#just feed onto your meals in the shiny dishes without questions if you wish for the feasts to continue..
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taking the fall (3)
warnings: imprisonment, interrogation, injury, mild blood, panic and sensory overload, dehumanizing language, ambiguous motives, morally neutral/antagonistic janus, snakes mention
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His guest wasnât eating.
Janus cast an irritated glance over to the terrarium, where the only âlifeâ that could be seen was a clump of thick foliage in one corner.
Heâd left the old fake plants in there as a taunt, but as soon as the tiny creature had ascertained that there were no snakes in the grass, theyâd immediately bundled every bit of shiny plastic greenery into a makeshift nest and hid within it. He supposed he should have expected it, from one as industrious as these tiny folk all seemed to be.
Regardless of his guestâs reticence, heâd been setting small dishes of food in there whenever he himself took his meals, giving them some time to adjust to the reality of their situation. It had been a couple of days, however, and every miniature entree looked entirely untouched.
His prisoner seemed to be on a hunger strike.
It added more evidence to his theory that he was being misled in regards to his guestâs identity. If they were actually a victim in all this, why bother keeping quiet and refusing to give the answers Janus needed? Why go so far as to not even eat, for people who allegedly wouldnât care if he lived or died?
No, things made much more sense if this was a gambit on the tiny peopleâs part, one of them volunteering to stay and play sacrificial lamb, distracting him for as long as the others needed. Their terror, their injury, their tiny bitter laugh, it could all be part of a ploy for pity on his end. Get him too invested in a puzzling prisoner while the others escaped.
The thought made his stomach drop unpleasantly. His opponents were exceedingly small, and he was one of the few who knew they existed. If they got away, heâd never see them again.
He couldnât afford that.
Pushing his chair back, he approached the terrarium, casting an assessing eye over the food set out in it. Some of it could sit out, and had been there overnight, the best time for his guest to eat without risking even seeing Janus. But no. Not a single crumb out of place to indicate that anything had been eaten.
âStill alive?â he asked dryly, rapping a knuckle on the glass once.
There was a long pause, and then one of the leafy stems sticking out from the nest twitched twice. This daily question and response was the only communication heâd had with his guest since that first afternoon, and even this small, silent answer had originally been prompted by a threat of Janus reaching in there and checking himself.
âI notice that youâve been refusing any sustenance,â he continued idly, and got nothing for his efforts. âPlanning to die before you can give up any secrets?â
No response. Janus sighed as though put upon, and slid the terrarium lid halfway off. There were still no meaningful movements from the nest, though it seemed to be subtly trembling. It was impressive that despite the dark clothing that his guest wore, he still couldnât make out exactly where they were even this close.
With narrowed eyes, he reached in and grabbed a few of the plastic leaves, tugging to pull the construction apart bit by bit.
He only caught the faintest flicker of movement before there was a sudden sharp pain in his index finger, and he yanked his hand back on reflex.
A weight came up with it, putting even more pressure on his wound, and it dropped as soon as his hand was just above the terrarium lid.
Seeing the dark shape attempting to scramble away, his other hand smacked down on top of it automatically, pressing it into the mesh with a small, muffled cry.
He glanced at his hand. There was a plastic thorn hooked in his thumb, the broad end chewed off and the point of it sharpened. His guest had attacked and used him as a makeshift lift in their escape attempt.
âOh,â he intoned, voice dark. âSeems like you have plenty of energy after all, hm?â
---
Virgil took in short, gasping breaths, barely able to hear whatever threatening thing the human was muttering as pain radiated through his leg.
It let up just slightly as the pressure of the hand on top of him eased, his face no longer pressed into the cold wire netting of the cageâs top. Before he could try and string two thoughts together, the fingers were curling around him like a hawkâs talons, lifting him up and sending another jolt of mind-numbing pain through him. He might have whimpered.
So much for that escape attempt. Heâd known it was a long shot, but his options had been limited after realizing that he literally couldnât stand on the injured leg any more. Theyâd dwindled further with every day he couldnât bring himself to crawl over to any food or water. Living outside, heâd survived on very little before, but it was a gamble every time.
He was flipped to face the light, the humanâs head in silhouette above him. He couldn't make out itâs words. Everything felt overwhelming, made incomprehensible by the pain and the dark spots in his vision. His face felt hot. Was he bleeding?
Things went blissfully quiet above him, and then he was being moved. He wondered if the human was about to kill him, and the thought sent a much weaker pulse of panic down his spine than usual. He hoped it killed borrowers before feeding them to itâs snakes.
Something soft and dark dropped over him, and he thrashed for a moment before his leg reminded him how awful an idea that was. So he laid still instead, letting his terror shake through him in waves, until he wasnât completely lost to it anymore.
Slowly, he lifted a hand, feeling at what was draped over him. Cloth, soft in texture and tightly-knit enough that not much light got through. Below him⊠a warm, living surface.
âAwake?â the human said, voice both closer and quieter than heâd ever heard it.
Another shudder worked through him, and he reached up to press his hands over his face, wishing none of this was real. His eye pigment had run, drying in tracks down his cheeks.
He wouldnât be able to reapply it. The locket he stored it in was left behind with the rest of his stuff, tucked away into his oversized pack and left at the opening into the humanâs home. It had probably already been torn through and picked apart by Mari and the other insiders.
The thought stung, somehow more personal than the nightmare of the situation he was already in.
âI believe I see now why you havenât eaten,â the human continued with a surprising lack of snark. It must have seen his leg. He felt a little sick just thinking about it.
What had felt like a low-grade fracture through the adrenaline had ended up growing worse and worse without treatment, until the injury was a solid lump of swollen flesh and ugly bruising that twanged with agony at even the slightest shifts. He wondered if the human was going to use it against him. It would make torture exceedingly easy on its part.
âContinue with the silent treatment, and you wonât get any actual treatment,â it said, now sounding exasperated.
After another stretch of silence, the hand beneath him moved and tilted, sliding him off onto a flat surface. Suddenly desperate to know what was going on, Virgil yanked at the cloth, dragging handfuls of it down until he reached an edge and could pull it clear of his eyes.
The light in this room was dimmer, but it still took him a moment to adjust. He wasnât in a snake tank, but on top of a low table in what looked like a sitting room, if he remembered the human terms right. The human was seated on the couch nearby, looking down at him.
âThere you are.â
---
The tiny person shot him a furious glare, rendered mostly ineffective by the dark tear streaks that were still smudged along their face.
Janus wished his earlier reflexes had been a little gentler. Heâd had a quite embarrassing moment of panic where heâd thought the grotesque worsening of their leg injury had been caused by his grasp, rather than simple neglect and lack of treatment.
Despite his patience, they didnât reply, continuing to just stare at him. He stood, ignoring the way it instantly made them begin trembling again.
âIâll be back in a moment. Feel free to move around and make your injury worse,â he instructed dryly, before turning and going to grab the first aid kit from the bathroom.
His thumb was still sensitive, the injury messily scabbed over with dried blood. Heâd pried the thorn out with his teeth easily enough, but with his other hand occupied by a prone tiny person and their hyperventilation fit, he couldnât properly treat it.
Upon his return, he saw his guest had abandoned his handkerchief and was halfway to the edge of the table. He rolled his eyes, and set the kit down before grabbing them by the shoulders and sliding them back over to the handkerchief.
âI was being sarcastic, you know,â he told them, and opened the kit to start cleaning his undersized injury. âIâll be very unhappy if my only source of information dies a completely avoidable death for no reason.â
âYeah, because I sure wouldnât want to make you unhappy,â his guest bit out, and then looked as though they were deeply and immediately regretting opening their mouth. Janus didnât know why; he personally took much better to sass than being stabbed.
âSo you do know how sarcasm works. Color me impressed.â
The tiny person actually hissed at him, like the worldâs most emo kitten.
âYes, yes, I feel very threatened,â Janus retaliated by prodding them with the edge of an open tube of arnica gel. âHere. For the bruising.â
After another long glare, his guest spoke. âWhat do you want for it?â
Janus raised an eyebrow. âCouldnât it be argued that I owe it to you, for allowing the injury to fester while youâre in my care?â
âYour care--!â his guest cut themself off, taking in a deep breath through gritted teeth. âTerrible hosting etiquette aside, you werenât the one who gave me the injury. Not your concern. So, what do you want?â
Janus wondered absently how tiny people qualified their hostsâ manners. He had certainly already failed by human standards, immediately imprisoning his guest and all, so perhaps it didnât really matter either way. He wasnât above taking advantage of a tiny personâs bartering honor system. âAnswer three questions.â
âI get to pass on questions I donât want to answer,â his guest countered quickly, apparently having expected this.
âYou get five passes,â Janus allowed. Seeing what they refused to answer would be informative in itself.
â... Fine.â With another glance at their injury, they grabbed the tube sharply enough that they almost overbalanced. âAsk.â
âWhere are the others living?â Janus asked, just to set the stakes high.
âPass,â his guest answered, not even looking up from their task. Janus rolled his eyes.
âWhy are you defending them?â he tried.
âIâm not defending them,â they shot back, vitriol thick in their voice. âI just donât want you to get what you want. Thatâs one question.â
âOuch. Iâm hurt, really.â Janus tapped his nails along the table idly. âWhatâs your name and pronouns?â
This did prompt them to look up, face pinching up in confusion. After a moment, they returned to their baseline expression of scowl and retorted, âThatâs two questions.â
âItâs one sentence, it counts as one question,â Janus lied smugly. They still looked close to passing, so he gave them a nudge. âUnless you want me to make something up? Iâm very creative, I assure you.â
âI use he,â he finally grit out, âand you can call me V.â
âFor Vendetta?â Janus mused, and received an utterly baffled look for his wit. âI suppose your movie repertoire isnât that expansive.â
âTwo questions,â V said flatly. âOne left.â
âYes, I can count.â Janus glanced at Vâs gel-covered leg. âYou have to rub that in for it to work.â
Vâs expression flickered to one of despair, but he bit his lip and started to slowly massage the gel in. Janus wondered at how easily heâd believed him.
âWhat do you call yourselves?â
âPass.â
âWhere did you live?â
âPass.â
âHow do I bait the others out?â
âPass.â
âWhy do you hate me more than the ones who allegedly put you here?â
Vâs hand slipped, and he winced and paused for a moment. â... Pass.â
There was certainly a grudge there. Too bad Janus had no idea what it could be about. Oh well.
He set a hand on the table, leaning over V. âWhen do the others plan to leave? As specific as you can get, please.â
âPa--,â V cut himself off, and Janus could see the moment he realized he had used up all his get-out-of-questioning-free cards. He patiently waited out the tiny personâs fit of frustration.
â... I donât know.â Janusâs smug grin dropped, but V continued after a speculative pause. âI donât think theyâll leave before the season's turning. The spring thaw has been slow this year, and theyâre-- not suited for it.â
Janus felt some of the tension drop from his shoulders. The start of summer. He had time, and the advantage of a weather forecast app. That was good news, even if heâd had to wrangle it out of his guest. He had time.
âHow interesting,â he said lightly, and capped the gel to put it back in the box. Vâs hands were clutching the edge of his coat tightly, as though guilty or angry. Or perhaps just stressed. âLetâs get some food in actual range of you, then, shall we?â
#sanders sides#ts virgil#ts janus#g/t#taking the fall#ttf#my writing#writing#borrowers#mind the warnings
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good heart
Movie/Game/Show: The Devil All the Time Dynamic: Arvin Russell/Reader Warnings: use of the daddy word but itâs purely platonic, sacrilege, post-canon, proofread but i am illiterate, fem pronouns Summary: Arvin knows he wants more, but he wonât let himself run for it. ~~~
Arvin slides onto the nearest stool he can find at the counter without looking around too much, peeling off his hat and holding it tight to the shiny surface with both fists. He keeps his head low and waits for a waitress to approach him.
âYou want anything or you just getting out of the sun?â a voice teases from behind the counter.
His head lifts and he offers a fracture of a polite smile and nod, âJust a black coffee, maâam. Please.â
ââMaâamââ you repeat as you write down the order, âYouâre awful formal, donât you think?â
âSorry, maâam.â
âOh, no, you donât gotta apologize for anything,â you awkwardly offer a smile, âI just tease sometimes, sorry âbout that.â
âNow, how many times have I told you to stop that,â an older man chides from the kitchen, âBring that poor boyâs order over and stop messinâ with people.â
âSorry, daddy,â you mutter, turning to hand over the ticket with Arvinâs measly order.
The man takes the paper and squints to read it, shaking his head before turning to the brunette boy at the counter, âSorry âbout her. Gets bored around here.â
Arvin finally glances around the whole room and sees that the diner is empty of customers except for him.
He shakes his head and gives a slight grin, âDonât worry none, sir. Just a rough few days, is all - nothinâ wrong with your daughter havinâ fun.â
Heâs waved off by the older man and you soon return to Arvinâs front with a bounce in your step at his words, âThanks for backinâ me up, stranger.â
âJust the truth,â Arvin murmurs, looking around the barren diner once again, âSlow day, huh?â
He internally cringes at the awkward starter but resolves to let it slide when you light up at the branch.
âYeah, itâs Sunday service hours, ya know. Donât get too many people willing to skip a meetinâ with the Lord for scrambled eggs and coffee.â
Lenora and Emma would be at service by now. Lenora would be praying with her neighbors and family by now. She loved services.
A bell dings before Arvin can claw out a subpar response and youâre making a trip to the little window between the kitchen and sitting area before carrying back a breakfast of toast, eggs, and coffee.
âOh, I canât- â
âOn the house,â you wink, pushing the plate towards Arvin, âDonât gotta eat it if you donât want, but Daddy likes makinâ the effort to feed people,â leaning over and whispering so your father canât hear, you let him in on a secret, âHe looks mean but heâs got a real soft spot for people like you.â
He quirks a brow, picking up a fork to poke at his eggs, âStrays?â
You roll your eyes at the suggestion, âPeople who look like they need a good meal. Heâs old but he reads people real well. I can take it back, if you donât want it.â
âNo!â he recoils and his face sours at the volume of his own voice, âSorry.â
âDonât apologize,â you shrug, âGotten a lot worse from customers for a lot less.â
Arvin finishes off a bite of toast before asking, âPeople yell at you often?â
Again, you merely shrug, âPolite young men like you ainât exactly common around here.â
âWho could do that? You seem mighty fine,â Arvin shakes his head, âI donât know you real well, maâam, but somethinâ âbout that donât rub me the right way.â
âNot much I can do âbout it. Daddy kicks âem out fast as he can but it ainât like heâs always listeninâ out for people who donât like his daughter.â
âWhat if I could get âem out?â
âWhat? You plan on sittinâ in a slow diner just waitinâ for people to get rough with little olâ me?â
âSad as it may sound, maâam, I donât got a lot goinâ on. âSides,â Arvin shovels up more eggs on his fork, âyour daddy ainât a bad cook.â
You werenât actually expecting Arvin to come back the next day. Or the one after that. Or the one after that. Or even the week later. But he did, just like he said he would - he came back and made sure nobody gave you a hard time. He wasnât the tallest or the most muscular, but nobody could deny the intimidation Arvin could give out. He seemed like heâd seen more than most men his age. Seemed like heâd done a lot more than a lot of men his age. After a day you asked his name, he panicked and said Eugene just in case either of you knew of the sins living in Arvin Russell.
After a mere week of him coming around, your father offered him a job at the diner. Heâd take the floor while you had the counter, and if the floor wasnât busy heâd be on call for anything else needed. After a month, you asked where he was staying and found out he had nowhere to really go and he felt guilt claw at his chest that night when he wound up sleeping in your fatherâs bed with your father on the couch.
But he seemed sweet on you, calling you darlinâ in that backwoods drawl of his - offering to carry dishes when he saw you struggling. Offering to take over your position if you seemed overwhelmed. Helped your father around the diner and in the house, kept you company, kept out people who threw fits in the diner. Never made a fuss, never made himself difficult.
He didnât give out his real name until a few months into his staying. His legs bouncing under the counter with nerves and hands gripping the surface for any sort of purchase. By now he figured you and your father would have some sort of attachment to him, maybe he wouldnât have to explain his past - maybe both of you already knew. Maybe youâd turn him in. Maybe youâd understand. Maybe he could stay.
Please, Lord, let him stay.
It was after closing hours, leaving just the three of you as he spilled all the weight looming over his guilt-wracked mind. Telling you both - he wasnât born as Eugene. He was born as Arvin.
âRussell, ainât that right?â
He wants to dig himself a hole and die in it with how your father looks at him. Judging and waiting. Spying and predatory. It reminds him of those woods. It reminds him of the sheriff.
âHow many people have you told?â heâs surprised by how you reach across the table so quickly to grab his hands and hold them in your own.
âJust you twoâŠâ
âYou shot that reverend. Suspected on a sheriff. We heard about you,â your fatherâs voice is cold and he wishes he could go back by mere seconds and never tell either of you who he was.
He didnât want to go to prison. He wasnât a bad person, he had good reason. He knows he had good reason but the bodies piled up and he felt his chances at getting out of this diner in anything but handcuffs slip away. He knows any chance he had at companionship with anyone other than his own head were burnt to ash.
âWhyâd you do it?â
His attention is brought back to you at your shockingly soft tone when asking the question, he purses his lips, âItâs gonna sound like a lie, but I swear that none of those people were any good.â
âArvin,â you lean towards him slightly to make eye contact, âI wanna believe that, I do. But youâve gotta explain yourself more than that.â
He lets himself find comfort in your sincere expression for a few seconds longer before looking to your father and then back to you, âThat preacher - he, he - he hurt my sister. Real bad. She⊠she killed herself cuz aâ him. And the sheriff chased me âround after IâŠâ he shook his head, clenching his eyes shut at how ridiculous he sounded, âThey werenât no good, I promise you. I swear it.â
âArvin, whyâd you kill the sheriff?â you pat his cheek gently, âWhy was he chasinâ you? Was it over the preacher?â
âNo, I- I shot his sister. And her husband,â he opens his eyes in time to see that your father has come closer and he wishes he never opened his mouth, âThey were tryinâ to kill me. I swear it. They took me into their car, said theyâd give me a ride but they- they stopped and I saw him pull out a gun and I knew they were up to no good and I had to protect myself. I didnât wanna do it, I didnât want- I didnât want any aâ this,â he looks away from your father and back to you, tears now springing in his eyes, âI didnât wanna hurt anybody⊠I didnât wanna kill them⊠Iâm not a bad person, I swear.â
You wipe away his tears, âArvin, I wanna believe you, I do. But I also know you know this is a lot to take in, right?â you look back at your father as if silently asking where to go next.
He pulls you away from Arvin and stares down at the young man as if he could physically read whether he was lying or not. Arvin wishes he was looking at you again, he felt more comfortable when he was looking at you. He felt more comfortable with his hands in yours. He wants his hands in yours.
âIf I was you,â he begins, âIf my sister was hurt however bad yours was, I know that Iâd kill that man. If anyone did what that man did to make your sister take her own life to my sister or, God forbid, my daughter, I know that Iâd kill that man. I know that if someone tried taking me outta this world, Iâd kill them too,â he nodded to himself, weathered and wrinkled hands splaying out on the table, âIâve never killed anybody with these hands, Arvin. But if I think youâre lying for a second, they just might have to.â
âDaddy,â you pitch in over your fatherâs shoulder nervously, âwhatâre you sayinâ?â
âI believe you, Arvin. I believe youâre a good kid, I believe you wouldnât hurt someone without a damn good reason. Youâre good to us and you do good work here. I believe youâre tellinâ the truth,â he looks into the young manâs eyes, âIf you ainât, and youâre lying to me, then I hope the Lord makes you see our faces every time you close those eyes.â
âI ainât lyinâ, sir, I promise,â Arvin shakes his head, growing desperate as tears pool at his waterline, he just wants one of you to say it - just say heâs okay. Say he can stay. He can stay here with you. Say heâs okay.
He just wants to be okay.
Your father leaves wordlessly, retreating to the kitchen, lights flickering as he began the routine clean-up for the night and preparation for an early tomorrow. Arvin turns to you in the growing silence, youâre a blotchy outline with the tears gathering in his eyes.
âDâyou believe me?â
You come around the counter and reach out, taking Arvinâs head and pressing it to your chest, just over your heart. Gently removing his hat and placing it on the counter, your fingers begin carding through Arvinâs messy hair, âI believe you, Arvin. The man youâve been to me is not somebody whoâd go around hurtinâ people, I believe you.â
He swallows at the lump in his throat, eyes falling closed and hands grounding themselves in your work uniform, âThank you, darlinâ. Thank you, thank you, thank you...â
âYouâre safe here, Arvin. We wonât tell nobody, I promise.â
Your voice is more comforting to him than the thought of any eternal bliss waiting outside this life. He wants to protect it - protect you. He wants to stay.
âCan I stayâŠâ he turns his head to press his face into the cloth of your uniform as if thatâd prevent any upcoming rejection, âCan I stay, darlinâ?â
âYou can stay, Arvin,â you murmur, continuing to run your fingers through his hair, âI want you to stay.â
Arvin kept himself wound around you for as long as youâd let him hold on, and you were content enough to keep him in your arms until your father was finished with his routine in the kitchen.
âReady to head home now?â
âIâm goinâ too?â Arvin pulled away from you just enough to not muffle his reply, eyebrows furrowed, âIâm still stayinâ with you both?â
âArvin,â you cupped his cheeks to direct his eyes with yours, a small smile just peeking at your lips, âWe believe youâre good. Of course, youâre cominâ home with us. We love you, Arvin.â
Your father nodded quietly, patting the boyâs shoulder before walking past you both, âIâll start up the car, so hurry up. We got an early morninâ tomorrow.â
It was in the dead of night later on that Arvin found himself still unable to relax. His eyes wide open and fingers nervously tapping at his stomach through the comforter on what used to be your fatherâs bed. What if you both were tricking him at the diner and thereâll be a police officer out in the front lawn by morning? What if you were at the station turning him in right now and heâs actually all alone in this house?
That thought has him springing up from the bed and down the small hall to where your bedroom door is shut. He feels guilty doubting the sincerity youâd shown but his brain wonât rest and his heart refuses to calm down. He knows he could never blame you for giving him up but he needs you in his life now that he has you.
He curls around the doorknob and pushes open until heâs fully inside. He can just make out your figure in bed within the darkness, his eyes hurrying to adjust to the night.
Creeping to the side of your bed, Arvin hesitates but ultimately shakes you awake anyway, âDarlinâ?â
You hum and groan and rub your eyes until youâre fully awake with Arvin at your side, âWhatâre you doinâ up? Didnât you hear daddy? We gotta be up early tomorrow.â
âI canât sleep, I- I keep worryinâ.â
At the admission, youâre sitting up and bringing a hand over Arvinâs, ââBout what?â
âDâyou really trust me, or was that just an act back at the diner?â
âI believe you,â you make room on the bed and drag Arvin into it, coddling him to your body, âI know youâre good. Iâve known you for a long while now. Itâll take a bit to get used to, but I know youâre a good man. I love that youâre a good man.â
Youâve gotten so close to saying what he wants to hear, he could almost pretend itâs what youâd said. He could almost pretend he heard you say you love him - he likes to pretend thatâs what he heard. But he knows he doesnât deserve that love - he just needs to protect what he has now rather than strive for more.
âThank you for believinâ me, darlinâ.â
âIâll believe you âtil the end, Arvin. I know youâre good.â
He feels comforted, once again, by those words - by your words. He feels comforted by your hold and he hopes that this is a safe place to lie until his bones give out - if youâll let him. He knows what he wants is to have and hold and cherish this home youâve given him both in the form of a roof over his head and the spot between your arms but he has to remind himself that what he needs is to just protect you. At least until you decide his sinful heart is worthy of loving with yours.
#arvin russell x you#arvin russell fluff#arvin russell x reader#arvin russel x you#arvin russel x y/n#arvin russel x reader#arvin russel fic
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