#and as always the lovely Mrs Innit is a refridgerator
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
13) âGive me your handsâ and 22) Surviviorâs guilt.Â
Disclaimer: this blurb is set in the SCP SBI AU I have called Fault, and dances over the timeline so good luck. Explanation of AU; tldr.Â
âGive me your hands.â The strangerâs voice was gruff and demanding, and Tommy complied at once. It wasnât that he was intimidated! Sure the random demon heâd summoned was massively tall, extremely strong, and just killed a lot of people, but Tommy was an alpha male! And anyway, the bloke technically saved his life in the barest sense of the word, so he had to be a good guy. Nevermind that Tommy watched people be reduced to smears running down the walls. They were villains. That was what they deserved. Right?
Tommy held a little stiller than he preferred, acutely aware of how easily the boar heroâs fists crunched skulls in. But the enormous hooves were surprisingly gentle as they held Tommyâs hands, prodding in their examination. His hero adjusted his dorky glasses and peered closer, curiously studying the strange crimson color curling around Tommyâs fingers. Blood mixed into the ruby power dancing across Tommyâs palms, indistinguishable.Â
The Blade hadnât been the only one killing the villains.Â
â...huh. Iâm guessing this red stuff is what summoned me?âÂ
âI think so? Do you know what it is?âÂ
His hero grunted. âI was hoping youâd know that.â
âNah, it only showed up a few minutes before you did.â Tommy studied his own hands just as intensely. With great concentration, he tried to get the swirling scarlet liquid to grow. Then, to disappear. It ignored him, and he frowned, not sure how the power worked. Wait. âWAIT! I have superpowers now?!â
The Blade squinted at the boy. âUhhhhhh. Suuuuure?â Tommy pumped his fist in the air rather excitedly. He had to admit it was kinda cute even if he wasnât a kid person. âProbably donât tell anyone, alright?â he hazarded, suddenly a little worried the twerp was going to get himself nabbed immediately. This kid needed to shift away from Marvel to X-Men fast if he was going to survive.
âYes! Like a secret identity! So youâre a superhero, right?â Tommy peered up hopefully. The crimson hitched upwards. âRight? Those guys were villains because they tried to murder me. Thatâs why you killed them, right?â There was almost a note of desperation to the question.
âUm. No.â The Blade pretty much murdered them because he was suddenly teleported into a hostile situation and was immediately attacked. Self-defense, baby.Â
The ruby power spiked then, the scent of fear sharpening. But then bull-headed determination flashed in his eyes. âA vigilante then, that makes sense. Like Batman. Hey! And now I can join you and save people too! You can be my sidekick.â
âWait hold on, no, youâre MY sidekick, not the other way around,â The Blade argued before realizing that meant he inadvertently supported Tommyâs absurd notion. He was a survivor, he didnât have time to be a savior. If the kid wanted to read any morality into his actions that was their problem.Â
âOk. Iâll train under you until Iâm too powerful and surpass you completely, and THEN youâll be my sidekick.â For some reason, the voices didnât feel threatened by his open intention to usurp him. Weird. For once in his life The Blade was getting zero intrusive thoughts about brutally murdering the dude he was talking to. It was kinda relaxing actually.Â
Tommy held out a fist, and after belated realizing it wasnât a (very wimpy) attack The Blade completed the fist bump. Tommy beamed at The Blade. âThanks for saving me.âÂ
It wasâŠstrange. No one had ever thanked him for something like that before. And sure heâd really only incidentally saved the boy through a combination of weird coincidences, otherworldly machinations beyond their comprehension, and the fact something about Tommyâs power literally prevented him from even contemplating attacking him, but The Blade did have to admit it felt pretty nice.Â
Nice, but not the reason his tail was wagging. Nope, not at all. That was all post-bloodlust high. Definitely.Â
.
âGive me your hands.â Mum smiled as she said it, but it made trepidation build in Tommyâs gut.Â
Tommy fixed his smile, rolling his eyes. âUgh, youâre so clingy. Iâm not a kid anymore!âÂ
âYouâre fifteenââ
âOnly for a few more weeks! Iâm practically an ad-â Deviously, she lunged for his hands and he jerked back sharply. âDonât,â he yelped a little too desperately. Tommy gulped, trying to swallow his panic. âDonât do that I have a- have a reputation to maintain Mum, canât be doing cheesy girly stuff like hand holding haha.âÂ
âTommy-â her tone was far, far too serious as he retreated.Â
âIâll get a hold of it eventually, just give me some time. Weâre working on it.â Tommy was a little frustrated he hadnât figured out how to control his powers yet, but all the other guys said it took a while so that was okay. At least it didnât work on The Blade or Philza. The same couldnât be said for Wilbur, which was really bad. It just made him bicker with the others, which, while funny, still meant he couldnât control the Red. Tommy didnât know what had made it so lethal in the villain encounter, but he needed to find out before he risked getting someone hurt.Â
Heâd find a way to use it for good, though. One way or another, Tommy was going to be a hero.
âWhat does your power do?â
Tommy laughed nervously. âSorry, thatâs confidential hero stuff, Mum.âÂ
Tommy refused to tell her what happened in that room. Her baby boy witnessed -enacted?- a massacre and that wasnât something that would ever be undone. He went in normal and came out with blood permanently fresh on his hands. All she knew was a haunted look came across him in quiet moments, and she didnât trust the new âfriendsâ heâd made in the aftermath, and he absolutely refused to touch anyone.Â
She reached up carefully to avoid his hands, craning his head down till their foreheads touched. For all that she had to rise to her tiptoes to meet him, Tommy was still her little boy. Heâd grown a lot in the last year, and even more so on that dreadful day his powers showed up, but sheâd never stop seeing that golden-haired child with his mischievous, gaptoothed smile and dirt staining the knees of his pants.Â
âJust talk to me when youâre ready, okay? And if those men try anything Iâll destroy them.âÂ
Tommyâs laugh was far brighter this time. âMum! You wouldnât stand a chance! Besides, The Blade and his friends are nice.âÂ
Scruffy was the word she would use. Sheâd vetted them, of course, she wasnât going to just let her son lose with complete strangers and just trust he came home safe. The Blade was intimidating, but a dork. That Wilbur fellow was just a hopelessly broke musician as far as she could tell, though had a worrisome collection of scars. She respected Philza to some degree though, since he had an ounce of manners. Hopefully, heâd keep the others in line.Â
âTommy. Youâre spending hours with homeless people, I have every right to be concerned.â Still, they were the only ones with any idea of how to help Tommy explore the new aspects of his identity. Unfortunately, Tommyâs mother was the supportive type, and was trying to give him room to experiment despite her reservations.Â
âYouâre always worried though.âÂ
She pressed a kiss into his forehead. âWith a brat like you, I have to be.â He pulled a face, feathers ruffled at the utter indignity of affection. But she let gravity seep into her tone. âI know it scares you. But I know youâll do the right thing, youâre a good kid at heart. Okay? This isnât going to change anything.â
.
But it did.Â
Tommy had been abducted and locked in a padded room for days now, and he wasnât sure how much longer he could take this. He wanted his mum. In Tommyâs books, that was a pathetic thought for a sixteen-year-old to have, but it was true, he wanted to see his parents so bad it hurt. He wanted his friends. Or even not his friends, random people at school, hell even people he didnât get along with so long as it was a face he recognized. Or even one he didnât. At this point, Tommy would settle for one of the freaky scientists or soldiers just so there would be someone to talk to. Or, more accurately, shout at and demand answers from. Like, were they villains, where the hell was he, what did they want, why did they kidnap himâŠ
And then someone finally entered the room. Or, more aptly, the guns entered before the squad of soldiers, so Tommy actually found it suddenly easy to continue saying nothing at all. His hands shot up in the air in surrender, scarlet ribbons of liquid dancing around him.Â
âCease the threat display,â a guard barked.Â
The power only poured out further. âIt doesnât- I donât control it, it wonât-â he was ordered to be silent. Tommy had never been good at that, but he managed, biting down questions. Doctors circled like vultures, and he had the strangest premonition shivering down his spine. He felt like a lamb being inspected for imperfections before the slaughter. Â
âGive me your hands.â Gloves were dropped into his outstretched palms. Thick, sturdy, and frankly pretty ugly. Tommy had no idea how deeply heâd come to despise them. In fact, Tommy had very little idea of anything, head still caught in the little stories people liked to tell. Lies about powerful heroes rescuing civilians, or good triumphing over evil, or the world caring about people like him.Â
âUm. What are the gloves for?â
The guard grinned. âSo you canât fight back.âÂ
.
The demon was tall and slender with bright white eyes and a literal beam of a smile. He seemed nice. That was the problem, the Foundation always sent Tommy to meet the nice ones so that he could fix that.Â
Tommy approached cautiously, carefully weighing threats between the D-Class prisoners behind him and the towering demon ahead. Anomalies were safe at first though, and Tommy knew exactly how to protect himself now. And if he were honest, Tommy didnât want to get to know the D-Class before their imminent execution. It only made the nightmares worse.Â
âHi!â the demon chirped. âIâm Halo! Wow, I havenât seen someone new inâŠâ he trailed off uncertainly, a faint furrow of his brow. But he shrugged quickly enough. âA couple years I guess. Sorry, they think Iâm boring. No one really pays attention to me anymore. Not violent enough to be interesting I guess. They certainly tried, though.â Tommy caught the flash of horror flickering across glowing eyes. He knew that pressure intimately given how heâd broken beneath it. Still, Tommy perked a little, not expecting the hope. A sour consolation, but neglect had to be far better than cruel attention. Maybe one day heâd be left alone too.Â
âIâmâŠâ he swallowed roughly. âIâm the Instigator, I guess. Iâm the newest attempt.â Â
âBegin threat assessment test,â came a strict voice over a com system. Â
At Tommyâs wince, Halo gave him a reassuring smile and a snort. âDonât worry about that. These muffin-heads have been trying to get me to murder people for years and Iâve yet to break.â TommyâŠdidnât have that kind of strength. He didnât know how Halo had endured it.Â
All he knew was that was finally ending today.Â
âInstigator, give it your hands,â ordered the overseeing worker. He could feel the eyes of observers for all that he couldnât see them.Â
âIgnore them. Whatâs your story?â Halo asked. âI havenât talked to anyone in ages, whatâs it like? Are you a recent capture? Do you remember the outside still?âÂ
Tommy glanced nervously at the observation window. But he was almost just as desperate for conversation. âIâve been here a few weeks. And. And I miss trees. Itâs weird, but I miss how tall they were. Like, because that meant there was space, not these cramped cells and hallways.â
âYes! And the sky! Oh how I miss the freedom of the sky,â he sighed, dark wings flaring out.Â
âStars,â Tommy added. âJust scattered out, millions of them. And people, everywhere, and you can just talk to them and theyâre nice, not like here at all. I just want to mÌ”ÌźÌÍuÌ·ÌșÌŠÌÌfÌ·ÌÌÌÌÌfÌ¶ÌŻÌŻÌÌÌÌiÌžÍÌÍÌ
Ìn̶ÍÌŁÌÌing talk to someone, you know?â Â
âLanguage,â the demon chided, barbed tail lashing. âBut yes. Listen, this is important, did you know a guy called Skep-â
âGive it your hands,â the human demanded. âOr youâll be wearing gloves the next three days.âÂ
Tommy went sheet white, rigid to the point of breaking. Halo gave him an odd look, awkward but politely sympathetic if utterly confused. He looked to the observation window. âIâm, erm, guessing thatâs some type of punishment?â Tommy nodded, relieved someone understood. But of course Halo would, hadnât held out for years against the Foundationâs demands?Â
It was his kindness that betrayed him. Halo bent to his level, hand outstretched. âWell alright then. Donât want that happening of course! Itâs okay, just do what they say.â He didnât understand what was about to happen. Tommy did, though. But Tommy had made this choice before. It was easier afterwards, took a little less coercion each time once youâd crossed that threshold. He knew he was selfish, prioritizing himself over otherâs lives, but once you made that choice you made it again, and again, and again.Â
He swallowed the lump of guilt in his throat. âIâm sorry,â Tommy shoved it out fast like that was any type of salvation. Tentatively, he reached for Haloâs talons, grasping firmly.Â
The executor shook hands with his weapon. Crimson seeped from their joined grasp.Â
Haloâs friendly smile dropped. This close, Tommy could make out the sharp fangs hidden amidst white glow. The demon stalked past to the chained prisoners, sharp words ringing out. Condemnation hissed out, giving way to shouts, to anger, to violence.Â
Tommy was told that the D-Class deserved it. Death row inmates, the vilest of humanity. Tommyâs arms wrapped around himself, frenzied scarlet curling around, spreading, exacerbating. Haloâs snarls gurgled through thick viscera, visceral ripping noises rending the humans apart. The Foundation said they deserved it, just like they said Tommy deserved to wear gloves when he disobeyed or get hit whenever he wouldnât stop talking, begging, screaming. He kept his back carefully to the unfolding slaughter, eyes squeezed shut. Pretending he couldnât hear the ragged howls of agony.Â
Pretending he couldnât hear the way Halo started to sob the moment the bloodlust faded.
.
The air was dusty as Tommy climbed into the abandoned hayloft, clambering over to where Tubbo perched. His nose wrinkled, still unused to all the various smells of the outside world. It was still startling how much world was in the world, overwhelming at times but exhilarating always.Â
Tommy scooted over to sit as close to Tubbo as he dared, distance carefully calculated to keep them safe. His legs swung back and forth over the edge of the loft, his friends scattered below, happy and free.Â
Tubbo waved at him, looking excited. There was a strange intentionality to the gesture, exaggerated. But Tommy couldnât blame them for that. He wasnât a stranger to pretending everything was normal. The escape wasâŠrough, to put it mildly, let alone the horrors of the Foundation. It felt nice to laugh even if it was a tad forced at times. But it made the next one easier, so it had to be worth it.Â
âGive us your hands.âÂ
Red spasmed along his arms. Tommy leaned away, unpleasant memories flickering in his head. Given the fact that Tubbo was unique (a word which here means âmade out of hundreds of thousands of beesâ), Red didnât work traditionally. Mostly, it resulted in pure self-destruction. Tommy shuddered to remember the way Tubbosâ skin tore apart as frenzied insects slaughtered themselves. Not something he was in a hurry to repeat.Â
âNo, itâll explode your hands,â Tommy said, not knowing that was exactly what Tubbo wanted.Â
They gave him a sweet smile, half crooked. âItâll be fine, Tommy. We wonât get Redâd, we just want to compare our hands. Our grandpa always said big hands meant you were going to grow up to be tall, kinda like puppy paws.â
Tommy scoffed. âWell I already know Iâm going to be massive, and anyway itâs not worth the risk.âÂ
âWeâll be careful. But if you think ours are that much bigger, thatâs fair. You still only have kid hands after all~â
âNo! Iâm basically an adult! JustâŠhold still, I guessâŠâ Tommy approached cautiously, still conflicted but splaying ruby fingers out to match their own hand. The fingers shook a little from the tension poured through them, little curls of Red unfurling off the back of his hand like sprouts poking through topsoil. Tubbo slipped their own close, lining up the newly finished digits to match the angle of his. Tommyâs fingers were longer than their own, stockier, his palms broader. They hovered closer and closer, shrinking the gap. âHah! See! I told you. Um, thatâs close enough, I think.â
âWe can see from a bunch more angles than you can, Tommy. Weâll know if it's too close.â He flashed a nervous smile, but trusted Tubbo. Still, it felt wrong to tempt himself like this. It took just about everything he had to not lace their fingers together and pull his best friend into a tight hug. JustâŠhold Tubbo, feel the buzzing warmth of life and the purr of bees working within their hollow body.Â
A quiet cage around his heart forbade him from ever reaching out. Tommy couldnât touch almost anyone in the entire world. It felt near suffocating at times to yearn for something regardless of how disastrous Tommy knew the consequences would be.Â
It didnât occur to Tommy that some people welcomed disaster.Â
Tommyâs fingers curled in slightly, unconsciously wanting to close around Tubbosâ. Closer, closer, till they were almost touchingâŠ
.
âIâve done some really, really awful things, Phil.â But it didnât stop Philzaâs arm from wrapping around his back and drawing Tommy in. If he were honest, he didnât want it to. Tommy melted into the embrace for all that he didnât deserve it.Â
âI know,â Philza murmured, squeezing his shoulder reassuringly. âThat doesnât mean youâre evil. The world isnât heroes and villains, Tommy.âÂ
âOkay then Iâm a bad guy.â Philza rolled his eyes. âI mean with a power like this what else could I be? Iâm a baddie. A wrongun. A âmalignant, misbegotton neâre-do-well of a knaveâââ Tommy sang, rattling off the old man insults Philza sometimes fell into when he got angry and forgot what century it was.Â
âStop deflecting and give me your hands,â Philza interjected. Tommy griped at him for being rude, but relented easily. Philza cupped Tommyâs hands in his own, reverent almost.Â
âIf youâre going to try to say there isnât really blood on my hands donât even mÌ·ÍÌÌÍÆ°Ì”ÍÌŹÌÍÍ
fÌ¶ÌĄÍÌœf̶ÍÌŹÍĂ̻̔ÍÌșnÌ”ÌÌÌ ing try it. We both know thatâs a lie.â Red spasmed, tendrils looping around Philzaâs talons.Â
âBut your hands arenât evil. They are simply hands. Red is the exact same. Power doesnât possess its own morality, thatâs up to the weilder. Your power isnât evil, and neither are-â
âFor you, maybe. Anyone else and itâs just brainwashing bloodlust.â Heâd been stupid for ever thinking he could save anyone.Â
âYou can have precautions without having terror.â
âI canât control it. Iâve tried so, so hard, and I just canât. All itâs done is ruin my life.â
âThe Foundation did that, not the Red, and most certainly not you. Surviving doesnât make you evil.â Philza lifted Tommyâs hand, brushing a kiss against his knuckles. âI hope one day you can find love for every part of yourself.â
#sbi whumptober#and as always the lovely Mrs Innit is a refridgerator#tommyinnit fanfic#scp tommyinnit#sbi scp au#fault au#sbi au#sleepy bois inc#sbi fic#technoblade#philza#tubbo#tommyinnit#badboyhalo#tw death#tw violence#was this what the prompt was supposed to be like at all#no#but brain go brrrrrrrrrrr#something to nom on#crumbs to tide you over
32 notes
·
View notes