#witchcorp?
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So I would use âthe show ended a year agoâ as an excuse for why Iâm so bad at keeping up with fanfics for the fandom but the truth is I was never good at keeping up with fanfics in the fandom. I just reread the same dozen or so and occasionally drop in, see whatâs new, find one that I like and add it to my reread collection. Please know that your witchcorp fic is one of the ones Iâve reread a dozen times in this past year. Iâm going to start reading your other fics but I just wanted to say I like your work!
I'm honestly still a little amazed that anyone read my witchcorp fic so the fact you've read it multiple times has caused me to go sit behind the couch to both hide and process the good feelings your ask has given me. One day I will finish the sequel!
Hope you have a fantastic new year anon! and that you enjoy my other fics, fair warning when I say Mercury is a slow burn I mean it is a sloooooooooow burn. okay. gonna go roll around in my good feelings some more.
#ask#took me a while to reply because I had to get home to use my laptop#anytime i answers ask on mobile both ask and answer get eaten#honestly the dopamine i got from this
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It's stupid (what isn't about this show) but I just find it kind of funny that since there was no resolution or clarification or anything there's this little town in Canada that hates Lena and believes her mother is a cold blooded killer. Guess newfoundland is out of the places to visit ever again
A concept: the Lena Luthor Foundation builds a school for magic in Newfoundland, revitalizing the local economy while giving Peggy of the Pub lots of foot traffic and new customers to boot!
WitchCorp my beloved, thereâs still hope for you!
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of whisky, witchcraft and what lies between
When Lena walked into Peggy's bar she'd been ready to tear shreds from her. Elizabeth Walsh was out of Peggy's reach, there was no way for her to pay for what she'd done, she she'd been prepared to hae the daughter pay for the sins of the mother.
But Lena just looks too sad. A couple of drinks couldn't hurt or lead to something more, could it?
read on A03 or please continue...
There was a momentary sense of satisfaction to popping that entitled rich bitchâs idea of her fairytail reunion with her motherâs memory. But it had only lasted a brief moment. Five minutes after Lena Luthor had left the regret had set in. The feeling of unease lying heavy in her gut and the second guessing rattling around in her mind. Now Peggy was pulling pints and serving customers with a churning stomach and knowing that sheâd never get the chance to apologise for her harsh words.
Not that she would apologise. Elizabeth Walsh had been rotten to her core and it was better for the Luthor woman to know that then continue to believe her mother was a saint. But she still felt bad. That was her own motherâs fault for raising her to be empathetic. Still. The guilt was eased by the knowledge that someone with Lena Luthorâs money would likely be sleeping on the finest cotton sheets and returning to her life of wealth and luxury. Sheâd hurt for a bit but what did someone of her stature know about real suffering? So Peggy continued to work and tried to put it out of her mind. It wasnât like she was ever going to see her again.
Life sure did like its little jokes.
It was later in the evening when Lena Luthor walked back in.
Peggy dropped her bar towel across her shoulder and placed her hands on her hips and watched as Lena approached the bar meekly. Her head lowered, shoulders up, and a definite drag to her steps. For someone so neatly put together she looked a mess.
âYa look like yerâve seen some stuff.â It was impossible to hide the nasty satisfaction. Her dear departed mother would be so disappointed. She didnât remember him well, but she knew her father could hold a grudge, and well, maybe the vindictiveness came form him.
Lena stopped at the bar and placed her arms across the top. She raised her head and it was immediately apparent that sheâd been crying. Peggy fought down the urge to immediately try and soothe her.
âYou could say that,â Lena said then laughed wetly. She wiped her hand under one eye. âSorry, I donât usually â no. Actually I cry a lot these days.â
âReally? Doesnât come across when I see ya on TV.â
âPublic personaâs arenât real. Theyâre just carefully crafted fantasy.â She drew in several shaky breaths and finally, once satisfied that she was under control, looked up to meet Peggyâs eye. âIâm surprised youâre not kicking me out.â
Peggy smirked. So, whatever it was Lena had found out it had corroborated what Peggy had told her. That was satisfying. But Peggy wasnât one to gloat. She could be magnanimous in her grim satisfaction.
âYou got cash?â
âMore then I know what to do with.â
âThen you can buy yourself a drink. Iâm not gonna kick ya out.â Peggy cursed her dear old dead mum and her stringent teaching on hospitality. Itâs old magic Peggy, there are rules. Peggy barely resisted the urge to huff in annoyance. âWhisky neat?â she guessed.
ActuallyâŚâ Lena stared at the pumps. âIâm trying to be better about drinking and wallowing. Whisky is too contemplative. What beer would your recommend for someone who rarely drinks it?â
âYellowBellyâs Fighting Irish is the most popular.â
âThat isâŚâ Lena blew out a breath eyeing the pump warily. âStrangely apt. Iâll have that.â
Lena took her half of ale and retreated to the far corner, sliding into a booth and pulling out her phone to make a call. Peggy went about her work. She served customers, took orders, piled dirty glasses into the drawer for the wash, and wiped down tables. Lena remained at her table slowly sipping her beer and talking softly on the phone.
Peggy resolved to ignore her but her eyes were continually drawn to the woman in the corner. She hadnât even taken her coat off. She sat stiffly, chin tight and head held high. She cut a strange and lonely figure. Dark coat and dark hair stark against her pale skin. She must have burn on overcast days with a complexion like that. She looked smaller in person than she did on television. Maybe it was standing next to Supergirl that made her look taller, more in control, maybe it was just camera trickery and a great stylist team. Whatever it was, Lena Luthor hadnât brought it with her. SHe looked tired and defeated.
Her call finished her phone lay on the table before her and her glass was finally empty. Peggy walked over.
âAnother?â she indicated to the empty glass.
âIâll take that whisky now please.â
âThought ya didnât want to wallow.â Peggy picked up the empty glass and stared down at Lena. She looked tired, and not just the usual jet lagged tired that tourists did around here but a bone deep tired hat sheâd be carrying about for the rest of her life. Weary with life as her dear departed mum would say.
âI didnât but I just chickened out on a phone call so now I do want to wallow.â She smiled sardonically and rolled her eyes. âA bit of whisky to help with the self-deprecation.â
âYou rich folk have it so rough.â Peggy marched to the bar and poured Lena her drink, making it a double because she looked like she needed it. On a whim she poured herself one. It was coming up to the end of her shift and she didnât need to be the one to close up. Perks of being the boss. She went back to Lenaâs table where the woman was staring down at her phone as she picked at her finger nail.
Peggy clunked both glasses down loudly and Lena jumped. She stared wide eyed as Peggy sat opposite her and slid her drink across the tale to her. She sipped her own.
âWhat are you..?â Lena trailed off. Then she closed her eyes and exhaled heavily. When she opened her eyes again her gaze had hardened. âIâm not in the mood for a fight.â
âYer sure? Yer look like ya gearing up for one.â
The muscle along Lenaâs jaw twitched. She had a hell of a jawline on her. One that could probably cut steel. That maniac of brother of hers must have been right jealous. He was clearly hiding a weak chin beneath his beard.
âIâm being neighbourly. Didnât want ya drinking alone.â
Lena finally picked up her whisky and took a sip. She put the glass back down and murmured a thank you.
âSaw yer on the phone before. Take it that wasnât the phone call ya chickened out on.â
âNo. That was my friend Andrea. Sheâs been instrumental in my taking this journey or self discovery.â She rolled her eyes again.
âThen who yer trying to call? â
âJust⌠A friend. A former, wellâŚâ She exhaled, her jaw working. She rubbed her finger against the wooden table top, following the pattern of the grain. Finally she looked up. âShe is a friend but for a time I wasnât a very good friend to her. We fell out. And I did some awful, terrible, arguably unforgivable things to her.â
âBut she still calls yer a friend?â
âSheâs very understanding. Even to those who least deserve it.â
âThen why arenât ya calling her? Sounds like if she forgave yer after all that then the least ya could do is call her.â
Lenaâs eyes flickered fearfully towards her phone.
âIt feels selfish to waste her time with my worries,â she said. She licked her lips nervously. Peggy followed the movement of her tongue and took a long, slow sip of her whisky. She set her glass down gently.
âSounds more selfish to not call her.â She tapped her fingers against the side of the glass. Lenaâs eyes widened and she drew back. Her pale skin going whiter by the second. She was the spitting image of her mother and it made Peggyâs blood boil. She was staring into the face of her fatherâs murderer and offering her friendly advice when she should have been throwing her drink in her face and cursing her out. âShe cares about yer as much as yer make it sound then ya should call her. Sheâd want to hear how itâs going.â
âYouâre right.â Lena picked up her phone and stood up. She stepped out from the booth, paused, turned and grabbed her whisky. She downed it in one swift gulp, lips twisting at the taste. It was a sipping whisky and that was a waste. She wanted to do that then Peggy had some cheap shit behind the bar she could have given her. Lena set the glass down and hurried outside, thumb already moving across her phone.
Peggy sipped her own whisky. With a huff she stood up, took Lenaâs empty glass to the bar and refilled it, bringing it back.
From what Lena had told her it sounded like the apple hadnât fallen far from the tree. Elizabeth had been a terrible friend as well. Sheâd abandoned Peggyâs mother when sheâd needed her the most. Left her to shoulder the looks of pity and incrimination. Peggy had been forced to watch her mother wither under the stress of what had happened to her husband, under the guilt, until she hadnât been able to stand it anymore and she had given up. She had as good as killed Margaret Bishop as she had her husband.
She swirled her whisky. It wasnât true what they said, children were stained by the sins of their parents. Elizabethâs Walshâs selfishness was written deep into Lena Luthorâs blood. That was also old magic.
She looked up from her drink as Lena returned, shoulders still hunched and her coat still on. She paused when she reached the table, no doubt surprised that Peggy was still there.
âWell. Donât keep me in suspense.â Peggy raised both brows at Lena. Slowly Lena slid back into the booth. She placed her phone down on the table.
âShe was busy. But I gave her a quick rundown of what Iâd found out.â
That her long thought exalted mother was a liar, a murderer and a gold digger. Sheâd probably already known the last one, being the product of an affair and all.
âAnd?â
Lena looked uncomfortable. âAnd she was happy that I was getting answers. But she was busy and couldnât talk for long.â
Maybe Lena wasnât quite as forgiven as sheâd thought.
âHonestly, Iâm amazed sheâs taking my calls at all.â Lena smiled sadly. She picked up her glass and took a sip. âThank you. I think after this Iâll try and find somewhere to stay. If anywhere will have me.â
âMight have to go a few towns over.â Elizabethâs crimes were well known in the area. âDidnât think youâd be staying.â
âThereâs some more questions I want to ask Florence,â Lena said.
Peggy slammed her hand down on the table top. âYâwhat?â
Lena had found Florence Abbott. Sheâd found the other witch that had made up her motherâs coven. Who had left her mother to die.
âI â I have more questions for Florence. Assuming sheâs willing to answer them.â
Peggy dragged her nails across the table top. All these years. All these years and Florence had apparently just been hanging around waiting for Lena Luthor to show up. Where the hell had she been Peggyâs entire life? She remembered her vaguely from when she was a child. That sheâd been kind, a little stern, tutting when Peggy had begged for sweets but giving her them regardless. Sheâd left after her fatherâs funeral. Left rather than face justice.
There were so many things she wanted to say to Florence Abbott and every single one of them would be far harsher then what sheâd thrown at Lena.
âPeggy?â
She looked up at Lenaâs curious watery gaze. This woman cried at the drop of a hat.
âEnjoy yer drink.â Peggy pushed her half finished drink towards Lena and stood up. She stalked back towards the bar and went back to work guilrt replaced by the old familiar burning twist of anger.
More fool her for ever speaking to Lena Luthor again.
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Last orders came and went and Lena Luthor was still at her booth only just finishing off her whisky. Peggy stomped over and stood by the booth, fists on her hips.
âDrink up, settle up and get out.â
âRight.â Lena startled. She slung back the last dregs of her whisky and stood, following Peggy to the bar. She dropped her card on the bar top and Peggy ignored the name of the bank printed on it as she swiped it. To her immense surprise and annoyance Lena dropped a hundred dollar tip.
âYer driver waiting outside?â Peggy asked. She didnât really care but it was a force of habit to make sure her patrons made it home safe.
âHeâs back at the B&B. He was tired so I told him to get some rest. Use the room I was meant to be staying in.â
âSounds real smart. Guess thatâs why youâre the scientist and Iâm just pulling pints. Where you sleeping, genius?â
Lena smiled and shrugged. âIâll work something out. Itâs a nice night for a walk.â
She left. Not that Peggy cared where she slept. It was none of her business. City girl wanted to curl up beneath a tree then more power to her. She had an alien who could fly on her frequent called log, sheâd be okay. She probably had the keys to a spaceship in her pocket.
Peggy cashed up, wiped down the bar, said goodbye to her staff and stepped out front to lock up. As she was turning the key she felt the prickle on the back of her neck, the fine hairs rising.
âIâm gonna tell yer now, attacking me would be a serious mistake.â Her voice didnât tremble. Her fingers tips did. The magic humming beneath her skin.
âGood job thatâs not what Iâm doing then.â
Peggy spun round. Sure enough Lena Luthor was waiting for her, eyes bright in the light from the bar. âWhat is it yer want?â
âTo talk.â
âThink we talked enough. Iâm going home to get some sleep.â She stomped down the steps and brushed past Lena. She was rounding the corner of the bar to the steps for her apartment when Lena called out.
âFlorence Abbott had a lot of interesting things to say. Some of them corroborated what you told me.â
âOh, aye?â Peggy turned. Jaw clenched and fingers curling to fists. âWhat was it old Florence had to say?â
âMuch the same you did. Witchcraft and cauldrons. Hopping over brooms and running naked in the moonlight,â Lena sneered. âIâve seen a lot of strange things. Even what aliens have passed off as magic but there always a scientific explanation.â She took a step towards Peggy. âWhat I find interesting is that you believe in it. Even with Supergirl and Superman flying around you still get those that deny the existence of aliens. Why would you ever believe that your mother and mine were witches? UnlessâŚâ
âYouâre chatty. Where was all this when we were enjoying our drink?â
âIâveâŚâ Lena tipped her head side to side, wrinkling her nose in thought. âIâve had time to contemplate. To put some things together.â
Peggy tilted her head back and stared up at the night sky. It was a small town with little light pollution so she could see the stars. For all of her guilt and shame, for all of the blame she took on herself and allowed to grind her down, her mother had always preached kindness.
âDamn ye mum,â she hissed at the stars. She dropped her head, sighing loudly. âWhere yer staying tonight?â
âI donât know.â
âCome on. The couch is a pull-out.â Peggy turned and went to the stairs leading up to her apartment. She didnât look back but knew that Lena was following. She put her keys in the door and unlocked it. Behind her she could hear Lena breathing heavily, her teeth nearly chattering even though it wasnât all that cold. She pushed the door open and stepped in, flicking the light on and kicking off her boots. âShoes,â she told Lena not waiting to see if she complied.
She walked through to the kitchen and turned on the lights there as well. Lena wandered in after her, looking about the small apartment. She froze in the kitchen door way, her eyes widening.
âYou have children,â She said. Peggy followed her gaze to the toys that had been left on the floor.
âTwo boys,â she answered. She filled the kettle and placed it on the stove not lighting it yet. âDonât worry. Itâs the holidays and theyâre with their father. Tea?â.
âYes, please.â Lena finally stepped inside the kitchen. âYou have a very nice home.â
Peggy snorted. âYa taught to say that at yer fancy schools?â
âYes.â Lena unbuttoned her coat, slipped it off revealing a black blouse. She hunger the coat across the back of one of the kitchen tables before pulling it out and sitting down. She rested her forearms on the table, fingers lacing together.
âWhat did Florence tell ya?â
Lena met her gaze steadily. âThat she and my mother and yours were witches.â
âYou believe her?â
âI believe what I can see.â
âCanât see atoms but you believe in them.â
âYou can see â of course you can seem atoms.â Lena screwed her brows up, confused. Peggy had never claimed to be good at science. It was one of those subjects that had never clicked for her. âYou canât see magic.â
âYou feel magic,â Peggy told her. âWhy are yer here?â
âBecause.â Lena heaved in a breath. âBecause Florence says that I have my motherâsâŚâ her lips twisted into a sneer. âGift.â
She made the word sound dirty rather than something to cherish. Like it was a shackle she would have to bear always chafing at her flesh. Irritation flashed white hot through Peggy. This woman. With all her money and her airs, with her super powered friends, was looking down on one of the last connections Peggy had to her mother. She saw it as best a joke and worst something to turn her nose up at.
âDoesnât explain why yerâve come crawling to me.â She crossed her arms, glared at Lena. âI donât have answers for ya.â
âSounds like this âgiftâ is hereditary.â
âSo yer wondering if I have it? Even though you donât believe in magic.â
âIâm not going to believe in something without evidence.â
She should kick her out. Tell her not to darken her doorstep ever again. Instead without breaking eye contact, Peggy turned the gas on for the stove top and put her finger to the ring. Lenaâs brows drew down, her lips parting. It took so little effort. No will at all. Just the barest hint of a tingle in her fingertips. It was more a parlour trick than real magic. A small flame flickered from Peggyâs fingertip lighting the gas.
Lena twitched but to her credit didnât leap from her seat. Didnât start screeching for the villagers to get their pitchforks. She raised her eyes to meet Peggyâs and exhaled slowly.
âI suspected,â she breathed. âIt passes from mother to daughter?â
âNot always. Itâs dying out, there arenât enough of us left.â
Lena nodded, absorbing the information. âI donât want it,â she said finally.
âTough shit.â Peggy turned to her cupboards and pulled out two mugs. She set about preparing the tea pot as the kettle on the stove started boiling.
âI wonât do anything with it. It doesnât matter if itâs⌠there. I donât want it and I wonât use it.â
The kettle boiled and Peggy poured the water into the waiting pot. She set it down on the table before Lena, ignoring the frown and pout she was sporting. She pushed one mug towards Lena and kept the other for herself.
âI donât have any fancy china to break out for ya,â she explained. Lena curled her long fingers around the empty mug, seemingly not caring that it was chipped. âGood news for yer is that itâs probably too late for ya tâlearn. Normally mother teaches daughter. That usually happens young. Yer mother not being here, yer age, wellâŚâ She shrugged. âYou might have the gift but I doubt youâll ever learn to use it.â
Not more then cheap tricks anyway. Very few learnt instinctively and without a teacher Lenaâs power, whatever it might be, would eventually wither.
Lena seemed troubled at the news. She shrunk down, shoulders up again and head lowering. Biting back the umpteenth sigh for the night, Peggy poured both their teas. Much like Peggy, the gift was probably Lenaâs only real connection to her mother. Her real mother, not the Luthor matriarch who spoke in syrupy sweet tones on the television but couldnât hide the cold contempt in her eyes.
Peggy poured them both half a cup of tea. Lena lifted it and inhaled the aroma, closing her eyes.
âIts fennel and ginger,â Peggy said. âItâll soothe ya and help ya sleep. Good for the bowels too.â
âThank you.â Lena smiled at her over the top of her mug. The stress lines around her eyes melted away, the hardened edge of her lips softened, and she looked like she should. A beautiful young woman. One who likely shouldnât be looking like she was trying to carry the weight of the world on her shoulder.
âYou got no luggage?â
âI left it in the car,â Lena admitted. Her smile turned a little sheepish as she tucked her hair behind her ear.
They sat in a not completely uncomfortable silence drinking their tea. Finally Peggy drained the last of her mug and stood up.
âIâll lend ya a shirt or something.â She quickly cleaned up. Pointed Lena in the direction of the bathroom while she went to the den and pulled out the couch and found some blankets that didnât smell too fusty. Sheâd just finished making up the couch when Lean reappeared, her face freshly washed and hair out of itâs neat braid.
Without the make up she looked softer. Younger. Less fake and more like a real person. Even more like her mother. She favoured the Luthorâs colouring but the eyes and the jaw line were all Elizabeth.
Peggy hated her.
Lena pulled at her own fingers as she approached. âThank you for this. It means a lot to me.â
Peggy pulled a shaky breath in through her nose and held it.
Magic was a strange and unpredictable thing. Peggy hadnât always been the best student of the craft, her mother had only shared enough so Peggy wouldnât hurt herself, and anything else Peggy had taught herself through painful trial and error. But she knew that when magic called you answered. And she was drawn to Lena. Felt it in every moment where sheâd wanted to turn her away but had pulled her in. Had anted to cast her out but invited her into her home. Served her tea and invoked old magic that meant she couldnât kick her out.
Her eyes dropped to Lenaâs parted lips.
âFuck.â
Lenaâs eyes widened a fraction just before Peggy kissed her. Her lips were soft. They parted further, a surprised âoh,â breathed against Peggyâs mouth. She stumbled back, her fingers going to her mouth.
Peggyâs heart was thundering. What was she thinking? What the actual fuck was she thinking? This woman was everything she despised and yet Peggy wanted her.
Lena stepped back into her and pressed her lips to Peggyâs. They stood in the low light of the den, hands y their sides, bodies apart, but leaning into one another, lips moving against and with one another. Lena tasted like her tea and whisky, with a hint of mint that suggested sheâd slipped a mint at some point. Peggy brushed her tongue against Lenaâs and the small whimper that Lena emitted made her break the kiss.
She stared into Lenaâs eye. The faded moss green of one and the gentle washed out blue of the other.
âThis way.â Peggy walked past her, not waiting for a response. Lena followed behind her as she led her to the bedroom.
Peggy switched on the bedside lamp and pushed the door closed behind Lena. She didnât reach for her but she turned, stepping back till her knees met the edge of her bed. Lena swallowed, eyes tracking over Peggy.
It wasnât about romance. Certainly not about love. It was something older and more primal than that. It was about the pull that Peggy felt and that she was sure Lena felt too. Old magic drawing them to one another.
She didnât go to Lena and Lena didnât come to her. They stood apart and each stripped off their own clothes dropping them to the floor until they were both bare and only then did they close the gap between them. Only then did Peggy curl her hand around the back of Lenaâs neck and draw her towards her, capturing her lips in a heated kiss.
She pressed Lena down atop the sheets on her bed. Kissed her as she cupped her breasts, thumbs skimming over already stiffened nipples.
Part of her wanted to wrap her hands around Lenaâs exquisite neck. To throttle her the way someone should have done her mother. But Lena gasped and trembled beneath her like it had been age since sheâd been touched with anything resembling kindness so the urge was smothered. It had been a long time for Peggy as well. Not for the kindness, but the gratification of sex. So she kissed Lena and let her hands roam over soft skin, she rolled her hips and moaned at the feel of long strong fingers exploring the length of her body. They gasped wetly into one another mouths, legs twisted together as their hands delved between on anothers legs.
Then it was a race to the finish. They breathed hot and wet, fingers pressing, hips pushing. Messy and beautiful and heart pounding.
Lena came first. Her hips shuddering against Peggyâs hand and letting out a small broken cry. She shook, twitching away from Peggyâs touch. She gulped down several breaths. Just as Peggy was starting to suspect she was going to have to finish herself off, Lena rolled her over to her back, lowered her head and took a nipple in her mouth. She pressed two finger inside her and ground down on her clit with the heel of her hand and â <em>oh!</em> â She had impressively long fingers.
Peggyâs orgasm was almost overwhelming. It rolled white hot through her, liquid heat and all those over used flowery imagery, with stars bursting behind her eyelids. Really she came so fucking hard that she yelled and slicked wetly against Lenaâs hand.
When she opened her eyes Lena was leaning over her. Eyes wide and shining, red blooming in her cheeks and chest, her hair in disarray.
She was beautiful. And broken. Peggy could see the cracks running though her and the way she was desperately trying to hold onto herself.
âWell that was something.â Peggy wiped her own hand down her stomach and settled back on the pillows.
Lena laughed. The smile curling a the edge of her lips a little shy. She dropped onto the bed next to Peggy and stared up at the ceiling.
âThis wasnât what I was expecting when I followed you home,â she admitted.
If she had a better understanding of her gift then she would have seen that it was inevitable.
âCome with me to see Florence tomorrow,â Lena said.
Peggy shook her head. She wouldnât. She couldnât. Maybe one day she would be ready to face that woman but she refused to be part of it now.
âIâll just get in the way,â she said. She turned her head so she could watch Lena, took in the frown pulling at her lips. She wanted her again. To touch her. To taste her. Sex was a kind of magic in itâs own way. People never really understood how much of themselves they gave away in the act.
âRight.â Lena licked her lips. She sat up, swung her legs over the edge of the bed.
âStay,â Peggy said. Lena looked back at her, surprised. Like she thought Peggy would kick her out. Which to be fair was probably exactly what she was used to in these situations. She knew nothing of the old ways. Peggy reached out and trailed a finger down her spine. âStay and make me come like that again. Iâll make ya breakfast in the morning.â
The smile that broke across Lenaâs face was the best yet. Her cheeks dimpled and eyes squinted closed. She turned and leaned over Peggy, buried her face to her exposed throat and pressed her lips to her pulse.
She wouldnât go with Lena to see Florence. She already knew this was a fleeting moment not meant to last. That Lena would leave, go back to her friend whom she had hurt and work on her forgiving herself. Likely she would rarely think of Peggy.
She didnât know it but she had smoothed the jagged edges of Peggyâs hurt. Made the ache where she kept the memory of her mother that little bit less.
But it didnât hurt to hope that Lena might think of her again one day.
#lena luthor#peggy bishop#supergirl#fic#you ever write something that you know noone is going to read?#I do it all the time!#hoo boy do I hate this witch business#witchcorp?#pegcorp?#I refuse to write out that accent phonetically#femslash
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please write more witchcorp
I was actually thinking of doing a follow up set after whatever mess the finale is where Lena goes back to Ireland comfortable in her powers and with a new found confidence in her abilities and Peggy's just like, "oh no, she got hotter"
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on the one hand I kinda don't like Alex on the other I really want to write a fic where Sam dies and Alex and Lena wind up awkwardly co-parenting Ruby and slowly fall in love
#i love the idea of alex but don't like how badly written she is#if they acknowledged that she's kind of a garbage person I'd like her#anyways...#should i tag this?#still gotta write my witchcorp followup#agentcorp#this ship had so much potential
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can't believe I'm still the only person to write a fic for Lena/Peggy
can't believe I'm going to be the only person to write a second one
#like c'mon!#that like one scene with them had so much potential#lena luthor#peggy bishop#we take the wasted potential and we make something hot out of it#witchcorp#me shipping it in the corner on my own
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Everyone writing their supercorp fix-its and I'm plonking away on my witchcorp follow up
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Favorite to read, favorite to watch, favorite to write or talk about:
Agentcorp, Rojascorp, Supercorp (you can sub one for Witchcorp if you want đ)
Wow this is a hard one! ;)
Favorite to talk/write about might be Supercorp? They got more time onscreen than the others and have a long history on the show, so there's more to talk about lmao. If I wrote fan fiction it might be a different answer though, since the other ships have more gaps for our imaginations to fill and fewer stories about them.
Favorite to read (fanfic) is probably Agentcorp ... it's a small but hardy crew with some really good stories out there. :)
Favorite to watch ... I like all of them including Witchcorp ... but for today I'll put Rojascorp in this spot.
Look at them. Imagine wasting this entire dynamic and backstory by just dropping their relationship altogether in the final season. Couldn't be me!!
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