Jon smile drops, and Martin almost wants to take it back. Almost, because he needs answers, because if this is a dream, if this is a nightmare, it's more wicked than he could've ever expected. Being stuck forever in a dance with only partners whose greatest talents were being alone in a crowd is one thing, but having a..a false Jon, one that regarded him with...that acted like...that felt anything close to the same as Martin was so..exacting. When it got taken away, when the illusion shattered, it would hurt. It's already hurting, anticipation of the wound causing a phantom pain. Jon's brows are furrowed, and at least that is familiar, expected. "I..thought you would want to leave. I came to get you out."
"I do," did he?, "but that still..that's not the why? Why would you come for me?"
"Because I love you? I know I'm not much for the swashbuckling hero role, bit I figured that would make me rather uniquely qualified."
Martin sucks in a breath through his nose and his eyes go wide. Ability to read be damned, this is a dream, and mean one at that. He's going to wake up, and he's going to remember, and he's going to be as alone as he's always been. "Since when? You're not..I think we've just started being friends, and it's not even, fuck, we're not even that close! And even if..if things were in development, which they aren't, you're supposed to be in America right now. Or, no, wait you're in a coma, or maybe..no, that's not-"
Martin's spiralling is abruptly cut off by Jon taking his hands. Looking at his face, he finds Jon staring back, his eyes, his two eyes, are searching him, and Martin realizes he might not be the only one that's lost right now. "Martin...what's the last thing you remember?"
A mostly empty flat, the delightful mix of insomnia and exhaustion, and the TV with the volume turned down low enough to not bother anyone but himself. The context around that scene is a bit fuzzier. "I..was at my place. It was..I dunno, it was boring."
"Anything else. Do you remember Jane Prentiss?"
"Of course I remember Jane Prentiss. Not likely to ever forget the worst two weeks of my life."
"What about Scotland?"
Scotland? "I'm mean, I've never been, but I, uh, am aware of the concept."
Except that wasn't quite true, was it? He had been to Scotland, and Jon had been there, but when? Why? What had they..
Jon's frown deepens. "Martin, do you trust me?"
He did. Despite everything, or maybe because of an everything he couldn't quite access, he really, really did. His response of "Yes" is more of a breath than a word, but Jon understands nonetheless. Jon reaches up, places his hands on the sides of Martin's face, and tells him, "Close your eyes."
Martin does as told, and Jon brings their foreheads together, an approximation of a kiss. There's a buzzing at the base of his skull, not painful, but not particularly pleasant, either. As Jon leans back and he opens his eyes, the sky is wrong, but it is the wrong that he has become increasingly accustomed to.
He remembers.
Jon hasn't fully released him yet, asking still ever so gently, "Back with me?"
Martin nods, and Jon drops his hands. Immediately, Martin grabs one of them with his own, because while it may be the apocalypse, at least he can do that as freely as he likes. "Yeah, yeah, I'm good, " he looks down, and sighs, "Eugh. Do miss the clean clothes though."
Jon gives a hint of a smile, and as he begins to move forward. "Now you understand my point about the lonely having a tidiness to it."
"If it's all the same to you, I think I'll take grime over memory loss any day."
"Next domain is a corruption one, so we'll see how much that holds true."
"Of course it is."
They walk in silence for a few moments until Martin gives Jon's hand a quick squeeze. "Hey Jon?"
"Hmm?"
"Thank you for getting me out."
Jon replies, "Of course," as an easy statement of fact, and Martin believes it. He has to add, "And I love you too."
The responding smile he gets from Jon makes him think he might be one of the few people in existence to feel lucky after the end of the world.
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A small alteration
So! This part is the...second or third to last part, so weâre getting to the end bois. After this, Iâll likely die, or at least not post daily like I have been, so if you guys want more content after this, remember to send in an ask for me to answer! Request stuff, ask me questions, joke around with me, whatever yall want. Itâll hold this blog over until I finish this second fic and can start posting/editting it here!
cw: lightly goes into detail on torture, hisoka, thatâs about it I think!
Previous part: here
First part: here
Thankfully, Hisoka didn't stop by after his phone call, but Illumi still took no chances when he went onto jobs. Along with Milluki using the spy cameras Illumi had placed earlier, the long haired assassin made sure at least three butlers were keeping an eye on you whenever he couldn't.
That precaution kept you far away from the blood hungry magician for a week, much to Illumi's relief. Hisoka was a pest, a thorn in Illumi's side through and through, so the last thing the assassin wanted was for him to meet his future wife. Especially now, when you were just too desperate for human contact, and he couldn't risk you getting attacked or manipulated by Hisoka and forcing the assassin to kill such a useful nen user. Or worse, risk you meeting him and growing to love the magician instead of him, so he was dead set on never letting you two meet.
So, instead of risking it, he made sure to keep you as secret as possible, at most giving vague answers to keep the violent hunter at bay when he found him on jobs or something and asked, but confirming or denying little to nothing. Aside from that, Illumi also let the man help him on missions a bit more, both because the assassin could hide things better than his butlers when questioned, and because, though annoying, the vibrantly colored man offered some sort of entertainment on otherwise painfully boring jobs like assassinating businessmen, ex-lovers, or runaway spouses. Though, Hisoka simply popped up sometimes too, either being in the right place at the right time to join on kills, or somehow seeking Illumi out, like a risky, aggravating jack-in-the-box. That habit had gotten him a trip to the Zoldyck basement and torture rooms recently, though it was also a reason Illumi humored the magician when he got bored and asked for help more.
    "Please make this simple and tell me where you put the money taken from Mr. Mori." Illumi told his target, a rather pretty young woman he'd been tasked to interrogate, torture, and kill by her ex-sugar daddy.     "Is she under-aged, is that why you won't tell me about her?" Hisoka asked, sitting on the table of menacing torture tools in a dungeon of the Zoldyck estate, having talked the assassin into letting him out to help in this little chat. Illumi was beginning to regret his decision to humor the magician though. The tall assassin glared at the other man for his interruption, only getting an innocent smile in return,     "No, she is not under-aged." He said curtly, and his companion snickered,     "Well, when can I meet her? I'm dying to know what type of woman a Zoldyck lusts after~"     "Never." Hisoka pouted at his flat refusal, but the assassin simply returned to questioning his captive, only turning back to the pink-haired man to grab some pliers from the table, "Now, I will ask this once more, if I don't get an answer I'll tear out your finger nails until I do. Where is your ex's money?" he warned the woman, who was sobbing and pleading to be freed from the cold, dark room. When she didn't answer his question though, he kept true to his word, gripping one of her nails with the pliers and pulling until it came away from the nail bed. The monotone assassin continued pulling out his target's crimson-painted fingernails while she tried to lie and say she had no idea where his client's money was. No matter, when he ran out of fingernails, he could always move to toenails or teeth.
Hisoka held a metal bowl that Illumi put the dislocated fingernails in, adding a soft clattering noise to the soundtrack of the woman's sobs, screams, and the lazy buzz of the one lantern that hung from the stone wall until he stood up in the partially lit cell to get another tool from the table.      "mmm, she seems quite fun to torture~" Hisoka observed, getting a twisted grin across his face as he looked down at the restrained woman,      "She's unbearably loud," Illumi sighed, looking around on the table of tools until he found a rather simple salt shaker, ignoring when Hisoka leaned a bit too close,      "Y'know, I bet I could get your girlfriend to be just as loud~" he hummed, and something inside of Illumi seemed to snap for a moment. His aloof air instantly changed to palpable malice and he whirled around on the magician, punching him in the face hard enough to send him sprawling across the cold stone floor. The assassin didn't even give him a chance to react once he landed though, in a flash he was on top of him, holding him down by his throat while his knee pressed down on his ribs,      "if you so much as look at my wife, Hisoka, I will fucking kill you before your heart gives another beat." he snarled, tightening his grip on the man's neck until he was gasping and wheezing for air. The pink-haired man gave a nod, a smirk tugging at his lips still, but the feral murderer didn't let him breath until that coy look finally left and he saw panic replace Hisoka's usual mischievous glint in his gold eyes. When Illumi did finally let him up, the magician was gulping down air and glaring at him instead of his usual knowing, coy glance,      "Jesus Christ Illumi, learn to take a joke. You know my humor can be perverted, there was no need to nearly kill me!" he snapped, the magician's flirty act falling away, but Illumi didn't respond, he simply checked on the woman he'd been tasked to torture. Sadly though, she was now dead from the amount of malevolence in his nen,      "Great, because of your 'joke' my job just got harder." Illumi said, his voice back to being cold,      "That wasn't my fault, you were the one who didn't just use one of your needles on her to begin with." he pointed out testily, getting glared at by the man,     "The client wanted me to specifically torture her, my needles would have been redundant and not what the client asked for. Of course, I didn't know you were going to be this annoying, or else I would've gotten the information from her at the start." he hummed, and while his voice stayed flat and his face stayed rather aloof, Illumi was boiling with wrath on the inside. Being a pest was one thing, but now Hisoka had actually crossed an important line. So, Illumi simply found the woman's phone in her purse and than called in some butlers. He gave one the cellphone, sending it to Milluki to make use of himself and scour through, than he turned to Hisoka, who was standing in a dark corner across the small cell glaring at them, mostly Illumi. "Now, I will say this nicely only once," the man said, though his words held no kindness, "please return to your cell with the butlers without a fight, or else I will be forced to call my family and drag you back." The two men stood there for a moment in a heavy silence that seemed to bring down the temperature of the already cold cell further. Illumi wasn't very expressive, he purposely added inflections and overt body language to himself when speaking to you, but Hisoka didn't get that sort of kindness, he simply got stared down by bottomless eyes and a deadpan assassin he knew very well was competent enough to stand up to him. So, he simply grinned a predatory grin at the long haired murderer,     "Fine, I'll go back to my cell peacefully," he relented, putting his hands up with a mischievous smirk. One of these days Morrow, I'm going to finally kill you. Illumi thought as at least three butlers escorted the magician back to where he'd been held, but he didn't say or show the annoyance as they passed.    "Oh, and Illumi, dear? Do tell (y/n) hello for me~" Illumi's aura became malevolent again at that, but the butlers and flamboyant pain in the ass were able to avoid dying from it thanks to their training. Instead, all it did was let slip just how fart Hisoka was under Illumi's skin, making the hunter laugh as he was herded away down the dark hallway, leaving the assassin to simmer in his temper before stalking out of the basement. His first stop once upstairs was Milluki's bedroom.     "How did Hisoka find out anything about (y/n)?" he asked, his voice's flat, monotonous tone coming off as more menacing when paired with how he slammed his brother's face into his trash-littered desk,     "I don't know! Why are you asking me?" the pudgy man hissed out, barring his teeth at his older sibling when he tightened his grip on his hair,    "You are the only person on this mountain aside from Mother who knows about (y/n), and unlike mother, you are the type to tell that bastard about her for a cookie." he pointed out, and Milluki couldn't argue, he did have pretty flippant loyalties when it came to secrets like this.     "Alright, fine, but I promise I didn't. I haven't been in the basement since Hisoka got here." he explained, and after a moment of harsh scrutiny, Illumi let him go and left his nasty, anime-littered room. The tall man then went to his wing of the home, thinking of what to do now. Hisoka knowing (y/n)'s name is bad. If he can figure it out, more people could. He mused, a wave of possessive anxiety washing away his rage for the time being. I can't leave her alone anymore. He finally decided as he reached his rooms and turned around to instead find his mother.
#Yandere Illumi#x reader#Illumi zoldyck#hisoka#yandere#hxh#illumi x reader#fanfiction#quotev#hunter x hunter#part 10
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The Halfling from the Mountains Contâd
Hey all! So I wanted to write something for Fanfic Writersâ Day, and even though itâs coming in a bit late, I decided to write a small continuation of the Mulan AU. It is almost a year exactly since I posted this little drabble, and itâs by FAR the most popular drabble I have on tumblr. Also, I really needed Kili to ask Bilbo if he âwould like to stay forever.â đ Please enjoy.
Thorin and Bilbo had barely hobbled their way to the base of the hill before they were swarmed by allies. Healers ushered them to one of the many tents being erected on the cleanest part of the battlefield. While Bilbo only had a few bumps and bruises of little concern, Thorin was all but thrown into a cot as they tended to his foot. Bilbo was able to get one more glance at the protesting king before he was shoved down on a makeshift bench with a bowl of stew in his hands.
âEat up, laddie. Iâm afraid the hard work isnât over just yet.â Oin instructed before leaving to tend to others.
Bilbo allowed himself the moment of peace as all the adrenaline seeped out with each bite of the bland, but very welcome food. Perhaps, truly this time, the worst was behind them.
âWHAT A MESS! WHERE IS HE?! WHERE IS THE ARKENSTONE THIEF?â
Then again, perhaps not. Bilboâs head whipped up to see a furious Dain stroll into the camp. He jumped to his feet, the stew regrettably spilling to the ground only to invite the irate dwarfâs attention. Dain immediately stalked into his direction, and for every step forward, Bilbo took one back until he bumped into someone behind him. He startled and turned to apologize only for the person to put a hand on his shoulder and gently push him behind them. Bilboâs shoulders sagged in relief at the sight of Dwalin. Dain, on the other hand, was flummoxed.
âStand aside.â Dain ordered. âThat creature isnât worth protecting.â
Bilbo flinched at the sheer acid in his tone. Before Dwalin could respond, his brother appeared on his other side completely blocking Bilbo from view now.
âHeâs a hero.â Balin argued.
âHeâs a Halfling and a thief.â Dain scoffed.
Bilboâs jaw nearly dropped as he was suddenly surrounded by his entire company minus the Durins. Each of them with a hard glint in their eyes.
âListen here you pompous windbag.â Bofur growled. It was the only time Bilbo ever recalled him truly angry. âI think we know our Burglar better than any here. You owe the life of your King to him.â
Dain looked about ready to spit fire as his face changed to match the color of his hair.
âHE BETRAYED MY KING AND ANY THAT DEFEND HIM ARE JUST AS BAD!â
Well that seemed to set everyone off as the Company started to yell loudly in defense of their honor, and Dain and his men continued to besmirch the hobbitâs name. Bilbo, having quite enough of such nonsense, was about ready to find some way to shut them all up when a strong voice broke through the clearing.
âSHARZA!â
Silence rang through the camp as all eyes be they man, elf, dwarf, and hobbit, turned to regard Thorin. The kingâs foot was wrapped tightly yet blood still managed to seep through the bandages. Because of this, he was being supported by his two nephews, but all three managed to look regal and proud in their grimy states. Thorinâs cold eyes bore into Dain until the other dwarf dropped his head. At that point, Thorin regarded the Company and silently demanded they stand aside. Bilbo was once more exposed to the glares and curious stares of the surrounding crowd. He could kill Thorin.
âThis is Bilbo Baggins.â Thorin announced in a clear voice that somehow seemed to ring for miles without being too loud.
âHe was contracted by my Company of thirteen dwarves to leave his home in the Shire and burgle from a dragon. He thinks of nothing but creature comforts of good homes and good food. He was inexperienced with a blade prior to joining us, and knew nothing of how to survive in the wild and yetâŠâ
Bilbo blinked in shock at the warm smile that split Thorinâs face.
âHe has saved us all. As King, I pardon any and all crimes against his person. Master Baggins shall only ever be treated with respect on behalf of all Durinâs folk.â
If Bilbo was caught off-guard before, the sight of Thorin bowing to him nearly had him flat on his back. What made it worse was it started a domino effect as next the Company was bowing, then the rest of the dwarves, and finally the remainder of the entire Free Peopleâs army. Even Dain, who looked like he tasted something foul, bowed in deference to his king. Bilbo wanted to scream that he wasnât a hero! He was just a simple hobbit from the Shire, but faced with the truly humbling sight, he couldnât find the words. Almost as if realizing his newfound conundrum, Thorin rose with a hidden twinkle in his eye before he turned to return to his tent using his sister sons as his crutch, satisfied that Bilbo would have no more difficulties. The Company patted his back or ruffled his hair. Dori even offered to stay with him if he felt unsafe, but Dainâs hasty retreat spoke volumes about any remaining troubles Bilbo would had. In a matter of seconds, he was alone once again.
âThereâs seems to be an awful lot of excitement this side of the Misty Mountains.â
Almost alone. Bilbo looked up at Gandalf whose smirk somehow managed to reflect amusement and pride all at the same time.
âHe didnât have to do that.â Bilbo finally found his voice, regardless of how awe-filled it was.
âI would think Thorin has a differing opinion on the subject. Youâve done well, Bilbo. You can go home now knowing you have gone above and beyond the call of duty.â
âHmm?â Bilbo mused, not registering Gandalfâs words.
âWhy back to the Shire! You do still plan to return to Bag End, donât you?â
âOf course!â Bilbo snapped reflexively only to flinch at the harshness of his own words. âI mean, yes, I do...I just...â
âWell,â Gandalf offered. âWe have a few days. Think about it, and let me know, whatever you decide.â
***
Bilbo thought about it, but he was no closer to an answer. He had to go back to Bag End. He was a Baggins after all, but the idea of leaving his dwarves. Leaving Thorin...it left a hole in his chest that refused to be closed. He finally decided it was just the freshness of leaving his friends. A few months back in the Shire, and the pain would leave him once he was back where he belonged. Therefore, despite how much it hurt, he told Gandalf he did still intend to go home.
His dwarves did not take the news well.
Bilbo ignored the pleading eyes of the Durin princes as he finished putting away his new clothes from Dori into his pack along with trinkets from the whole Company. Well, all but Thorin. Even Dain had come by to apologize for the way he had reacted after he got the full story and left Bilbo with a rather large and impractical shield. Remarkably, Bilbo had seen neither hide nor hair of the new King Under the Mountain since his declaration to return home.Â
âYou could build a new home here! You donât have to go, Mister Boggins.â Kili pleaded.
Bilbo couldnât help smirking as he patted the dwarf on the shoulder.
âAs I have said before Kili, the Shire is where I belong."
âYou also belong here.â Fili added, looking oddly serious and melancholy.
Bilboâs smile fell as he turned his back to hide how effected he was by the princeâs words.
âMe? Iâm just a silly hobbit. I no more belong in a mountain than an acorn in a window garden. Now, are you going to walk me to the gate or expect me to carry all of this myself?â
Fili and Kili had many more protests for him, but in the end gathered the ornate shield and the chest bearing his companyâs treasures to be loaded on Bilboâs pony. The rest of the Company, minus their king, was gathered just as somber as Bilboâs companions. The wizard was ready to go, and waited for Bilbo to make his goodbyes.
âWell...â He started. âT-Thank you. Thank you all for...the most amazing adventure. If youâre ever in the Shire, tea is at four...donât bother to knock.â
That earned a weak chuckle from his friends.
âAnd I suppose tell Thorin that...â
His throat closed, and Bilbo had to look down at his toes to gather his courage.
âTell Thorin...â
âYes?â
Bilboâs head shot up as his heart thrummed in his chest.
âThorin!â He breathed in delight.
The king was looking much healthier if but for the dark circles under his eyes and the saddened expression.
âYouâre here.â Bilbo remarked in awe.
Thorin ducked his head with a small smile.Â
âI was getting your going-away gifts together.â
âOh.â
Bilbo should have been delighted much like he was with the other Company membersâ gifts. However, he had been hoping for...well, he wasnât quite sure what. Without further ado, Thorin pulled out Bilboâs small sword he had been rather fond of but sacrificed in desperation to rid them of the monster orc. Sting.
âI asked Prince Legolas and Captain Tauriel to try and find it. They were more than happy to assist. I hope that it reminds you of all that youâve done for Erebor.â
He presented it to Bilbo with a small bow, and Bilbo repeated the motion happy to place the blade back in the scabbard on his hip. Even with his limited experience, it certainly made him feel better having it on his person.
âAlso,â Thorin added almost eagerly. âI want you to have this.â
Letting his braid flutter lose, Thorin tugged one of the hair beads from his own raven locks and presented it to Bilbo.
âSo all of Arda will know what you have done for me, a grateful and indebted king.â
Bilbo was practically trembling.
âThorin.â He croaked. âI-I canât...â
âPlease.â The king whispered as he carefully closed Bilboâs fingers over the bead sitting innocently on his palm. âFor me.â
It was too much. Thorin looking at him like that. His too large hands still softly cradling his hand. There was only so much a respectable hobbit like Bilbo could take. Before he could stop himself, he closed his eyes and surged up onto his tiptoes as he planted a kiss on the handsome king. It was quick and chaste and breath-taking all at once. Thorin seemed equally befuddled but hopeful. Bilbo tried his hardest to ignore the cheers of the Company and the heat in his own cheeks as he gave Thorin a single nod.
âWell then...good evening.â
He turned to saddle the pony when his actions seemed to catch up to him. What exactly was he doing?! He loved Thorin. How could he leave him now? His mind struggled to process the influx of emotional information while he remained halfway on his pony, staring into the setting sun.
âPerhaps...â Gandalf finally offered, far too amused. âWe got too late a start.â
Thorin picking up on the cues rushed to Bilboâs side.
âWould you...? Would you like to stay for dinner?â He blurted much to the annoyance of their friends.
âWHAT HE MEANS IS WOULD YOU LIKE TO STAY FOREVER?!â Kili corrected.
Everyone couldnât help but laugh including Bilbo and Thorin. The hobbit finally returned to the present turning to Thorin with a large grin.
âI think dinner would be a lovely start.â
And Bilbo enjoyed dinner in Erebor for many years to come.
#bagginshield#thilbo#mulan au#continuation of another drabble#dain really isn't a bad guy#its just a lot to take in for a mere few hours
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The Moon Will Sing
When facing the reality of a bargain made, sixteen year old Catriona realizes that hard choices must be made before she loses herself completely.
Avery (they/them), Edrine (she/they/he), and Astoria (she/they) are all nonbinary. Bolded pronouns are the ones used in this fic for each of them.
This fic acts as the end of the first âactâ of Astoriaâs pre-canon, and also ends the frequency of Senga appearances. Hell yeah. I also blame the length on this being pretty lore heavy, because this covers a lot of bases.
7.4k. No CWs apply.
Title: The Moon Will Sing, The Crane Wives
Noise was no strange occurrence in the halls of Castle Kintyre - between the three generations living within its walls full time, the youngest generation currently ranging in ages from sixteen to twelve, it was an inevitability. It was easy enough to ignore after a time, and most of the residents had become accustomed to adapting if they could not completely block it out.
The kind of noise that had come to Kintyre on this day, however, was the kind that made your ears ring and your head pound just trying to make sense of it all. There were so many more bodies slipping between the walls, across the grounds, too many unfamiliar faces for Catriona to feel particularly keen on leaving their bedroom until they absolutely had to.Â
Blessedly, September had brought the beginning of the storm season - the rain pounding against the glass drowning out the gathering crowds until it faded to a murmur they could stand. Though, her sanctuary would have to end. Soon enough, sheâd have to face the crowd, and brace herself for the hundreds of pairs of eyes from all corners of Rosinmoor.Â
Thunder crackled in the distance as she stood before the mirror, idly tracing the gilded flowers and birds that framed the glass with their fingertips even as their mind wandered elsewhere.Â
Three years ago, Catriona had left with Myrna to visit Lulia, and though she had a wonderful time, the shadow of the promise made with her mother still hung heavy on her shoulders. And it would follow her to Vesuvia, to Firent, to Prakra, from the Sea of Persephia to the Bay of Jewels and everywhere in between.
The letter came in the summer before her sixteenth birthday, calling her home to prepare her for her coronation as Luxe of Kintyre.
True to her word, sheâd returned home no matter how desperately she wanted to run, and threw herself into the lessons her mother packed her schedule with in hopes she might just feel nothing at all.Â
A tactic that had worked a little too well, perhaps, as she felt empty all the way down to her bones.
Her mother hadnât seemed to care. Sheâd gotten her way. A fact she emphasized when the Baroness herself flounced into Catrionaâs room moments after the sun broke over the horizon with the coronation gown and two handmaids in tow, chattering happily about getting her ready and how perfect sheâd look before the morning began to blur into an odd tornado of hair curling and poking and prodding to make everything look just so.
The dress Senga had chosen was white, with a simple neckline and puffy sleeves. The silk base was laid over with delicate gossamer, and the whole thing was embroidered with metallic silver floral motifs as well as tiny vines. The whole thing was finished with a golden sash and a rather full petticoat that made Catriona feel like the porcelain doll that sat untouched on their dresser for most of their childhood.Â
Senga had kissed her on the brow once she was ready, fluffed the carefully styled curls that hung against her shoulders, and promised sheâd be back shortly to come get her once it was time for the ceremony to begin.
Rosinmoor was a nation steeped in tradition as much as it was superstition. The first heir to be named after the establishment of the seven seats was Aoife, the sixteen year old daughter of Balmoral the Breaker and Muiri Leamhnach. As their only child, she stood to inherit Braemuir in its entirety, and Balmoral had thrown a celebration, inviting not only clan leaders but all those who chose to live in the nation once it had been established. Seven clan leaders had borne witness to a public proclamation, and since then, every heir had been acknowledged in the same exact way.Â
So now that her time had come, seven clan leaders had come to bear witness and acknowledge her as the next to hold the title of Luxe Kintyre, and eventually, Baronet.Â
A knock at the door drew her out of her reverie, and she quickly slipped her shoes on - flats, her mother had insisted, because it would be âdisastrousâ if she fell on such an important day - before taking the few steps necessary to open the door and meet her motherâs inspection.
Catriona recognized the suit her mother wore. It was the same from her own coronation as Baroness, though it had been tailored once again, and golden embroidery added to the cuffs and lapels of the deep green fabric. Never did Senga fail to look polished, either, with her auburn hair perfectly straightened and smooth beneath the intricate crown that adorned her head.Â
The leaders of Rosinmoor did not wear their crowns outside of official ceremonies, for the sake of practicality, but the proclamation of heirs was an occasion that called for them. Senga was no exception, the gold and emerald glimmering even in the low light of the hall.Â
âThere you are, dear.â Senga smiled, reaching forward and gently smoothing a few pieces of hair away from her face. âYou look lovely. Are you ready to go down?â
âAs Iâll ever be.â Catriona stepped into the hall beside her mother, letting her lead her down the hall with a hand laid lightly against her lower back. Senga only chuckled softly in amusement, heels clicking on the stone floors and cutting through the chatter as it slowly became more noticeable.Â
âYouâll be fine, Catriona.â Senga took a single step down the stairs, then turned, offering her hand to Catriona with a smile. âItâll be over before you know it. Cherish it.â
She lingered at the top of the stairs, looking up to the great window of stained glass that was dark with the storm beyond it, and let out a deep breath before she lowered her gaze to her motherâs palm.Â
Funny to think that once the worst thing in the world had been being eleven years old and having to hold someoneâs hand to traverse these same steps. And now, being sixteen, knowing what awaited them at the bottomâŠ
The dam that surrounded their heart began to crack.
* Â Â * Â Â * Â Â * Â Â *
When Catriona had been led into the great hall, it was absolutely packed with people - and the storm had kept away the bulk of the crowd, which meant they knew many of those spectating that day were the families and close peers of the families of Rosinmoor. Others still were notable figures of Rosafearn: merchants, artisans, performers, anyone from any walk of life who bore an invitation to the ceremony and the ball hosted immediately afterward.Â
For the rest of Kintyre, the tour would begin on the morrow. Senga, Catriona, and Sengaâs personal guard would begin the rounds to major cities in the region, introducing the Luxe Canonach to the people that one day she would be charged with defending.Â
Catriona, ever the introvert, was stiff with nerves as Senga led her through the crowd that parted around them to let them pass - so much so that she was pretty sure she had blacked out for a second. One moment, they were just inside the doorway, facing down swirls of color in every shade worn by the guests, and the next...the next she stood before the throne at the complete opposite side of the hall.Â
Nor could they take comfort in the presence of familiar faces, not when every member of the Canonach family was here today, none the wiser to what terms held her here and how quickly sheâd run if she saw a way out. Briefly, she caught a glimpse of Sachairi, who gave her an encouraging smile she couldnât match as Senga gestured for her to sit.Â
Her mother, as Baroness, could not take the oath directly - it had been the same since Balmoral, who had not taken Aoifeâs oath upon her own proclamation. Rather, the oath had been taken by Cliamon themself, in an attempt to display that Aoife took the oath of her own free will by not having to face her predecessor and her father in the same fell swoop.Â
Catriona was grateful that she would not face Senga, at least, but somehow seeing Avery Maollosa step forward when Senga asked who would name her was worse.Â
Avery looked every part the Baronet they were - wild curls braided back, the sleek black doublet and vest paired with the crimson tartan of the Maollosas, the carefully polished silver buttons and sword-shaped kilt pin...and the crown, forged by Avery themself from iron and the raw quartz mined from Ardaleith out of the crown of their father.Â
A table with a long, hinge-top cedar box had been set up off to the side, watched over by Myrna until Avery approached and gave her grandmother a polite nod and a smile. Myrna returned the expression before she turned, gently lifting the lid of the box and reaching in with both hands to neatly lift the sword inside from where it rested in silken
For a moment, Catriona forgot the situation she was in, tilting her head back and craning to get a good look before Myrna turned and laid the sword delicately in Averyâs outstretched hands - grip snug in their left and blade laid flat against their right palm.Â
Catriona had only seen Ăran na H-ealachan, the Swan Song, once before in their lifetime, but it was as if they knew it like the back of their hand.
The two-handed Highland claymore that had once belonged to Cliamon the Great had been carefully maintained over the centuries, now falling under the stewardship of one Myrna Canonach to be safeguarded and maintained when it was not being used for ceremony. It had been this way since each of the Seven had sworn an oath upon their own weapons to defend not only the land, but the people who lived within it, until their dying days - and Aoife Leamhnach had done just the same on her sixteenth year when she became the Lady of Braemuir.Â
Senga had made her own oath to the Barony of Kintyre the last time Catriona had seen the sword, and now, they would make their own.Â
With the sword laid across their hands, Avery turned and took the few steps to approach the dais, each step louder as the crowd watched with bated breath.Â
Eyes fixed on hers, they lowered themself to one knee, hands uplifted and open for Catriona to take the blade for themself.Â
âCatriona Canonach.â Avery began, and any lingering chatter in the room swept into silence, the only other sound the rain against the glass. âYou come before the people of Kintyre to make an oath, swearing fealty to the Seven Seats and all within the boundaries of Rosinmoor. Do you make this oath of your own free will, with true understanding of the title it will bring you?â
Even though their expression was carefully schooled, Catriona could see in Averyâs eyes the unspoken question.Â
Do you really want this?Â
Her eyes flickered toward her mother, whose brows lowered ever so slightly as the pause became slightly more pronounced. Catriona swallowed down their nerves and straightened their shoulders, looking only at Avery, and hoped that they could mask their true thoughts well enough.
No.Â
âI do.â She said, voice lifting to be heard over the winds that blew the rain in sheets.
Avery nodded and raised the blade, offering it to Catriona from their place before her with both hands open. Catriona would take a breath, then lean forward, carefully wrapping one hand around the leather grip and slipping the other under the flat of the blade so as to not cut herself or Avery when she lifted it into her lap. As she settled with the weight of the blade, she caught a reflection of her own eyes, blue against the carefully polished steel.Â
âIn your hands you bear Ăran na H-ealachan, a symbol of the legacy established by Cliamon, first Baronet of Kintyre. I ask of you, as heir to this legacy, will you solemnly promise and swear to lead the people of Kintyre according to its laws and customs? Will you aid the remaining six seats, whoever they may be upon your ascension to the throne, in guiding the nation forward for those who will follow you?
Catriona, whose palms had begun to sweat, could not wipe them on her dress for fear of dropping the sword on the floor in front of hundreds of intently staring eyes. Rather she tightened her grip on the hilt and tried cupping her fingers along the edge, all without cutting her fingers in the process.Â
Perhaps it was all in her head, but the steel felt like ice - like dipping your hands into the Frozen Sea in the dead of winter.Â
âI solemnly promise.â
âWill you hold yourself to the same principles of law, justice, and mercy that are upheld by the people of Rosinmoor, in all course of action this oath may bring you?â
Avery held her gaze intently as she nodded slowly, as if searching for something more the longer they looked.Â
âI will.â
âTo the utmost extent of your power and ability, do you swear to act in collaboration and diplomacy to defend the liberties of your people? Do you swear to act in defense of the peopleâs faith, traditions, and livelihoods wherever you are capable? To act in the best interests of Kintyre and those within, and to spend your life in her service?â
In the crowd beyond Averyâs shoulder, Catriona could see her motherâs approving look - could see Averyâs wife, Rima, with Edrineâs arms looped around her shoulders as he stood behind her. She could pick out other semi-familiar faces from other clans, like the smiling face of Ewan Griogal, who had been crowned heir to Glenarden mere months before. They could see Myrna in their peripherals, forever in black, waiting to receive the sword again and still unaware of the bargain Catriona has struck to keep her safe.
But she had to wonder - was it really in the best interest of Kintyre to name someone heir who didnât want it at all?
Though they supposed it didnât matter. Perhaps in time sheâd come to enjoy it, though her relationship with her mother would certainly never be the same no matter how much time had passed.Â
âTo my last day.â She answered, and Avery nodded, their face neutral as they lifted themself from their position and extended a hand for her to take. Catriona would accept, shifting to balance the tip of the blade on their soft shoe rather than the hard stone as Avery pulled her to her feet.
âThen rise, and face Kintyre as Luxe Catriona Canonach, descendant of Cliamon and heir to the Seven Seats of Rosinmoor.â Avery gave them a small smile then, all other words nearly drowned out by the roar that greeted her once she was fully upright. âMay your life be long and full of love and joy, Catriona.â
Myrna would step forward to gently take the blade from Catrionaâs hands again - not before she placed the customary kiss to its smooth pommel before a chanting crowd, a gesture meant to invoke good luck to the one who took the oath. Avery stepped back to give Senga room to step forward, glancing back only briefly before rejoining their family as the Baroness gave the word for the festivities to begin.
Only five minutes, and in that short time, it felt like sheâd signed her life away. Sixteen years of wishing and hoping for something to change, for their life to be different, and in moments it all had become meaningless.Â
In a perfect world, they could abdicate anytime they wanted. A new heir could be chosen and titled, and the cycle would begin anew. But there would be no heir to follow, not while Catriona felt she had to protect Myrna, and certainly not while Senga Canonach held the title of Baroness.Â
And in this room, full of hundreds all there to celebrate her newfound position, the cracks in Catrionaâs heart widened into chasms that threatened swallow her whole.Â
* Â Â * Â Â * Â Â * Â Â *
Contrary to their introverted nature, Catriona actually enjoyed parties on most occasions. They were thrilled to take part in the Hogmanay festivities and birthdays and the like, but they quickly found they did not like being the focus of the party itself on this particular day.Â
Their sheltered upbringing had meant that while they had met several of the major players in the political sphere of Rosinmoor, it had been only briefly - and it made them a point of intrigue for most of them in return.Â
Over the sounds of the small band hired to play for the day, Catriona had been constantly at her motherâs side, rubbing elbows and forcing smiles without reprieve. On the occasion she tried to slip away to visit with Edrine or Sachairi or any of her other relatives, Senga would set a hand on her shoulder, a silent demand to stay right where she was, and Catriona would oblige even as she fought the urge to smack her hand away.Â
It would only be when Senga found herself entrenched in conversation with the Baron of Melinlaesh - Callum Urchardan - about a possible trade agreement for several Melinlaeshi horses that Catriona could finally politely excuse themself, making a beeline straight for one of the tables of confections rather than continue the charade.Â
After a moment, she picked up a crystal stemmed glass, eagerly eyeing the raspberry cranachan layered within and contentedly making her way to the edge of the room to eat it in relative peace.Â
The refuge was necessary. She couldnât leave the hall, not without royally pissing off her mother, but every interaction brought her closer to wanting to scream.Â
Every single one of the people sheâd met had been eager to ask her about her studies, what areas of the Rosen political sphere intrigued her, asked how she felt about this or that relating to the title until she thought she was going to go mad. Her entire education as an heir had just been a regurgitation of Sengaâs own plans and beliefs, as she wasn't oblivious to the expectation that she uphold her motherâs legacy even when she was no longer Baroness.Â
There was a point where Catriona had actually enjoyed the conversation - in meeting the Lady Consort of Glasinshiel, Maisie Ainsworth, she had mentioned raising a litter of pups as herders for the regionâs abundance of livestock - but Senga had steered the conversation back once again to politics, leaving Catriona to nod blankly in agreement whenever Senga looked to her expectantly.Â
Pity Senga was only thirty-five. At least as Baronet, Catriona might have had a chance at some form of freedom, but that wouldnât be for a long time yet. Her future was so indefinite, so unclear...and yet sheâd placed it in someone elseâs hands so easily.Â
Well, that made her cranachan taste rather sour.Â
As discreetly as she could, she spit her mouthful of trifle back into her glass, setting it carefully on the windowsill and wiping the corner of her mouth with her thumb as she hoped nobody had seen.
âNot a fan?â
Catriona jumped, head snapping toward Avery, who merely raised both hands in a gesture of surrender.
âI come in peace.â They teased gently, and Catriona smiled a little before they relaxed. âThought Iâd join you as a wallflower, if you donât mind.â
âNot at all. People are...quite overwhelming, honestly. I didnât expect so many to be here.â
Avery chuckled at that, reaching up to pull off their crown and holding it loosely in hand as they folded their arms across their chest.
âThere might have been more, if the rain hadnât kept the crowds away. You missed Ewanâs proclamation, but people were crowding at the windows just to try and catch a glimpse once the hall was packed to capacity.â
âThat sounds nightmarish.â Catriona sighed, wrapping her arms loosely around herself.Â
âIt only gets worse from here. Thousands of people will meet you when your tour begins, all eager to put a face to the name thatâs been drifting around the social circles of Kintyre for years. Youâll be at most social events, special occasions, ceremoniesâŠâ
âAre you trying to make me more anxious than I am, Avery?â
âIâm trying to be realistic, but that brings me to one of the main reasons I wanted to speak with you in what little privacy we could get.â Avery turned then, one shoulder pressed to the wood paneling on the wall as their expression turned serious. âWhat changed, Catty?â
Catrionaâs breath caught in her throat for a moment before she managed to swallow it down, forcing that same, pretty smile sheâd been forcing all night back onto her face.Â
âWhat do you mean?â
âYou know exactly what I mean.â Avery sighed and gave her a knowing look. âOnce upon a time, this was the worst thing you could have imagined. I know five years is five years, but...not when you were so adamantly against it.â
âPerhaps I just came to realize how fortunate I am to have such a life and such opportunities. Itâs a privilege I shouldnât neglect.â
A regurgitated answer, one schooled into them by their mother, for fear that deviation from the script would reveal to Sengaâs peers the farce Catriona found herself in. And, well, one that Avery saw through as if the lie were made of the same gossamer overlay to her dress.Â
âThatâs a load of shit and you know it.â Averyâs face didnât change, save for the slight creasing of their brows as Catriona gave them an incredulous look. âI can see it in your eyes, the same way I have since your motherâs coronation - that sad, heavy weight of understanding what weight fell on your shoulders and wanting none of it.â
Catriona couldnât help the wry smile that spread across her face, and she kicked loosely at the floor, scuffing the white toe of her shoe.Â
âItâs not about me anymore.â She whispered, quiet enough to force Avery to lean in to hear her. âI appreciate your concern, but I am fine.â
Avery stared at them for a long moment, eyes searching for something Catriona couldnât name - but feeling still that they were looking straight into her heart.
âYour mother is young and healthy, meaning she has the potential to be Baroness easily into her sixties or seventies, if she follows the same patterns as her predecessors. Sorcha, who didnât step down until she was seventy-five, and Malvina, who stepped down at sixty-four, and she considered herself frail. Thatâs at least another twenty-nine years, possibly up to forty, or even longer than that.â
Catriona swallowed lightly, squeezing the sides of her arms as she looked up at them.Â
âWhat are you getting at, Avery?â
âIs whatever changed your mind worth the possibility of living your whole life like this? This life can be exhausting on the mind, body, and spirit, and you are starting leagues behind us all who took their oaths willingly. The dam on your misery will break one day, and it will drown you before you figure out a way to piece yourself back together.â
Her eyes burned, and Catriona quickly looked away, drawing in a sharp breath to try and pull herself together.Â
âThank you for your concern, Baronet Maollosa.â She said, a little more forcefully than she meant, and dropped into a quick curtsy. âIâm going to step out for some air, would you be so kind as to let anyone whoâs looking for me know? Iâm feeling a bit hot.â
She didnât wait for Avery to answer before she turned on her heel, heading for the veranda and forcing the same pretty smile whenever she got stopped - paired with a âexcuse me, Iâll be back in just a momentâ as she kept moving as fast as she could for the doors before she crumbled completely.
Avery had been right.
For months, she had pushed the feelings down, drowning out her rational mind screaming as she allowed herself to be pulled further into this life she didnât want. She knew that in the deal she made with her mother she had condemned her lifetime to that of one dictated eternally by Senga, every move watched, every word controlled, to exist as little more than a porcelain doll on display.
She shoved past the heavy oak door, the thunder a thousand times louder and the wind ripping at that pretty white gown and her perfectly curled hair. Had she not been so numb in that moment, she might have realized that the rain was blowing nearly parallel to the ground, and the temperature was so icy it felt like needles pricking her skin with every gale.Â
She was selfish. She was weak, and she knew she ran the risk of losing everything, of disappointing her entire family - now her country, to have made the oath and now wish they could turn back the clock and run from the room the second Avery had stepped forward.Â
But...she would lose herself, too, if she stayed.Â
A few short steps beyond the safety of the verandaâs roof would have Catriona soaked to the bone, hair plastered to her cheeks and shoulders and her delicate shoes sinking enough in the mud for her to abandon them completely before she even realized that she was running. Anywhere, even in this, would have been betterÂ
Faintly, she heard the doorâs hinges behind her, groaning under the weight of the oak as someone stepped out onto the veranda. She nearly shit herself thinking it might be Senga, and she pulled at the stupidly heavy skirts, trying to lift them out of her way so she might cover more ground.
âCatty?â She heard Edrine call out, voice nearly drowned out by the wind. âCatriona, what the hell are you doing?â
For a moment, they considered turning to face them, but...if Avery could see into her heart, Edrine would be able to peer right through her soul, and there would be no stopping what came pouring out then. And if Edrine knew, then Avery would know, and when mother inevitably found out that sheâd broken her end of the deal to keep this to herselfâŠ
She wasnât prepared for that fury to come down on her.Â
Catriona bolted out into the gardens, weaving through the carefully manicured hedges and colorful flower beds in an attempt to get as far from view of the castle as possible before she figured out how to go forward. Going back wouldnât be an option - not with her looking like a drowned rat, even if she wanted to be there - but part of her hoped that if she got away, her mother couldnât use her as leverage against Myrna ever again.
As she ran past the gazebo, the very same in which Senga had taken her coronation oath, she realized she could hear a second set of footsteps behind them, just barely audible over all the other sounds her ears were contending with.Â
Edrine had followed them into the storm. And, given the staggering difference in both height and athleticism between them, they were gaining on her quickly.Â
Catriona at least knew the gardens well after all this time stuck at the estate.Â
She took a sharp turn suddenly - planning to lose them in the hedge maze near the back of the gardens - but instead she slipped barefoot on the stone path, yelping as she tumbled down and crashed onto her hands and knees. She tried to scramble upright again, but that had been all Edrine needed to catch up, kneeling beside her and asking if she was alright when she shoved them away as best she could.
Edrine, however, barely moved, the brick wall that they were becoming, and reached to grab Catrionaâs wrists to keep them from running again as they tried to get a good look at her bleeding palms.Â
âStop it, damn it, youâre going to get yourself more hurt than you already are! What were you thinking, running out into this?â
The sob that wrenched out of Catrionaâs chest in answer was unbidden, and it made Edrine freeze where they were, hands wrapped around her wrists and eyes wide in surprise as they looked her in the eye.
âDonât make me go back!â Catriona wailed, body sagging like the strings on a marionette had been cut. âI canât...I canât go back, Edie, please, please donât make me. I canât do this anymoreâŠâ
It was a miracle they understood anything through the strangled hiccuping sounds she was making, but Edrine nodded slowly, releasing her wrists to let her wipe some of her tears away.
â...okay. Okay, we wonât go back to the hall. But I need to take you back to the gazebo so I can at least clean up your hands and take a look at your knees without getting pissed on by the sky.â Edrine cracked a small smile at that, but Catriona did not return it, only nodding slowly as she unstuck some of her hair from her face. âIâm going to pick you up, is that alright?â
When Catriona nodded again, Edrine slipped an arm under her knees and around her back, quickly lifting her up to carry her as quickly as they could to the gazebo without sending them both to the ground again. As soon as they were under cover, Edrine would carefully set her down, wordlessly extending their hands to take her own again and take a better look at them.
For a long while, they were silent, Edrine focused intensely on dabbing at her wounds with the semi-dry handkerchief that had been tucked into their blazer - her knees had, thankfully, been saved by the cushion of stupidly puffy petticoats - while Catriona looked anywhere but their face, her cheeks hot with both tears and embarrassment at the stupidity of the situation.
âAre you going to tell me whatâs going on, or do I have to play a guessing game?â Edrine said eventually, breaking the silence as they set the kerchief aside. âLast I saw, you were talking to Ava, and everything seemed alright.â
âWeâre good at pretending, apparently.â Catriona sighed, closing her eyes as they felt Edrine shift to sit beside her. âIf I...if I tell you Edrine, Iâll get in so much troubleâŠâ
âYou know, youâre whip smart, so considering I just witnessed you do the stupidest thing Iâve ever seen, youâre not getting off the hook that easily.â She felt them nudge her with their elbow, and she turned to look at them, watery blue meeting the soulful dark of Edrineâs. âLet the rain wash it away, Catriona. Thereâs not a chance in all the world anyone else will hear you out here. Whatever you tell me, it stays between us, I swear that to you.â
Slowly, Catriona nodded, turning her head up to look at the wood paneling shielding their heads from the storm beyond.Â
âDo you remember a few years ago, how we had Hogmanay with Myrna down in her little cottage?â
It all came pouring out - once the first words left her, there was no stopping her, beginning all the way back at that first departure from Rosinmoor right after the holiday had ended. The reason why she left home, her motherâs threats against Myrna, the promise sheâd made to keep her grandmother safe, the agreement to come back and take the oath to keep Senga happy in return, even what Avery had said that had made them finally break under it all
To Edrineâs credit, they kept their composure until the very end,Â
âFucking hell.â Edrine muttered, and Catriona couldnât help but laugh even as Edrine apologized, simply laying her head against their shoulder and letting out a long breath.
âThat feels like an ample way to describe all of it.â Edrine huffed a small laugh as she continued, temple pressed to the crown of her head. âBut...my stupid plan was to just run away. I figure if Iâm gone, Mother canât use me to hurt Granny anymore. I didnât think about the rain, I just thought if maybe I could get away from everything else hereâŠâ
âWhere would you go?â
âI said it was a stupid plan, Edie, not a full blown strategy. My running away attire unfortunately does not include a ballgown.â She said, tone dry. âI didnât really get that far.â
âWould have been in character with all those fantasy novels you read.â Edrine teased, ruffling her hair playfully even as she groaned and tried to squeeze some of the water out of it. âBut...I donât actually think running is a terrible idea.â
âSorry, what? I think my eardrums are full of water.â She made a dramatic tapping gesture against her temple with the heel of her hand, as if to knock water loose. âSay that again?â
Edrine only shook their head, wrapping their arms around their knees and lacing their fingers together. âNo, I mean it. Youâve been talking about Myrna through all of this, and how you canât be the reason she gets hurt, but...youâre not, Catty. If anyone hurts her, itâll be your mother. But have you even spoken to Myrna about this, seen what she has to say?â
âNo, I...I didnât want to put her in the middle of this.â
âWell, sucks to suck, but sheâs in it whether you like it or not. Senga used her because she knew it would hurt you, and it worked. And granted Iâm not around your grandmother as much as you are, but the woman I know would kill for you before she let anyone else hurt you. So I think you should run, but I think you should go with her like you did before, because you shouldnât have to do it alone.â
âAnd what about the rest of her family?â Catriona whispered. âThatâs her blood...everyone is here.â
âBlood doesnât mean anything, in my opinion. Your family is made up of the people you choose, and who choose you in return. They love you without terms or conditions, without expectations - completely and utterly unconditionally. And if the rest of them donât understand why sheâd take you and go, then they werenât family at all.â
âWhat if youâre wrong, Edie? What if she wonât go and Iâm left alone?â
There were a few beats of pause between them both, punctuated by a clap of thunder, before Edrine broke the silence once again.Â
âDo you know what a threefold death is?â
Catriona nodded, swiping away the new tears that had formed before they could fall. âYeah, theyâre a type of oath. The idea is that if you break your oath, whatever it may be, you die in three ways simultaneously - which I am very glad my proclamation was not one.â
With a snort of laughter, Edrine shifted, kneeling in front of her and taking both their
âSmartass. Thought I maybe knew something you didnât for once.â
âKeep trying, blockhead.â
They shared a small smile before Edrine squeezed her hands, drawing her gaze down to look at their joined hands before she met their eyes again.
âI ask because I intend to make you one, Catriona. Should it all go to shit and you find yourself alone, I swear to you that you will always have a place in Ardaleith. I vow to defend you in all ways, to be your sword and your shield to call on, even if you have no name or title to call your own. If I break my oath, then may the land open to swallow me, the sea rise up to drown me, and the sky fall upon me to right the wrong I have done you.â
Catriona watched with wide eyes as they lifted her hands, pressing a kiss to the back of eachÂ
âWhy would youâŠ?â She began, and Edrine scoffed, setting her hands back in her lap and sitting cross-legged on the wooden platform.Â
âBecause, stupid, youâre my family. And while I canât go with you, I want you to know you will never not have a home in Rosinmoor - no matter what happens in the future. I also think the idea of nature itself trying to kill me is pretty terrifying, so you know Iâm good for it.â
She stared with wide eyes before she let out a small laugh and shook her head, swatting lightly at Edrineâs knee.
âYou really want me to go, huh?â
âIf Iâm honest, no, because Iâll miss you. But I want you to be happy, and that matters to me more than anything else. Sachairi, too, if he were out here to say it himself.âÂ
Edrine stood up then, offering a hand to help her to her feet as they looked around the gardens beyond the railings of the gazebo.
âCome on, Catty. The rain is slowing down a little bit. Letâs go find Myrna.â
Catriona looked at that hand for a long, long moment, briefly thinking back to earlier that afternoon on the stairs - when she stood at the top of the stairs and looked at Sengaâs hand and thought back to the time where the worst thing in the world had been to take someoneâs hand for help forced upon you.
There were no expectations now. Only a genuine love, of someone more like a sibling than a friend, who offered help in her time of need.Â
After another momentâs pause, she allowed herself to take that outstretched hand, feeling a little lighter as she and Edrine raced through the rain to find another entrance back inside without running through the great hall itself.
* Â Â * Â Â * Â Â * Â Â *
Thankfully, Edrineâs oath had not needed testing so quickly. When they made their way inside, Myrna had found them both easily - fussing over their sopping wet clothes and how they were âgoing to catch their deathsâ if they didnât come up and dry off. She pulled them both into her own quarters, finding the fluffiest of towels and setting them up by the fire so they could fight the tremors that racked both of them.Â
It would be then that Catriona swallowed her fear and asked Myrna, ever so softly, if she could tell her something important.
Edrine had stayed the whole time, a comforting presence to Catriona as she recounted it all again - their hand gently rubbing her back when the tears started anew and she found it harder to get the words out.
To say Myrna wept with her would have been an understatement. Her tears, much like Catrionaâs own, had become a blend of rage and despair that rivaled the monsoon as she began packing her things right then and there. Sheâd asked Edrine to help Catriona do the same, asserting that theyâd get as far from Kintyre as they could tonight before taking a ship further north.
The storms would be too rough for them to depart tonight, but Catriona only heard âleaving Kintyreâ to crumble all over again, realizing that Myrna didnât hate her after all.
Edrine had helped her pack the important things before leaving her alone in her room with a parting kiss to her cheek, promising theyâd cover for her long enough to keep Senga from searching for them right away once she pulled herself out of the attention sheâd been basking in. Catriona swore up and down sheâd write to both Edrine and Sachairi as soon as she and Myrna stopped somewhere, though Edrine told her not to worry - that theyâd take care of Sachairi, and to be safe above everything else.Â
Their departure was swift and silent once sheâd packed and changed, taking two horses rather than the Canonach carriage to avoid attention, continuing that way even after Catriona glanced back over her shoulder and could no longer see the lights of Castle Kintyre in the distance.Â
She wasnât sure either of them spoke again until theyâd settled onto a ship at the crack of dawn the next morning, the skies clear and painted gold with the early morning light. But she knew it wasnât because Myrna did not want to talk, nor was she angry with her - she was simply waiting for her grandchild to let her know she was ready.
Myrnaâs cane heralded her presence as always, tapping against the deck as she came to join Catriona at the railing to watch the sunrise.Â
âGranny?â She asked, smiling a little as Myrna jumped in surprise, but seemed to recover quickly as she rested her elbows against the wood.
âYes, a bhobain?â
âHow long will we be gone?â
Myrna hummed in thought, then shrugged, watching Catriona out of the corner of her eye. âI should think however long you want to be gone. My place is with you, after all, and I donât plan to stray from it.â
When she fell silent again, Myrna took advantage of the opportunity, knowing that she would still be listening.
âCatriona, I want to tell you something, I want you to listen to me well.â Myrna waited for Catriona to nod in acknowledgement, the latter turning to look her in the eye. âI could never be angry with you for wanting to choose what life you have for yourself. I have had my time, and you should never feel like you need to sacrifice for me.â
âBut Astor and Balfour -â She started, but Myrna raised a hand, gently and effectively cutting her off.
âI donât need to visit their graves to remember them, sweetheart, though I appreciate you knowing how much they mean to me. But I carry them with me, always, and I remember them every day - itâs just nice to have a place to visit when I feel up for it. The fact of the matter is that I donât need the place so much as I want for you to be happy, and there is nothing I would not give to make sure that you have every opportunity to achieve that for yourself.â Myrna sniffed a little, but stubbornly swiped a hand across her cheek, setting it on her hip once she flicked the tears away. âDo I make myself clear? No more secrets. You tell me everything from now on, or IâllâŠâ
Myrna floundered, waving her cane a little, and Catriona couldnât help but smile - Myrna didnât have a threatening bone in her.
Rather than answer, she stepped forward, wrapping Myrna up in the tightest hug she could manage and burying her face in her shoulder as she felt Myrna squeeze her right back.Â
âI promise.â Catriona murmured, and Myrna hummed her acknowledgment, but neither of them let go of the other. Nor would they until the ship began to move out of the harbor of Briar Glen, when Catriona broke the long silence to draw Myrnaâs attention again.
âGranny, can I ask you for an odd favor?â
Myrna nodded, leaning back to look her in the eye and gesturing for her to continue.Â
âI...donât want to be called Catriona anymore. It makes me think of Mother. And maybe itâs stupid, but Catriona is who she wanted me to be, not who I wanted to be. So I want to pick a new name, and I want to be just myself for myself, and nobody else. I hope that doesnât offend you, though.â
Her grandmother snorted, giving her a playful look and nudging her lightly. âWhat, because my full name is Myrna Catriona? Please, darling, I donât even use that part of my name for myself. Never have. But do you have a name in mind that youâd rather I use, or do you want to try a few and see what sticks?â
She hummed a moment, lacing and unlacing her fingers as she listened to the sounds of the wind catching in the sails.Â
âMy full name is Catriona Astoria Elspeth Canonach-Fenharrow, though itâs always been shortened.â She mused. âI like parts of it still, so I donât want to just get rid of it, either. Canât I be just Astoria Fenharrow, like I was Catriona Canonach?â
Myrna smiled warmly, giving her a squeeze as the wind began to pull at their hair and the harbor began to grow smaller behind them.
âThereâs nothing stopping you from giving it a go, Astoria.â She said, making the teen in question smile broadly at the sound of the name from someone other than themself. âBut I do think it suits you well.â
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ooh ronan pov of the bllb scene?? fuck yess!!
anon i love u endlessly
on ao3
As Ronan fluttered back to reality, he realized two things very quickly. One, he was frozen in place, lying in a pew. Two, his clothes were drenched âhe looked as far as he could without moving his headâhis own blood.
Well, technically his own blood. And technically, those were his own whimpers echoing agonizingly through the pews of St. Agnes. But Ronanâs mouth was stuck shut.
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Adam start awake.
Fuck.
Adam jerked back from the twitching dream-Ronan before he even seemed to fully realize what he was seeing. Ronan watched, still helplessly stuck, as Adamâs eyes raked over dream-Ronanâs arched spine, his shaking fingers, his desperate eyes. Adam sucked in a sharp breath. His lip began to curl, quivering, and Ronan tore his eyes away.
Watching Adam grieve felt too private to watch, even for the grieved himself.
He heard the shuffle of denim against carpet and finally, as Adam scrambled over to the body that pleaded with Ronanâs own voice, Ronanâs body sagged against the hard wood of the pew. The manila envelope, stuffed with a hundred different horrors, almost fell out of his hand before he tightened his grip, refusing to let go of everything heâd just sacrificed for.
He had to get up, he had to get them out of there. But as he lay there, Ronan couldnât think of anything besides the panic in Adamâs eyes. The heat of a thousand different emotions mounted in his chest.
The simple, wringing sadness from seeing death. The heart-stopping fear of his nightmares. The pain in Adamâs gasp that had lodged like an arrow in his chest and, above all, the frustration that Adam had insisted on staying. That heâd been sappy enough to let Adam stay, that heâd had to see this-
âRonan-â Adamâs voice came out strangled. Ronan sat up in a rush, but Adam wasnât talking to him. Bent over dream-Ronan, bleeding out on the church carpet, his voice was barely a whisper, no life behind it. âOh, God.â
A prayer fit for a church. Ronan didnât miss the irony.
The pain, the guilt, the tears straining to be held back all exploded in his chest with those two damn words. Watching Adam move helplessly over Ronanâs own body, beautiful hands fluttering from blood-soaked stomach to ruined throat to chest, Ronan had the sudden impulse to run before Adam could see him. Another impulse immediately followed, barely stronger than the first.
You can't run from this, idiot. He thinks heâs watching you die.
How many more burdens would he throw carelessly onto Adamâs shoulders? How much more could he take? Heâd watched the bags under the other boyâs eyes grow deeper and deeper as the hunt for Glendower had stolen more time from Adam, and nowâAdam didnât deserve this, he didnât need the nightmares. He was running on empty already.
Frustration spiraled up again, faster than he could push it down. Anger picked a target before he could stop himself.
âAre you happy now?â Ronan regretted the words as soon as heâd spit them out. âIs this what you wanted?â He gritted his teeth as Adam jumped, looking around wildly. When his eyes finally landed on Ronan, he looked-
Emotion swelled again in Ronanâs chest. Adam looked lost, gaze faint. Unreachable. His voice came from miles away. âWhatâs-â he blinked several times to no avail. âWhatâs happening.â It wasnât a question.
Dream-Ronan let out a shivering cry. Real-Ronan knew how he felt.
He couldnât stop the fear-sorrow-anger from flashing across his face as he saw the version of himself bleeding out on the ancient St. Agnes carpet. Somewhere deep in the fog of his brain, something told him he should scream. Something else told him that it could have been worse.
At least Adam hadnât had to put the pieces of him together.
Ronan looked back over at Adam, and found that he was watching Ronan intently. He still looked about ready to faint, but the fog in his eyes had cleared. What was underneath, thoughâan unguarded sadness, pain, pity written all across his perfect cheekbones--was somehow even worse.
It was the fact that heâd seen this part of Ronan, all the shit inside his head. Adam was crouched over a hard copy of all the bad decisions heâd made, all the times heâd gone to bed wondering if he would be around to bring anything back. All the terrible, too-real things heâd brought back. Wasps in Monmouth. Adamâs t-shirt. Slit wrists.
Maybe Ronan should scream.
Maybe he should break down, throw his arms around Adam, beg him not to let him die.
But if there was one thing he and Adam had in common, it was that they couldnât stand to be pitied. So Ronan dragged the ice back into his tone.
âYou wanted to stay?â he snarled. He thought of Kavinsky. Leash your dog, Gansey. âWell, here we are. Hope you enjoyed the show.â
Adam pushed himself up from where heâd been kneeling by the body. There was a tiny red bloodstainâRonanâs bloodâon the worn-out neck of Adamâs shirt that Ronan couldnât tear his eyes away from. Dream-Ronan was still gasping for air. âWhy would you- why?â Surprise met with his Henrietta twang as they laced their way through his voice. âWhat did you do? What happened?â
What had happened?
Nightmares. They shouldâve known. Even if Ronan had tried to dream a godddamn lollipop, he wouldâve had nightmares, but dreaming this kind of shit? To get photos, he had to stage them. To get a hand, he had to cut it off. Adamâs plan was the kind of grisly detail that nightmares eat for breakfast. And heâd been in there so longâŠ
The dream-Ronan gave a last shuddering cry and went still. Ronan knew Adam was watching, could feel Adamâs eyes on his face, and he tried to keep his face neutral.
But God- heâd just died, for fuckâs sake.
âI tried for too much at once,â he said. His voice betrayed him- it was too flat, too emotionless even for him. Adamâs eyes flashed with guilt growing more watery by the minute, and the resulting stab of self-hatred shocked even Ronan with its force. He stared resolutely past the other boy. âI was in there too long. The night horrors came, and then-â he realized in horror that his voice was shaking. He took a breath in and refused to meet Adamâs eyes. âThen I heard the wasps, and I knew I would bring them back, and then-â he gestured with practiced thoughtlessness towards dead-Ronan. âThat would be me. But, like, for real.â He could see Adamâs jaw clench out of the corner of his eye. He refused to let himself think about what that meant, and this frustration only added to the mix of emotions coloring his words. âEasy solution. Dreamt a new me, fresh and ready-to-die. Woke up. Here I am. Here I am, again.â He was spitting the words out now. âWhat a cool trick. What a damn cool trick.â
He finally glanced over, but Adamâs face was unreadable. He had a look in his eye like he was putting together a puzzle that was, as he went, gaining more pieces. Ronan felt far too known.
He couldnât do it anymore. He had to get out. Some corner of his mind reminded him why theyâd gone through all this in the first place, and he only remembered the envelope in his hand as he was shoving it towards Adam. âHereâs your shit.â The words came out embarrassingly wounded. Ronan could feel his window of escape slipping.
It seemed to take a second for Adam to recognize what the envelope was, and a second longer for him to reach out his hand and grasp it. The blood-stained manila looked wildly out of place in his long fingers.
There was a moment of silence as the two faced each other. It was obvious from in the pain in Adamâs eyes, in the way he seemed to wilt in on himself, in how his breath hitched that he had lost something precious in this church. That Ronan had ripped something from him.
Dream-Ronanâs eyes stared up at the chapel ceiling, seeing nothing.
A sigh broke the silence. âWhat now?â Adam sounded almost embarrassed. âWhat do we-â
âNothing,â Ronan interrupted. His eyes had just caught the bloodstains on Adamâs knuckles from the dreamt envelope. He thought about crossing over to him and wiping them away. He thought about pausing, hand in hand, looking into the cornflower eyes that had shed tears over his dead body, lifting a tan knuckle to rough lips. He thought about running away and leaving Sister Whoever to find his dead body. âWe do nothing. You go.â
Adamâs eyebrows lifted in surprise, then crinkled in confusion. âWhat?â
Heat was rising in Ronanâs chest again, that same fiery mix of grief and anger and fear and this time love, maybe. He couldnât breathe. He realized he was shaking. âI said I didnât want you here in case this happened. It happened. Look at you.â
Any trace of grief or even embarrassment was suddenly gone from Adamâs eyes. He was the magician again, making bargains with Ronanâs dreams without ever feeling a thing. âAsshole.â His mouth twitched. âThis wasnât my fault.â Ronan knew it wasnât Adamâs fault. Of course it wasnât Adamâs fault. Adam wasnât the one who had made Ronan watch him die, slowly and painfully.
But he still couldnât breathe right as long as Adam was standing there staring at him, and by now, the bloodstains were sinking into the carpet. The chapel was starting to feel less like a house of worship and more like a place where demons were made. âJust go,â he said in a voice too low, too rough, not to mean the opposite. âGet the hell away from me.â He stared up at Adam, and Adam stared back, and he knew they both could feel the echoes of a thousand past fights, a thousand times where neither had backed down.
âIâll ask one more time.â There was steel in Adamâs voice. Ronan knew, instinctively, that they would never mention this again. There was a part of him that wished they could. âWhat now?â
But another, stronger part needed to watch it all burn, if only for a moment. Ronan wished desperately that he could shove it down, but it set his jaw and drew his face into a scowl before he could stop himself. âBye. Thatâs what.â
He was an idiot who deserved whatever came to him.
âWhatever.â Adam stepped around dream-Ronan on his way out. Ronan couldnât tell if he imagined the way Adamâs expression faltered when he looked down or not. âNext time you can die alone.â His footsteps faded up the stairs to his apartment. Much later, so late it would almost be early, Ronan knew those same stairs would echo with Adamâs panicked shout as he woke from seeing Ronanâs glassy eyes over and over again. He knew he would do the same.
He knew heâd hide a worn-out gray t-shirt underneath his bed.
He finally screamed. It echoed off the chapel ceiling, past the altar, back to the stairs where Adam and his cheekbones had just left, until Ronan couldnât tell if the sound had come from himself or the pale dream-Ronan still lying in a pool of his own blood.
âWhatâs happening?â Adamâs shaky voice, scared because of him. âRonan, oh god.â
Ronan fell into the pew and buried his head in his hands.
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Cherry Vodka [Part I] | Richie T. + Eddie K.
Pairing: Richie Tozier x Reader x Eddie Kaspbrak (21+)
Word Count: 3.1k
Warnings: language, nsfw material but no explicit sex (yet), alcohol, polyamory mention, kind of a modern au too
Anon said:Â â okay so based off that art you reblogged of the richie x bev x eddie, what about like a reader x richie x eddie fluffy smut based off that (i hope that makes sense bahahha)â
A/n: Yeah, I had to split it in two parts because 7k words... Iâm sorry it took me so long to post it, dear anon, if youâre still outta there. I rewrote and changed the plot of this one three times and itâs inspired by this post and by the song Sleep Apnea by Beach Fossils, by the way.
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âRichieâŠâ âWhat, doll?â You felt his hand trailing down the small of your back, slowly and treacherously.Â
You rolled your eyes from your book to meet Richieâs little smirk. He had his black wayfarers on, even though the sun was down in the horizon now, and behind those you knew his eyes have been glazing all over you. He was all careless laying on his side right next to you on the towel, unruly wind-dried curly hair, head up resting on a hand, the other free one teasing you because he just couldnât help it when youâd put on that black high-cut swimsuit of yours. Eddie shared the curly-haired boy thoughts but, on the other hand, he laid peacefully flat on his back by your right side. Arms resting under his head, eyes closed, but here and there heâd peek at your and Richieâs constant bickering. You, laying on your stomach in between them, were still in your swimsuit from earlier. After lunch, it was Richieâs idea to go to this lake nearby by his parents' vacation house. It was also Richieâs idea to spend spring break there. Usually, your break trips would include their other friends, who ended up being your friends too over time, but that was being a harsh semester for quite everyone. With Bill and Stan stuck with their academic duties, the best idea was to drive to the Tozierâs vacation house in a small town in Pennsylvania. It was a simple, untouched, two-floor house. Richie told in the car his parents bought it when he was a teenager so they could travel and spend some time there, but ended up not doing that as much as they intended on once it was too far from his city. âFor fuckâs sake, Richie!â Laughing was not what you intended, but you did it and you heard Eddie giggling behind you. Richieâs hand had finally made its way to your hips now, while he leaned closer. âCome on, toots. Just one kissâŠâ He whispered in his best charming tone, but you pushed him away, playing cool although you felt your cheeks burning, the known hots already hitting you like a truck. âNo! Fuck off⊠I already told you we should stop doing this,â you muttered. âYou always say that,â it was Eddie who reasoned, and you turned for him, eyes threatening him with no words while he shrugged. âYeah, and Iâm sticking to it,â you retorted. Indeed. It had been over a month since you last⊠Did what you did. âPlus I think Stan has been suspiciousâŠâ Richie snorted, âyeah, like lil old he would give a single fuck about it, y/n.â You breathed out, closing the book because now your concentration was ruined. Richie, Eddie, and you met at the creative writing class, 8 am on Tuesdays, your first semester of college. You remembered as it was today how you found them âlostâ less than 10 feet away from the lecture hall but arguing like an old couple without realizing that. You helped them find the right way, and Richie flirted with you as you walked into the class, while Eddie scoffed at him for making them get lost and almost late. You knew those boys had been friends their entire life, but from that moment on the three of you became inseparable. If someone needed to find one of you on the campus, the other two would probably be found at the same place. The pureness of your friendship didnât last long. It only lasted until the first party you went to together, when you lost to Richie at a snooker game and he claimed a kiss as his prize, the smooth motherfucker he was. You kissed him and only that, but ten minutes later you were making out in the bathroom. You made him swear he wouldnât make things complicated between you two and he had been keeping his promise ever since. Eddie was a whole out of the curve story though. After what happened at said party, you noticed how fidgety he got about the matter of you and Richie been together once, although he did a great job hiding it. Took a while for him to leave it alone, but you didnât. Something pestering inside wouldnât let you. You were at his dorm, studying for a complicated final exam while the sky fell apart in rain outside when you asked him why he got upset. He denied to his death he had jealousy of you and Richie running through his veins, but you knew he was lying when his eyes started to avoid yours, saying âRichieâs a better ladies' man, anywayâ. You shoot your shot without really thinking about it, told him âhe was just as desirable as Richieâ and it seemed to light a spark between you two. You were the one who leaned closer but he closed the gap, nervously, pulling you into his lap as soon as you kissed him back, building up his confidence. Just like when Richie and you had your thing, you felt no need to hide from him what happened between you and Eddie. It was an embarrassing talk, but it worked. The three of you quickly and naturally warmed up to the facts: you were friends with benefits with both of them and there was nothing complicated about that for you. But you wanted to keep it low because casually making out with your best friends regularly here and there over time whenever you all desired to was none of people business. Eddie rolled over to lay on his stomach, just like you were, shoulder to shoulder. After a couple days constantly under the sun, you noticed he had more freckles than usual over his nose and cheeks, a few on his shoulders. âYouâre being more uptight about it all than me, and everyone knows that being more uptight than me is a big deal...â His self depreciative statement made you flash a half-smile, but didn't stop you from leering at his soft lips because you remembered how he tasted like mint whenever youâd kiss. And it had been a long time since you did for the last time. âIâm just being cautious, Spagheddie.â He smiled at the silly nickname, just when you freed yourself from Richieâs grip, grabbed your book and got up, leaving them on the grass while you walked towards the backdoor. âWhere yaâ goinâ?â Richie called, but you didnât look back. âTaking a shower!â You shouted. âI fucking need to cool down,â you thought to yourself. In your silly head, about a year ago, this whole situation was a great idea. Now you found yourself utterly screwed. There was pining going on since the very first beginning in between you and them. You always knew it was there, you just didnât expect it to escalate like it did. You thought once you had tasted from Richie and Eddie, youâd be done. Checked them out of your possibilities, life goes on, but now you were bonded to them in a way you never intended on. You fell for them. For both of them. And that was making you act up. Since your high school years you understood you were an afraid-of-commitment kind of person. No big deal, no attachments, no pain, so you werenât ready to fall for a single person alone. Falling for two at the same time made your brain short circuit. You had debated the matter with yourself multiple times before. Since you became aware of it happening, you werenât able to choose between them, you didnât even know someone was capable of splitting their feelings like that. Your only solution was to stop it somehow. You couldnât just leave them completely, so you decided to break the colorful side of that mess of a friendship. It wasnât easy because it was not just about physical bonds. They were everywhere around you. Eddie would buy you coffee on the test mornings he knew you were tired after studying the whole night and hand it to you kissing your forehead. Richie would always hold your hand, keep you close and protect you somehow, doing that thing where heâd distractedly run his thumb over your knuckles. You knew that maybe you were not just an arousal let-out for them too and that made things even worse. You ruminated the facts the whole time you were under the cold water upstairs, and when you came down later, all damp hair and sleep clothes, you found them both in the kitchen, struggling with dinner although it was just frozen lasagna for three. Beach Fossils played from Richieâs phone, open vodka bottle on the wood table in the middle of the small kitchen. Richie was the one who first noticed you there, smiling over his shoulder. âGonna leave you watching Eds so he doesnât implode the house while I take a shower, doll. Help the poor man.â he said, walking past by you and running upstairs. âYouâre talking like you werenât the one struggling to turn on the oven!â Eddie shouted at him. You laughed just like Richie did at distance, joining Eddie by the stove. âDo you want a hand there?â âNever mind,â he said, closing the oven door with a proud grin, âit will be ready in twenty, I guess.â âTalented boys you two are!â you scoffed. âOh shut up!â He faked a disgusted face at you. Your eyes laid over the cherries you bought the day you arrived, placed in a fruit basket on the counter and, while Eddie sat down at the table you grabbed a glass, the vodka, and a handful of cherries. He didnât ask you what you were doing, but your peripheral sight allowed you to know he was keeping full attention on you while you fumbled around. You mashed the fruits in the glass until they were a reddish pasta, collecting the seeds and pouring alcohol over what lasted in there. As you swayed everything together, you remembered drinking it once, but not quite where was it. You gulped it turning around to finally face Eddie, and he was splayed in a chair, a ghost of a smile on. âThe hell you doinâ?â he asked lowly and you shrugged. âI donât know⊠But it worked.â He raised his brows, getting up and walking towards you. âYeah? Is it good?â You hummed in response, feeling it burn down your throat. In the deep of your mind, watching Eddie coming closer and closer, you knew what was about to happen, but you didnât act fast enough against it. âLet me taste itâ And he did. Not from the cup but straight from your lips. Eddie leaned in and kissed you softly, an arm around your waist while his free hand went for the back of your neck. And you ease in melting into him was embarrassing, leaving the cup onto the sink as soon as he pressed you against it before the glass ended up shattered on the floor. His tongue slid over yours, hands going to grab your hips, lifting your shirt a bit in the process. You instantly wished he took it off, already built up after spending that time alone in the middle of nowhere and with that aching tension all over the place. You had sex with Richie twice already over time, one of them a bit drunkenly, the other completely sober and thirsty for it, but you had never done it with Eddie. And you wanted it bad. Been wanting for a long time now, since that fucking rainy day in his dorm. But you knew you couldnât, not when you shouldnât even be kissing him like that after managing to stick up to your chastity for over a month now. So your hands palmed his chest and gently pulled him away. âHoly fuckâŠâ Richieâs whispered voice made both you and Eddie startle. He was right there, at the kitchen entrance with a towel around his waist, mouth agape looking at both of you and you had no idea of how much time was standing there now. But he for sure saw shit happening. âThat was the fucking fastest shower ever,â Eddie said, so casually it disturbed you. âN-no⊠I just came back to grab my phone.â Richie muttered. You froze, having no idea of how to move or what to say now. Yes, they were pretty aware you messed around with both of them, but one never saw the other in the act. Never, nor even a peck, and now Richie just witnessed a goddamn show. You were ready to tell him how you were sorry because you had just denied him a kiss when you were sunbathing outside and you have been constantly denying him for weeks now, but he didnât give you the chance. Richie grabbed his phone over the table and stopped the music. You had the hint that maybe he wasnât upset once he had that little mischievous smirk of his while he made his way out of there and upstairs again. Of course you didnât talk about the matter over dinner, but Richie acted like nothing happened and Eddie just followed the lead completely unbothered. You tried to go on as naturally as they did, but something about Richieâs furtive looks over you made you think he was definitely not cool about catching you and Eddie together in the kitchen. You just couldnât tell if either he was jealous or whatever was that and it pinched you from the inside the rest of the night while you watched old TV shows reprising until it was past one in the morning. That was when Eddie started yawning and decided to go upstairs, to the room thatâd be Richieâs formerly, kissing your forehead and smiling nonchalantly before shoving Richieâs shoulder. So it was Richie, you and silence in the living room lighten up by TV flashes here and there. He was already sleepy, laying on the couch he had been sleeping since he insisted on leaving his parentsâ bedroom for you, claiming he'd be a terrible host if he had you or Eddie without a bed. You, curled in the armchair, hated unsolved matters and worse than that, you hated when said unsolved matters had to do with Richie because you knew how he internalized everything he felt if it was slightly messed up. So you went straight to the point to avoid any evasions from him. âDid you get jealous of me and Eddie?â You asked right away, eyeing at him from your safe place. He looked at you, dead in the eye, no single sign of emotion perpassing his face. âNot at all, sweet thing,â he said, shrugging. âWhy would I be?â You didnât explain it, because you knew he knew where you were trying to get at, so your raised eyebrow was enough. But Richie raised his back and you had to get up because the lack of words from him, the one whoâd never shut up, was bothering you beyond belief. You walked over the couch, passing a leg over his, straddling the Tozier boy for his slight astonishment, his reddish lips curving in a half-smile. Richie also had freckles, darker and more numerous ones than Eddieâs, all over his nose and cheeks, some across the rest of his face and none on the rest of his body. When he sat up with you still in his lap, you could smell that cologne you didnât know exactly which was, but that you loved. Loved how its scent would stay ghostly on your clothes after you made out in his truck like a mark of his, just like the hickeys heâd give you sometimes, on hidden places so only you could see them. âDonât fucking play dumb with me,â you whispered now, âIâm sorry, okay?â Richie snorted. âIâm not lying to you, y/n/n. Iâm definitely not mad at you nor at Eddie. Youâre making up things in your pretty head, dollâ His hands drifted up your thighs. âI miss you, that's true. But it doesnât make me jealous of that hell of a scene I saw earlier.â You noticed how he swallowed dry. âSo you trying to convince me youâre not utterly disgusted and hurt?â Richie snorted once more at your tease and the light air of his relieving a lot of pressure from your chest. âFar from that, y/n/n...â The way his voice slowed down and his eyes drifted away from yours to his restless fingers on your skin...You finally understood where the problem laid on. And you wouldnât even need the light pink shade of his cheeks to assure that. âOh God, you liked itâŠâ You whispered in disbelief and Richie laughed, hands on your hips now, pulling you closer. âWhat if I did, doll?â He didnât let you answer, lips on yours before you recovered from your shock. He kissed slowly and passionately, it was always like that, kisses that after a few seconds already got you wanting to rip his clothes off. He was warm against you, bare chest pressed against still clothed yours. As earlier with the Kaspbrak boy, you had the urge of pulling away from him for your own sake, but you couldnât this time. Richie peppered kisses all the way from your mouth to your jawline, kissing the spot that got your underwear ruined every time, earning himself a low whimper from your lips. You felt dizzy. âEds is my best friend, toots,â he whispered against your skin, âthereâs no one Iâd be more glad to let spend time with you, touch you...â His hands ran up your sides underneath your shirt and your nails dig into his shoulders. âKiss you.â He sucked a hickey on the crook of your neck that finally had you moaning out loud. âRichie-â His name. You could feel him smiling at that. âOr have you.â âFor fuckâs sake, RichieâŠâ You knew how to read in between his lines and in his darkened eyes when he pulled away to look into yours, glasses off. You knew he couldnât see you quite well, but you could see him. If Richie was implying what you thought he was⊠âI told you Iâd never lie to you, and Iâm sticking to it.â Richie didnât smile this time. âAnd believe me when I say I wish Eddie had taken you right on that counter.â You were the one dry swallowing now, thoughts running a mile a second. âFor you to watch?â You scoffed, trying to hide how flustered you were. Richie remained serious when he laid down again. His moves underneath you let you feel him hardened under you. âNo. Iâd for sure join.â You read him again, tried to find whatever proved you he was just teasing. But he wasnât. And that left you speechless, made him smile, tapping your hips gently. âBut go to bed, toots. We can talk about it any other day. When you're ready and the cat doesnât get your tongue.â
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