#heartpascal writes
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name your courage
âčâ joel miller x platonic!reader
âčâ summary: you donât like the blood in your reflection, joel wipes it away.
âčâ a/n: this is like 1.4k words and itâs shit, sorry!!! barely any joel interaction but itâs the thought that counts? (from febâ23, posted juneâ25 so go easy lmao) this was supposed to be a lot longer i think
âčâ warnings: extremely unfinished, creeps from silver lake, reader murders folk (off page), trauma, dissociation, BLOOD, canon typical violence
MASTERLIST
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Life in Jackson had been something of a miracle. A working, living society that fought back against the Infection that threatened to poison the whole world, and the humans who had taken advantage of it in the worst kind of way. It was a safe haven, a little pocket of life that you had never known before arriving alongside Ellie and Joel, close to a year ago.
But it didnât change you.
It didnât change anything about the world outside of the walls, either. The world was still infested with fungus, and full to the brim of immoral assholes who would love nothing more than to tear Jackson apart.
You couldnât help but remain on edge, even as Ellie and Joel slowly began to relax into the life of somewhat normalcy. Every time you tried to just calm down and enjoy life, you felt overwhelmed with images of people destroying this place. You were sure it wouldnât be able to last, nothing ever did.
It was the reason you were so eager to go on patrols, to be allowed the gun in your hands as your horse trotted along the routes that members of Jackson frequented.
So it was no surprise to you when you saw the smoke in the distance, coming from a supposedly abandoned cabin. You werenât sure who would be in there, whether itâd be Jackson patrollers taking a pit stop, or someone more malicious.
You had been grateful, then, that being in Jackson hadn't made you soft. Your guard was still present, still strong, and you were thankful, especially as you got closer to the cabin. It had become increasingly clear that whoever these people were, they didnât come from Jackson. The windows were unblocked, and you could see at least three men inside, their faces angled away from where you were staring in.
Nobody in Jackson would be that foolish, you were certain. It was standard procedure to block entrances to wherever you may be laying low, not wanting to risk Infected or hunters sneaking up on you. That open window would have anybody sneaking in with ease, which was why you knew youâd be getting answers.
You had tied up your horse, then, to a tree just out of reach, giving her a comforting pat against the side of her neck.
The next moments had been a blur, crawling through snow and bushes to keep out of sight, all the way until you had reached the open window, finally able to hear their voices carrying through the air. Your gun was gripped tightly in your hand, safety off, and you were ready to shoot first, answer later, before you caught wind of their words.
It had you freezing, eyebrows furrowed, and you recall the way misted breath had left you.
âTheyâll all pay, Sid. Thatâs what weâre here for, ainât it?â One of them had laughed, and you had heard the pat of him hitting presumably Sid on the shoulder.
âWhat? You think those assholes are gonna let us kill three of their own?â
âHey, that stupid girl killed one of ours first. An eye for an eye.â The first voice responded, much angrier than his first comment had been, and you had realised then that this seemed⊠personal.
âThey killed David, Sid. We ainât about to let that slide!â A third voice spoke up, lower and much more vengeful when he uttered the name. Your mind had been racing, going through the likelihood that this was all a coincidence, and that they werenât here for Ellie. For you. For Joel.
You were climbing through the window before you could think better of it, boots thumping harshly against the wooden floor and drawing all of their attention. You had grabbed the nearest guy before they could even make a move, your gun pressed to his head.
âWeapons on the floor.â You had hissed, pushing the metal harder against the man you held as they hesitated. âNow.â
âAlright, girl, jusâ calm down now!â One of the men, Sid, you figured, said, nodding towards his companion and dropping his pistol and rifle to the ground. You had jerked your chin, and kept your eyes sharp as they begrudgingly kicked away the weapons, out of reach.
Your hand had gripped the arm of the man in front of you as he held a knife, poised to strike you with it. âI wouldnât.â The knife slipped to the floor as you twisted his wrist, and he cursed as you kicked it away, towards the window you had entered through. âWhat the fuck do you want? Why are you here?â Your voice had been dark, full of anger and a not so subtle threat.
âWe just want the girl, okay? She killed one of ours.â Sid told you, his brows furrowed as he clearly tried to repress the anger in his expression.
âWhere are you from?â You asked then, awaiting confirmation of your worst fears. You had repeated your question when they hesitated, pressing the gun harder against the head of the man below you, ignoring his wince.
âSilver Lake! Itâsâitâs in Colorado!â
Your blood had felt like it was frozen, dragging through your veins at a speed so slow it physically hurt. You had swallowed, something in your eyes setting as you nodded, jaw clenched.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
The wind had numbed your limbs as soon as you stepped foot back outside, blood drying against your skin in the harsh weather.
Your horse was exactly where youâd left her, and she stayed quiet as you claimed back on the saddle, making your way back in the direction of Jackson with more supplies than youâd left with. The ride there was a complete blur, something inside of you just as numb, though not from the wind.
Concerned voices reached your ears when the gates opened, people reaching for you as you slipped off of the horse, patting her neck before someone took her back to the stables. ââM fine.â You grumbled, stepping away from somebody as they reached hands towards you.
âAre you hurt?â They asked, hands stilled in the air, prepared to reach towards you again.
You shook your head, something fumbling from your lips about going home, and you set off before they could question you further. The journey blurred together, just the sound of your footsteps as you looked for the familiar road that was Rancher Street. You hadnât fully registered the stares on you as you trekked through the heart of Jackson, finally reaching the house you were meant to call home.
âJoel?â You called, stepping into the house, the backpack and gear on your back being set down beside the door. When he didnât answer, you frowned, knowing he wasnât on any jobs this evening.
You made your way up the stairs, avoiding the fourth step that creaked when you step foot on it, and looked through the rooms, one by one. When you finally found the man, he was hunched over his woodwork desk, his mostly-deaf ear facing toward the doorway in which you stood.
âJoel,â You breathed, something of relief finding you as you saw he was fine, just working away in his own world. You were going to say something else, but were stopped by the way he looked over at you.
âShit,â He said, standing immediately and making his way to you with quick steps. âAre you okay? What happened?â Joel asked, furrowing his brows when you didnât answer him, rather stepping into his arms and gripping onto him like your life depended on it. He held on to the back of your head, holding you close, and couldnât help but frown as you sagged in his arms.
He called your name, unable to do anything but be more confused and concerned by the second when you could only shake your head.
It takes him more than a few moments to realise that the blood staining you isnât your own, and that brings along another realisation. Your despondency translates what happened for you, so you have no need to fill him in with words.
This is something Joel Miller knows all too well.
The disassociation afterwards is a powerful thing, but what comes after that stage isnât any better. There are struggles ahead of you, he knows, and he knows those struggles well.
He holds you tighter, arms firm around you, and waits.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
âčâtaglist: @rhymingtree @sleepygraves @wnstice (everything) @auggiesolovey @just-kaylaa @evyiione @fariylixie0915 @faceache111 @randomhoex @pedropascalsrealgf @star-wars-lover @soobsdior @sunflowersdrop @definitely-not-a-seagull-i-swear @miss-celestial-being (pedro) please let me know if you want removing or adding!
#heartpascal writes#joel miller fic#joel miller x platonic!reader#joel miller imagines#joel miller x reader#joel miller x platonic!f!reader#joel miller father figure#joel miller angst#joel miller comfort#joel miller fluff#the last of us one shot#the last of us imagine#the last of us x reader#the last of us x you#joel miller x you#joel miller hurt/comfort#tlou fic#tlou imagines#tlou imagine
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âsome more of my favorite fics â fic rec masterlist is here
a sheep in wolf's clothing by @jupiter-soups
My Brother's Keeper by @diversemediums
The Two of Us by @yourwinchesterbros
call me by @macfrog
i'll be needing stitches by @thetriumphantpanda
easy, plaid-shirt mornings by @morning-star-joy
Keeping up by @talaok
Tender by @brighttears
bath time by @luvrxbunny
an open invitation by @walkintotheriveranddisappear
Sweet spot by @javiscigarette
give in by @cupofjoel
clouds by @softlyspector
seasons by @loquaciousferret
speak now by @mendessi
stranded by @soullumii
whatever you want by @inkedells
in my hometown by @swiftispunk
in a feud with her neighbor by @proxima-writes
if the door wasn't shut by @heartpascal
I want your video by @tieronecrush
Friendly Neighborhood Handyman by @juletheghoul
Float Like a Feather by @wheresarizona
Yellow by @ilovepedro
heat lightning by @millerscoffee
Falling into My SIns by @inthe-dark-tonight
anyone is welcome to send fic recs to my inbox!đ i lovee reading them :))
#mari's fic recs#fic recs#actually organized my fic bookmarks for once#shocker#so i found some good fics i thought i lost!
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10 SONGS 10 PEOPLE !
put your playlist on shuffle and list the first ten songs that play !
â i changed the rules bc i listen to just about fifty million playlists and iâd have noooo idea which one to do so i shuffled five playlists and listed the first two songs that came on heheh
iâve just been tagged by THE @heartpascal my heart is <333 ily tysm for the tag !!! what a notification to come back to
ONE. mandamientos â marĂa becerra , iâm hoping to choreograph this song someday soon
TWO. mañana serĂĄ bonito â karol g , iconic
THREE. not that type â gugudan , throwback to my early kpop days tbh
FOUR. love me now â nct 127 , not a frequent listen but iâm remembering how good this song is rn
FIVE. saw you in a dream â the japanese house , mmmmmmmm always the perfect vibes
SIX. flame â luli lee , god i looove this song, who doesnât love a hot girl who sings and plays the bass
SEVEN. midnight cruisinâ â kingo hamada , nothing better than japanese city pop <3
EIGHT. feel like â woodz , sexy sexy song good as hell
NINE. the rose captain â sea wolf , makin me wanna write an angsty pirate story
TEN. black leaf falls â sea wolf , one of my fav sea wolf songs also makes me wanna write an angsty, creepy story
tagging : @seonghwaddict @jaehunnyy @hwaightme @hwatonin @nebulousbrainsoup @justhere4kpop @ad0rechuu @bluehwale @ssaboala @enluv no pressure love yâall <33
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Joel Miller
J.M. - Masterlists
Joel Miller Masterlist By: justagalwhowrite
Joel Miller Masterlist By: cavillscurls
Joel Miller Masterlist By: eupheme
morning-star-joy Joel Miller Masterlist By: morning-star-joy
Pedro Pascal Masterlist By: savemefromanepicoftimewasted
Masterlist By: heartpascal
Joel Miller Recommendation Masterlist By: outoftheseine
Last of Us Masterlist By: hottpinkpenguin
TLOU Masterlist By: loganlermanstanaccount
Joel Miller - Masterlist By: forever-rogue
Pedro Masterlist By: creedslove
Joel Miller Fics Masterlist By: atomicladytimetravel
masterlist By: sl-ut
masterlist By: rogueonestan
Joel Miller By: darkroastjoel
Fanfiction Hall Of Fame [May List of 2023] By: picklejar-hall-of-fame
Masterlist By: sp00kymulderr
navigation By: breakfastatjoels
Joel Miller Masterlist By: thetriumphantpanda
Masterlist By: stylesispunk
Joel Miller Masterlist By: guess-my-next-obsession
Masterlist By: macfrog
Masterlist By: bluebeary-jay
Masterlist By: punkshort
Pre & Post Outbreak Masterlist By: Tightjeansjavi
J.M. - Series
Just Too Good To Be Gone Masterlist By: something-tofightfor
Uneven Odds â Series Masterlist By: theetherealbloom
To Hell and Back l J. Miller Miniseries Masterlist By: darkroastjoel
a stranger's heart without a home masterlist By: morning-star-joy
Friendly Fire By: the-ginger-hedge-witch
The Stable Girl Masterlist By: guess-my-next-obsession
Twenty Years Later - Joel Miller By: yelena-bellova
cruel summer By: proxima-writes
That's a Real Fucking Legacy: Masterlist By: wyn-n-tonic
The Teacher | series masterlist By: jwritesfanfics
Broken Souls | series masterlist By: jwritesfanfic
plum, masterlist By: thyme-in-a-bubble
Harder To Find Whatâs Right By: something-tofightfor
Look for the Light - Masterlist By: albertasunrise
Seeing you, Seeing me - completed series By: amywritesthings
At Your Service By: randofantfic
Broken Without You (Completed) By: sourwolf-sterek32
Gold Rush | Masterlist By: trulybetty
Canary In A Coal Mine: Masterlist By: thebigsl33p
Apothecary - A Joel Miller Story By: atinylittlepain
Fall Into Temptation Masterlist By: darkroastjoel
The Great War By: stylesispunk
Fractured masterlist By: katsheadinclouds
Whiskey Tears By: papipedroo
Slow Hands By: tightjeansjavi
Edge of Darkness By: hyzer34
Restoring the Roots By: bearsbeetsbeskar
Keep close By: nexusnyx
Texas Sun By: from-the-clouds
But you know the killdeer doesnât understand By: morning-star-joy
In the woods somewhere By: thetriumphantpanda
Ghost of you By: thetriumphantpanda
A safe haven By: joelsgreys
Slow hands By: tightjeansjavi
Look what weâve become By: punkshort
The way we were By: punkshort
Fate, after all By: mandoisapunk
Under the moonlight By: hier--soir
Five days By: morallyinept
A Future Together By: kteague
flash point By: dustydaddyyy
Seeing you, Seeing me By: amywritesthings
I couldnât want you anymore By: Stylesispunk
You know you never stood a chance By: corazondebeskar-reads
Firefly By: final-girl96
Seeking whatâs desirable By: chloeangelic
Too Sweet By: bunnysbrainrot
Over again By: burntheedges
I need to start a garden By: sepptember
Youâre the loss of my life By: stylesispunk
J.M. - One Shots
Love at First Fight Part 2 By: jazzysnazzys
one thing i'm missing (joel miller/reader) PART ONE By: joelscruff
Willow | joel miller x f!reader | pt. 1 By: jenispunk
Bell Bottom Blues By: thot-of-khonshu
Observations By: ezrasbirdie
Followed the Beast By: psychedelic-ink (more parts please)
Neighborly Love By: kteague
Be still my foolish heart By: bluebeary-jay
Nobodyâs son, nobodyâs daughter (Part 1) By: fragilefable
Harvest Moon By: joelmillersmunch
Din Djarin
D.D. - Masterlist
Masterlist By: sp00kymulder
Pedro Pascal Masterlist By: savemefromanepicoftimewasted
D.D. - Series
Din Djarin By: goldafterglow
D.D. - One Shot
Significant By: softlyspector
Face to Face By: bluebeary-jay
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Writers' reblog
đ 2 more days to sign up! đ
@f0rever15elf @f0rg3t-me-n0t @fettuccin-e  @ficjoelispunk @fleetwoodmactshirt @flightlessangelwings @floralpascal @foli-vora @forever-rogue @frannyzooey @frenchiereading @from-the-clouds @fuckyeahdindjarinÂ
@gaiuswrites @galaxyedging @garbinge @gasolinerainbowpuddles @gemmahale @ghostofaboy @goodwithcheese @gracieheartspedro @greenwitchfromthewoods @grogusmum @guess-my-next-obsession @guiltyasdave
@haileymorelikestupid @handspunyarns @hauntedhowlett-writes @haylzcyon @healmydesires @hearteyesforjoel @heartpascal @heatherbelart @hellowoolf @heythere-mel @hidden-behind-the-fourth-wall @hier--soir @highsviolets @hnt-escape @holacia3 @holobandit @honestly-shite @honeydjarin @hopeamarsu @hotgirlbedtimescenariosÂ
đ PedroStories Secret Santa event 2024 đ
Dear Fanfic writers and readers,
PedroStories would like to invite you to our second Secret Santa event! âš
If you write fanfictions for any Pedro Pascal characters and/or you're a visual art creator (graphics, gifsets, fanart) with a love for our fandom's fanfic writers, this event is for you! You can register here until November 27 (you can expect our message about your giftee a few days later), and the gifters will post their arts on December 24.
We have tagged all the incoming questions and answers about the event with âsecret santa questionsâ, you can search for it on the blog, but if something still isnât clear, feel free to send us an ask!
Please read the rules carefully before submitting your application!
Please make sure that itâs specified in your bio if youâre a minor/adult (at least temporarily)
Please respect the deadlines: application ends on November 27 and you will need to post your gift on December 23
Please consider the following rules about the format of the gifts: gifsets should contain at least 3 gifs (or multiple banners) and fanfictions should be at least 1k words
We encourage you to anonymously contact your giftee if you feel like your prompt isn't clear enough, or if you have any questions about their preferences. If you're in doubt, you can send an ask to pedrostories, and someone will contact you via dm
If you're a tumblr user please make sure your anon ask is enabled, and if you're not a tumblr user please provide a contact where your gifter can approach you anonymously (obviously a media account or e-mail address you check regularly)
Please tag your gift as #pedrostoriesgift24 and #pedrostories so we can track and reblog all your arts on the day of the gifting, and don't forget to tag you giftee as well!
If for any reason you need to drop out, please do let us know as soon as possible so we can find a pinch hitter for your giftee
If you have any questions please donât hesitate to send us an ask!
Join us and spread the word! đ
 - PedroStories Staff
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ok ok I had an idea for a story about Joel Miller: in his journey he meets a young girl (a bit like Ellie) who he takes under his wing and everything, he is cold and distant at the beginning because he doesn't want to get too attached to the reader (since he was traumatized by Sarah's death, BUT also the disappearance of his second daughter, we imagine). After months of coldness between them Joel begins to get closer to the reader, and because of a sign or something she says he realizes that it is his missing daughter. I don't know if it's very clear, in any case thank you I love your stories!!
helloooooo anon!đ
This sounds like a very lovely request but I don't think i can write itđ I'm not really into writing right now. The last tlou fic i wrote was a year ago and i haven't written anything since, but there is a fic by @heartpascal called "I was born waiting" that i can recommend that is maybe similar to this request AND IT IS VERY GOOD.
I'M SORRY THAT I COULDN'T WRITE THIS FOR YOU, ANON
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VIDEO GAME REC
PT.1
......
⥠- smut
Most of them are fluff
......
<a/n>i somewhat explain why there's alot in my pin post
poppy playtime
security breach [montgomery gator][sunnydrop/moondrop]
the last of us [ellie williams][joel miller]
call of duty[task force 141][alejandro vargas][simon 'ghost' riley]
âââPOPPY PLAYTIMEâââ
@clanwarrior-tumbly - reader being a same model as huggy
- Reader being an older janitor who never left
- bunzo learning that it's reader birthday
- the toys reacting to the reader carrying a kick-me-paul
- reader being the creator of huggy wuggy pt.1 pt.2
âââSECURITY BREACHâââ
@clanwarrior-tumbly - security breach with a facepainter reader
- gregory and freddy finding the technician's secret office
- security breach with a mouse animatronic
- Canon animatronic meets y/n a kangaroo
- the animatronic receiving a tiny version of them self
@rainbowapocolypse - first encounter pt.1 pt.2 (animatronic! maintenance! reader)
@blueberrys-writings - scary dog privileges
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
montgomery gator
@clanwarrior-tumbly - monty with a small moth animatronic
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
sunnydrop/moondrop
@srslysierraa - hand in hand
@g00mb13 - headcannon
@clanwarrior-tumbly - sun and moon with a swordfighting fox animatronic
- Reader apologizing after getting banned
- sun helping overnight worker!reader clean
- reader calming moon when the light go out
- separate bodies
ââââTHE LAST OF USââââ
ellie williams
@gonzo-rella - helping out ellie when she gets her period (platonic)
@elliesmainhoe - headcannon with a feminine s/o
@bubbles-for-all-of-us - that's my mom (platonic)
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
joel miller
@forever-rogue - before
- hey kid
- bookish
@multific - a little friendlier
@luveline - grumpy x sunshine
@yelena-bellova - twenty years later masterlist
@peterparkersnose - christmas vibes
@nexusnyx - miss sunshine âĄ
- my fellow, my guy âĄ
- imagine being loved by me
@joels6string - cup o'joel
- haircut
@joelsgeetar - ___
@baevillier - regulars
@adora-but-ginger - sparks fly
@nanatargaryen - beach day
- grumpy x sunshine (platonic! immune!reader)
- joel and sarah miller x daughter!sister!reader
@wardenparker - for her
@from-the-clouds - savior complex
@orangevtae - I'm right here
- walking sins, lost tragedys
@talaok - incentive
- hunting lesson
- interrupted
- stay
@ourautumn86 - stray pt.3
@heartpascal - I am good (platonic)
- the crooked kind (platonic)
@angelltheninth - rescued by joel miller
@joshuagrayboy - jealous joel miller hc
- more than friends
ââââ CALL OF DUTY ââââ
task force 141
@sant-riley - random task force 141 x gen z member headcannon pt.3
- headcannon pt.2
@meatonfork - grim x platonic 141 hc
@itzclouding - becoming a shadow
@venomous-ragno - ghost and könig wirh a reader who has a big dog
@gatorbites-imagines - ___
@imaginesheaven - medic reader x tf 141 hc
@starstruckmiraclekitty - with a reader who sneeze like a kitten
@mangowafflesss - s/o who plays the sims
- Cod Boys Noticing their S/O Phone Screen is of Them
@a-small-writer-in-a-big-world - The 141 with a reader who's a cybersecurity specialist
@thesharktanksdriver - being the youngest member of 141 pt.1 (platonic)
@personwhowrites - putting stickers on them
@ghosts-bandwagon - ___
@mockerycrow - reader catching them looking at her ass
@gomzwrites - finding out about your soft spots
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
alejandro vargas
@ragingbookdragon - ___
âââââââââââââââââââââââ
simon 'ghost' riley
@sm8th0p - date (medic!reader)
@ragingbookdragon - babysitting
- ___
- ___
@halfmoth-halfman - the little things
-little treasures, life's pleasures
- our little secret
@clairdelunelove - things simon 'ghost' riley finds attractive about you pt.1
@euovennia - simon being a mom/dad friend to reader
#masterlist#video game rec#poppy playtime x reader#security breach x reader#ellie williams x reader#joel miller x reader#task 141 x reader#alejandro vargas x reader#simon riley x reader
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all the users tagged are some of the best writers i have come across since making my account. thereâs nothing i look forward to more than reading all the fics you guys put out. please know the time you guys spend on all your work has not gone unnoticed or unappreciated by me. whether itâs romance, angst, smut, platonic or anything else in between, i always feel like i am actually in the story and i love it ALL. so this is my thank you to you all and i canât wait to read more of your future works. i also look forward to discovering more Pedro fic writers. live laugh love Pedrito đ€Ș (FRANKIE AND JAVI SUPREMACY THANK U VERY MUCH)
p.s. - this also goes out to every single writer on tumblr regardless of what fandom you write for. you are all amazing and do an amazing service to us readers. <3
@jrrmint @ezrasbirdie @gracieispunk @jwritesfanfics @jksprincess10 @wardenparker @theidiotwhowritesthings @elvinaa @strang3lov3 @prolix-yuy @urf1lterr @tightjeansjavi @frannyzooey @l0ngschl0ngking @psychedelic-ink @absurdthirst @joelscruff @the-ginger-hedge-witch @astroboots @grnherbs @toxicanonymity @guess-my-next-obsession @pettyprocrastination @heartpascal @pedgeitopascal @joels6string @whatsnewalycat @coffeeshades @girlboybug @proxima-writes @pr0ximamidnight and many more to come!
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honestly i have 40+ drafts (maybe like 5 ish in the 1000s of words) and ive kinda been considering just posting some of them unfinished đ
(should be said. some of these are like. 2 years old)
also lmk if yall want me to put up titles / summaries of what the fics are!
#heartpascal says#joel miller fic#joel miller imagines#joel miller x platonic!reader#heartpascal writes#allegedly
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im doing okay!! trying to get through my own finals đ„đ„đ„ ALSO HELLO???? your essay topic actually sounds so goodâŠ. forget a fic. drop your essay.
BUT ALSO I READ SOMEWHERE THST IT WAS UR BIRTHDAY??? many moons agoâŠ. do forgive my belated happy birthday wishesâŠ.. HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!! đđđ„łđ©” but anyway i hope your essays and whatever other work you have are going well. weâre all behind you and rooting for you!!
omg how have finals been going?!?!? sorry i know i am (yet again) late!!!! hope all is well .. especially with the finals!!! keeping you in my thoughts fr. ALSO LMAO HAHAH can you imagine.. sorry yall, my blog is turning into an essay blog now, forget fics â (kidding)
HAHAHA thank you!!!! youâre basically early now!! my bday is in august 𫥠the 11th to be PRECISE. but thank you thank you <3 i am sending yuou literally all my love rn. I ROOT FOR ALL OF U GUYS I SWEAR. love u all.
#heartpascal says#wnstice#LOML#you guys r the best i love u sm#I AM SO SURE U HAVE SLAYED UR FINALS AS WELL!!!!!#i dont have another essay to write til july so who knowsâŠâŠ..
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Some of my favorite writers, they are all so so talented & I highly recommend all of their works!! I ran out of mentions for this one, so i'll be making another post sometime laterđ©·
@bastardmandennis
@beskarandblasters
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I am desperately hoping there's more to this. In spite of Joel being dead inside, he wouldn't be able to let go of the fact that he has a living child. Nobody writes platonic angst the way @heartpascal does!!!!
i was born waiting
âčâ joel miller x daughter!reader
âčâ summary: youâve been looking for your dad for as long as you can remember, is this really him?
âčâ a/n: hi! i started writing this september â23, so it has. itâs been a WHILE. so if this seems jumpy / not consistent then that is why! sorry!!! i have done my best!!!
âčâ warnings: canon-typical violence and themes, weapons, parental death, witnessing parental death, aka insane amounts of trauma, death in general, she/her pronouns, reader is biologically related to joel but no mentions of appearance, no mention of her bio motherâs appearance either, fantasising about being dead (sorry), all hurt zero comfort, attempted murder, unrealistic expectations of someone you never met â please let me know if ive missed anything!
âčâ taglist: @rhymingtree @sleepygraves @wnstice (everything), @auggiesolovey @just-kaylaa @evyiione @lemonlaides @fariylixie0915 @faceache111 @randomhoex @canpillowscry @pedropascalsrealgf @star-wars-lover @coolchick333 @soobsdior @rvjaa @sunflowersdrop @definitely-not-a-seagull-i-swear @miss-celestial-being @hqkon
MASTERLIST
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
There are certain things from your childhood that you can remember vividly. Though, really, childhood is a bit of a stretch, isnât it? Itâs hard to find the right word to encompass the way you had grown up, because you didnât have much of a chance to actually grow.
From the moment you had been born, your life was a battle of staying alive to see another day.
Thatâs not to say that your mother didnât do her best for you, obviously. But it was hard to raise a child as a child in the midst of a global apocalypse. You were bound to end up the way you did â moulded and hardened by the world around you, by having to pick up a gun at seven years old and use it to protect your mother. By never putting that gun back down.
For the past few years, you had known your mother was suffering. The world had been anything but kind to her, and age was hitting her harder than she had expected. More than the physical aspect, you knew it had been destroying her, the fact that you were now the one protecting her and not the other way around.
But what choice did you have? Her aging body had left her fragile, prone to falling and breaking even more frail bones. You could see the strain on her muscles, as they slowly decayed and shrunk, until they were barely there at all. You couldnât let her carry the burden for you anymore, because you knew her body couldnât handle it.
You had been preparing yourself for that moment, though. Making sure that you were ready, that you were strong enough for the both of you, strong enough to shoulder the burden she had been carrying for years.
When you were growing up, your mother had told you tales of your father.
She had told you all about how strong he had been, how he had been the best man she had ever known. She told you how he had cared for his daughter before you, how he had been the best father to that girl. When you were old enough to comprehend these things, youâd asked what had happened to him. âIs dad dead?â You had asked her, watching the way her face fell.
âI donât know, honey. I hope not.â She had responded, smiling sadly at you, and patting her hand against your cheek.
It was hard for you to let go of that.
The uncertainty had haunted you for the rest of your life since that very moment, leaving you wondering for hours at a time where he could possibly be, why he would ever leave your mother to carry this responsibility alone. And in your more selfish moments, you couldnât help but wonder why he wasnât here to care for you as he had his daughter before you.
For a long time, you had convinced yourself that he was dead, despite what your mother hoped. And sure, you felt that loss, something like mourning weighing you down, but it was the only way you felt you could accept his absence. He had to be dead, because otherwise, why wasnât he here?
But as you grew up, getting taller, stronger, you felt like you could rationalise his absence even if he wasnât dead. After all, the apocalypse wasnât exactly family friendly. You figured that if your mother didnât know whether or not your dad was alive, that the same could go for him. He might just think that you and your mom died, years ago. After all, how many pregnant women survived the end of the world?
You have a feeling that the answer would have to be not many.
So, really, you and your mother being alive by now was nothing short of a miracle. It was a testament to your motherâs strength, her ability. She had succeeded where so many others had failed, and she had managed to keep both herself and you alive.
Itâs a bitter kind of irony that you canât do the same.
The last dredges of autumn fall away, leading into the coldest and harshest part of the year. Winter is hard â itâs full to the brim with fresh Infected, the ones not yet frozen solid, and resources are more scarce than ever. And this winter feels like something tangible, something which sends unending waves of dread through you.
Your mother gets weaker by the day, spending more time resting than moving, and you spend as much time as you can keeping her warm, finding food and water and pain relief for her broken arm that didnât heal right. Sheâs exhausted, you can see it in her face, in her every movement. And youâre pretty sure itâs not just from the lack of rest. She watches you with dulled eyes, something like heartbreak reflecting in them.
For a long time, you pretend not to notice.
You pretend that you donât see the way she lags behind, just watching you move away from her with speed she canât quite manage any longer. You pretend that you donât see the way she hesitates before taking her painkillers, or her food, or the last sip of water.
This year, the winter brings something worse than the cold. A bug, spreading across the state in a way that was familiar to so many. Not quite the Infection, but still able to take out people with ease.
When your mother catches it, you physically felt your heart clench in your chest. You felt it squeezing all of the blood around your body so quickly that you became dizzy with it. Thereâs a panic so deep that you canât climb your way out of it. For days, weeks, youâre certain that youâve lost her. That after everything, everything youâve done, everything the two of you have been through, a cold would be the end of it all.
But then, she gets better.
The little strength she had before the sickness returns to her, bringing some colour back to her skin, some ease back to her breathing.
Religion wasnât a thing in the apocalypse. Not really. But if you had believed in God, you wouldâve thanked every one that mightâve existed for giving you this. This miracle. This small mercy.
The two of you are in an abandoned barn when it happens.
Youâre dozing away, not quite asleep, but not awake either, when you hear the sound of old hay crunching underneath boots. If you werenât so familiar with the lightness of your motherâs footsteps, you mightâve passed it off as her wandering. But these boots are heavy. Theyâre purposeful.
The gun in your hand means nothing when you jerk upwards, eyes snapping open and squinting through the light let into the barn by the rising winter sun. Itâs an image that has since been ingrained into the back of your skull, replaying each time you close your eyes.
There, right in front of you, is your mother.
Behind her, a man, a gun pressed to the back of her skull.
Your stomach lurched suddenly in that moment, the small rationed dinner you had before dozing off trying to rise to the back of your throat, trying to race the rapid beating of your heart to see which would kill you first.
âPut down the gun.â He said, voice cold, throat dry from the winter air. The sound of his voice is printed in the base of your brain, echoing every time things around you still, go quiet.
He could be bluffing, you thought in the moment. His gun could be unloaded. It didnât take you long to notice that the safety was off, but in those few moments, he had pressed the end of it harder into your motherâs head. You dropped the gun to the floor without another moment of thought.
You were nauseous, waiting to wake up, to realise this was all some twisted nightmare.
But you could see a look in your motherâs eyes. Acceptance. Defeat. It was almost familiar to you, so closely related to the look she had been giving you for months.
All this time, she had just been waiting to die. Waiting for something to come along and kill her off, to free you from having to take care of her. She knew that if it was up to you, that you would look after her for the rest of your goddamn life. If she lived any longer, she might just live long enough to see you die.
âSlide it over.â
You barely registered the cold pinch of metal against your palm as you pushed the gun away from you, sending it skittering over the rough ground and into the side of an old hay bale.
âNow your pack.â
There was a numbness to you as you gripped the backpack you had been leaning against, and chucked it towards where he stood behind your mother. It hit the front of his boot, but his eyes didnât stray from where he stared at you.
âTurn around.â
You stared at him, teeth gritted together.
âNo.â
There was a beat where both him and your mother just watched you. And then the surprise flickered across his face, apparently not expecting any resistance from you.
âTurn. Around.â He told you, firmer this time.
âNo.â
âOkay then,â He relented, after a moment of consideration. His eyes drifted down towards your mother, who stared forwards at you. âThis your daughter?â He asked, jerking his head towards you despite knowing your mother couldnât see the movement.
âYes, she is,â Your mother said, voice shaking, her breath clouding in front of her face as it reached the cold air. âPlease, just let her be.â
He hummed, dropping his free hand down to rest heavily on your motherâs shoulder, his fingers clamping around it and not helping the way she trembled.
âSo, your momma, huh?â He asked you, a smirk drawing up his face, showing smile lines around his murky blue eyes. His hair rustled in the wind, a piece falling down across his forehead. He stared at you, and you stared at him, not daring to say a word, still hoping that this whole thing was a dream. Muscles in his cheek twitched, pulling his skin taut and showing a scar across his left cheekbone. âGood.â
There was a moment where the sound didnât register. A moment where you didnât even realise it was your mother when the body slumped forwards. A mere moment where you didnât think about it being her blood that splattered across your face.
The moments after that though, become blurry, hazed over, and youâre not sure it actually ever hit you that the body before you was your mother.
Youâve always had a hard time remembering that bodies were once people, that they once had lives and loved ones and thoughts and feelings. That they werenât just bodies. So seeing her like that, as a body, not her, was wrong on so many levels. It didnât feel real. Nothing did.
You heard the second gunshot, just a moment later, followed by a snickering laugh that you would never forget, before the pain bloomed in you.
It was buried by the shock, the complete disbelief, and you only felt the pain for mere seconds.
His gun â the one that killed your mother â was whacked across the side of your head a moment after, and that was the end of that.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Three months passed by, judging by the way the seasons turned, and you were on your own.
It was a strange feeling, really. Throughout the entirety of your life, you had never actually been alone. At least, not really. Your mother was always a small ways away, a mere shout from running to you. There had never been any true distance between the two of you until that day.
A sort of ache claws your throat each day, when you realise that itâs easier like this.
The only back you have to watch is your own, the only life you have to worry about belongs to you, and you have nothing to lose in this world. There was no terrible outcome if you were caught. Nobody else would be hurt, or suffer because of it. And youâre less likely to be caught now, when you donât have your mother slowing you down. You donât have to stop for the frequent rest breaks she needed, you can try to outrun Infected without worrying about someone lagging behind, and you only have yourself to feed.
If your mother had known how much easier survival was when alone, you hope that she wouldâve abandoned you at birth. Because perhaps, without the burden of you upon her shoulders, she wouldnât have fallen apart so quickly.
Sometimes, you like to think of a world where she was spared all of this. Never pregnant with you, for a start. So when the infection broke out, she wouldâve only had herself to worry about. You think that maybe, one day, she wouldâve been able to reunite with your father. If she hadnât been carrying a child, she wouldâve been able to manage the journey to where she believed him to be. You look at the picture that had been in the pocket of her coat for your whole life, the papers folded and clipped to the back of it, one word underlined: Boston.
You had reached a store in the weeks after that day, and when you found a map, it wasnât difficult to notice that the direction the two of you had been heading in was to that very city.
Itâs a long shot. More than a long shot, really, but you find yourself continuing in that direction regardless. You donât know what you hope to find in Boston, whether it was your dad, or the man who had killed your mother, or perhaps just somewhere to take shelter for a while. You try not to hope for anything. You try not to focus on the fact that you might not even make it that far.
It keeps you up for days.
The uncertainty of it. The unknown. The fact that youâre walking your way to a city you know nothing about, almost certain that your motherâs killer was already there, and more than that, consumed by a fever that might kill you regardless of the where the journey took you.
The only sleep you get results in fever dreams, rippling, warping images that make your perception falter, feeling all too real until you notice that itâs not. And when you do wake up from them, itâs as if you havenât slept at all. An exhaustion weighs heavily upon you, and your shoulders hunch over with it. Thereâs almost nothing you wouldnât do to get rid of that endless feeling.
You hopeâor wish, maybeâ that if you reach Boston, the journey there will have tired you out so much that your body will have no choice but to rest. Itâs a distant thought in your mind, though. Youâre almost certain you wonât make it that far, because if the fever doesnât get you, surely the Infected will.
Itâs not as though youâre trying to get killed. But there is a kind of peace that comes with the thought. Thereâs an idea of rest behind it, hiding within the shadowy depths that make you scared. Would not having to fight in order to survive really be so terrible? You have this image in mind, of a never ending blackness, a void, somewhere that your thoughts and worries can just fizzle away. The small part of your fever-fried brain that has retained its rationality reminds you of the unknown. It reminds you that death could be worse than this.
You donât like the thought. Not after that day. Itâs a shuddering feeling, wondering if your mother is in some kind of unreachable hell.
By the time youâre even close to Boston, a few hours out at most, youâre out of ammo in the gun youâd found along the way. Out of food rations. No knife, no resources. Youâre barely standing on two legs, kept up by the adrenaline, the knowledge alone that youâre this close.
When the tall walls of the QZ finally come into view, you start to feel some amount of hope. Which is a dangerous thing, but especially in a situation as dire as your own. You couldnât afford any adrenaline fading, couldnât afford to lose your cautious nature. You couldnât make a mistake. One wrong move, one slight misstep, and youâd be as dead as your mother. Or worse, infected. Though this close to a QZ, you had some amount of relief at the knowledge that they shouldâve cleared out any nearby infected. Runners, and clickers alike.
Your steps donât falter for a moment. Partly because of your worry about the fever taking you out, but mostly because youâre certain that the FEDRA guards on watch on top of the wall will have spotted you, and you donât want them to think youâre Infected, just because of your sickly appearance, and shoot on sight. Though, with FEDRAâs track record, it wouldnât surprise you if they just shot you down regardless.
For a while, youâre not sure if youâre even awake, or if perhaps you were stuck in yet another fever dream. Everything felt so real and so not real simultaneously, it felt impossible to believe that you had actually made it.
Soldiers met you on your approach, calling out for you to get on the ground with your hands up. You called back some sort of response as you did so, practically collapsing to your knees and squeezing your eyes shut at the pain that followed. But despite all of it, despite the pain and the rough hands that grabbed you and pulled you forwards, through the gates and straight into a building, you had made it to Boston.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
It was maybe three weeks into being a resident of the Boston QZ that you caught wind of him for the first time. Or, at the very least, somebody who might be him. You didnât know how common the surname Miller was, being a child of the apocalypse, but you kind of hoped the answer was uncommon.
âGoddamn Miller, again.â A man had muttered as you walked through the trading market. You paused almost instantly, pretending to peruse the feeble amount of clothes a woman had to trade. âSaid we gotta go through him and Tess if we want anything, as if we gotta listen to them.â He practically spat out, glaring around as he spoke to the woman beside him.
âTheyâre the most well established smugglers in the whole goddamn QZ. Donât have to tell you how, do I?â She asked, sounding more annoyed with her companion than she was with whoever Miller and Tess were. âJoel is as nasty as they come, Darren. Donât get on the wrong side of him.â
Your heart practically stuttered to a stop in your chest, and you had to remind yourself to keep breathing. Could it possibly be a coincidence? Could there be another Joel Miller? One who wasnât your father? Sure, it was possible. Plausible, even, considering the fact that you had absolutely no idea if he was here. Not any concrete idea, anyway. Your mother had believed as much, but who was to say she was right?
Besides, whoever this Joel Miller was didnât sound like the man your mother had told you about. As nasty as they come didnât have any relation to the heroic and kind and amazing father and man your mother always spoke about. Though, you knew as well as anyone what the apocalypse could do to people.
Darren didnât say anything else to his companion. So, after a few more moments, you continued on your way, making the journey to the tiny box apartment that FEDRA had elected to you.
But even as you got there, sitting down on the poor excuse of a mattress, you couldnât shake the conversation out of your mind. After everything you had been through to get here, what was it all for? Could you really make this journey and just never try to find Joel Miller? Your father? You could still remember the anxiety that had come when you first arrived, when you were strapped into a chair and scanned for the fungus that had taken over so many. You didnât know what you were more scared of: the idea that it would flash red, and youâd be killed, or the idea that it would be clear, and youâd be sent out into the QZ, where you may just find the other half of your DNA.
You donât even know if you want to find out anything about him. Donât know if you could face that, especially after losing your mother. Thatâs been the hardest thing since being here, since having your own place, the fact that youâve gotten it all without her. It feels⊠empty. For your whole life, she had been there at your side, making every short stay at whatever accommodation you could find feel like home.
Plus, even if you did consider trying to find him, and if it was him those people were talking about, then who the hell was Tess? What if she got upset at your appearance, your claim as Joel Millerâs surviving child? Youâre not sure you can lose another parent.
Sure â Joel Miller wasnât exactly your dad, he couldnât be classed as a parent in the way that your mother was, but if you never met him, that couldâve been for any number of reasons. He could be dead. He couldâve thought you and your mother were dead, all these years. You didnât want to face a reality where you met him, and he wasnât present for you and your mother because he didnât want to be. Youâd rather live your whole life thinking him six feet under, than know he was out there, and just didnât care about you.
The more you think about it, the more certain you are that Boston was a mistake.
It would all be different if your mother was alive. If she had brought you here, if she had been the one to hear the chatter about Joel Miller, if she had been the one to seek him out. But she was dead, and the only living connection you had to Joel was, too. Hypothetically, if you did seek him out, you didnât know enough about him to prove your claim as his child, and without your mother, how could you make him believe you?
They had been a family, once. They being Joel, your mother, and your deceased half sister. Youâd heard the tale of how Joel and your mother had met, of how it took months for him to finally feel comfortable introducing her to his little girl. Hell, you had heard almost as much about Sarah as you had about Joel. Your mother had certainly adored his daughter, and youâre somewhat sure that they had planned to have you, despite Sarah already being a teenager.
You donât want to have to mourn a family you had never actually had. Perhaps, Joel and Sarah were out there, living their lives certain that you and your mother were dead, just as you and your mother had done.
Not that any of this even mattered â you didnât even know for sure if it was the same Joel Miller! And even if it was, itâs not like Boston QZ was small. Thereâs absolutely no chance you run into the man who might just be your dad. No way.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
You find someone else, before you hear anything more about Joel Miller, and it immediately sends the thought of your biological dad to the very back of your mind.
After all, itâs not every day you see the man who murdered your mother.
It wasnât exactly a surprise. You had guessed that this was the place he was heading, all those moons ago. But to actually see him, here, in the flesh, alive and well despite all of the pain and heartache and devastation he had caused you? It was surreal. You had to practically pinch your skin from your body to make yourself believe he was real.
And it only really hits you now, that this man killed your mother. You had been so focused on surviving, on living to see another day, on healing and moving and getting away from her body, buried in shallow dirt outside of some abandoned barn. You can vividly remember the strength it had taken to pry the frozen dirt from the ground.
Sure, you had felt the guilt over it, the guilt over the ease that came with surviving without her, guilt over your very existence, but youâre not sure you had ever actually grieved over her. Not sure if you had ever let yourself be sad, be angry, be anything about what had happened.
But now, seeing him, you feel⊠almost too much.
All of the rage and grief you had squashed in favour of surviving another day, all of the sadness and fear, all of it. It all comes rushing towards you at once, hitting you in the chest, winding you. You gasp for breath on the street, ducking away for a moment, gripping your chest like you could physically hold your heart steady.
When you look back out at the street, you see him as he nears the corner. Panic grips you at the thought of losing him, of never seeing him again, of failing to avenge your mother. You follow after him before you can think better of it.
Itâs strangely easy. You fall back into the life of a hunter like itâs the most natural thing youâve ever known â and maybe it is. Youâre healed up, by now, or about as healed as anybody gets in this world, and your shoulder only bothers you when you move it too much. Even with that, youâre pretty sure that you could take the man on. Now that youâre not hazy with sleep, caught off guard, held back by any sort of earthly tether.
Youâre strong. And despite FEDRAâs harsh reign, their dire consequences for rule-breaking, you have a switchblade stuffed into your shoe. You could do it. You could kill him.
Thereâs no question about it in your mind, especially as you follow him from a distance, and he remains none the wiser. He takes a left, and a moment later, so do you. Heâs clueless. Itâs almost painful that he was the one who managed to get the jump on you. How could you have let this man kill your mother?
He skids to a stop outside of a doorway, so you slide down the wall of the building opposite and listen. He pays you no mind as he knocks twice on the door.
âWhat dâyou want, Colin?â The man who opened the door asked gruffly, seemingly inconvenienced by the man. He sounded tired, or out of it, maybe.
âI need the supply.â Colin answered, and the sound of his voice sent a shiver down the back of your neck. It echoed in your ears, the words he said that day. Good. Everything in you itched, like thousands of critters had dug into you and made a home scuttling around your insides. You wanted to kill him. You wanted to end his life, and you wanted to make it slow. Brutal. Painful. Even if it meant you were hung by FEDRA tomorrow morning. Itâd be worth it.
The man at the door sighed, as if deeply bothered by getting Colin what he needed, and disappeared inside. He emerged a moment later, empty handed. âIâm all out. Youâll have to go across town tomorrow.â The man said flatly, saying nothing as Colin swore, before stepping away.
You ducked your head down as Colin passed, all too aware of the man in the doorway watching you suspiciously. After a moment, he sighed again, and retreated inside, slamming the door after himself. It took almost no time at all for you to push yourself back to your feet, and take off after the man who had left.
Despite your pounding footsteps against cracked concrete, he didnât pay you any mind as you caught up to him. He seemed focused on getting to wherever it was that he was unknowingly leading you to, glancing up at the darkening sky every other step. FEDRAâs curfew would be coming into play soon enough.
To your disappointment, he walked into an apartment building, about three blocks away from your own. It seemed that, unless you were willing to risk being caught and stopped, today wasnât the day you would be avenging your mother. You vowed that tomorrow you would do it. You would kill Colin. No matter what got in your way.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
By the time curfew was lifted, you had been waiting by the exit of your building for an hour.
The switchblade in your shoe felt heavy with every step you took towards the home of your motherïżœïżœs killer. It weighed almost as much as the picture in your pocket. All of it was heavy. But you acted as normally as you could manage, passing by patrolling FEDRA guards without them so much as glancing towards you.
You were waiting by his building when the door opened, when he stepped out, and headed determinedly in the opposite direction from which you had come. You followed without a moment of hesitation.
He made his way around town, trading with a few people on the side of the streets, handing them small wads of ration cards in favour of various items. Nothing dangerous, though. Not to you. He clearly was oblivious to your loitering figure, standing a few metres away, like some omen of death. Despite your shadow reaching for his shoes as the sun rose, he didnât flinch.
It was irritating you, just how easy this was. You had been following the man for two days now, and he hadnât even noticed. How had he gotten the drop on you? How had he managed to kill your mother? How had you allowed him the opportunity to do so?
There was nothing remotely special about him â no reason that he should have survived over your mother, no reason that he should have been granted mercy over the last twenty years. He didnât deserve it. Not like your mother had. She had done the best she could, for years, for the only daughter in her care. And she had done it all alone. This man, Colin, he was alone, and he had no reason to hurt her. You were going to make sure he regretted it.
You loomed at the entrance of an alleyway as he walked down it, finally stopping at a dead end, leaning against the brick wall as if he was waiting for something. Or someone. You knew it wasnât you he was waiting for, so you bided your time, cautious of someone happening upon the two of you. If they had business with him, they would care. If they didnât, then nobody but FEDRA would care.
By the time you finally decided to move, almost an hour had passed, and Colin was facing away from you at the entrance of the alley, head pressed to the bricks.
It was strange, what the innate desire to hunt and kill could bring out in you, that it could make you move silently without thinking about it. It could make you reach for the blade in your shoe, without so much as a rustle of your clothes.
With a final glance back at the entrance of the alleyway, you grew impatient, and you attacked.
From an outside perspective, you probably looked like some kind of wild animal. You jumped at him, tackling him, pushing him sideways and landing on his back as his shoulder smacked the asphalt, and he howled in pain. It was like seeing a cheetah hunt an antelope, the way you bored down on him. If you could have widened your jaws, and ripped out his insides, you think you would have.
But without that ability, you could only press the cold metal blade to his throat, and feel him go still.
âDo you remember me?â You asked, voice flat and still, despite the way your heart felt as though it would beat out of your chest, and splatter down in front of his face. You were quieter than you had expected, too. You thought that the words would burst out of you, vicious and unending, but they were quiet. Calm.
Colin shook his head, as much as he could with the side of his face pressed to the ground, and a blade to the soft skin of his neck.
âThink about it.â
His eyes strained to try and get a look at you, and they widened as you leant sideways slightly, allowing him to gaze at your blank face. âOh, shit,â He said, mouth fumbling around the words.
âYeah, shit.â You repeated, waiting for satisfaction to seep into your chest cavity, waiting for the grief to fade away.
It didnât.
Nothing changed, even as you pressed the blade closer to his throat, even as you watched his eyes dart back and forth, as you watched him try and formulate a plan to survive. âListen, kidââ He started, throat bobbing against the knife, drawing the tiniest line of blood. You watched him bleed, and expected to feel more than numb.
He threw your weight backwards, sacrificing more skin on his throat to your knife. You went flying off of him, but you flung yourself forward faster than he could stagger up, and dug the knife into his calf as he tried to stand. His yell pierced the air, louder than any of the commotion yet, and likely drawing attention of people out on the street. You just hoped, distantly, that FEDRA wasnât around.
His flesh and muscle moved as you pulled the blade free, and you didnât flinch at the squelch of blood that left him alongside it.
Colin fell back to the floor, resulting in crawling along the asphalt without care for how the small stones cut into his palms, leaving streaks of blood. âYou donât gotta do this, man, chill out!â His voice had more emotion in it than it had back when he killed your mother, which was infuriating. âIt wasnât personal!â He insisted, crawling further as you got to your feet, prowling after him similarly to the wild animal you felt like.
Youâd disagree with his statement, though.
He already had your pack, you had already relinquished your gun â the only thing you refused to do was turn so you could be executed. If you were going to be killed, you were going to look your murderer in the eye. Instead of that, though, Colin had decided to make it personal. He had decided to kill your mother, to spread her brains out on the ground in front of you, to cover you in her blood, rather than spare her. And then, worse, he had let you live.
That seemed pretty personal.
âYou killed my mom.â You stated, getting closer as he turned so he was facing you, watching you get closer. âDâyou remember what you said to me?â
He shook his head.
âYou said good. You were glad that it was my mother. Admit it, Colin. Tell the world all about how not-personal it was.â
More than anything, you wanted to feel satisfaction for how badly he was trembling beneath you, for how scared you were making him. But you just didnât. Fear wasnât enough. Not for what this man had done to you.
âIâmâIâm sorry.â He said, shaking, still shying away from you,
âNo, youâre not. Youâre sorry that Iâm here, that youâre going to die. And that isnât something to be sorry for.â
âPlâPlease, I have a daughterâa son, you donât need to do this.â He begged, tearing up as he watched your grip on the switchblade tighten, watched you continue to approach. He was pathetic. Everything about him was pathetic.
âShe had a daughter, too.â
His eyes widened as you leaped at him once again, digging your knife as deep as you could get it into his shoulder, feeling it graze bone as you pushed the hilt firmly against his skin, until you could practically hear the blood vessels breaking. He howled, a wounded animal, prey. And he did nothing as your fist descended against his face, once, twice, a third time.
It was just as you were losing count that somebody grabbed you, hauling you up and away from the body sprawled out on the floor, the puddle of blood slowly expanding beneath him. His chest was stuttering, but he had stopped groaning minutes ago.
âWell, shit.â A womanâs voice said, not sounding particularly authoritarian, so you figured she wasnât FEDRA.
The hands grasping onto your arms released them shortly after, and you dropped to the asphalt, watching Colinâs chest closely, waiting for his breathing to stop. It didnât seem to be slowing much, and you could feel that unending wave of rage coming back to you, overruling the numbness, and enhancing your need to have him dead.
You moved the slightest bit, about to launch yourself at him, but as soon as your foot was pushing you from your spot on the ground, the hands wrapped around your arms again.
âFuck! Get off of me!â
âWe canât let you kill the guy, for fuckâs sake. We got business with him!â The woman spoke again, sounding increasingly irate as she moved to get between you and your motherâs murderer.
âHe deserves to die. He deserves to be killed. Get off!â You practically roared, resorting to a state not unlike a feral cat, spitting and hissing, spine curling, trying to claw at the hands holding onto you. They stayed steady, even when you managed to scratch one of them deep enough to break skin.
The woman swore again, âEverybody deserves to die, get a hold of yourself!â
âTess, âs probably best if we get him out of here.â The man gripping you said, voice straining slightly as he focused on keeping you restrained. He couldnât do anything but hold on to you and watch as Tess dragged the guy, by his ankle, down the alley slightly, banging on a side door that you hadnât even noticed. It opened, and the man inside swore before helping Tess grab the guy and haul him inside.
As soon as the door was safely shut, the man released you.
You walked to the end of the alley, gripping at the back of your head, swearing the whole way. You were probably screaming, given the way your throat was grating on every word, but the sound didnât register.
âJoel, youâd better get in here.â Tess called, poking her head out of the door. You could hear the irritation in her voice, but it was immediately sent to the back of your mind as you realised what she had actually just said. You whirled around.
He wasnât exactly what you were expecting.
But he was⊠familiar.
You couldnât help it â you laughed, almost hysterically.
âAre you kidding me?â You said, voice strained with laughter, âYou are Joel? Miller?â You asked, wanting him to say no and be done with it all so badly, but you knew that he wouldnât say that. It was ingrained in your blood, in your very DNA.
He stared uncomprehendingly at you, as if expecting a spark of recognition to go through him, but it didnât happen. You saw Tess step cautiously out of the building, apparently prepared to have Joelâs back, no matter what your next move was.
âWho are you?â Joel asked, instead of answering your question, or even making a move towards where you had begun to cry. If only he fucking knew â he had just saved the man who had murdered your mother, who had murdered the woman who was, once upon a time, his wife.
You reached into your pocket, uncaring of the way they both reached for what you assumed were weapons, and pulled out the photo. The moment you unfolded it, revealing him stood next to your mother, it was certain. This man was your father. You held the photo out towards him.
âJoelââ Tess warned, as he stepped forward, but he dismissed her with a look, clearly communicating that he could handle himself. He wasnât worried, despite the state Colin had been in when they had arrived.
He stared at the photo, brows creasing, face drawing blank, before he reached out and took it. His finger ran across the image of your mother, her bright smile, not a slither of grey to be seen in her hair. âHow did you get this?â He asked, clearly in disbelief, denial, maybe.
You pointed to the woman in the picture. âThatâsâwas my mom.â
It couldâve been funny, months, maybe years ago, the way his eyes flickered between you and the image of her, as if trying to put together how much of the statement was true. You vaguely noticed Tess shift uneasily behind him, before approaching.
âWas?â Joel decided to ask, eventually, instead of whatever else was going through his head. He said nothing to Tess as she took in the photograph he was still holding onto.
âThat man, heâhe killed her. A few months ago.â You said, smiling, because you couldnât do anything else. This was all too much. First, your mother is killed. And then when you finally find somewhere potentially safe, you hear about your father. And then before you could do anything about that, you see her killer! And then, before you could finish the job, your biological dad, Joel Miller, saved his life. It wasnât funny, but you didnât know how else to react.
You stepped back, sliding down the brick wall behind you until you were sat on the asphalt, and could hang your head between your knees.
âOh fuck,â Tess said, connecting the dots as she looked between you and Joel rapidly, brows furrowed as she became increasingly concerned. âDonât tell me that sheâsââ She shook her head, turning away from the photo and Joel and you, running a hand through her greasy hair.
Joel was still processing, or at least thatâs what it looked like to you. He was staring at the photo, strangely still, seeming blank of any and all emotions.
Tess paced for a moment more, before releasing a heavy breath. She walked past Joel, over to you. âOkay, câmon.â She said, holding out a hand for you. When you hesitated, she waved her hand and barely refrained from putting it in your face. âCâmon, weâve gotta get you out of here before Colin goes to FEDRA.â You take her hand, surprised by her strength as she hauls you to your feet in an instant, releasing you immediately. She shook her head again. âJoel, time to go.â
He looked at her, and then towards you, nodding once. You said nothing when he put the picture in his own pocket, instead of handing it back. You hesitantly followed after Tess, wondering what your next move should be, and Joel followed after the two of you, looking stricken.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
None of you had said anything, the entire time Tess had hurried you through borders and to what you assumed was their apartment. It felt like it was miles away from your own.
The wallpaper was yellowed with age, slowly drooping down the walls, peeling away at corners, but it wasnât the worst state it couldâve been in. The floral pattern didnât really lend itself to the vibes of the apocalypse, though. Nor did it match either Tess or Joelâs stoic and tough demeanours.
You had no idea what to expect from this.
For as long as you could remember, your mother had told you tales of your father, of the great man he was, the great father he was. But here, on the other side of a worldwide outbreak of infection, you couldnât quite match the image in front of you to the man in those stories. You had spent so long thinking of him as being dead, unable to do anything to find you or your mother from a grave, that to learn he was alive, and with Tess, it was a shock to your system.
Where was Sarah? Where was the half-sister you had heard so much about from your mother?
Despite Joel matching the name, and the photo that your mother had kept, it just didnât feel like he was the man you had been imagining as your father. He didnât seem kind or caring, he didnât look like he had any love left in him. And maybe, you could have accepted that, if he had other aspects to him, if he hadnât let your motherâs killer live.
âWhat happened the day of the outbreak?â You asked, finally, despite the way you ached to run away and cry, for your mother, for yourself, for the father you would never have. Joel just looked at you, rarely blinking as if you were a figment of his imagination, clenching and unclenching his jaw.
âNo, we are asking you questions.â Tess responded, clearly taking the lead on the situation, despite having no connection to you. It really shouldnât have been her business. You scoffed. âWhere did you come from?â She asked you, unblinking in the face of your disbelief.
You shook your head, âHow is that even relevant?â
âBecause I said it is.â
âI donât care what you say. Heâs my dad. Youâre not my mom.â You replied, roughly, angrily, and youâre only more irritated when Tess doesnât even react. You become furious when Joel says nothing. âAre you going to say anything?â
Tess went to speak, but you spoke again before she could utter a word.
âNot even about how you let my motherâs killer go? You donât have anything to say about that?â You questioned, stepping towards him where he had taken a seat on the couch in front of that god-forsaken wallpaper.
There was an awkward lull in the room, each of you waiting for Joel to speak. He seemed unsure if he was going to speak at all, his brows furrowing further, and he pulled the photo out of his pocket to look at once again.
âShe died, years ago. Myâmy kidsâŠâ Joel swallowed, and shook his head. He placed the photo down beside him. The photo meant nothing. You couldâve been to his house, and brought it here with you, never having met the woman he hadnât seen since the day the world fell apart.
âDid you even look for us?â You asked him, head tilting, eyes stinging, wanting desperately for him to say yes, to say he scoured the world but missed you somehow. But looking at him, covered with scars, you could see he was nothing like the man your mother remembered. He didnât care, not like she thought he had. The man in front of you wasnât your father â he was a disappointment. He was your fatherâs shell.
Joel didnât speak, swallowing harshly, seemingly unable to form any words.
âYouâre nothing like she said you were.â You told him quietly, shaking your head, reaching by his side and taking the picture. You wanted to rip his half off, throw it at him, denounce him, tell him he wasnât your father, that he was never worthy of your mother, but you couldnât. It was the only thing that you would ever have of the father you shouldâve had. The man your mother had loved. Sheâd already had so much taken from her, you couldnât, even after her death, take Joel away too. He could live on in the memory. In pictures.
They didnât say anything when you turned your back on them, shoving the picture in your pocket, and walking out of their door. You slammed it behind you, felt the walls of their apartment tremble with the force, and kept walking.
Part of you, a big part, wished that Joel Miller would have stayed dead. At least that way, you could have kept pretending.
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masterlist. . .
important: help free palestine verified fundraising a blog for resources daily clicks
PALESTINE LINKS â via abbyshands
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
collection of my writings! more to come⊠stay tuned
alternatively, read over on my ao3!
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
JOEL MILLER
âč late spring, f!reader â you and joel didnât exactly see eye to eye, but things have started to change, at least for you. [2.2K words]
âč the gold, f!reader â you donât like the person joelâs become. [2.1K words]
âč iâll be brave, platonic!f!reader â an infected attack leaves you fragile, in more ways than one. [2.4K words]
âč i am good, platonic!f!reader â joel finally sees the darkness in himself reflected in you. [2.4K words]
âč the crooked kind, platonic!f!reader â you were sarahâs best friend, and you reunite with joel years after outbreak day. [2.5K words]
âč the tunnel, platonic!f!reader â joel gets hurt, and in the face of losing the only person you have left, something inside of you breaks. [2.7K words]
âč to an empty house, niece!reader â tommy hasnât been your dad for a very long time. [3.0K words]
âł something is rotten, niece!reader â part two, arriving in jackson brings painful feelings, and even worse conversations. [4.0K words]
âč so far from it, platonic!f!reader â you get yourself into some trouble, luckily, you know who to call for help. [2.3K words]
âč all my faith, platonic!f!reader â joel and tess raised you, in a moment of anger, he nearly loses you. [5.3K words]
âč if the door wasnt shut, platonic!f!reader â months of travelling with joel and ellie come crashing down on you, the fear is suffocating. [5.1K words]
âł i would let you in, platonic!f!reader â part two, after being abandoned in jackson, tommy and maria take care of you. joel and ellieâs return hurts far more than their departure. [7.5K words] âł lock it when you leave, platonic!f!reader â part three, tensions rise in jackson, leaving you scrambling to find your place. [6.9K words] âł check under the doormat, platonic!f!reader â part four, settling down fully in jackson means new friends and more patrols. what could go wrong? [9.7K words] âł youâll find the key, platonic!f!reader â part five, after feeling hopeless, you decide itâs time to heal [10.5K words]
âł please donât lose it again, platonic!f!reader â a what if one shot, the aftermath, set in tlou part two [2.7K words]
âč the world is brighter, platonic!f!reader â joel is trying to be someone heâs not. [13.0K words]
âč weight too heavy to hold alone, platonic!reader â joelâs life in jackson is much more complicated than he thought itâd be [4.0K words]
âł hoping thereâs somewhere to go, platonic!reader â you try to navigate life after the rejection of the only family youâd ever had [3.9K words]
âč break beneath the weight, platonic!reader â joel struggles to deal with someone who isnât as emotionally constipated as he is [3.9K words]
âč carved over the door, platonic!reader â youâve been hiding something, and joel finally finds out what. his reaction is⊠not what you expected [2.1K words]
âč forgive the sea, platonic!reader â after a trip to the outside world, you come back different [3.0K words]
âč when the sun goes down, platonic!f!reader â joel doesnât talk about you, until he does [3.6K words]
âč the sun was collapsing, platonic!reader â joel thought you moving to a college halfway across the country would be the worst thing to happen to his family [6.6K words]
âč fight the tide, platonic!reader â you face the consequences of going to seattle, set in tlou 2 [3.3K words]
âč i was born waiting, daughter!reader â youâve been looking for your dad for as long as you can remember, is this really him? [8.1K words]
âč joelâs place, platonic!reader â you visit the cemetery [2.2K words]
âč name your courage, platonic!reader â you donât like the blood in your reflection, joel wipes it away. [1.4K words] DRAFT â Newest Work!
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
TOMMY MILLER
Nothing here yet!
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
SPIDERVERSE
âč is it freedom?, platonic!reader â after losing everything, you struggle to accept the one thing you needed all along [8.0K words]
âł or is it loneliness?, platonic!reader â you need closure, and information. two visits kind of give you that [9.2K words]
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
. . .check out howlâs song association!
and my platonic joel miller recs!
#heartpascal#masterlist#heartpascal masterlist#pedro pascal imagines#pedro pascal x reader#joel miller imagines#joel miller x reader#joel miller angst#joel miller fluff#tlou imagines#pedro pascal angst#pedro pascal fluff#heartpascal writes
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picture this, little old me just sitting at home whil my phones on charge, EUREKA! i have not yet blessed my eyes and heart with heartpascals recent fic, i shall get on this right now!
suddenly as the fic goes on, my jaw drops more and more as i realise: i am a fool. i am the biggest fool of all the fools. this is an angst fic, i have condemned myself to pure depression at the hands of a platonic joel fic crafted by my fav joel writer. tears are falling as i finish and i am left DISTRAUGHT.
heartpascal you never cease to amaze and entertain!!! your fics are so beautifully written, it never feels like im just passively reading, you genuinely write in such a way that is so perfectly descriptive that it feels like im there actually experiencing it. genuinely you are so talented wnd one of the best!! hope ur days going well babs and take your time!!!!
if the door wasnât shut
âčâ joel miller x platonic!f!reader
âčâ summary: months of travelling with joel and ellie come crashing down on you, the fear is suffocating.
âčâ a/n: i donât like the second half of this one D: but i made you guys wait long enough so i apologise!!! been super busy so this is v rushed but i hope you enjoy nonetheless
âčâ warnings: angst, loss of loved ones, tlou ep 5/6 spoilers, father figure joel, reader is really scared, not proofread
masterlist
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Had you known that those days in Boston QZ wouldâve been the last peaceful ones for a long time, you think you mightâve treasured them more. Held them closer, let the edges sharpen when you thought of them, rather than seeing only blurred images, the memories faded.
You wouldnât have believed it if somebody had told you. The life you lived in Boston was flawed, at best, but it was your life. Filled with violence and bloodshed, sure, but there were things you could control. Things that Joel and Tess had always made sure you could control.
Out in the wide world, the facade of control that the two adults had always kept up crumbled to dust in your hands, lost to Infected and hunters and shelters in the strangest places.
It was a difficult shift in your reality, and you tried to hide it from Joel. He had already given you so much, hell, he and Tess had provided you with a home, even when they had no obligation to do so. You owed them more than your life.
When you had met Ellie, you immediately disliked her. She grated on you, her biting words and humorous comments doing nothing but fueling your growing dislike of her. She was childish â she acted her age, showed her fear, and it was something you just couldnât understand. You were far too used to closing down the emotion behind your eyes, to shutting away all of your baggage in a box deep in your mind.
It had worn you down, eventually. Hating her was much harder than you expected it to be, especially when she looked at you for the understanding she knew you possessed. You even watched as Joel softened up to her, far faster than he had done with you, and you couldnât help but follow in his example, as you always tried to do.
Hushed conversations when following Joelâs tense figure, something young passing over you, something that had seemed so⊠far away. You had always thought that bonds like this could only exist in the world before your own, trust Ellie to prove you wrong.
But one gained friendship didnât quite make up for all the losses. It was Tess, to start with. Something that had singed your lungs and left you breathing the smoke, something of choked words leaving you when she had revealed the bite on her shoulder. She had looked at you, that understanding passing through her eyes, grief for a life she wouldnât get to live. You understood the gaze far more than you wanted to, and you knew that the burns scarring your insides wouldnât fade for a very long time.
Then, it was finding out that Bill and Frank were gone.
It seemed wrong. Something so untouchable, so guarded, how could it possibly be gone? You couldnât understand it, couldnât understand how the few people you valued seemed to be dropping away before your very eyes, faster than you could even reach for them.
The journey seemed pointless to you, after that.
Though you felt for Ellie, that selfishness that had always been drilled into you rushed in, drowning out the empathy towards her cause. It left you with something empty inside of your chest, and you couldnât figure out a way to fill it. You werenât sure you wanted to.
It only got worse.
Warm days turned colder, the nights going to something nearby freezing, and then there was the events of Kansas City. You had been so sure Joel was going to die, that you and Ellie would follow soon after, that you couldnât move. Your legs seemed frozen to the spot, and even as you heard the struggle in the other room, it didnât quite register.
It was only when Ellie managed to get Joel through to the room you were hidden in that you managed to snap out of your fear-induced haze. Your eyes were cloudy, and after that, it was so hard to focus.
You and Ellie had found some comfort when Sam showed up alongside his older brother, Henry. They were a breath of fresh air in the hellscape of a city, and for once, you witnessed true childhood. Saw it in the way Sam scribbled on his board, in the way he laughed at whatever Ellie had written on it. It was contagious, almost.
That was probably the happiest you had been since leaving Boston, and it all fell apart so quickly. Like the first sparks of a fire squandered by the downpour of a storm.
You canât even remember much of it. Not the big parts, anyway. You remember the little things, like the colour of Samâs hoodie, or the splinters you got from the floorboards as you fell backwards, scrambled away from the only semblance of childhood youâd ever had. You remember looking to Henry, something in your chest begging to be let out, but choking on it before it could escape. Your remember the sound of something splattering against the wall, and you remember Joel touching your arm after the burial.
Everything was blurring together, but one thing stood out; that overwhelming fear that threatened to sweep you away with every sound you heard, every flash of movement in darkness, every loss you witnessed.
Each day it became harder to shake away the haze to your eyes, harder to feel something other than scared, harder to close that box in your brain and leave those big feelings in there. It became so prevalent, all of it weighing you down, pressing tightly against your shoulders, and somewhere along the line you knew that Joel and Ellie had noticed.
Whether it was your withdrawn behaviour, or the gaping hole ripped into your chest, you werenât entirely sure. But they knew. Perhaps not to the extent that you believed them to, but they knew something wasnât quite right.
And now it was the cold threatening to take the three of you â it was freezing the blood in your veins, the air in your lungs, and you really werenât sure how much more of this you could take. It had been months since Henry and Sam, but it felt like it had been both no time at all, yet so far away. Everything still felt so raw, so fresh, despite time passing as normally as ever.
Joel had somehow managed to find winter supplies for the three of you, consisting of a coat and gloves, a hat that you let Ellie take. It was enough to keep you all alive, but it didnât stop the chill seeping into your very bones, making it feel all the more harder to keep going.
It got to the point where you just didnât want to. Couldnât.
âCome on,â Joel said, your name falling from him as he patted your shoulder, all of his supplies already packed up, âTime to go.â
Getting up seemed impossible, so you didnât. Just let your eyes glaze over and watched as Joel and Ellie grabbed their weapons, glancing outside of the cabin youâd taken refuge in. Joel looked back to you, his eyebrows furrowing as he noticed you hadnât packed up any of your things, hadnât even moved.
He looked at Ellie, frowning when she noticed, too. He made his way over, crouching down with aching knees, and placed a hand on your shoulder.
âKid, we gotta get moving.â Joel said, shaking your shoulder the slightest to gather your attention. You just looked at him, shaking your head. âCâmon. We donât have time for this.â
âI donât wanna go anymore, Joel.â You told him, finally admitting the words that sounded so much like defeat. You hated that the world had won, but you were so tired of fighting that you just couldnât bring yourself to do anything but lose.
Joel shook his head, eyebrows creasing, an expression close to dumbfounded crossing his face. He couldnât understand.
âWeâre closer than weâve ever been!â Ellie said encouragingly, the biggest smile she could muster on her face. You couldnât bring yourself to look in her direction, instead looking down to where your fingers pulled at the loose threads on your sleeping bag.
âI canât,â You said, much closer to tears than you had even realised. âI canât keep doing this. Joel, I wanna go home.â
His frown just deepened, uncertainty present in every feature on his face. Joel didnât know how to handle this, and there really wasnât that much time to do so.
âKidâŠâ He sighed, before sitting down properly beside you with a pained breath.
âNo, Joel, Iâ I want to go back. I want all of this to go away. I want Tess.â You admitted, heart pounding so hard just at the mention of the woman you had lost, and it was painful. Your chest aches the more you thought about it, and there was the realisation that you were homesick. Though you werenât sure if thatâs as for Boston, or for Tess.
âThere is no goinâ back, kiddo. Tess⊠sheâs gone. Nothinâ we can do about it.â Joel said, taking a moment to steady the shake in his voice after saying her name. It was just as painful for him as it was for you.
âIâm⊠Iâm scared.â You confessed, voice barely a whisper, but it echoed around the empty walls of the cabin. The confession almost scared Joel, he knew you preferred to keep everything locked tightly, never admitting to the fear he knew was there. âAll the time,â You continued, lips trembling around the words, âAnd itâs all I can think about. I canât keep doing this. Every time we meet something I just get so scared, I canât move, canât speak.â
âItâs okay to be scaredââ Joel tried.
âNo, itâs not! Itâs like Iâm frozen, and every time, I lose someone. I canât watch you guys die. I canât do it.â You cut him off, the tears falling from your eyes as you looked at Joel.
He couldnât do much more than frown, unsure how he could fix something like this. He knew the feeling more than you could imagine, so familiar it was the clearest thing he could remember. Joel had felt this way for years, but he was an adult. He had people relying on him, he couldnât shut down in the way he knew you wanted to.
âWeâre not gonna die,â Joel said, hesitantly. It was stupid to make promises in this world, especially when danger and the unknown lurked around every corner. âWeâre all goinâ to be just fine. Listen to me, kid, weâre gonna get this done, and then weâre all gonna find somewhere, no infected, and weâll just live. But we need to get through this, first.â
You shook your head, turning away from him, and he glanced to where Ellie stood, the guilt flooded onto her face.
âYou two listeninâ?â Joel asked, beginning to pick up your things and shove them into your backpack. âWeâre getting close now. Itâs almost over. Got nothinâ to worry about.â
âHeâs right,â Ellie said, quietly, passing Joel something to put in your bag. âLetâs just get this over with.â
They packed up your things around you, Joel grabbing your arms to help you to your feet, and Ellie linked arms with you as soon as you were up. Together, they managed to get you out of the cabin, back out into the cold.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
You had been so sure that one of you was going to die when the people on horses showed up, guns trained on each of you in turn. You thought it was going to be Joel when he shoved you and Ellie behind him, his head spinning around, taking count of the people who were a danger to you.
Then, they brought out their dog, and your heart stopped when they directed it towards Ellie. It was going to be her, you were almost sure of it, thought that it would get a whiff of something from the bite scarred over her forearm.
You held your breath for a long time, not able to let it go even when the dog settled, playing happily with Ellie. Surely, these people would shoot you, regardless. They certainly didnât seem very friendly.
But no, they were taking you back to their town, with you and Joel sharing a horse while Ellie rode on her own. Youâd never ridden on a horse, and before, you may have enjoyed the experience, but you could only feel that suffocating fear that made you choke on your words, so scared that these people were taking you to their town just to kill you. Or worse. Youâd heard of people who do worse.
You couldnât get the words out to express your concern to Joel, forced to stay silent and cling on to him as the three of you made your way past the walls, surrounded by strangers. You shared a look with Ellie, that nervous understanding shared between the two of you once more.
Your fingers twitch, aching to wrap around your gun, but that was the first thing these people had taken. Then it was your knife. And then the axe Joel had you storing in the side of your bag. It didnât help that helpless feeling, that fear clogging your throat.
Joelâs tense frame loosens suddenly, something like relief sinking into his bones as he shouts, âTommy!â A man immediately looking up from where he was stood atop of some scaffolding. Joel slides off of the horse, handing the reigns to you, before meeting his brother halfway in a tight hug.
Ellie frowns, and you understand the furrow to her brows as you looked at Joel and his brother. He was all the two of you had.
The two of you stick together as you follow Joel to wherever his brother is leading the three of you, sharing nervous glances and only just about relaxing when youâre seated with hot meals in front of you.
You did your best to tune as much of the conversation out as possible, even ignoring Joelâs comment about slowing down, as you shoved as much food as you could into your mouth while the opportunity was there. After all, who knew how long this would last?
Ellie kicked your leg when Tommy mentioned about a tour, the two of you reluctantly leaving your plates behind to follow the three adults. Maria went on with her touring speech, talking about when and how they settled in the town, with Tommy pitching in about the shared resources. It was only when she talked about separating you and Ellie from Joel that your attention was really caught.
âJoel.â You said, urgency in your voice, a pleading look sent his way as he wrung his hands together, his brother already heading in his direction.
âYouâll be fine.â He said to you and Ellie, nodding in your direction and missing the look of defeat you and Ellie shared as he walked away.
âShall we?â Maria asked, looking between you and Ellie. She was half-turned away already, but caught the way you both gazed nervously at Joelâs turned back. The two of you nodded, following behind her as she made her way through the town, clearly as familiar to her as the back of her hand.
Ellie answered all of Mariaâs idle questions whilst walking alongside her, though her answers were slightly withdrawn. It comforted you, even the slightest bit, to know that you werenât the only one who was feeling distrustful towards this place. That you werenât the only one on edge.
Maria opened the door to the house you, Ellie and Joel were meant to be staying in, swatting a hand in front of her face as dust rose up from the untouched surfaces.
âHomely.â Ellie commented, stepping around Maria to peek into the living room, and then the kitchen, whilst you remained beside the door with Maria.
âItâs not much, but itâll keep you warm. And itâs got running water.â Maria said, despite this being more than any of you had had in a very long time. She smiled tightly at you, head dipping as she looked around. âMake yourselves at home.â
âWhen do I get my gun back?â You asked, probably the most you had spoken since your slight⊠outburst at the cabin, just a few days prior.
âKids âround here arenât armed. Nobody is.â Maria answered, eyebrows creased as she looked at you.
âRight, well Iâm not a part of your commune, or whatever, so I want back whatâs mine.â You replied, with more heat to the words than wouldâve been considered respectful. You couldnât really find it in yourself to care, though, because how were you meant to defend yourselves if you had no weapons? Especially considering Maria clearly didnât want Joel here, and by extension, you and Ellie.
Maria sighed, a slight exhale from her nose, and you stepped away from her, looking towards Ellie, who stared right back at you with something nervous in her gaze. âWeâll talk about all this later, okay? How about you guys go take a shower, and Iâll grab you some new clothes.â
Ellie nodded, practically leaping up the stairs, and you heard doors slamming open until she finally found the bathroom, yelling an: âAha!â
âThereâs just the one shower in this house, but if you wanna have one now, mine and Tommyâs house is just across the street.â Maria offered, kindly.
âIâd rather wait.â You replied, voice snappier than you expected it to be, but you bounded up the stairs and flopped down in the first room you found.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Ellie had taken forever in the shower, so it was a while before you finally took your turn. As much as you hated to admit it, the warm water cleared away much of your bitterness towards this place. It felt good. Finally being clean, properly clean, after going so long living off of what little you could take when travelling across the country. You hadn't had a shower like this since Bill and Frankâs â and you hated thinking of it.
Maria had been around earlier, bringing two piles of clothes hanging in each arm, dumping them on the bed outside of the bathroom Ellie had been showering in. You hadnât acknowledged her, so she had nodded and left quickly.
You didnât exactly enjoy feeling like you owed anybody anything, but you had to admit that slipping on the clean clothes that Maria had left felt good. Wearing the long sleeved t-shirt underneath a thick jumper was probably the warmest youâd been in a long time, not that you wouldâve admitted that to anybody.
The small part of you that had been numbed for the past few weeks began to thaw, and you felt almost embarrassed of how you had treated Maria earlier on â despite you having every right to act in such a manner. So, with a huffed breath of annoyance, you decided to follow the note the woman had left, and made your way across the street.
She had shouted to come in almost as soon as you had knocked, and you opened the door hesitantly.
The first thing you noticed was the sound of hair scissors, and it sent a pang through your chest. Then you heard Maria and Ellie chatting, and followed the noise. The chalkboard in her living room caught your eye, and you frowned as you passed by it.
âWhatâs going on?â You asked, eyebrows drawn together as you stepped into the room to see Ellie putting up her short hair.
âJust a trim,â Maria said, waving the scissors in her hand, âYouâre up next.â
She noticed the way you tensed, drawing your arms back up towards your chest as your eyebrows furrowed further. It was defensive, the way you immediately curled in on yourself.
âNo, no, Iâ I donât want my hair cut.â By you were the words missing from the sentence, going unsaid but not unheard as one of your hands reached up to hold onto the too-long ends of your hair. They were splintering, and unhealthy, but you couldnât do it.
The last person to cut your hair had been Tess â a memory you treasured, held so close that it almost hurt to think about. It was one of those things that had come naturally at the time, but felt so taken for granted once Tess was gone. You could remember the evenings so clearly, one of the only times that she allowed herself to come across as something almost maternal.
It would feel like you were betraying her, her memory, to allow someone else to take scissors to your hair. It was a job that belonged to Tess, and Tess only. You pretended it didn't hurt, the length your hair had grown. She wouldâve never let it get this long.
Maria frowned, but seemed to take your defensive words and body language for a good enough answer. She placed the scissors on the counter, an act of truce, if you had ever seen one.
âOkay,â She said, hands up in surrender, before she reached to the counter and grabbed the coat that had been laid there. âHere, put this on. Weâre going to the movies.â
You had no choice but to do so, tugging the coat on and resorting to holding it closed with your arms folded across your chest when your fingers trembled on the zipper. Ellie glanced at you with a frown, and checked you were following her and Maria out of the door, just huffing out a small sigh as you closed the door behind you, hurrying to catch up.
Sitting around a bunch of kids was one of the weirdest things to happen to you. Youâd spent most of your life surrounded by only Joel and Tess, occasionally Bill and Frank, hell â Ellie was the first person your age that youâd really spoken to. After everything the two of you had been through, being surrounded by children felt much stranger to you than being surrounded by adults.
You could understand adults, to a certain extent. Kids⊠were a different story. So transfixed on the movie projected on the wall ahead, which you couldnât understand. You felt vulnerable, sat in the middle of the room. Out of the loop, even, as adults watched and chatted around the edges of the room.
It was why you went to find Maria whilst Ellie followed Tommy out of the place, confused on why she had brought you here. âWhat am I meant to be doing here?â You asked her, when you finally found her standing to the side, gazing at the movie.
âWeâre at the movies,â She laughed, saying your name, âYouâre meant to be watching the movie.â
âWhy?â You asked, incredulously, because how did this help anybody? Watching fake people in an image against the wall mightâve fascinated you, but you were nervous. Paranoid. At any moment, they could have people breaking into the town, knocking down the walls, anything⊠so why waste time and people watching a movie? To you, it wouldâve made more sense to have more of these people stationed as guards.
âEntertainment,â Maria offered, moving from where she had been leaning against the half-wall. âWhatever you wanna call it. Youâre not out in the wilderness, anymore. Youâre safe. Take some time, enjoy the film.â She told you, and you hated the sympathy that she held in her gaze.
You moved to say something, but followed Mariaâs gaze to see Tommy walking back through the doors. Without another word to her, you were shoving your way through the crowd and pushing the door open, back out into the cold air.
By the time you found your way to the house on Rancher Street, both doors at the top of the stairs were tightly shut. You frowned, unsure why they wouldâve shut them, and made your way up to the room Ellie was in.
âEllie?â You whispered into the darkness of the room, seeing her turned away from the door as she lay on the bed. She was still, and remained quiet. With a sigh, you closed the door and crossed the hall, opening Joelâs door with the same results.
You tiptoed back downstairs, frowning as you laid a blanket across the couch, swatting the dust that rose to the air.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Waking up to an empty house stirred the panic that you had been storing away. You felt frantic as you tumbled up the stairs, ripping the covers away from the unmade beds as if Ellie or Joel couldâve been hiding beneath them. But finding nothing just made everything so much worse, because what if you were right all along?
Anybody couldâve come into the house, caught the two of them off guard, and what could they have done? All of your weapons were taken from you, which meant no defence, and no deterrent.
You were ripping the kitchen apart before you could think to do much else, pulling drawers out and sending the dusty contents crashing to the floor. In the end, you found nothing of use â the sharp cutlery had long since been taken, leaving dust in the empty compartment that shouldâve held knives.
Your last resort was the plate you had smashed against the counter, leaving a dent in the material upon impact. Blood trickled down your cheek from a minuscule cut, the result of a tiny piece of ceramic. You grabbed the sharpest piece of the plate in a gloved hand, and marched out of the front door.
Upon entering Tommy and Mariaâs house, you were greeted with nothing but silence, despite the impact the door had made against the wall when you had opened it. A small piece of paper on their kitchen counter caught your eye, and you snatched it up.
Going to the stables first thing. Love you - Tommy.
The edge of the paper was crinkled, and you figured that Maria mustâve seen it already.
Your run to the stables was frantic, and not at all subtle. People stared as you practically sprinted across the town, almost slipping on patches of ice that blended in with the snow. âSlow down, girl!â Somebody had shouted at you as you passed, but you just gripped the sharp ceramic tighter, barely feeling the way it had begun to tear at your glove.
âJoel, Ellie!â You shouted, almost hysterically, as you finally saw the two of them. Ellie was already sat upon a horse, holding the reins as Joel spoke to his brother. They both turned to face you as you approached, an almost defeated look matching each otherâs expressions. âWhatâWhatâs going on?â You asked, stumbling into Joel and feeling him grasp on to your shoulders to get you to finally stop.
Joel shared a look with Tommy, who looked back at him with what was almost sympathy.
âKid, IâŠâ He sighed, rubbing a gloved hand down his face as his speech trailed off.
âWhat?â You snapped, gripping the ceramic tighter.
âListen to me,â Joel said, his hand squeezing your shoulder as he said the words. âMe and Ellie are heading to the Universityââ
âLetâLet me grab my bag.â You told him, trying to turn away but feeling his grip tighten before he turned you back to face him, a bracing expression on his face. He looked almost pained.
âYouâre not listening!â He told you, sounding far too close to frustration. âMe and Ellie. Not you.â He repeated, watching carefully the way your furrowed eyebrows fell, something so similar to grief presenting itself in the way your whole expression fell apart.
You looked to Ellie, only to find her gaze averted, and shook your head as you turned back to Joel. âWhat? Youâreâ Youâre what? Leaving me behind?â
âItâs not fair for us to ask you toââ
You cut him off, stumbling back and away from his hands, and watched as they fell from the air where they had held on to you. âItâs not fair?â You asked, trembling from something other than the cold as you looked at the only man you had ever trusted.
The ceramic in your palm fell to the ground, fibres of your glove clinging to the edges of it. Joel frowned.
âNot fair?â You repeated, at the sound of their silence. âYou know whatâs not fair, Joel?â You questioned, stepping forward to push your hands against his chest, feeling your chest ache when he did nothing to stop you. âFollowing you two, all this way, just for you to fucking abandon me!â
âWeâre not abandoning you!â Ellie said, then, her voice sounding just as childish as the words did. Because if they werenât abandoning you, what were they doing? They hadnât even said goodbye â if it werenât for you running out here, after waking up to find them gone, you might have never even seen them again.
âYes, you are!â You yelled at here, feeling your throat clog up as your vision went cloudy, âAnd after everythingâŠââ
You stared between them, waiting for them to have a response, but neither of them did.
âI lost everything, following you here. Everything! Itâs all gone. TessâŠâ You trailed off, feeling tears bubble at the corners of your eyes as you said her name. It was a betrayal, more than anything. If it werenât for this whole adventure, Tess wouldâve been alive. Bill and Frank, maybe not, but Tess.
âThat ainât fair, kiddo, weââ
âNone of this has been fair. None of it! And youâyou were just going to fucking leave me! Howâs that for fair?â You asked desperately, despite knowing that no answer they could give would be what you wanted. All of your fear over losing them, it had never considered that they may leave of their own accord.
Maria said your name, approaching from behind you, and you didn't flinch when she placed a hand on your shoulder. You missed the pain on Joelâs face at the way you allowed her to comfort you, but had moved away from his attempts. She pulled you a step back from him, and another, until she finally turned you away as your tears spilled over.
Tommy shook his head when Joel made a move to follow the two of you, and you pretended not to notice their gazes on you as they strode by.
âHow could they justâŠâ Your voice broke off at the edges, and you felt the haze to your eyes returning as you looked at Maria, the realisation that you were alone hitting you harder than any of your fear ever had. That was fear; a possibility of what could happen, whereas this⊠this was reality.
And your reality was that nobody loved you enough to stay.
#heartpascal u are a godsend to mentally ill joel lovers who just wish him to be their father#U ARE SO TALENTED#MWAH MWAH HUGS UR THE BEST#i love writing these silly little bits after#hope youre days is splendid and your pillows are nice and cold and#hows your day been btw !!!!#also omg ive got some hot goss of whats going on in my life rn#yes i am mentally ill mind ur business#joel miller imagine#mjl.recs
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is it freedom?
âčâ spiderverse (future) found family x platonic!reader
âčâ summary: after losing everything, you struggle to accept the one thing you needed all along.
âčâ a/n: ok i have been enabled by exactly two (2!) people. (thank you both) SO dare i start a spiderverse series??? IF YALL WANT MORE OF THIS⊠I WILL DO IT. this is really just a set up thing idk but i feel like arachnid has potential for further parts and ACTUAL found family!! also havenât tagged people on my general taglist bc idk if you guys want to be tagged in ALL works or just all pedro works :(
âčâ warnings: slight across the spiderverse spoilers, not really found family yet, injuries, blood, treating own injuries, stitches, fighting (canon-typical violence yall), dead parents (mentioned a LOT), a whole lot of angst (itâs a spider-person so what do we expect), reader has a whole lot of bad thoughts, loneliness, isolation
masterlist PART TWO
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Had you known what this, this thing, would lead to, you would have never started it. Not that you had done so purposely, at least to begin with, more so happening as an event of pure chance. You were in the right place at the right time, and since then, you had been addicted.
But if you could go back, look at yourself just a year younger than you are now, tell that kid what would come if you went through with saving a life for the first time, you wondered. It was a question that scratched deep in your brain, sending you off balance the more you thought about it; would you have still done it? Would you have saved that personâs life, knowing it would lead to your own falling apart?
You would like to think yes. In fact, you know that back then, when your eyes were bright at the prospect of helping people, when you still marvelled at the world like it was good, you would have been certain that it would be worth it. Why should that person die, just to save you? Itâs a harrowing realisation. A conclusion that makes your fingers tremble, your voice shake. Now, youâre not sure you would do it. You donât think you could bear to face that decision knowing what you know of the world around you now.
Itâs something cruel, really, that the spider that bit you gave you these powers, and nothing to go back and fix your mistakes. Your perceived victories. Your losses.
But the worst has already happened, and the only one left to die is you, so you carry on. You don the suit every day, you sew up your own injuries on the top floor of the abandoned offices that youâve claimed as your own. Each day, you wake when you choose, you sleep when you want to, and you work yourself down to your very bones with nobody to object.
The hollow feeling in your gut is a pain you have no choice to ignore, to smother with assurances that this is freedom. What else could it be? You do whatever you so please, you spend your time swinging through the streets of New York rather than doing schoolwork at home, you eat all the junk you could ever have wanted.
Itâs freedom. It has to be.
You tell yourself that you donât miss the home part of having to do schoolwork, promise your heart that you donât miss home-cooked meals as opposed to greasy food that leaves you unsatisfied. You swear that you like having nobody to tell you what to do. Thereâs no other choice, after all.
And each day, when you spend a little bit longer out on the streets, getting yourself into needless fights that the police could certainly handle, you tell yourself itâs because youâre protecting the city. You convince yourself that itâs not because of having an unending rage to satiate, or a permanent feeling of breathlessness when you leave police to handle anything, as if you could relive the moment your father, the captain, was left to handle something he couldnât.
So, youâre almost relieved by the appearance of something⊠strange. Something dangerous. This is what you live for â this is your job.
You crouch against the wall, fingers splayed and suit itching where you had crudely sewn it back together across your ribs at an almost too-close call. You hold your breath, you watch. The lenses over your eyes shield your sensitive sight from the harshest colours of this new opponent, who looks almost⊠unreal. Too different to be a part of reality. He yells out, seemingly glitching? A distorted scream of what is apparently pain, accompanied by flashes of colour that are unfamiliar to you.
âWell, that doesnât look good.â You comment, eyebrows raised beneath your mask, and the strange looking guy snaps his head towards you, long hair slapping across the goggles over his eyes. He bares his teeth at you, something almost resembling a grin marring his face.
âSpider-man!â He yells triumphantly, cackling as he wipes the hair away from his face, tendrils unfurling from behind his back and lifting him into the air.
âNot quite!â You call back, dodging below the metallic arm that shoots towards where your head was, crumbling through the wall. You try to think back to the jokes you used to tell to rile up whoever you were facing, but find your mind is blank. Instead, all you can think of is questions. âWhere the hell did you come from, anyway?â
The man follows you as you spring from wall to wall, heading towards the center of the building where it tunnels up for about forty floors, balconies overlooking the fountain below. âA new spider, eh? Well Iâll take you down just as easily as I have the other!â He tells you, though youâre immediately suspicious of his statement. Youâre the only Spider-related hero around, and even if you werenât, you doubt this guy could squash a worm, let alone you.
âSure thing, man.â You say, sighing, already exhausted by the repetitiveness that comes with every fight. Your opponents always say theyâll beat you, kill you, squish you, take you down, and yet you always get back up at the end of the fight, and they always remain defeated. When you started doing this, you never would have thought youâd get so tired from winning all the time.
And yet here you are, slipping further and further up the building with the octopus-looking guy chasing after you, metal arms crumbling walls and bannisters on his way up. He falters once more, another one of those glitch-like movements sending him down a few floors, but heâs quick to recover. Of course, it wouldnât be that easy.
You crouch down on one balcony, somewhere around the thirty mark floor-wise, peering down at the guy as he shakes lingering pain from his body. He charges upwards, aiming to reach you quickly with an almost predatory smirk on his face. Before he can even get close to you, however, youâre back on the move, setting a trap for him that he doesnât even seem to notice.
Itâs only when a group of late workers emerge on what youâre pretty sure is the twenty-first floor that you become more anxious about this fight. You donât like when civilians are involved.
Thereâs about a dozen of them crowding the balcony, looking up to where youâre facing off with octopus-man above, some having begun to descend the stairs to the next floor before catching on to your presence. You try not to draw attention to them, but their pointing and whispering sets the Spidey-sense off, ringing loudly between your ears, almost deafening in its intensity. Maybe you underestimated this guy. The flash of a camera sends the last hope of him not noticing down the drain, and he grins at you as he switches targets, climbing down towards them with some semblance of caution.
Youâre much faster than he is, dropping down and using a web to catch yourself rather than having to climb. Itâs hard to stop yourself from yelling at them, cursing them out for being so damn foolish â who in their right mind would stick around a very dangerous fight to take pictures?
Instead, you choose to yell, âGet out! Go, go, go.â And usher them down the stairs, but itâs not difficult to realise that this guy is going to get to them before they manage to descend to the bottom. You shouldnât be surprised, really. Nothing is ever as simple as it could be, not for you.
The split second decision to drop down and form a net-like web low enough to catch the workers worked out for you in the end, as you swung back up and pushed the workers off of the balcony and stairway just as the octopus man was reaching them. He cursed at you, refocusing his efforts on you as you vaguely noted the workers clambering down after their screaming had stopped. Honestly â did people really have so little faith in you? Had you ever sent anybody to their death before?
âYou are just as pesky of an insect as Spider-man!â He growled out, teeth gritted, and came after you with renewed force. He kind of reminded you of that doctor you faced not long after getting your powers, but this guy looked completely different. The doctor you faced â aptly named Doc Ock â had turned himself into some form of a mutant, he had reinforced tentacles which sprouted from his back. Was this guy some kind of copy cat? Maybe he was just delusional.
âI donât know who Spider-man is, man!â You shout to him as you ascend the building again, trying to figure out the best way to take this guy down. His tentacles seem electronic, so surely you could disable whatever machinery resides on his back?
âThatâd be me.â A voice came from above you, two floors ahead of your position. Your head snapped towards it, seeing a man in a blue and red suit, framed by a burst of orange behind him. He didnât linger up there long, instead moving to leap down to the guy who had turned his attention to the new guy. The closer you looked at this new guy, the more similarities you saw to yourself â his webs looked remarkably similar to your own, the pattern that went across his suit matched your own, even the wide white lenses that shielded your eyes on your mask. Who the hell was this guy?
The octopus man grinned widely, shaking greasy hair from his face. âAh, finally! The real Spider-man. Got yourself a new protĂ©gĂ©, I see.â He drawled, dodging this new guyâs hit straight off of the bat. You tried not to get annoyed at being referred to as a protĂ©gĂ©, considering as far as you were aware, you were the only Spider-person around. Where was this guy when you were holding a bridge full of civilians together? Where was he when you took down villain after villain, never once failing to get the guy? No â you were the real Spider-man, if anyone.
âI donât know who you are, man, but Iâm handling this just fine.â You call to the guy, swinging down to rejoin the fight, webbing the villainâs metal tentacles to the wall behind him, before dropping down to kick him towards the wall.
âOh, so you know how to send this guy back to his own dimension?â Spider-man asks you, eyebrows raised beneath his mask, and as if on cue, the guy glitches once more, ripping his arms away from the wall and just about catching himself on a balcony below before he could fall into your net.
You gape at the new guy, glancing back up to where the burst of orange remains opened, and is that a portal? Is this Spider-man from another dimension? Is that why youâve never heard of him before? God, if your mother was alive, sheâd kill to find out about this. Inter-dimensional travel was something she had spent her life researching. If you didnât remain so bitter toward her even after her death, you mightâve been sad she wasnât alive to see this.
But you were bitter, and it made the experience all the worse.
Because youâre pretty sure that that bitterness takes the place of grief within you. Itâs hard to understand why you crave to feel that pain, that grief, as opposed to the aching resentment that floods you with the thought of her. Itâs such a sharp contrast to thinking of your father, your kind father, the man who threw himself into a battle he couldnât have hoped to survive, just on the off chance he could save somebody. You hope you take after him.
âWaitâ youâre from another dimension?â You question anyway, eyes flickering between the battle and the looming portal above. In fact, youâre so distracted by finding out about that tidbit of information that you miss octopus man aim a tentacle for you, and it snatches you around the ankle. âOh, you gotta be kidding meâ!â
The man waves you around like some kind of rag doll, and you try not to be too bitter about being caught off guard. You should probably learn that getting caught up in your little pity party always ends up badly, always distracts you from that renowned Spidey-sense. You formulate a plan in your mind when the drip of blood around your ankle draws your attention back to the battle at hand.
You web the wall opposite and hold on tight, pausing the movements and letting the dizziness that had come over you fade away. The man growls out in annoyance, and gets closer to cut the webs with another tentacle, which is exactly what you planned for. The tension from the webs launches you towards him when you let go, and in his surprise, the metal tentacle releases you. You wrap around him, and start webbing up the machinery embedded in his back as Spider-man distracts most of the tentacles, keeping them from pulling you off.
His tentacles start faltering, clearly not obeying his movements, and you wrap them up where they emerge from his back, continuing along until the movement is so limited that he has to use them all to clutch onto the nearest balcony.
You crawl up the tentacles in the very same spidery manner that youâre known for, and crouch, watching the octopus man struggle as Spider-man observes from the balcony opposite. âYou wanna finish this one off, Spider-man?â You ask, unable to hide any bitterness from your tone at his mostly unhelpful actions throughout the battle.
âHey, not bad!â He praises, and it annoys you. Youâre good at what you do â for the most part. You manage without help constantly, and thatâs the way you prefer it. âYouâd make a good addition to the Spider Society!â
Now, you donât know what the Spider Society is. But honestly? You donât care. You donât need help, and you prefer working alone, and you certainly donât like feeling patronised.
âWhatever, man. Just send him back to whatever dimension he came from.â You tell the guy, and drop down as you hear sirens outside, landing on your injured ankle and just about stopping yourself from cursing. Through all the adrenaline and fighting, youâd forgotten about the way the metal had ripped into your skin, drawn blood. Itâs just be another place youâd have to sew up your suit with itchy, uneven stitching. âOfficers,â You greet as they open the doors, guns drawn, radios murmuring. âAll taken care of. Civilians okay?â
âShaken up, but fine.â The leading police officer says, immediately relaxing and holstering his weapon. You wish it reassured you that the police trusted you now, but it didnât. Nonetheless, the other officers follow suit. âThank you, Arachnid.â
The name your world has bestowed upon you has yet to grow on you, but you nod your head regardless, and salute them as you make your way out, swinging across the city, trying to put the existence of the multiverse and inter-dimensional travel out of your mind. Surprisingly, itâs pretty easy when you have a busted ankle to fix up.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Youâre halfway through stitching up your suit, having already sewn your skin back together with as much skill as you possessed in the matter â which was, not much. But the bleeding has stopped, and your stupidly slow healing will take care of it within a few days. You know that the itchy stitches on your suit will just irritate the injury, and though you wouldnât lose anything if your identity was revealed, it doesnât feel right to go out into the city with any part of you on show.
No, you wear the suit for a reason. You keep every part of yourself covered because nobody can know itâs you underneath the suit. Not because you had anything to lose, no, you had already lost everything. It was because then you could never make a mistake, you would have to be absolutely perfect, flawless, to make up for the fact that it was you underneath the layer.
So, you settle with a sewn suit that will itch and make the stitches on your ankle sting.
However, when thereâs a burst of orange across the room, you have no choice but to forgo the suit, to simply drop the needle and thread and hover your fingers over your web shooters. You wait, nervously, for some other villain to appear. Youâre not sure if Spider-man appearing would be better or worse.
But when a foot steps through the portal, itâs nobody familiar. In fact, itâs a suit you have never seen before, made up of dark blues and bright reds, sharp edges and long claws. Itâs⊠unnerving, and considering the silence coming from the person wearing it, youâre not entirely certain of what theyâre here for.
A moment later and another person steps through, a woman, with bright yellow lenses across her eyes that filter her irises into an amber. She steps forward, standing beside the person who had stepped through first, and if she hadnât showed up, you wouldâve been tempted to attack. With that being said, you remain on edge, but thereâs something⊠comforting about her presence. Like her presence softens the manâs jagged edges.
She says your name, and then adds, âArachnid.â
You furrow your brows and curse as you glance back at the suit so crudely laid out on the floor. Still, it doesnât explain how she knows your name. Was it an inter-dimensional thing?
âSpider-man told us about your work in capturing Doc Ock earlier.â She tells you, as if that explains their presence. You did what you were supposed to do, which was take out the bad guys. âWeâre here to offer you a place in the Spider Society.â
You canât help but wonder if this is some kind of good cop, bad cop thing. She presents an offer which doesnât sound too bad, and then her sharp-edged companion presents all the drawbacks and the catches. They donât seem like the type to take no for an answer, either way. You still donât even know what this Spider Society was! Was it some kind of multi-dimensional cult?
âI already told Spider-man that I wasnât interested in joining whatever cult youâve got going on.â You practically hiss, though you didnât exactly tell him in such blatant words. You were more dismissive earlier, so youâd have to be clear now.
âItâs not a cult,â The man speaks, voice harsh and sharp much like the blades that branch from his forearms. âWe work to protect the multiverse from anomalies that threaten to destroy it.â
The woman glances at him in a way that you translate as being vaguely annoyed, like he wasnât approaching you in the way she had wanted him to. âHe means to say that itâs a big job, and we need all the help we can get.â She says, softer, but only in comparison to the manâs harshness. âListen, kid, youâre good at what you do. We need that kind of talent.â
âYouâll have to find it somewhere else.â You say firmly, because why would you want to leave your universe? This was a lot to think about when you had only learned of the multiverse existing mere hours ago. Regardless, you werenât about to abandon your city just to go across the multiverse to help other heroes who couldnât keep a leash on their own villains.
The two of them shared a look, a mere glance, before the woman heaved a sigh. âLook,â She sighed, heavily, like whatever she was about to say was something she didnât want to be voicing. âBefore you make your choice, you should know, your Green Goblin is currently terrorising another universe.â
You couldnât work out if this was some kind of recruitment tactic, or something. That just wasnât possible. You had put Gwen Stacy in the highest security prison after all antidotes to her goblin-tech failed. She was stuck in there â permanently. There was no way she had gotten out, let alone gotten out to another universe.
âŠRight?
Itâs hard not to think of the memories at the mention of herâGreen Goblin, not Gwen Stacy. Never Gwen Stacy. You wonder if this is where your fear comes from, the terrifying fact that you are remembered only for your mistakes. Because before she was the Green Goblin, she was Gwen. She was everything to you. She was the sun you orbited, the stars that charted your path. And it hurts, it hurts that you can only remember the blood and the dust and the destruction when you think of her.
People arenât born as monsters, are they?
Like the spider that bit you, that invertebrate that so many fear, it was born the way it was. It was born with those fang-lined maws, with those eight legs and dozens of eyes. It was made into the monster it became, artificially crafted to deliver a venom that changed you forever. But it wasnât born that way.
Surely, Gwen wasnât either. She was kind. You remember that about her. You can remember her soft hands that used to hold your own, the loud laughter that always ended in a snort when she laughed at her own jokes, the gentle eyes that stared into your very soul. But those eyes are the very same ones that let her see through your mask, let her see exactly where to hit you to make it hurt. Was that what she was born as? Or is that what she was made into? A killer. A monster.
âShow me.â You say, because what else could you possibly respond? If what theyâre saying is true, if the Green Goblin is loose once more, then people will die.
You canât let her get fresh blood on her hands. Not when somewhere, deep inside your chest, so far down itâs almost unreachable, you have hope for her. You have an innate desire to look for the best in her, even when the Gwen you knew was the first life that the Green Goblin took.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
If thereâs one thing youâve taken from being Arachnid, itâs to expect the unexpected. And you go through the orange portal after Jessica Drew and Miguel OâHara with that exact mindset about you, staring at where an orange watch-like device is wrapped around your wrist.
Itâs in your nature to be suspicious, and these people werenât an exception to that.
In fact, their presence only heightened that behaviour. After all, what were you to expect from two Spider people, who supposedly came to you for your help?
You werenât blind, you saw the aged lines of their faces the moment you got close enough to see them clearly, away from the dim lighting of the building. They were adults, adults who had clearly been doing this type of thing a lot longer than you had. You, who was barely bordering on adult, who had fought enough battles already to last a lifetime â so why would they need you?
It didnât feel right.
And when this Miguel person summoned Lyla the moment you walked through the portal, it felt all the more wrong. She was a hologram of some kind, much higher tech than the kind of thing you saw on your earth. But then again, you had never really been in high tech labs back in your earth. Still, it unsettled you. âLyla, get me the location of Green Goblin, Earth 5011.â He commanded, and they argued in hushed voices for a moment, before a wider hologram appeared, stamped at Earth 3899.
âHow did she get to another universe?â You ask, then, because it doesnât make sense, and youâre shaking underneath the thin material of your suit. Youâre hyper aware of each drag of stitching against the wound on your leg, each patch of fabric you had sewn on in hopes of the suit lasting you just a little longer, because you didnât have the resource to produce a new one.
âItâs an anomaly.â Jessica Drew tells you, her tone softer than youâd heard it, as if she was attempting to reassure you in some way.
It didnât help. But how could it? The last time you had faced Gwen StacyâGreen Goblinâ you had lost so much. It had been the beginning of the end of everything good in your life. The explosion she had caused at your motherâs laboratory was the very same one that killed her, the very same explosion that sent you and your dad miles apart all while living in the same home. And still, you found a way to hope that there was something to salvage within Gwen.
But not only had you lost your mother, and not long after â your father, you had also lost your closest friend. The one person you had confided in, who knew you from your surface to the deepest level, and she had used that against you the moment the Goblin had taken over.
It had taken everything in you to beat her, back then.
And that was on home turf! How did these people expect you to do that a second time, in a completely unfamiliar place?
âSpecifics arenât important right now. Jessica, you take Arachnid. Lyla, send another one of the teams.â Miguel instructed, dismissing your questions right off the bat. It was frustrating. They were leaving you completely in the dark, and sending you to fight the worst enemy you had ever faced, and they were sending you alongside others like you from different universes. It was like asking you to bare your soul in front of them, to reveal your secrets, your deepest regrets, everything that you wanted to stay buried.
You knew Green Goblin. You knew thatâs exactly what she would do. She would undermine you, she would lay your life out in front of you like tiles on a scrabble board. In the end, none of it amounted to much.
Jessica Drew made her way out, glancing at you and nodding for you to follow along. Your moment of hesitation had drawn Miguelâs attention, and he called out to you after a moment of hesitation. âWeâve all faced one like it, kid. Itâs easier with others.â He told you, though he held a pained expression on his face all the while. Instead of admitting to the way he had hit the nail right on the head, you simply nodded and followed after Spider-woman.
It was a whirlwind from there.
Meeting up with others. Travelling the length of the so-called Lobby to wherever it was that Jessica was taking you. When you finally arrived, she offered an empty glass box with a mannequin inside, bare. She gestured towards it like it shouldâve been self explanatory, but soon realised sheâd have to spell it out for you.
You shouldnât have been so upset by the offer of a new suit.
But you were.
This suit was your life. You had nothing outside of it, not anymore. You couldnât just throw it away, as if it meant nothing, as if every rip and patch and wonky stitch didnât mean anything. These were proof that what you were doing was real, that it was worth something. Each stitch proved you had value. You werenât about to throw all of that away, especially for whatever overly technical suit these people would provide.
You had everything you needed.
And so Jessica led you to the next destination: Earth 3899.
The moment you stepped through the portal, it was like you were hit with a wave of familiarity. And not in a positive, slightly nostalgic way, noâ this was chaos. This was the state your world had been in when Green Goblin ran riot, unchecked. She had torn apart buildings, blown up parks, she had set New York City aflame. And she was doing exactly the same here.
It was more contained here than it had been on your earth, and you had to assume that was thanks to the Spider-man already on site, coordinating police, ambulance and fire responses to douse the fires as quickly as she set them. If only the police in your city had trusted you so much, back then.
âWhere is she?â You ask, the moment you get close enough to speak to the resident Spider-man of the universe. He looks at you as if youâre familiar, but doesnât comment, instead just pointing a finger toward a skyscraper just a short way ahead. Youâre gone the moment he tells you where to go.
She had the uncanny ability to stay quiet. It had freaked you own back on your own earth, but it was even more terrifying here, where things were ever so slightly different.
âArachnid.â Gwenâs voice called, and for a moment, you could forget. You could forget every horrible thing the Goblin had done, and you could remember your friend, your Gwen, who had called out to Arachnid more than once without knowing it was you behind the mask. Whether it was for a story or to provide information on your most recent opponent, the voice calling your alias was familiar. But then there was that crackle of laughter, an unnatural gurgle in the way it left her throat, and you turned to see the green-tinged pallor of her skin. âI was so hoping youâd show up.â
You didnât know how much her appearance would effect you, until you were stuck to the side of the building, staring at what had once been your best friend. Youâre so choked up that you canât even formulate a response, because you want that to be Gwen so badly, but you know it isnât. The more you look at her, the more Goblin you see, the more you know that the Gwen you love is never coming back.
âNothing to say?â She asks, and then says your real name, the name she used to say down the crackle of a phone line, or across the school hallway, and she smiles. âI thought youâd be happy to see me.â
âYou shouldâve stayed in prison, Gwen.â You say, your voice unsteady as you say her name aloud for the first time in what must be forever. She seems to relish in the tremble of your voice, and you have to curse yourself for being so stupid, for already showing the vulnerability she was so easily able to pick out.
The Green Goblin tutted at you, stood atop her glider, but the smile you saw didnât belong to Gwen. âYouâre pathetically predictable, you know. Youâre like a moth to the flame.â She tells you, and you fear that sheâs right, that youâre the same person you were back when you fought her, back when she almost won. She sighs, like something heavy is weighing upon her, but it turns wistful in the blink of an eye. âIâm just glad your dad isnât here to see this. Heâd be so disappointed.â
âArachnid, focus.â Jessicaâs voice interrupts, before you can spiral down that rabbit hole. How did Gwen even know about your father? She was in prison long before he died. It didnât make sense.
âMaybe,â You say, that familiar tremble around your words. âHe did always hope for the best for you.â
She bares her teeth at your words, the only visible reaction before her mask is slipping over the bottom of her face, stretching out up to pointed ears, all metallic and tinted a murky green. Then, sheâs attacking.
Itâs muscle memory, mostly, you think.
If you donât think too hard about it, it could be like playing a game with a longtime friend from your childhood. You know the moves to make, you know how sheâll respond. Itâs a constant push and pull, a balance which leaves only destruction behind, the path of the Green Goblinâs wrath tangible in each battle scene the two of you leave behind. You canât beat her like this.
Itâs her glitching that gives you a slight upper hand â and you send her careening off of her glider to the ground below.
Your heart squeezes suddenly in your chest as you watch her fall, her eyes wide in what could almost be perceived as fear. If you didnât intervene, would she die? Would you have put an end to her story, once and for all, when you secretly hope thereâs a cure out there for her? You canât bear the thought of finding out, of watching her die, and so you foolishly dive after her.
A web to her midsection allows you to grip her before she hits the ground, and you set her down with a far more gentle hand than you would ever admit.
She says your name, then, a whispered version of it that sounds like Gwen. You think you can see her in those wide blue eyes, in that stare, and you approach with some caution. âGwen,â You say, more of a question, âYou with me?â
âIâm with you,â She answers, as you reach her side, as you resist the urge to pull off your mask. Youâre so preoccupied staring at her expression that you donât see the blade until itâs too late, your Spidey-sense failing you as you wallowed in your search for someone who was gone. âYou sweet, predictable bug.â She spits then, twisting the blade she had sunk deep into your side, and you writhe, trying to move away from her.
âArachnid!â Jessica Drew calls out, drawing the Green Goblinâs attention, allowing you to pull away from her slackened grasp. You leave the blade where it is, knowing your only slightly enhanced healing wouldnât make up for the onslaught of blood that would pour from the wound. âI think thatâs enough, Green Goblin.â Jessica says, riding a motorbike that you swore she didnât have earlier. Nonetheless, she uses it to put even more space between you and your villain.
âYou need a hand, kid?â A new voice asks, and a gloved hand reaches out for you where you had knelt against the tarmac. You look up, seeing a new Spider-man, but this one has his mask up, showing off his aged face and the bags underneath his eyes. You wave him off, staggering up to your feet, and clench your jaw as you stare at Green Goblin, watch as she pulls bombs from her waistband, barely the size of a chocolate bar, but capable of causing irreparable damage. âGet back to HQ, Arachnid, we can handle this.â Spider-man tells you, in what you suspect to be a fatherly voice, but you ignore him.
Time flies, slips out of your grasp, and you donât know how long you and the others spend fighting Green Goblin, but she proves to be just as difficult of a foe for them to face as she was for you. Each time the three of you manage to get the drop on her, she slips away before she could be caught. Itâs frustrating, and you can even see the way irritation thickens in the air, tangible.
Spider-man, or Peter, as Jessica had called him, is with you, focusing on trying to take Green Goblin down, whilst Jessica Drew is focused on damage control, blowing up Gwenâs bombs before they could hit their intended targets. Youâre pretty sure the resident Spider-man is around here, too, pulling any lingering citizens out of harms way before Green Goblin could end them. Youâd admit, it works better than you had done alone back on your own earth.
But it doesnât work well enough, and more than one building is damaged almost beyond repair, and in the dust and rubble, Peter was distracted by the few citizens poking their heads out of the gaping hole in the side of their apartments. He didnât see Green Goblin coming until it was too late, until she had thrown two of her bombs, one towards him, and one towards the already wrecked building.
Your throat dries up as you try to figure out what to do, who to go for, but in the end, you donât have to choose.
Beams of glowing orange webs shoot into the bombs where they arc towards their victims, blowing them up and leaving both Peter and the civilians in the apartments without a scratch on any of them. Well, nothing that wasnât already there before. You see him then, running alongside Jessica Drew, none other than Miguel OâHara â who clearly didnât think that the three of you were capable of handling Green Goblin.
âWeâve gotta end this.â Peter tells the three of you, glaring over at Green Goblin after coming so close to one of her bombs.
âYou distract, Iâll go in.â You say, the only plan that makes sense. The only plan thatâll work. You wouldnât be much use as a distraction, not with the blood still pooling around the blade hanging from your side, but you could beat her. You knew you could.
Peter nodded, and he, Jessica and Miguel went in one after another, landing hits on Green Goblin before she could even think to withdraw another bomb, or land a hit of her own, whilst you made your way behind her, swinging as high as you dared to go in your state. She was getting angry, you could tell, a distinct flush rushing up the back of her neck, a tell that Green Goblin shared with Gwen.
It was only when she was starting to turn the tide that you jumped down from your spot against the side of a building, looking for your opening.
She sent Jessica Drew tumbling off of her motorbike, which was your chance.
Green Goblin heard you only a moment before you were on her, not giving her a chance to make a countermove. Instead, you were curling your arms around her, as tight as you could, holding her hands away from her waistband. You gripped the blade in your side and yanked it out, holding it to her chest, breathing heavily through the pain as you bared your teeth at her, her face beside your own.
âDonât make me kill you.â You say, and try not to hear the pleading in your own voice, the distinctive tone of a beg. You may have the upper hand on her, but as always, she had the power. âDonât.â You repeat, because you can feel it in your bones that you would do it. If it was the choice between her or the hundreds that she would kill on this world, it would be those hundreds. There was no doubt about it, no questions to be asked.
You may have resented your mother, but she wasnât the only one who died because of the Green Goblin. You wouldnât let that happen again.
Perhaps she heard the plea in your voice, the giveaway that you werenât bluffing, because she went still in your arms, still enough for the other Spiders to approach with some caution, eyes on her hands where you held them away from any weapons, using your forearm connected to the hand holding the blade to her chest to keep her left hand from grasping anything.
âI wonât be asking again.â You tell her, which is as much of a threat as you can muster. Or, more so, a promise.
As Miguel pushed you back with a firm hand, throwing a machine at Gwenâs feet, you think she understands. If the two of you are ever in that position again, there will be no hesitation about it. You will kill her.
âGood work, kid.â Peter says as Miguel and Jessica get to work with getting your Green Goblin through a portal to the HQ. He glanced down at where your hand is now pressing into your side, blood pouring steadily. In your other hand, you still hold the blade that had pierced your own skin, that would have killed Gwen Stacy had she not surrendered. He winces as if itâs him who got hurt, and guides you through the portal after the others. âCâmon, weâll get you checked out. You not got enhanced healing?â He asks, though you suspect he doesnât expect you to answer, and youâre glad.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
âI can do this myself, you know.â You sigh, wincing as a Spider-man â who apparently is also a doctor and works in the Spider Societyâs infirmary â stitches up the wound on your midsection. Itâs uncomfortable, though less painful that when you do it yourself. Still, itâs uncomfortable to accept help from these strangers.
âOoh, shouldnât say that to him.â Peter B. Parker laughs, one of the many Peter Parkers of the Society, but the same one who had fought Green Goblin with you. âHeâll lecture you on proper healthcare for days if you give him the opportunity!â
The Spider-doctor glares at Peter, or you assume he does, from the slight squint of the lenses of his mask. He kisses his teeth under the mask, tutting, muttering about âSpiders and their complete disregard for their health. Lucky you havenât died ten times over from infections.â But he doesnât say anything that requires a response from you, and he soon finished up the stitches. He goes to offer to fix up the injury on your ankle, but youâre up on your feet before he can even get the words out.
âNow, I gotta get back home to the wife, but Miguel wants to see you. Heâll take you home,â Peter tells you as he walks out of the infirmary by your side, but he stops you in the hallway with a hand on your shoulder, surprisingly gentle. âIf thatâs what you want.â
Your eyebrows furrowed before you could stop them, and the confusion over his words mustâve been written all over your face.
âWhy wouldnât I want that?â You ask, defensively.
Peter opens his mouth, but nothing escapes. Instead, itâs his expression that tells you everything heâs thinking. The crease between his brows screams pitying, or sympathetic. Heâs talking about the way you live back on your earth, about the life you lead, Arachnid by day, and by night. With no room for you, no room for your secret identity. Heâs thinking of the way youâll be returning to a world with nobody awaiting you, with not a soul to look out for you, to stitch you up after a battle. Nobody but yourself, anyway.
You pull away from him, brows furrowing further, into an almost angered expression, and you donât watch the way his hand falls away from your shoulder back to his side. He sighs when you turn away, scoffing as you make your way through the hallways of the Lobby towards where you think Miguel will be.
Itâs overwhelming, all of these people. They all believe that they know you, that they know your circumstances, your story, but the truth is that they donât. Nobody does, and thatâs the way you prefer it. You donât need a Society of Spiders surrounding you, breathing down your neck, telling you theyâre sorry, or not trusting you to handle yourself in your own fights, because you can handle yourself. Youâve spent the last year of your life trying to prove that, trying to prove that you can do good things, that youâre worthy of the title Arachnid. You certainly shouldnât need to prove that to a whole Society of people like you, most of which had been doing the job a lot longer.
Youâre capable and youâre content.
You donât need a life as your secret identity to be content, in fact, itâs better without one. You donât have to tell so many lies, donât have to worry about hurting the people you love, because there are none of them left. Thereâs nobody to hurt, and thereâs nobody to lie to. Why would you want to change that?
The hallway ahead looks familiar, and you follow it until you enter a room where Miguel stands, looking at orange tinted screens on a platform halfway up the room. You enter with the absolute certainty that you want to return to your own earth, and youâre not going to let anybody stop you.
âIâm ready.â You tell him, expectantly.
He scoffs, saying nothing, still staring at the screens in front of him. For whatever reason, the reaction makes you angry â inexplicably so. Youâre slinging up to the platform before you can have a second thought about it, and youâre pushing his shoulder so heâll face you, so heâll acknowledge you.
He stares at you, unimpressed.
âSend me back to my earth.â You press, brows furrowed beneath your mask, but youâre sure he can see the anger in the way your shoulders tense up.
âSure,â Miguel said blankly, staring at you as if youâd suddenly change your mind or something. âBut you know, thereâs a lot more like her.â He added on when you said nothing, waiting for him to send you back to your world so you could give him back the stupid watch still wrapped around your wrist.
You stared at him like he was speaking a foreign language. âThere are no more like her.â You respond, feeling that hot press on your chest. You donât want to talk about Gwen Stacy anymore than youâre sure heâd like to talk about whatever he had gone through in his life. Hell, you donât even want to think about her, but you know that nobody else you would ever have to face would hurt you in the way that she did. In the way that having to see her as an enemy, rather than your friend, had hurt. So, yeah, there was nobody like her, not for you.
Miguel seems ready to let you go for a moment, but then heâs shaking his head at you. âYou have a place here. You can be with people like you. You donât have to do this alone, anymore.â He says, and you think that is ironic, because you donât see anybody else in here. To you, it seems like he is doing exactly that; doing the job alone. You can practically see the weight of the world on his shoulders.
âI prefer being alone.â You tell him, and it has to be true. It has to be.
His jaw sets, acceptance, you think, and he nods. He glances past you, to where a portal was open on the floor below. Considering that you hadnât seen him set up the portal, youâd wager that his AI Lyla mustâve listened in and done it for him. You pull the watch off of your wrist, relishing in the way your very atoms seem to sag with the weight of being in another dimension.
âThanks.â You say, and drop down, landing on your sore ankle but not murmuring a word about the pain. You walk back to your world with your head held high, despite your tattered suit and multitude of wounds that would take days to stop hurting.
Miguel stares after you as the portal closes, eyebrows furrowed. He barely acknowledges Jessica Drewâs arrival in the room, already having known she had been lingering in the hallway, listening in. âWell, that went well.â She comments, glancing between where the portal had been and where Miguel stands, brooding. She knows how much pressure he puts on himself, and she knows that he cares about each and every Spider-person in the multiverse. It doesnât take a Spider-sense to see the way in which you struggle. Itâs a familiar struggle, sure, but there were so many Spiders across the multiverse who had a shoulder to lean on in their hardest times. Who did you have? There was no Aunt May for Arachnid, or Gwen Stacy, or Harry Osborne, or, well, anybody.
Jessica thinks that if anybody were to know exactly how that felt, it would be Miguel.
#heartpascal writes#across the spiderverse spoilers#atsv spoilers#spiderman atsv spoilers#miguel oâhara x reader#miguel oâhara x you#miguel oâhara x platonic reader#jessica drew x platonic reader#peter b parker x platonic reader#peter b parker x reader#spiderverse x reader#spiderverse x platonic reader#spiderverse x you#spiderverse imagines#spiderverse one shot#spiderverse imagine#spiderverse angst#miguel oâhara angst#struggling idk how to tag with a new fandom shhh
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or is it loneliness?
âčâ (eventual) spiderverse found family x platonic!reader
âčâ summary: you need closure, and information. two visits kind of give you that.
âčâ a/n: guys idk what im DOING. i have things planned for atsv but not how weâre gonna get there ⊠rn im just yolo-ing. im not a big fan of this one but im gonna start writing the next one asap, which will hide fully be more found family-ish lmao arachnid is gonna start warming up to them all some day i swear
âčâ warnings: angst, injuries, not good thoughts, dead parents, sensory issues, explosions, violence, fighting, blood?, damaged hearing for a good minute, peter b parker eating burgers deserves its own warning, food, mention of throwing up / nausea, insecurities about being good enough, refusing help, idk what else, if ive missed anything let me know!!!
âčâ taglist: @rhymingtree (everything taglist) @justmare @uniquemonstrosity @lacunaanonymoused @erensbbg @dulceteris @noxxing @escherichiacolli @ray-rook @i-3at-kidz @miwagila @stoneforests (is it freedomâverse) â also i only tagged those who explicitly asked to be tagged!
MASTERLIST , part one
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
You spend a long time sat on the edge of the open window, staring out at the traffic below after getting back from Spider Society HQ. Thereâs a tangible relief that comes with returning to your dimension, like a weight being removed, a tension that is finally released from where it had been pulled taut. Your shoulders feel just as heavy as they did when you left, but you try not to think about it. You try to be happy that youâre back.
While you wouldnât say it aloud, and you hate to even have the thought, you donât think anybody had noticed you were gone. But then again, who would? You have no reason to be so upset about such a thing.
Time slips by as you diligently sew up the tears in your suit, frowning as you hold it up once youâre finished. It looks nothing like it used to, but then again, neither do you. Things have changed, it only makes sense that your suit would, too. You wonder if travelling through alternate dimensions can alter your perception of things. Youâd swear that your suit had been a different shade before you left, lighter, maybe, but you have nothing to compare it to.
At least now, this time, when you put on your suit there is evidence of damage that Gwen Stacy had caused. The stitching along your the material where she had tore into you is a tangible thing, physical, and you run your fingers across it as if it might disappear. Itâs almost a relief, to be able to feel where she had caused you pain, as opposed to the invisible ache she had left within you after fighting her the first time around.
Alongside the scar raised on your body, the fight with Gwen had left you with a sort of paranoia. An uncertainty in the back of your mind that has you glancing over your shoulder, has you messing up simple manoeuvres as you panic, thinking you hear her voice.
It must have been your third day back from the HQ that you come to the conclusion that you have to visit Gwen Stacy in her prison.
The decision doesnât come easily. It comes slowly, torturously so, a realisation that deafens you as you glare through squinted lenses at the city around you. You wonât be able to go on like this, getting yourself hurt in stupid ways all because youâre not certain that sheâs back in her prison. Youâre meant to be a hero, which means that messing up, despite whatever paranoia that lingers in the back of your head, is unacceptable. It has consequences.
Seeing her in the flesh will likely be the hardest thing youâll ever do. Except, maybe, not killing her when you caught her in that other dimension. You keep your mind on the fact that she wonât be able to touch you, that sheâll be walled away, to reassure yourself that there is no risk of either of you hurting the other â at least, physically.
But seeing her isnât the only difficult part.
No, the hardest part is stepping back into an identity that you had lost your grasp on, long ago. You wear your old clothes, clothes that you hadnât put on in months, and try to remember how it felt to be you, rather than Arachnid.
âHi, Mrs. Stacy.â You say, when the door to an all too familiar apartment opens just a slither, and you catch sight of her wrinkled eyes. Thereâs a noticeable change to them when she realises who you are, and sheâs slamming the door shut, undoing the chain, and reopening it before you can say another word.
She whispers your name like she canât believe itâs you â and you canât blame her.
You had disappeared, months ago, after the death of your father. Going missing was far easier than being placed in a foster system that would only hold you back. It had been so much easier, not having to face anyone, not having to speak at his funeral.
âHi.â You repeat, when her stare lingers in the silence for far too long. The sound of your voice once again breaks her out of her trance, and sheâs rushing forward to pull you into her arms as if you were her child. You suppose, in some ways, it was quite a lot like that. At the very least, your presence will remind her of the daughter she had lost.
âWhere have you been? Oh, honey, I was so worried.â Mrs. Stacy says, her voice trembling by your ear as she squeezes you tight, unfazed by your lack of reciprocation. âCome inside, please.â
You follow her through the doorway, closing the door behind you as you had done so many times before. Not looking around at the apartment is near impossible, but youâre not sure how much familiarity you can take. Even just seeing Mrs. Staceyâs aged face makes your chest ache, your legs feeling shaky.
âSit down, honey, let me get you a warm drink.â She says, a tremor to her voice as she bustles towards the kitchen which is adjoined to the living room. The news plays on the television, and youâre glad to hear a weather report, rather than some city-wide attack. Mrs. Stacy is quiet as she goes through the process of making your favourite drink, but with your enhanced hearing you listen to the telltale clink of a spoon against ceramic. You listen closely to her hitched breathing as her footsteps pad back into the room. âHere.â She hands you the warm mug, and you donât comment on the way her hand shakes.
âThank you.â You say, though it feels stilted, wrong, too formal. Itâs hard to be normal in this setting, to be whoever you used to be, especially as she stares at you like sheâs seen a ghost.
Mrs. Stacy stares at you for a long while before she speaks again, as if sheâs still not sure that youâre real. âWhere have you been? AfterâAfter your dad⊠we didnât know what happened to you. Are you safe? Do you need help?â She asks, frantic once sheâs gotten started on her questions.
âMrs. Stacy, Iâm fine, really.â You lie, smiling tightly over the rim of the mug as you hold it towards your face. Before, you wouldâve burnt your tongue drinking it too fast, but youâre hesitant to drink it at all. The last thing you want is to become too familiar to your old life. âIâve been staying with some friends, downtown. Itâs been good.â
She raises a brow at you, and stares for a moment longer. âHoney⊠you donât look well.â She tells you, and raises the back of her hand to press it against your forehead. Her frown only deepens when you flinch away from the touch. You try not to curse yourself too much, but canât help reprimanding the way you hadnât anticipated such an action.
The skin on your forehead is clammy, but thatâs just the anxiety, the nerves at being back here. Arachnid canât get sick.
âListen, I⊠I was hoping I could ask a favour from you.â You say, hesitantly, gripping the warm mug tight between your hands, but loosen your fingertips against the ceramic when you hear a minute crack.
Mrs. Stacy furrows her brows, looking more concerned by the second, but nods. âOf course, anything.â She tells you, and places one of her hands against yours on the mug.
âI was hoping I could visit Gwen.â You voice, after one last moment of hesitation. The way her face immediately crumples at the request doesnât give you much hope, especially as her hand withdraws from your own. âIâI know you donât get to see her very often, and maybe itâs selfish, but⊠I donât know. I wanted some kind of closure, I guess.â You ramble on in response to her silence, glaring down at the liquid still swirling in your mug.
âHoney,â Mrs. Stacy interrupts, her voice soft in contrast to the way yours was growing in volume. You quiet immediately, your gaze drawn up to where her tearful eyes stare at you, her expression almost mourning. âI would never deny you that, but you should know⊠I havenât visited Gwenny since she was put in there.â She admits, her stare dropping to her lap, almost ashamed.
âOh,â You voice, softly, in response. âIâm sorry, I shouldnât have assumedâ IâI mean, I canât even imagineââ
âNo, donât be silly, how would you have known?â She replies, raising her eyebrows at you strictly. âNow, I can get you that visit. Iâll call my attorney first thing tomorrow, but⊠really, honey, do you need me to call someone for you? Who are these friends?â
Her voice is familiar, and itâs kind, which makes it all the more painful. Itâs strange, seeing the resemblance between her and the Green Goblin, and it makes a part of you ache. Your life wasnât the only one torn apart by Gwen. In fact, her mother probably faced the worst of it. With her husband being long gone, her oldest son away at college, youngest withdrawn after her daughter became a homicidal maniac, who did she really have left? Who was looking after Helen Stacy?
You smile at her, as best as you can without tearing up, and reach out to grasp her hand, which she readily accepts. âIâm okay, Mrs. Stacy, I⊠Itâs just a few friends of my dad, from his home town. Their kids, too. Itâs better than being put in the system.â You tell her, and can only hope that she believes you. You have no way to back up these lies, knowing those friends of your father donât exist.
âYou couldâve stayed here, you know?â She says, teary and squeezing your hand so tightly you can hear your bones creaking. You smile sadly at her.
âYouâre a much stronger person than me, Mrs. Stacy. I couldnât even face my dadâs funeral, let alone be around the memories of somebody I lost. This place, itâit reminds me of her.â You explain, voice shaking as you hold back your own tears, swallowing them down and trying to breathe through the ache in your throat.
The way her heart breaks is almost loud enough for you to hear it, but she nods her head understandingly, regardless. âOf course,â She says, nodding still, âBut know you always have a place here, okay?â
âOkay.â You respond, heart clenching so tightly youâre not sure it can pump your blood any longer.
âNow, whatâs your number? Your old phone was disconnected.â She says, shaking her tears away to pull out a pad and pen from the coffee table. She sets the notepad against her knee, looking expectantly toward you.
âOh, right,â You stutter, teeth chattering as you comb your mind for the number of your burner phone. âThere was a mixup, because it was in my dadâs name.â You explain needlessly, still searching your mind for the answer. Finally, you remember it. You listen to her ballpoint pen scrape along the paper as she writes the numbers as you say them, and then she clicks the pen off after writing your name beside it, underlining it twice.
âHow about I give you a call with the details of your visit, okay, honey?â She asks, nodding with a pleased hum at your affirmative. âGood. Stay for dinner, okay? Iâve missed you.â
Who are you to deny her that?
Though, even as you try to pretend that you help to set up the table for her benefit, and as you hug Gwenâs little brother tightly when he comes home for his, you know, deep down, that itâs for you. That this is a moment of selfishness that youâll let yourself have, because god, you deserve it, donât you?
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Itâs thirteen days post Spider Society discovery, and youâre starting to regret the way you discarded that watch so carelessly. Not because you want to be a part of some cult of superheroes, but because you wish you had asked some more questions.
Surely Miguel OâHara mustâve known a way to stop these villains from appearing in other universes? And if he did, had he already implemented whatever it was to stop Gwen escaping again? How exactly did she escape the first time? Was it a coincidence? Is there somebody out there, working behind the scenes, helping her get out?
You, unfortunately, have no way to answer any of the burning questions nagging at the back of your head. While a part of you hopes that you never see any of the Spider Society weirdos again, you also desperately want answers. Especially if it meant you could call off your visit to Gwen Stacy.
But the day arrives as any other does, and you spend every moment before the drive over to the prison desperately hoping that one of the Spider-people will show their face. None of them do, and youâre left to get into Mrs. Stacyâs car and simply brace for the journey ahead.
Youâre pretty sure that swinging would be quicker, or easier, but you had no way to explain that way of transport to an interrogating Mrs. Stacy, and so you had to relent to her insistence on driving you. Now, you sit here, shifting in the seat of the car, uncomfortable without your suit underneath the clothes you used to wear on a daily basis. Even the knowledge that itâs stuffed into the bottom of your tattered backpack in the boot of Mrs. Stacyâs car doesnât bring you any comfort.
Instead, the rough material of an old jacket has your skin crawling like you were being bitten by a thousand mosquitos, and the trousers on your legs itch like youâre allergic to them.
You suppose, really, that the spider bite that gave you so many powers had to have more drawbacks than just destroying your life. It only makes sense that your heightened senses would extend to the receptors on your skin. It makes every movement in these clothes torturous, and you wonder if it had always been this way, or if you were just so unused to wearing your old style of clothes. Either way, you hope that you wonât have to wear them for much longer.
If it all goes to plan, you should be in and out of the prison, just ensuring that Gwen Stacy is actually in the cell as sheâs supposed to be. Then you just have to endure the fifty minute drive back to the city with Mrs. Stacy, and youâre free. You wonât have to wear these clothes again, wonât have to use your name, no â you can just sink back into the half life that is being Arachnid. Itâs better that way.
âOkay, honey, here we are.â Mrs. Stacy says at last, having shifted her car into park. She pointedly avoids looking at the looming high-security prison ahead, instead focusing on you as you wipe your sweaty palms against your trousers. âNow you take as much time as you need in there, alright? Iâll be just out here, if you need me.â
You smile tightly at her, nodding with what you hope is more of a grateful expression rather than a grimace. âThank you, Mrs. Stacy, really. I appreciate it, more than you know.â
That much was true â after all, it wasnât like you could tell her that she was allowing the vivid paranoia you had been experiencing to be put to rest after her daughter escaped to another universe. Mrs. Stacy, from what you could gather, didnât even know that Gwen had been missing for any amount of time. She had no idea what Gwen had done, how many more people she had hurt, but you assured yourself that it was better that way. Mrs. Stacy already had to deal with plenty, and that knowledge surely wouldnât help.
She was already dealing with her own grief and feelings on the situation, as well as trying to support her two sons in the matter. Given what Gwenâs little brother had asked of you when he found out about you visiting her, you knew that he hadnât been to visit Gwen, either. It seemed that he wasnât coping with it all very well.
âOf course, youâre family. You should know that by now.â She says, smiling with teary eyes, reaching across the console to grasp your hand tightly in her own.
Her words take a stab at your chest, especially considering what had happened to everybody else who had seen you as family. Dead parents, villainous best friend â it really didnât bode well for your loved ones. You just reassured yourself with the fact that youâd be able to disappear as soon as the two of you returned to the city. You couldnât put her in any danger, that way, or her remaining kids.
âIâllâIâll see you after, okay?â You respond, squeezing her hand in return before quickly letting go and throwing open the car door, getting out and catching a slither of Mrs. Stacyâs surprised reply before you shut the car door.
There are guards waiting for you at the gates, checking you are who you say you are, scanning you for weapons before you even get in the building. Theyâre satisfied after their searches, content that you werenât stupid enough to bring a weapon into a highly secure prison. You keep your focus on your breathing as they walk you in, handing you clothes to change into as well as a box to put all of your belongings in.
The scrub-like clothes they give you are even worse than your own, sending shivers up and down your spine at the feeling of each fibre scraping against your skin. You just try to breathe through it. Luckily, the rest of the security checks blur by, which means less time spent on agonising over this visit. You barely hear a word of the statement they read to you before you go in, and your hand cramps as you write your signature against a dotted line of a waiver. All of the other legal things were sorted out by Mrs. Stacyâs lawyer, which you are more than thankful for.
Instead of having to deal with that, you just have to wait.
You think that the waiting might be the worst part of it all. With the scrubs making your hairs raise and promoting uncomfortable shivers up and down your body, as well as the cold metal seat that they sat you on, youâre far too aware of everything around you. You can hear the hundreds of heartbeats in the buildings, the beeping of security doors, the footsteps heading your way. You can smell the coffee that the head guard in the adjoining room to the one youâre in is drinking, as well as the day-old sandwich in his desk. Worst of all is the way your own heartbeat is thrumming in your throat, padding harshly against your chest, so loud in your own ears that it slowly starts to drown out everything around you.
Gwenâs footsteps are heavy, accompanied by the clinking of the chains sheâs shackled in. You can practically hear the maniacal laughter that had come from her whilst in that alternate dimension, even though sheâs completely silent as she enters the room.
She smiles at you when you look up, and for a moment youâre fooled â itâs soft, gentle, kind. But then you see the glimmer in her eyes that was distinctly not Gwen, and you feel the scar along your side throbbing with phantom pain.
You smile tensely at the guards, who regard you with looks of gentle concern and caution, before they attach her chains to a link on the floor beside a chair three metres away from where you sit. They nod at you, which you return, and you watch as they go and take their positions beside the door before you move your eyes back to the elephant in the room â which is Gwen Stacy.
âSo, you missed me?â She asks, baring her teeth in a grin that has too much teeth to be anything friendly. Gwen regards you closely as you stare at her, watch for any signs of flickering, any signs that this isnât real. Her brows raise slowly, the longer youâre silent, but youâre in no hurry to talk. âNo? Is that not it?â
âSure, I miss you.â You respond after another stretch of silence, tilting your head to study her more closely. You donât acknowledge the way that your voice shakes as you speak, the way it comes out in something closer to a croak before you swallow harshly against your dry throat. âThought Iâd come to check in.â You add, brows furrowing to make sure she gets your true meaning.
âAh,â She voices, then laughs, shoulders shaking, chains clanking loudly against her metal chair. âI get it, now.â
Gwen doesnât add anything else after that, even though you suspected that she may take this opportunity to loudly claim that you were Arachnid, outing your identity once and for all. Apparently, if she does want to out your identity, she doesnât want to do it like this, as she stays silent until you speak.
You sit forward on your chair, ignoring the way the guards at the edges of the room shift uneasily at your movement. âYour mom arranged this for me, you know?â You say, eyebrow raised. She probably knows what youâre doing, or what youâre trying to do, but she doesnât voice it. Instead, she just shifts to lean backwards in her own chair, sighing as if relaxing.
âHmm, so she can visit.â Gwen says, nodding her head as if itâs all making sense now.
âShe can, she just doesnât want to. Neither does Georgie.â You respond, and find satisfaction in the way her eyes flash at the mention of her little brother, the nickname that the two of you both used to call him. She recovers quickly, but you can tell that she knows it wasnât quick enough. The Green Goblin cracked, right in front of your very eyes. Itâs proof that, if anything, her little brother has some meaning. âHe wanted me to tell you something.â
Her head tilts across from you, though she doesnât move from her laid back position.
You clear your throat, and look at the words youâd written on your skin. She tilts her head forwards the slightest amount, and you shift uncomfortably in your seat, glancing at the guards who look just as uncomfortable as you feel. âHe said that he misses his Gwenny, but he doesnât want you coming home.â You stare at her as you repeat his message, the one he had told you nervously, as if he was truly afraid that Gwen would escape and come back. Her eyes twitch as she focuses on keeping her expression cool, but you know that the words have hit something in her, even if itâs part of the Green Goblin. âLooks like you even ruined your own family.â
Youâre up on your feet as she lurches forwards, flung backward from where she tried to go against her chains to rush toward you. The guards are in front of you in mere moments, but you werenât in any danger. Not as long as she stayed in here.
Itâs almost satisfying, to see her chained up. Itâs so different to seeing the Green Goblin on the outside, where she could be your Gwen Stacy. Whereas in here, bound by chains of heavy metal, clothed in uncomfortable looking prisoner scrubs, she was nothing but the Green Goblin. It was reassuring, almost, to be able to pick apart something physical between the two.
She bares her teeth at you, animalistic in a way that Gwen never was, and glares at you as you follow one of the guards out of the room, the others closing in on her, ready to take her back to whatever cell she came from.
The clothes you wear become less overbearing as you keep your focus on the guards taking Gwen away the whole way back through security, only switching back to your surroundings when they hand you the tray of your own belongings to change back into. Youâre relieved for many reasons, and you try to focus on that feeling as you approach Mrs. Stacyâs car rather than the way your jacket itches.
Mrs. Stacy looks as if she wants to speak as you get in the car, as if she wants to ask about your visit, but she seemingly canât bring herself to do it. You keep your mouth shut.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
Not a month later, your daily activities are back to normal, uninhibited by the daunting idea of Gwen being free. Still, though, you think about her more often, as much as you did in the time after she was put away the first time.
Mrs. Stacy had tried to call you more than once since, and at the two week mark youâd had to invest in a new burner phone. You just couldnât risk anybody getting a hold of it and seeing her contact, or the ringer going off and exposing your position in a fight. No, it was better for her not to have your number. Besides, you had hers memorised if you needed to call her.
It was better if you tried to reduce any connections to Gwen Stacy. Youâd be much better off, the less you thought about her.
Despite knowing that, you couldnât help it. And despite seeing that crack in the Green Goblin exterior at her little brotherâs words, you didnât have much hope for her. You donât think theyâd let her out of prison even if you could find a cure, somehow. The fact of it was that Gwen Stacyâs life was over. She had no hope of a future in this world, the Goblin had destroyed that. All you could do was remember her and hope beyond anything that in one of those alternate dimensions, you and Gwen were happy together.
The thought of it played on your mind every day, a lingering pain that stung at your eyes. You thought about it so much that you had even imagined the world where Gwen had never become the Goblin, where you and your Gwen were happy. It was a suffocating image, one without any hope of being true, but you couldnât help thinking about it.
Even as you fought villain after villain, petty criminal after petty criminal, you thought about it. Even now, as you were swinging around a bridge, dodging all the debris this villain was throwing your way, it played on your mind.
It was a distraction, and it was one you needed to get rid of.
That much became certain as the villain you were facing, Tombstone, managed to get a hit on you, sending you flying across the bridge. You landed on a car with a groan, the windshield cracking below you, and you rolled your eyes as the person in the car held a hand on their horn until you managed to climb off, a distinct Arachnid-shaped dent left in the bonnet.
Well, that would be aching tomorrow, that much was for sure.
He grinned where he was stood across the bridge from you, showing off his filed teeth, as if trying to intimidate you with the pointy edges of them.
âYouâve been a formidable foe, Arachnid,â Tombstone says, his voice barely a whisper above the wind, but you can hear him perfectly. You suspect he knows as much, and that only makes you nervous. âBut I think itâs time for our battle to come to an end.â
âI actually agree.â You respond, stretching your aching back and feeling a bone shift when it definitely shouldnât. You canât help but wince, gritting your teeth and glaring over at Tombstone across the bridge.
Youâre getting tired of these villains, of their constant spiel about how the world should be, about how everything should be how they wanted it to be. What was so wrong with the human population that everybody couldnât just get along? Surely, if everybody got along, listened to each other, the worldâs problems would be solved. But then again, this is New York, and itâs a city in which greed is bred.
A light press against your webshooter has you slinging high up on the bridge, staring down at Tombstone as he watches you intently. Youâre planning your next move, considering all the variables, when a burst of orange manifests into the air behind him. He looks confused as you falter in your web slinging, dropping slightly before you catch yourself, and he turns around just in time to receive a curled fist to the face, courtesy of a familiar man in a red and blue suit.
âYouâve gotta be kidding me.â You murmur, lowering yourself to the bridge to approach this Spiderman, glaring at where Tombstone stands, straining against a red barrier that had materialised from the device Spiderman had placed at his feet.
âI hate that guy!â The familiar voice of Peter B. Parker says, shaking his fist as he hops slightly from one foot to the other, his lenses squinted before he finally turns to acknowledge you. âThat guy sucks.â
Your brows are furrowed, eyes squinted behind your lenses as you stare at Peter, confused. This Tombstone guy isnât an anomaly, is he? While you hadnât faced him before, you knew that there had been a battle between him and another vigilante down in Hellâs Kitchen. And he knew your name, hadnât been calling you Spiderman like the last anomaly. So why was he here?
Peter sighed, as if he was disappointed to be met with your confusion. âYou got a place, kid? Or a burger joint, maybe?â
With that same amount of confusion, you nodded, brows furrowed as cops came to collect Tombstone, who was still in a fit of rage. You can just barely hear him swearing to get you back, both of you, through the barrier. Peter gestured a hand forwards for you to lead the way, and with slight hesitation, you swung off with him following.
Now, the two of you are sat in a Shake Shack, despite you wanting to head back to the offices you were set up in. Peter had ordered two burgers, one for you and one for him, though you had decidedly rejected the one he pushed towards you. He had only shrugged, and accepted it onto his own plate.
âMy wifeâs pregnant, canât even stand the smell of these.â Peter groans, stuffing what mustâve been at least a quarter of the burger in his mouth. You just nod at his statement, though you had to admit you were slightly surprised that this guy was going to be a dad. But then again, youâre pretty sure you can remember your dad scoffing down his favourite food in a similar way. âNow listen,â He continues, speaking with his mouthful and paying you no mind as you cringe at the sound. âMiguel wants to strike a sort of⊠deal with you.â
âOkay?â You respond, brows furrowed. You look around the place, uncomfortable with all the people staring at Arachnid in a booth beside an old man stuffing his face. The lenses of your mask squint with you as you look at Peter, waiting for him to add anything on to explain his statement. âThen whyâd he send you?â You ask, at last, when Peter makes no move to speak of his own free will, too engrossed in his second burger.
Peter held up a finger, gulping down a sip of his strawberry milkshake. âSaid something about this being good practice for me,â Peter eventually answers, flashing you a smile. âYou know, being a new dad and all.â
He seems to realise quickly that that was the wrong thing to say as your eyes narrow further, visible only through the shift of your lenses. The last thing you need is some random guy trying to father you. Even just the idea of it irritates you, makes the very blood rushing in your veins feel hot with anger. You had a dad, and look what good that did you. Heâs gone.
Not to mention the implication of you being a child! Youâre far from being a kid. Youâve been looking after yourself for some time now just fine. Whatever deal Miguel wants to strike with you is because they need you. Not the other way around. You knew that you shouldnât have let that Spider-doctor fix you up.
âIâm not some kid. I donât need you lot, you need me. Donât get it all twisted, Peter.â You respond as he continues to look like a deer in headlights, clearly kicking himself for revealing what Miguel had said. You keep your voice low, fighting to stay unheard with the quietened air in the diner. âNow hurry up and tell me about whatever bullshit deal you want to strike with me, so I can say no and we can go our separate ways.â
âKid,â Peter sighs, before immediately wincing as he realised he just directly disregarded your statement about not being a kid. âSorry, Arachnid,â He corrects, settling his hands on the table in front of him, finally taking a break from his almost-finished food. âNobodyâs saying you canât do this.â
âSounds like thatâs exactly what youâre saying.â You mutter, averting your eyes from Peter and instead narrowing your lenses at the people still staring in your direction.
âAll weâre saying is that you shouldnât have to do this alone,â He continues, ignoring your interruption with nothing but a quirked brow. âItâs a tough job. Everybody needs someone to look out for them, you know? Itâs in our nature to feel responsible for everything around us, as Spider-people. But you canât carry the whole weight of the world on your shoulders, itâs too much!â
You stare blankly at him, remaining unimpressed with his whole speech.
Peter sighs once more, looking at you with hesitant hope that youâll come around. Unfortunately, youâre not about to let these people think that youâre incapable. If anything, Peterâs little speech was just adding fuel to your fire. You liked proving people wrong â itâs what you thrived on. You needed to prove them wrong. Because if you didnât, what did that make you? You couldnât let people be right about their assumptions of you. If you couldnât prove everybody wrong, then that meant some of the things people said about you were right. And with the amount of people who accused you of being responsible for more deaths than you saved, who portrayed you as a menace rather than a vigilante, who said you werenât worthy of your powers, who said whatever divine intervention had given them to you was wrong, you couldnât let them be right. You wouldnât.
âI already told you people. Iâm not interested.â You spit out at him, feeling your frustration brimming over the edge. Why would nobody just trust you? Was that so much to ask? You understand that you had made mistakes, that you had cost people their lives, but you were trying. Why couldnât that just be enough?
Peter says nothing as you slide out of the booth, stomping your way out of the Shake Shack as if you were some kind of grumpy teenager. He could only hope that his unborn child was a less grumpy teen, but then again, he was pretty sure you had every right to be miserable. Correcting himself, he could only hope that his unborn child never experienced your reasons for being so miserable.
You make your way towards your office building, swinging through the streets whilst doing your best to keep your heightened hearing down. You really didnât want to have to deal with anything else, tonight. All you wanted was to get back, to put on the only clothes other than your suit that didnât make you want to crawl out of your skin. Even if it was just for an hour, youâd take it.
While you had gotten used to how quiet it was in the building a long time ago, you couldnât help but think that tonight, it felt almost⊠eerie. There was something tingling, buzzing at the very base of your skull, but even as you strained your hearing, your sight, everything, you couldnât detect anything out of place. Everything seemed normal, so you couldnât understand why you were so on edge! It couldnât just be Peterâs presence, surely, because he posed no threat to you. So what was going on?
Picking up your backpack filled with belongings, you stared around at the empty office, the breeze that flowed through the open window sending a shiver down your spine, even though you werenât feeling cold. Something wasnât right. You just couldnât figure out what it was.
âHello? Anybody there?â You call out, straining your hearing once more, trying to listen out for even the slightest sound. A movement, a breath, anything, even as you couldnât help but think that this was the most clichĂ© horror movie like moment that you had experienced to date. Still, you heard nothing, but that nagging feeling didnât dissipate, and you quickly lost all desire to change out of your suit.
The unease you felt only grew stronger as you stood there, unsure what to make of the feeling. It was quickly growing towards being overwhelming, but you didnât know what to do.
Luckily for you, you didnât have to make a decision.
Unfortunately, the decision was made by one of the very people you were trying to prove yourself to.
Peter B. Parker â or at least, you were pretty sure it was him â swung through the very same window you had, only to grasp a hold on your arm and pull you out of the window as he jumped straight back out of it.
Now, you had been Arachnid for a long time now. You had gotten used to the swinging, to the way your stomach dipped and your throat tightened, but you had never experienced it where you werenât the one in control. Finally, you understand why people you brought to safety had, on occasion, thrown up immediately after you set them down on their feet again. The feeling of falling, of having no choice but to trust somebody else to catch you, it was terrifying.
But what was infinitely more terrifying was the way that the very floor of the building you had just been stood on exploded.
The blaze was blinding, even with your lenses protecting your eyes, but the noise that came moments later was much, much worse. And sure, you had been around explosions before, but never one that big, never so close. And never so unprepared for one.
Your ears were ringing, and you vaguely realised that you had become dead weight in your shock, with Peter struggling to keep his grasp on your arm firm. After a moment, you had the sense to grab his forearm in return, trying to assist him in holding you up. He didnât seem as effected by the explosion in comparison to you, and you wondered if heâd had the time to put earbuds in his ears as you had sometimes done before a fight. Either way, you were insanely envious as the pain in your ears increased, leaving you struggling to focus on holding on to Peter.
When he set you down, which couldnât have been more than a minute after he had grabbed you, considering you could still see the office building smouldering, you had to hold a hand over your mouth even over your mask, trying to rid yourself of nausea. Smoke was leaking into the darkening sky, and you saw the flash of sirens below, but heard nothing other than the distinctive ringing that felt like it was melting your brain.
Peterâs hand was squeezing your shoulder, and after a moment in which you didnât acknowledge him, he was gripping your other shoulder with his spare hand, shaking you the slightest bit. You looked up at him with a groan, squinting past the floating lights in your vision to see that his mouth was moving, no sound coming out. You shook your head, trying to get rid of that incessant ringing, but it didnât work. You dropped your chin to your chest again, hands bracing against your ears as if they could ease your pain, and you didnât make a move as Peter removed one hand from your shoulder.
Mere moments later, the same tingling you had felt before the building you were in exploded returned, stronger, more intensely. Your head snapped up, frantically looking around, paying Peter no mind as he spoke into the orange-glowing watch on his wrist. You breathed through your nose, trying not to cough at the smoke permeating the air, and you just managed to push Peter over the edge of the roof of the building, with you diving after him, as another explosive went off.
That explosion was smaller than the last one, and the only reason you had managed to avoid it was because you knew it was coming. You knew what the alarm bells in your head were trying to tell you now, and you spotted the projectile just seconds before it reached your feet.
Part of you was glad that your senses were dulled from the first explosion â your hearing, especially, as it meant you were less effected by the close-range on this one. You saw Peterâs eyes widen as he looked up above you at where the explosion had just occurred. You just about managed to web him before shooting a web towards the next building, feeling something in your shoulder pull sharply with his extra weight and the suddenness of the move.
You squinted down at him as he gripped the web attached to his chest with one hand, his lips moving more frantically as he spoke to a hologram projected by the watch on his other hand.
âShit, what is going on?â You asked, though mostly to yourself, but the only way you could tell you had even voiced the words was by the way they rumbled out of your throat. That explosion had messed up your hearing, for the moment, anyway, and you quickly realised that with your slow healing and the ringing in your ears, this fight was going to be majorly difficult.
You only had a moment to think that, before something snapped the web that was holding you to the building, sending both you and Peter falling through the air. Embarrassingly, youâre pretty sure that you let out a yell of some sort.
All the air was knocked out of you the next second as something hurtled into you, sending you careening towards the windows of the closest building. Peter, for a moment, had a shocked expression on his face, before he seemingly realised what was going on, smiling and letting out a string of words that you didnât hear. You groaned as your sore back collided with the window, smashing upon your impact, and you were sent sprawling over a desk, a monitor breaking underneath your sudden weight.
Yet again, there was a hand against your shoulder, and you paid it no mind as your head dropped back, thudding against the desk. You couldnât help but groan, the duress that your back had been under today was certainly taking its toll, leaving your whole spine throbbing with pain. On top of that, you were struggling to catch your breath, and with the sudden adrenaline provided by the spider-sense fading, the intensity of the pain in your ears was increasing.
Finally, you managed to peel your eyes open to see a concerned Peter B. Parker looking at you, with Miguel OâHara stood beside the shattered window, staring out menacingly, as if daring whoever it was to attack again. Peter said something else, squeezing your shoulder, and all you could do in response was hold up one thumb.
Miguel seemingly barked out an order over his shoulder, and a moment later, you were squinting against the bright orange light of a portal.
Peter was hauling you to your feet, leaning to hold one of your arms over his shoulder, practically carrying your weight towards the portal looming ahead. âNo, no, wait,â You said, and you felt the way your words slurred as you became slightly delirious with a mixture of pain, adrenaline, and desperation. âStop, I gottaââ
He only shook his head, before tipping the two of you forward until you both fell into the portal.
The dizzying feeling of inter-dimensional travel definitely didnât help the pounding in your temples, nor the nausea you had previously been feeling, and you had no choice but to try and focus on Peterâs grip on you as you squeezed your eyes shut. When the world finally stopped spinning, or feeling like it was falling away around you, you opened your eyes just enough to take note of where you were â which was back in the Infirmary of the Spider Society HQ.
You shook Peter off, standing on your own weight and waving him away when he tried to assist you as you swayed once more. You glared, eyes narrowed, and turned to head straight back through the portal you had come from, only to see it close before your very eyes.
The same Spider-Doctor from the last time you were here snapped a band around your wrist, and you squinted down at the red and blue band. It made you feel lighter, even slightly, which felt good on your aching bones and muscles. You opened your mouth to speak as the Spider-Doctor led you to sit down on an empty bed with white sheets, but you vaguely saw the way his mask shifted as he presumably spoke. You couldnât tell what he was saying with his mask on, but a minute later, you felt a sharp prick against the inside of your elbow.
You just about had the lucidity to murmur âYou fuckerââ before you succumbed to the weight of your eyelids.
âââ§âââââ âââââ âââââ ââââââ§ââ
When you woke up, it was to a throbbing pain in your forehead, that only got worse when you tried to open your eyes. At the very least, you were glad to have your hearing returned to you, albeit slightly muffled, which you were only aware of because the sound of voices across the room was the reason for you waking.
âIâm just saying, maybe knocking the kid out wasnât the greatest idea!â Peter B. Parkerâs annoyingly loud voice says, slightly high pitched in the end. Who he was saying it to, however, you couldnât say, not without opening your eyes. And that didnât feel like a good idea, the lights even with your eyes closed feeling like too much.
Instead, you just groan, bringing your hand up to rest over both of your eyes. âIt wasnât a great idea.â You say through gritted teeth, more than annoyed over the situation you found yourself in. Honestly, what did these people have against leaving you be? Why did they think they had any right to tell you what to do, or how to handle things, or to overrule you when it came to your own treatment?
âHey, kid!â Peter responds, drawing the letters out in that typical oh shit voice. From the snippet of the conversation you had caught, at least he was seemingly trying to advocate for your consciousness. However, that didnât change the fact that he was there when that Spider-Doctor knocked you out. No, you were still pissed. And when you got your hands on that doctor? He was in for it.
Any other thoughts or feelings on the matter were overturned when you realised that your hand was resting over your eyes, not the lenses of your mask.
Who do these people think they are?
You open your mouth to jump into a rant on that exact subject, on the audacity that they all have, but find yourself silenced by somebody grabbing onto your free wrist, and seemingly dropping your mask into your hand. You feel it until youâve got it the right way around, and then pull it over your face.
The lights are much more bearable with your lenses back over your eyes, but itâs still painful, and still worsens that pounding in your head. But it does mean that you can see whoâs around you; Peter, Miguel and the Spider-Doctor. You have half the mind to leap at that doctor, but Miguel is raising placating hands in your direction before you can make the move to do so.
âLetâs all calm down.â Miguel says, placing his hands on his hips when your eyes only narrow at him.
âWhat is wrong with you? Who gave you people the right toâto take off my mask? To knock me out? Hell, to come to my universe and get in my business!â You practically yell out, swinging your legs over the side of the bed, ignoring the way your back hurts with the movement and glaring when the three of them step forward to help you.
âIf Peter hadnât gotten there when he did, you wouldâve died.â Miguel responds plainly, seemingly aggravated by your irritation. One of his arms is raised in a gesture towards the man, who smiles almost guiltily, as if helping you was a crime. Which, in your mindset, it might as well have been. âThere was an anomaly, a villain from another dimension targeting you.â
âI can handle myself.â You spit out, though the way the room spins when you stand is almost a direct contrast to your words. Your blood is rushing through your veins, and you realise that thereâs a machine beeping next to you, increasing in frequency. As you look, you realise itâs measuring your heart rate, and you yank wires off of you that you hadnât even noticed before, as if they were exposing you somehow. âAnd that doesnât give you the right to take off my mask. Who does that?â
Spider-Doctor raises his hands, as if surrendering, though seems unintimidated by the way your glare switches to him. âIt was necessary. Your hearing was severely damaged by the explosion, you needed treatment. You have dampening-buds in your ears now, while your healing catches up.â While that sounds reasonable, it only makes you angrier. Why did these people even care if some anomaly killed you? If your hearing was damaged? Why did they insist on bothering you?
Miguel sighs, pinching his nose, before he lifts his head up to speak to you again. You just about stop yourself from making a snotty comment about his attitude. You didn't even want to be here, and here he was, acting like dealing with you was such an inconvenience to him. It was frustrating. âYour universe seems to be at some sort of epicentre of anomalies, and we donât know why. Yet.â
âWeâre just trying to keep you safe. You canât deal with all of those anomalies alone, nobody can. Sometimes, you need a team.â Peter says softly, like he could convince you of the matter. âBelieve me, you donât want to learn that the hard way.â He adds on, smiling almost hesitantly, as if thereâs a memory heâs thinking of connected to his own words.
Youâre sighing through your nose, your teeth gritting together as you regard them. âOkay, fine, you want to come take out your anomalies, or whatever? You do that. But anything more than that isnât welcome.â You say, at last, your eyes narrowed towards them as you wait for their responses.
You still donât really understand it, any of it, but itâs becoming clear that you have no choice but to deal with these people. Apparently, they were not budging on all of this stuff, which â fine, so long as they stay out of your way. The last thing you need is a bunch of Spider-people stepping on your toes, or making you seem incapable in front of the citizens of your own dimension when in the end, theyâll all up and leave.
After all, you can remember your mother telling you how important it is to do things yourself. The moment you start accepting help, you relax, and when they decide they donât want to help you anymore? Youâre screwed, your sense of independence reduced to ashes. And as Arachnid, thereâs far too much at stake to risk that happening.
âHere,â Miguel says, only nodding his agreement â or at least, thatâs what you assume the nod was for. He throws a watch towards you, and you catch it with some confusion. âIn case you see any anomalies before we do.â He explains as he watches you fiddle witht he watch in both hands, glaring down at it as if it was offensive. Heâs relatively satisfied when you relax at that explanation. While Miguel doesnât voice what else itâs for, knowing youâd only get irritated and refuse the watch, heâs silently hoping that youâll understand. Itâs so you can come to them, if you need them. They can only hope that theyâll be able to tell you that, one day, before itâs too late, without the offer scaring you off.
âSo, Iâm good to go?â You ask, looking between the three Spider-Men still staring at you and the watch you hesitantly clasp around your wrist. They nod, or, Peter and Miguel do, while the Spider-Doctor throws his hands in the air, exasperated.
âThat dimension is yours,â Peter says, leaning over to see the screen of your watch. âThe button at the bottom will input this dimension as the destination. Just press that,â He points to another button, âTo open the portal to whichever dimension has been typed in.â
You nod, still pissed that heâd let the Spider-Doctor knock you out, but at least you didnât give him a snarky comment. Instead, you just pressed the button to go back to your own dimension, and stepped through the portal the moment it was big enough for you to go through.
You didnât expect for him to follow you through.
âHey, listen,â Peter says, almost reluctantly, as if he doesnât want to upset you. When you turn to him, he raises his hands, as if to further prove that sentiment. âI am sorry that he knocked you out, I didnât know he was going to do that.â
âOkay, fine, apology accepted.â You say, flatly, turning to survey where exactly you are. It doesnât take you long to notice the remains of the building you had been camping out in, the building charred and the air still thick with all the smoke that had been produced.
âI wasnât done,â Peter sighs, pinching at the bridge of his nose momentarily. âI also wanted to say that Iâm sorry about your building. And I wanted to ask, well, mention about how when Doctor-Peter took off your mask, he noticed you donât have anything protecting your ears, like other Spiders with your level of enhanced hearing do.â
You turn to stare blankly at him, while mulling through where exactly youâre going to stay in your head. If youâre being honest, youâre not paying his words much mind. So what, you donât have anything protecting your hearing? Sure, sometimes you had stuffed earbuds into your ears when you knew you were going into a rough fight, but you didnât know when some psycho exploded your building right in front of you. Plus, itâs not like you have unlimited resources to figure out some way of protected your ears under your mask while also letting you effectively use your hearing.
âOkay? And?â You ask, voice edging on the side of boredom. In all honesty, you just want to be left alone. You want to put on your comfy clothes, curl up into a ball and go to sleep so you can dream of a world where everything is okay. The likelihood of that happening is small, but not impossible, right?
âWell,â Peter hesitates then, which piques your interest the slightest bit. âHere, I had these made back when my hearing was crazy sensitive, but itâs not anymore, so I got no use for them!â He says, holding out two blue and red earbuds in a clear case. âYou gotta wait until your ears are healed up to use âem, but I figured theyâd do you more good than me.â
For a moment, youâre ready to deny him. To glare and insist that you donât need his help. But then, he had said that they were originally for him, and he didnât need them any longer, so really, would it be so bad to take them? To accept this one thing? To allow yourself to be saved of this tiniest bit of pain?
âYouâre sure?â You ask, likely the least aggressive youâd spoken to him, though thatâs not to say that it was asked softly. You were still firm on not accepting their help, on doing your own thing, but you could accept this much, surely? It couldnât hurt.
Peter smiles, a short laugh leaving him, and he waves the box towards you. âIâm sure!â
ââŠThanks.â You say, shortly, as you accept the earbuds offered to you. He also hands you the backpack that you had lost track of after the attack, and you accept that far more quickly. Youâre glad that it feels the exact same weight as it did the last time you held it, before you shove the earbuds into the opening and zip it back up.
Thereâs a portal still open on the rooftop the two of you stand on, and Peter backs up to go towards it almost reluctantly. âAlso, if you need somewhere to stayââ
âDonât push it,â You respond, quickly, cutting him off before he could finish what he was saying. He doesnât take offence to your abruptness, and smiles with a nod, before he disappears into the portal. You stare out at the city around you, looking in the direction of another building you had been very reluctant to return to. âWhat is my life?â You ask yourself, rhetorically, because you donât know how youâd even answer that.
You glance behind you to ensure the portal is closed, before jumping off the rooftop, freefalling, relishing in the way the cold wind soothes the pain in your back. Before long, though, you have to shoot a web to catch yourself. You head towards the only place you know will be suitable for you, but canât shake the way the thought of it chills you.
All you can do is hope that this multiverse stuff will be over with, and soon.
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