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đđđ. đ'đ đđđđđđđ đđđđđ đđđ. đđđđ đđđ. đđđ
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đđđđ đđ đđđđđđđ... đđđđđđđ đđ đđđđ đđ đđđđ đđđđ đđđ.â
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The âoh I could definitely write this fanfic in under 5000 words and it really wouldnât take me that longâ voice in your head is actually the devil speaking
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i had a sixth sense that you posted some kind of brilliant writing piece, so i got on tumblr and here you are and i can't wait to read whatever beautiful masterpiece you've created đ©đđ
tbh this is at least half of my motivation to post in these trying times
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I'm so sorry to bother you, if it's convenient, can you write another Stiles x Reader exes to lovers series? I LIVED for "if I could lose you, I would" and I'm absolutely dying for more, (smut is always welcomeđ but 100% not a requirement) I shed ACTUAL tears for some of your fic your so crazy talented and this is coming from an Anhedonic so its crazy you got a reaction, like your writing is a miracle 𫹠Thank youu muah <33


stop :'( :') i live on praise alone, so thank you for the much-needed sustenance. coincidentally (or maybe not because exes to lovers might be my favorite trope for stiles) the fic i working on was another exes to lovers verse. i just posted it for your reading pleasure.
#stiles stilinksi x reader#stiles stilinski#stiles stilinksi imagine#stiles stilinksi fanfiction#dylan o'brien imagine#dylan o'brien#dylan o'brien x reader#stiles stilinski x reader#;; answered
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wishing you all the good vibes đ and very excited whenever you post anything, whether it's a fic or a brilliant snippet like the one you just released đ«đ
please please excuse my atrociously long response time. thank you so much for the sweetness and support. i got a gig writing policy for my stateâs government, and i would like to think it is entirely thanks to all the virtual good vibes đđđ
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oá„ᄎᄱ Îč'm á§oá„rs Îč'm á„Čᄣá„á„Čá§s á§oá„rs //stiles stilinski imagine characters: stiles stilinski, fem!reader, mentioned malia tate pairing(s): stiles x you word count: 4k tags: exes to ???, hurt some comfort, set in s5 warnings: some light emotional cheating, i think that's it, sad boy hours, *pats stilesâs head* this boy can fit so much trauma in here
a/n: long time no see. i've missed you my babies, and thank you so much for all the love while i was gone. i'm back with my usual overdose of angst and em dashes. i can't help it; i have a sickness. also, the timing of when stiles and malia got together is a little fudged, so they probably started dating in 4b.
Itâs an icy slice of fear that wakes you up. A white flash of âfight or flightâ behind your sleep-sticky lids. A rattling that doesnât belong to the pitter-patter of sleet or the whiplash of wind against your bedroom window. You sit up on your forearm, peek out from behind your fleece blanket, and pray until youâre nauseous that there isnât a pair of glowing eyes waiting for you on the other side of the glass.Â
The sleet leaves angry rivulets in the dirt-smudged panes. Sad little lines of streaming water, flooding in time with the choppy squallâyou canât help but think it looks like weeping.
A soft sigh falls from your mouth and stirs the stilted air in the room: No skulking eyesâŠbut a foreboding sense of unease still looms above your head like the plumes of steely clouds outside your window. They swallow every trace of starlight and shift every so often in your peripheral vision, almost like theyâre alive. Â
The rattling sounds again, soft but deafening in the darkness. Itâs a familiar sound, someone scrambling on the loose tiling of your roof, but a forgotten one. It's strange, sweet-sharp, and out of place in your current reality.
A noise that shouldnât exist outside of a memory.Â
Stiles spills into your room and lands on his knees, dripping water onto the hardwood floor. His hair is plastered to his forehead from the storm outside, and the dark clouds are a mocking reflection of the look on his face.Â
The moon has eclipsed all the sunlight in his eyes, and it feels so, so cold.
For a moment, you think youâre dreaming, or maybe youâre still stuck in that luminescent oil slick spill between sleep and consciousness. Stiles looks like something from a dreamâfrom a nightmare. Heâs a boy, but he isnât. Heâs there, but he isnât. Heâs lost to something you canât see, swept up in the storm and turned into something else.
The glow of your phone illuminates the pinch of your brow, the squint of your bleary eyes. 3:27 am. Stiles used to sneak in through your window a couple times a week, even during the day, just to avoid the parental inquisition. He still does sometimes, rarely, only when Beacon Hills is on the verge of collapsingâand it always seems to be 3 in the morning.Â
He only ever needs you at 3 in the morning now.Â
It makes you feel a little sick, the reminder that the only string tying you together now is barbed wire. Â
You sit up in your bed and wait for Stiles to say somethingâto moveâbut he doesnât. He just sits there, soaked to the bone on his knees, and stares at something beyond the shifting shadows on your bedroom walls.Â
âStiles?âÂ
Stiles doesnât reply. Doesnât even make a sound.Â
You crawl out of your bed and sit down on the floor next to him, draping a woven blanket over his shoulders. It almost matches his flannel, blue and checkered. Itâs a little thing that wouldâve made you smile before, mostly because Stiles would get this warm look in his eyes when you did: so fond it felt like worship.Â
Itâs fall. The air smells like apples and earth. You watch the shadows of little fish swim in jagged circles through murky lake water. Stiles is a warm presence against your side.Â
He buries his nose in your hair and hums, âYou like the pieces.â
A fish breaks from the group and bubbles near the surface. Its silver scales gleam in the setting sun: a piece of a fractured landscape, a detail that steals all the color in your peripheral vision.Â
You watch the fish swirl for a moment, almost like itâs dancing, and then shrug with a little grin. âI guess.â
You feel Stiles smile against your temple.
âMe too.â
Now, the only color your retinas can detect is black.Â
Stilesâs pupils swallow his face, and they stick to everything like tar. Seep into the room and stain the moonlight until the blue haze over his skin looks more sickly than luminous. He looks alarmingly corpse-like, so still on your floor, slimy from the storm keening outsideâhollowed out from the storm rotting inside.Â
You sigh after a moment; a soft little sound to break the surface of strained silence coating the room. âCome on.â
It doesnât take much prodding. Stiles bends to your guiding hands mindlessly and sits down on the edge of your bed without so much as a grunt. Pliant and robotic in the same breath. Ever the paradox, your boy is.
Though.Â
Heâs not, really. Yours, that is.Â
Not anymore.Â
Not for a long time.Â
âEverythingâs so fucked up.âÂ
Stiles is quiet, but his whisper still startles you. His voice is rawâand maybe, youâd really convinced yourself that he was dead. It feels like he is sometimes. At least, a version of him. Stiles, in the mole-speckled flesh, heâs a ghost of the boy you knew, a killer of the figment boy you never lost. A paradox. So difficult to read. Impossible to hold on to.Â
Stiles doesnât notice that youâve gone silent, but he doesnât really seem to notice anything beyond the wet film over his eyes.Â
âI donâtâŠI donât see a way out this time. I donât knowâŠâ he scrubs a hand over his face and looks infinitely older than eighteen, âI donât think I can fix itâany of it.â
Youâre reminded, briefly, of the night he broke up with you. When you looked up, saw the look on his face, and you knew. You have the same sick feeling in your stomach now, and you want to crawl inside yourself until the flip-flopping of your intestines stopsâto wring them into little knots until thereâs nothing left.Â
Stiles looks like he feels about the same, so small on your bed for such a lanky man.Â
âWhat?â You pull your knees to your chest and hold onto your shins so that you donât reach for him. âThe Nemeton? Weâll find it againâŠeventually, andââ
âNo,â Stiles grits his teeth and closes his eyes, âI mean, yes, but itâsâŠeverything. Everythingâs falling apart.âÂ
âNot everything. Youâve always gotââ
âNot anymore.â Stiles gets that dead-inside look behind his eyes again, and your stomach turns. âYou and meâŠand Scottââ
Your sheets whisper against your legs as you shift towards him. âScott?â
Youâve seen Stiles wear pretty much every expression under the sunâbacklit by shitty diner lights, laughing; tangled up in navy sheets, panting; drenched in sweat, sobbingâbut god. The way Stiles looks now, like his soul has been bleached from his bones, drained from his eyes with a power drill, itâs the worst thing youâve ever seen. Worse than the when the Nogitsune stole his face, because itâs Stiles. Whatever this skeleton on strings is, itâs him. Â
âI fucked up.â Stiles whispers so softly you can barely hear him over the cracks in his voice, âI fucked up so bad.â
It takes you a second to realize that heâs talking about Scott. Dumb, considering you asked, but youâve imagined him saying that to you so many times it almost feels like a memoryâlike heâs talking about you.Â
You clear your throat and pull at a loose string on your blanket until it snaps. âHeâll get over it. He always does.â
Stiles just shakes his head, keeps his eyes trained on his muddy sneakers. âNot this time.â
Your fingers twitch with the impulse to grab his hand. âWhat happened, Stiles?â
âIâŠâ Stiles rubs his hand over his mouth, trying to wipe away the taste of his thoughts. He swallows and then stands, tugging a little on his wet hair until it sticks up in random tuftsâit would be cute under any other circumstances, if Stiles didnât have a disturbingly manic look in his eyes and a desperate tumble of words flooding from his split lip. âThe ends justify the means was just a thought experiment, right? Machiavelli was an academic, not a soldierâyou know what kind of people actually practice Machiavellianism? Stalin, MaoâPeter âfuckinâ killed my own nieceâ Hale.â
Your brow scrunches as you try to find the invisible path connecting all his seemingly disjointed thoughts. âStilesââ
âAnd I know I rag on Scott all the time for being too soft,â Stiles sneakers squeak against the floor as he continues pacing, without a breath or so much as a glance in your direction. He might as well be pontificating to the darkness. âI mean, fuck, how many times have I said itâd be easier if we just killed the psycho? A dozen? Definitely enough for one of those stupid fuckinâ âtake a shotâ memes.â
Stiles stops abruptly mid-step and finally looks at you, really looks at you, for the first time tonight. His Bambi eyes look so big right now, completely open and boundless on his sweet face, like the child he hasnât been since sophomore year. âI didnâtâŠI donât really mean it, you know. I donât actually want...âÂ
His voice is so small it breaks your heart. Â
âI know,â you say softly, coaxing him to stay here with you, in the moment.
Stiles blinks at you slowly and hangs his gaze on your face like itâs the moon. âI know it would kill himâŠfeeling like this.â He spits it out like âthisâ is something vile, poison on his tongue. Â
Your stomach sinks, and a prickling sensation of hot-cold settles through your sinew. You lick your drying lower lip and methodically rub your clammy palms up and down your thighs. âFeeling like what?â
Stilesâs momentary dip into the present fades with the next blink of his clumped lashes.Â
He starts pacing again, bending and flexing his fingers with twitching gestures that clarify little and worry you greatly. âI get it, totally support it as a concept. I mean, the greater good outweighs a scumbag or twoâconceptually, because how do you really define scumbag? And thatâs if you use a qualifier; real consequentialists think itâs totally fine to kill whoever the fuck you want as long as itâs in the name of a good outcome.âÂ
You blink a few times and drag your tongue over your teeth, âRightâŠkilling innocent people: bad. Thatâs the general consensus.â
Stilesâs eyes dart back to your face. âWhat if they arenât?â
âArenât what?âÂ
Maybe, if it werenât almost four in the morning, youâd be able to follow his tangential breakdown. Maybe, if you hadnât become dependent on his quiet sleep-babbling to fall asleep at night, if he hadnât become the only thing capable of bleaching the nightmares from your eyelids, your temples wouldnât be throbbing so violently. But it is almost 4 am, and you havenât fallen asleep next to Stiles in over a yearâno matter how right he looks when he sits down next to you on your bed.
Stilesâs throat bobs with his swallow before he says, âWhat if they arenât innocent?â
âStiles,â you grab one of his hands and search his face, scan every solemn line and curve for some semblance of meaning, âwhatâs going on?â
Stiles chews on his bottom lip and lets out a ragged breath, going stiffâbracing himself for the fallout. His voice is thick with fear when he finally whispers, âWhat if they were going to hurt someone you care about?â
You let out a heavy sigh and study his expression, eyes flickering across the unrelenting question written in his pinched forehead and glassy eyes. âDo the ends justify the means?âÂ
Stiles nods and bites down on his jagged thumbnail, âYeah.â
You hold Stilesâs gaze so that he can see your eyes, so earnest they almost look pained, and nod, slow and definitive. âYeah.â
It takes a second, but when his body catches up with his brain, Stiles collapses in on himself. Turns into a ragdoll of relief and wet clothes, and drops his head into his shaking hands.Â
âF-fuck,â Stiles exhales and wipes his face dry with cruel scrubs of his hands. âSorryâI justâŠâ he digs his thumbs into his temples and trembles, âIâm losing my fucking mind, and I didnât know where else to go.â He glances up from his hands, looks so devastatingly lovely as he peers up at you through his wet lashes it hurts, and murmurs, âThere wasnât anywhere elseâŠanyone else. NobodyâŠâÂ
Stiles shakes his head slightly and clears his throat, but his words are still syrupy with so much meaning when he says, âI donât really feel like IâmâŠme anywhere else.â He pauses again, and you forget how to breathe when his gaze refocuses on your eyes. His tongue flicks over his split lip, and then he whispers, âIâm not me unless Iâm with you.â
This boy. This boy. He can wreck you without even trying.Â
You have to reorient yourself before you get stuck on the drizzle of honey in Stilesâs eyes. Theyâve always been soâŠalive. Thereâs an entire ecosystem in his irises, savanna grass swaying under the glow of sunset. A blackhole in his pupils, bending and distorting your every thought to Stiles, Stiles, Stiles. Stop. Breathe. Count your fingers.Â
Your arms are around your shins, the air is cold, and Stiles has someone who isn't you.
You still wake up with the taste of him sticking to your teeth, sweet honey and sharp cloves, but itâs never enough. Lately, it lingers like a cavity. Â
You spent so long thinking you werenât supposed to be friends, and you werenât. You were supposed to be togetherânow you donât know what youâre supposed to be. How can you belong to a memory?
What does Stiles think when he looks at you now? Does a thought even come?Â
Does he ache for who you were that Friday at the lake? Does he still love that girl in his armsâorange and warm under the setting sun, blissfully unaware of the end?Â
Oh, he does.
Stiles aches for you, thinks of you, constantly. He meant what he said; he only feels solid when it's just you, him, and the shiny little bubble that keeps out the rest of the world. He doesnât feelâŠreal when heâs around other people, pretending like everythingâs fine. Like he hasnât lost every shiny piece of the life he had before his mind was stolen.Â
Thatâs how it is for Stiles now; thereâs before, and then thereâs after. He can feel the schism widening with every single fucked up thing he does. Lately, it feels like thatâs the only thing he does: completely and catastrophically fuck up.Â
The thing is, when they finally got himâitâout, Stiles thought that would be it. Happily ever after. Evil expunged. Demon defeated. End-stop. No page turn. Cheers to the Nemeton. Stiles learned, very quickly, that you canât purge darkness. It always leaves a mark.Â
The days afterâŠeverything, Stiles discovered that rotting was a real human emotion. He still canât believe people donât smell it on him. The remnants of Stiles havenât stopped putrefying in the Nogistuneâs absence, and he just knows, somehow, that something this malignantly alive is contagious. He didnât want to ruin youâdoesnât, Stiles corrects himself before he can finish the thoughtâdoesnât want to contaminate something so good with something so sick.Â
Or maybeâŠmaybe it was because Stiles knew that youâd see it. Youâd see it, and youâd leave.Â
The only clean thing he has is memories. He canât stain the past. The figment girl in his mind canât hurt. Canât die. Canât run. Stiles keeps you thereâor, at least, some version of you, a you he can keep underneath the shelter of his ribcage, where you can watch the sunset turn fish scales into topaz in his maroon jacket, happy, forever.
Stiles canât really remember the last time he saw you, the real version of you, happy. You must have laughed without him at some point, but he canât think of anything other than when you were with him. Well, that, and the end. Stiles remembers the end with painful clarity.Â
You were at a lake. The lake. Somehow, it only occurs to Stiles now how shitty that mustâve been for you. Anyway, you just sat there for a while, and he just listened to the silence wash over the world like a flood until the sun reached its peak. He remembers thinking: Holy fuck, this is what they meant. All those stupid songs and poems. This is what it means to break. Stiles couldnât stand the way you kept your eyes closed, like you were afraid of seeing the inevitable car crash. If I kiss her, heâd thought, everything will be okay. If I kiss her, sheâll forgive me.Â
Stiles didnât kiss you. He just said, âIâm sorry,â and the words hung heavily over your heads. In the harrowing quiet, Stiles thought: I never realized cordial could sound so much like cowardly.Â
âWhat are you doing here, Stiles? What is this?âÂ
Your voice drags Stiles from the gutters of his mind, and feels a fresh wave of shame when he hears how tired you sound. What is he doing here? Stiles knew it was a mistake before he even started his Jeep, but the flicker of doubt in Scottâs eyes drowned out his best intentions.Â
âI justâŠâ Stiles swallows, and his hand moves to scratch at his wounded shoulder reflexively. HeâŠhe just needed to be with the only person on the face of this planet that still knew himâwho would get it.
You get tired of waiting, and when you speak again, Stiles feels about two inches tall.Â
âYou should be with her.â You say it nicely enough. Polite. No venom to fill the awkward hollowness. Cordial.Â
Fuck. Stiles fucking hates cordial. He kind of wishes you would yell at him. At least, then, heâd know that you still cared.Â
Stiles clasps his hands together between his thighs and leans his weight onto his elbows. He probably should be with Malia. No. He definitely should, but heâs not. And right now, like this, he doesnât want to be.Â
âSheâs not good atâŠâ Stiles clears his throat and sits up a little, âshe tries, but she justâŠcanât.â
Itâs not even her fault, and thatâs probably the worst part about it. He doesnât want to be another bad thing thatâs happened to Malia Tate, but bad things just seem to be his specialty lately.Â
âYou know why you like her, right?â you say softly, not unkindly, but Stiles thinks he isnât going to like the answerâmostly, because heâs sure itâs true.Â
âNo.â Stiles pauses and draws a circle on his knee with his pointer finger, âWell, I mean, yeah. Didnât know you put so much thought into it.â
You donât bother to dignify such a blatant lie with a direct response. Thatâs fair, Stiles thinks, and tries not to shrink in on himself.
Instead, you lift your shoulder like itâs made of marble and murmur, âShe needs you.â
Itâs innocuous enoughâsweet, even, under different circumstancesâbut Stiles feels it like a blade. He clears his throat; it doesnât help the dryness. He manages to arch a brow as he pushes out a raspy little, âSo?â
The corner of your mouth lifts into a small smile; Stiles can still see it quiver. âYouâre a control freak,â you bump his knee with your own, and itâs the first place on his body Stiles can actually feel, âand we both know sheâs never going to be the one to end it.â
Thatâs just like you; even your jokes are wrapped up inside an argument. It always left him frozen in a maddening power struggle between quipping something snarky and kissing you. No one else has ever managed to keep him on the ropes like you, and maybe thatâs why no one after has managed to keep his, admittedly, short-attention span for long. After all, Stiles has always liked his sweetness with a little bite.Â
Of course, now thereâs no sweetness between the two of you. Itâs all uncomfortable silences and unspoken thoughts that leave his teeth aching for something more
Stilesâs jaw goes tight as he brings his lips to his knuckles, feeling a bit like bearing down on the bone. âThatâs what you think happened?â He glances at you, eyes a little haunted, âI couldnât control you, so I ended it?â
You tilt your head to the side, so sympathetic it makes Stiles a little nauseous, and murmur, âI think you realized that I didnât need you; I think it scared the hell out of you.â You say it so softly, carefullyâand it impales him in the heart, right through the fucking center.Â
It would be one thing if you were angry; people say stupid shit they donât actually mean when theyâre angry all the timeâbut this? You look like you mean it. You look like you mean it, and youâre saying it for his own good. The look on your face, it looks a whole lot like the truthÂ
And.
Maybe it is.Â
Itâs not like youâre wrong. Stiles remembers thinking it, more than once. He remembers more than a few mornings where he woke up to the sound of your breathing, your warm breath washing over his neck, and he thought heâd probably die if you ever stopped. It felt like an epiphany every time, the reminder that without you his world would be irreparably changed.Â
Dark. Without you, Stilesâs world would go dark.Â
Maybe, the Nogistune was just an excuse. Maybe, Stiles had been leapfrogging over his heart since the moment you met. Avoiding the future. Wrapping the present around your body and constantly thinking: I canât believe it's not over yet.Â
Yet. Yet. Yet.Â
Maybe, Stiles thought about it so much he tempted fate. Maybe, thatâs why the Nogistune chose him. Maybe, he should stop scapegoating the devil. He did end up with Malia after all.Â
Itâs different with her. Not bad necessarily, just different. He takes care of her, and heâs good at that. Making the plan. Having the answers.Â
Being in control.Â
With youâŠthat was different.Â
Stiles is a cynic at heart, but when he looked atâlooks atâyou, he felt less lonely. When he was with you, he kind of got why his dad used to show up to work 15 minutes late because he got distracted by the way his mom made coffee and did the crossword at the same time. The simple domesticity, the comfort of a morning routine for the rest of his life, the concept of tried and true blue love: Stiles got it all when he saw you. Â
You saw his happiness, and you gave it back to him. Every single time. That kind of loveâŠitâs become abundantly clear to Stiles that kind of love is hard to find. Like maybe, once in a lifetime hard to find.Â
Stiles swallows hard and shakes his head. âWhatever it was that I was afraid of,â his voice drops to a whisper, âthis is so much worse.â
Youâre still the only person he can really cry in front of. Stiles is reminded of that when his eyes burn and something wet drips onto his lips. He sniffles quietly, feeling so incredibly small when he realizes the sound is coming from him.Â
Stiles canât look up from his shoesâwonâtâand then you speak. Youâre so quiet he almost misses it.Â
âLifeâs a lot better when youâre in it.â
The corners of Stilesâs mouth twitch into a small smile. The first one in about a week. Feels like much, much longer.Â
âYeah?â
âYeah.â
#stiles stilinksi x reader#stiles stilinski x you#stiles stilinski#stiles stilinksi fanfiction#stiles stilinksi imagine#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#dylan o'brien
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the children. they yearn for you and your stories. i hope you're doing well and just know that you are so very missed and appreciated here đđđđ
thank you so much :') i'm still searching for another job and more importantly good heath insurance rip, so sweet messages like this really help lower the cortisol levels lmao.
i haven't had a lot of time or energy to write, but here is a little snippet of something i'm working on to hopefully quench the yearning. it is not edited or finished obviously.
Itâs an icy slice of fear that wakes you up. A white flash of âfight or flightâ behind your sleep-sticky lids. A rattling at your window that isnât the rain or the wind echoing in the moonlight. Itâs a familiar sound, someone scrambling on the loose tiling of your roof, but a forgotten one. Itâs strange, sweet-sharp, and out of place in your current reality.Â
A noise that shouldnât exist outside of a memory.Â
Stiles spills into your room and lands on his knees, dripping water onto your hardwood floor. His hair is plastered to his forehead from the angry squall outside, and the dark clouds are a mocking reflection of the look carving out the hollows of his face. The moon has eclipsed all the sunlight in his eyes, and it feels so, so cold.
For a moment, you think youâre dreaming or maybe still in that luminescent oil slick between sleep and consciousness. Stiles looks like something from a dreamâa nightmare. Heâs there, but he isnât. Heâs a boy, but he isnât. Heâs lost to something you canât see, swept up in the storm and turned into something else.
You sit up in your bed and wait for him to say somethingâto move. He just stays there, soaked to the bone on his knees, and stares at something beyond the shifting shadows on your bedroom walls.Â
âStiles?âÂ
He doesnât say anything. Doesnât even make a sound. You crawl out of your bed and sit down on the floor next to him, draping a woven blanket over his shoulders. It almost matches his flannel, blue and checkered. Itâs a little detail that wouldâve made you smile before, mostly because Stiles would get this warm look in his eyes: so fond it felt like worship.Â
Itâs fall. The air smells like apples and earth. You watch the shadow of little fish swim in jagged circles through murky water. Stiles is a warm presence against your side.Â
He buries his nose in your hair and hums, âYou like the pieces.âÂ
âI guess.â
You feel his smile against your temple.
âMe too.â
You still wake up with the taste of him sticking to your teeth, sweet honey and sharp cloves, but itâs hardly enough. Does he ache for who you were that Friday? Does he still love that girl in his armsâorange and warm under the setting sun, blissfully unaware of the end.Â
What does Stiles think when he looks at you now? Does he think about you at all?Â
You spent so long thinking you werenât supposed to be friends, and now you donât know what youâre to be. How can you belong to a memory?
#stiles stilinksi x reader#stiles stilinksi imagine#stiles stilinski fanfiction#stiles stilinski x you#stiles stilinski x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brian x reader
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at least one teen wolf villain a season: wow...scott mccall...you have charmed me with your boyish whimsy and earnest love for others...I'm not evil anymore because of this btw
#itâs me#iâm the seasonal scott mccall villain simp#scott mccall the protagonist that you are đ„č
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lord take all of my pain and sufferig and give it to elon musk
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Hiiiii!!!!
Can I just say I flipping love you Omg.
I come back at least once a day to see if youâve written anything else bcos you my friend are one of the only people who actually write GOOD WELL WRITTEN FICS ABOUT STILES OR THOMAS AND OMG I NEED MORE I NEED YOU TO LIVE WITH ME SO YOU CAN READ ME BED TIME STORYS OR SOMETHING.
Ok love u bye xxxxxx
i'm having the most anxiety-inducing day today (if you live in ameria, you know the struggle i'm sure), so thank you so much!!
i would love to read you a bed time story, especially because i have been Slacking on the content recently. the fandom is def a ghost town, but there are still some stiles and thomas writers clinging to life lmao. I have reqs in my answered tag.
i should've made a post way before now, but i'm in the midst of a job search, and it's consuming my every waking moment. but i promise as soon as i get a new job, i will be spamming the stiles and thomas tags.
#;; answered#stooooop y'all are going to turn me into a monster#stiles stilinski fanfiction#stiles stilinksi x reader#tmr thomas x reader#thomas tmr x reader
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HOWLING: TST Rewrite // Prev. / Chapter 4
Characters: Thomas, fem!reader, Newt, Aris (bg), Winston (bg) Pairing(s): Thomas x Reader (the slowest of burns as is my brand) Word Count: 3.5k Tags: Mix of book and movie canon, newt!sister!reader Warnings: Canon typical violence and gore, character death, mentions of sui attempt (please take care of yourself and don't read anything that will harm you)
A/N: mix of book canon strikes again. in the book, the flare is airborne, and that is so much scarier to me than a zombie chomp. also this is v sad, but i tried to make it end hopeful for y'all :'( :')
Taglist: @m30wk1ttycat, @mxltifxnd0m
The only sign of life in an endless stretch of sand is the haggard breath rattling through Winstonâs cracked lips. He coughs, and your throat almost stings with the sound of his serrated wheezes. The dried blood on Winston's mouth sloughs off in flakes with the new stream trickling from his esophagus, and your stomach roils. This is a man about to die. This is a boy who won't grow up.Â
âIâm not going to make it," Winston rasps. His voice is wet with his own blood, "I donât want it to be like this. Itâs betterâŠif itâs quick.â
No one speaks. No one moves. Itâs mere seconds, no more than ten, but it feels like eternity.Â
Newt wakes from the horror first. He takes the gun from Frypanâs trembling hands and moves towards Winston slowly.Â
Thomas steps forward to stop him, âNewt, waitââÂ
Newt pushes forward and falls to his knees, gently pressing the gun into Winstonâs hand. He whispers a goodbye thatâs sticky with the wetness glossed over his eyes. Clogged with a lifetime of conversations that will never happen.Â
Youâre far enough away from Winston that you canât see him over the rolling dunes when it happensâbut you all hear it. The gunshot tears through the desert, and the echo cleaves you right in two. Severs you through the spine and all the tender nerve endings attached.
Newtâs eyes are always wide, but right now theyâre swallowing the desert whole. You pitch into them, and a sharp pain rips through your spinal cord to your optic nerve.Â
For a moment, you canât see anything but the searing white light of pain. What comes after is worse.Â
You canât tell if itâs a memory. It feels like the feverish flashes you thrashed around in the Maze, but everythingâs been so muddled since Newt showed up. You canât tell whatâs real anymore. Maybe, you never could.Â
This echo is more unsettling than the others. Youâre watching a screen on a screen, a memory of a memory. The girl in the center of the snow globe stares at a grainy monitor from her hiding spot in the shadows.Â
You almost donât recognize yourself.Â
She looks so much younger than you feel now, maybe twelve. Her face is still soft and round with lingering baby fat, hair tied back with a pretty white ribbon and face clean of dirt and the scar above your brow.Â
Who is she? This girl with the perfect hair and innocent eyes. You canât remember.Â
The only world you truly know begins with fourteen. You always thought the before mustâve been better, something to run towards. Now, you aren't so sure.Â
Sheâs so afraid. You want to coax her out from the dark, but somehow you know that sheâs safer there, curled up behind a desk, away from the light.
Your little pinched face is awash with a blue glow. You stare at the wall of monitors, clutching a battered book to your chest. Most of the screens are blurry, but it doesnât matter. Youâre only worried about one.Â
Look away, you try to tell her, look away before itâs too late.
She canât hear you, of course. She tears her teeth into her fingernails and stares ahead, barely blinking. Barely breathing. A slip of a girl on the precipice of fading.
Newt looks younger too, even through the fuzzy computer screen. If your math is right, he must be around fourteen. However old he is, heâs far, far too young for large shadows in his eyes. Heâs on top of a ledgeâthe Maze, you realize, horrified, heâs standing on top of the Maze.
You realize what heâs going to do a second before he jumps.
Your scream gives you away. You didnât realize until now that you could sound like thatâthat anyone could make such a horrible sound. Like a fox in the night, a lamb before slaughter, a soul that canât pass on.Â
A WCKD employee in a pristinely white lab coat drags you away from the room. It should be soaked in blood, you think. They should be stained with what theyâve done, smeared with their sins for eternity.Â
You flail in the manâs arms, kick at his legs, try to plant your feet against the slick floor and go boneless. It doesnât slow him down in the slightest. Youâre so small, after all, and heâs so big. A monster you canât run from.
Your eyes dart around the room, searching for someone, anyone, to help you. They land on Thomas. He looks as horrified as you do, but heâs more composed. Less hysterical, more stunned. He doesnât move; maybe, he canât.Â
You hate him anyway.Â
The scene fades into mist before you can start screaming at him.Â
You donât remember the walk, but somehow youâve ended up along the ridge of a slender dune. Youâre a step away from falling on either side of your dusty boots.
You stumble over your confusion, and your face scrunches, bracing for the inevitable tumble. At least, the sand will provide some cushioning, you thinkâbut you donât end up rolling down the dune. Newt grabs your hand and pulls you into his side. He holds you out at arms length and rapidly scans over your frame for any sign of injury.Â
âAre you alright?â Newt whispers. His question almost gets lost in the sand, but you hear him. Your senses are entirely attuned to him and the proof that heâs still here.Â
You blink away a curtain of tears and stare at Newt, watching his chest rise and fall with his steady breathing. âAm I alright?â You shake your head and let out a shallow, shaky puff of air, âYour friend justââ Your jaw snaps shut with a click.Â
You have so much you want to say, so many thoughts stripping the healthy tissue from your brain like a plague of locusts. You don't know what to do with them, how to appease them before they rip you apart one bite at a time.Â
You tip forward, bracing your palms on your thighs and breathe through the roiling in your gut. You think you might puke; thereâs so much inside you, too much. Some of it has to get out or you might just splinter into the lingering shards of the little girl you used to be.
âIâm okay,â you finally say and scrub at your face with viscous fingers. You swallow the grit of sand on your tongue and shake your head, âDonât worry about me.â
Newt frowns, but you continue before he can speak. âCâmon,â you mumble, clutching your injured hand to your chest, âweâre falling behind.â
Youâre almost grateful for the deadly heat and Thomasâs brutal pace. It exhausts you so thoroughly you almost forget about everything other than the blisters forming on your heels and the sweat dripping into your eyes.
And then you stop.
Night falls, someone starts a fire, and everyone falls to the sand with the weight of their dehydration. With their grief. You stop, and now your brain cannot.Â
You clamor to your feet and mumble something about going for a walk to Arisâs slumped figure.Â
The Scorch is almost beautiful at night. If you pretend you canât hear the wind crying in the dark, forget about the decaying remains of a society lost to the Flare and the sand, the moon, glowing overhead in the black sapphire sky, is almost charming.Â
You watch it glisten and wrap your arms around your torso, clinging to your ribcage and fraying sanity. The veins in your feet pulse, the ache shoots to your knees, but you need to move. You have to do something to temper the crawling under your skin.Â
Thomasâs faint voice upsets the quiet. âYou forgot your jacket.â He looks a little shy, holding out the jacket he gave you after the crank stole yours. You wonder how such a sweet face could be responsible for so much pain.Â
âDonâtââ you choke for a moment as the nausea returns and hold up your hand, âI canâtâI canât fucking look at you.â
Thomasâs brow furrows. âWhatâs wrong?â He takes a step towards you, and his hands twitch by his sides. âWhatââ heâs paralyzed by the look on your face briefly, stops just out of armâs reach, and his face looks sick with concern. It makes you sick.
Thomas gnaws on his lip. The sinew in his forearms flexes as he reaches for you. He rests his calloused hand on your shoulder and says, âAre you okay?â
You wrench your shoulder from his light hold. âDonât touch me, Thomas.â You donât think youâve ever sounded so venomous, so viscous, but you canât be sure. You donât remember muchâjust that Thomas let Newt die.Â
âWhat did I do?â Thomas looks so despondent. You almost feel sorry for him. Almost.
You whip towards Thomas and shove him, slamming your palms against his chest, âYou killed him.â Thomas stumbles backwardsânot from your little arms and ineffectual pushes, but from the look on your face. The tremor in your voice. âNewt. HeâŠyou might as wellâve pushed him off the edge.â
Thomasâs face crumples as he wraps his long fingers around your wrists. You thrash in his grip until he lets go and scream, âYou sent him into your maze, and you killed him. One day at a time.âÂ
It sounds like a gunshot, and by the look on Thomasâs face, you think it must feel like one too.
His skin is pale in the moonlight and so is the look in his eyes. You watch the tendons in his neck strain with his swallow. âYou wanted to be put in with him.âÂ
You can barely hear him; his whisper is so weak against the pull of the breeze, but you do. You both seem to remember at the same time how you insisted that you go next. You had to find Newt and make sure he never slipped away from you again. When you woke up in the wrong Maze, you werenât even given the dignity of remembering that you should be enraged by it.Â
âCouldnât even do that right,â you sneer through your sniffles, wiping at your eyes with a cruel scrub of your arm.
Thomas is crying. He doesnât seem to realize it, makes no effort to dry his wet face with his handsâjust stares at you with big hopeless eyes. They burn into your chest like hot iron. You close your eyes, and they haunt the back of your lids.Â
Thomas shakes his head slightly and takes a small step towards you, âIâmââ
You shove him again with weak arms; they're heavy with the whimpers trembling through your shoulders. Thomas just takes it this time, hands limp by his sides. You hit his shoulders and sob nonsensical accusations until a pair of arms wrap around your waist.Â
âCome on.â Newt hauls you away from Thomas, practically carrying you as you squirm in his hold. He lets go of you once youâre far enough away to keep your conversation just between the two of you. A secret. Something sacred.Â
You sniffle at the ground and fold your arms, curling in on yourselfâhiding from Newt and yourself. You arenât sure how much Newt heard, but you werenât exactly quiet. Â
Newt looks at you, and you arenât sure what heâs feeling. His face is soft though; it always is when youâre crying, you realizeâremember. Sighing, Newt eventually says, âIt wasnât his fault.â
Your gaze darts to the tips of your shoes, unable to meet Newtâs eyes. You kick at the sand and wipe your cheeks clean, âYes, it was.â
It sounds petulant, even to you, but you canât help it. It has to be Thomasâs fault. It just has to. Heâs just a person, and heâs hereâhe's the only one you can punish. There's no one else in arm's reach.
Except for me.
You repress the thought with a harsh swallow, and Newt wraps arm around your shoulders. Heâs all skin-and-bones, but heâs a solid warmth against the frigid sting of misery. He pulls you into his chest, squeezes you tightly, and you let yourself fall into a bundle of memories. Good ones this time, a montage of hundreds of hugs in growing arms.Â
Newt cups the back of your head and whispers, âIt would certainly be easier if it was, wouldnât it.â
You snuffle into Newtâs shoulder like a baby and hiccup, âTheyâve taken so much.â
He drops a kiss on top of the crown of your head and then pulls away. Newt gives you a soft smile and cocks his head to the side, âThen we shouldnât let them take anymore, should we?â
You remember things in your sleep now. Little things. Never enough for context, but just enough to leave you shaking in the morning. Most of them are bad. A few are good. None of them make any of this easier.Â
The dream that woke you was hazy at best. You were little, and so was Newt. You canât tell exactly how young, but youâre in a room youâve never seen before. The wallpaper is a sweet, soft mint, and a trail of painted baby goslings follow their mother along the baseboards. Itâs the first wall youâve ever seen with color; the first wall that you arenât afraid of.Â
You're tucked under a quilt, and Newt is reading you something. You can't make out the title, but you see that the book is worn and well-lovedâand then the cheery warmth of buttercup yellow blankets ripples into somewhere dark and cold.
Youâre moving somehow, but you donât look out the windowâyouâre only looking at Newt.Â
Heâs crouched down in front of you, squeezing your hands, and trying to tell you something. Heâs trying to smile too, but you see the fear. The panic. The desperation. The effort makes your heart clench.
Newt's distorted voice slowly sharpens into focus, and you catch the end of his sentence. â...thereâs always a chance the sunâs gone out. Remember how long itâd take to reach us?â
You mouth, âEight seconds,â in time with the little girlâs quivering voice.Â
Newt smiles and nods, feathery hair falling over his forehead. âSo when you count to eight, you know that we have more time. When youâre scared, just count to eight and remember that we have time, alright? Iâll find you, and weâll be together again. Weâve got all the time in the world.âÂ
You wondered what it was like when Thomas told you. You wondered what it was like to have a brother. You think perhaps itâs a little bit like knowing youâre going to be okay. Â
You push yourself onto your elbows and sweat trickles down your back. You shiver. The night is insufferably cold, but your shirt is stuck to your back and your sleeping bag is damp. Blearily, you notice that thereâs another layer draped on top of you.
You clutch at the denim jacket blanketed over your torso, eyes aching, and look around the sleeping Gladers for a head of tousled brown hair. The flames flicker and sparks fly from the embers every so often, casting billowing shadows over your friendsâ sleeping faces. Thomas isnât among them.Â
Your vision slowly adjusts to the dark, and eventually you can make out the shape of Thomas. The shadow of his figure is a ways away and staring into the vast nothingness. You look away from his back and down at the jacket bundled in your lap, chewing on your lipâsomehow, you end up standing by him.Â
Thomas seems to sense itâs you. Youâre close enough to see the moles flecked around his skin. The one on the hinge of his jaw jumps when he finally speaks, âI have to make up for what I did.â
You blink at him and tip your head to the side, listening.Â
âYou asked me how I keep going, keep caring afterâŠeverything.â Thomas cards his fingers through his hair, and it sticks up in odd places when he drops his hand to his side. You want to smooth them back into placeâand then you immediately hate yourself for the thought.Â
Thomas keeps his eyes on the moon and continues quietly, âI have to get us outâI have to save everyone because I have to make up for everything I did.âÂ
Your teeth catch on your bottom lip, unsure what to say. You look at him for a moment and then rock onto your tiptoes so that you can drape the jacket over his broad shoulders. It actually fits him, you realize with a small smile.Â
Thomas finally looks at you as the faded denim settles over his biceps. His lips part in surprise, and then the corners twitch into a little smile.Â
âIâm sorry I keep using my hands instead of my words,â you say quietly.Â
Thomas huffs out a breath. Itâs almost like a laugh, but the bitterness dampens the sound into something darker. Something that hurts. His jaw is tense as he says, âIâm sorry that I keep doing terrible things.âÂ
You feel a residual ache, a distant throb of anger. It fades when you look at Thomas. He looks small, all curled in on himself and lost to before. The sky goes dark in his eyes, and you move closer, searching for the stars in a pool of obsidian.
âIn the past,â you say softly. Your fingers tremble as you reach for his jacket. The scratched buttons are cold against your skin. You repress a shiver and clutch at the material, pulling the sides tighter against his torso. âA past you canât even remember,â you add quietly, gesturing for Thomas to slide his arms through the sleeves.
Thomas looks at your hands with big eyes and slips into the jacket. He smiles faintly and bites his lip, watching you button the front closed with clumsy fingers. Theyâre stiff from the cold and maybe a little fearâtouch isnât a constant in your life, after all. Itâs infrequent and usually painful. Tender things donât survive in your world. Blossoms shrivel. Little birds are eaten. Sweet children harden, or they die slowly.Â
But you button the jacket all the way to the top and then slide your hands over his chest, smoothing out the creases in the denim. Gentle. Tender.Â
Thomasâs fingers twitch, like he wants to reach for you, but he keeps them by his sides. He stares at you instead. âWell, I almost wish I remembered it all,â his voice is thick around the consonants, shaky through the vowels, âso that I can say Iâm sorry for all of it.â
Your cheek rounds with your half-moon smile as you shrug, âHow âbout I only hate you for all the stupid things you do after tonight.â
Thomas pauses, conflicted, and then he smiles. The crooked line of his mouth is devastatingly endearing. âYou sound confident.â
âOh, Iâm very confident.â You nod a few times and hum, âItâs an eventuality, not a hypothetical.â
Thomas bites back a smirk and slides his hands into his pockets, âNoted.âÂ
You grin at his profile. The humor bleeds from your face, spilling something more earnest. âBut I do forgive you,â you tip your chin so that you can meet Thomasâs eyeline, âI do forgive you for the things you donât remember. The things none of us remember.â
âI,â Thomas sucks on his teeth and shakes his headâas if thereâs a lingering taste of something bitter between his molars, like heâs chewed on bitterroot his whole life. He swallows and shakes his head again. âI donât know if you should. Not afterâŠâ he chokes on the rest of his words and rubs a hand over his mouth, trying to wipe away the half-formed thought, the imprint of the words he canât bring himself to say.
You go cold as the wind shrieks through your blood. You shudder and wrap your arms around yourself, whispering, âHe was only fourteen.â Thomas flinches, and you sigh, chewing on your cheek as you look at himâreally look at him.Â
Thomasâs brow is dipped in a heavy frown that seems to pull at his entire face; it weighs down his eyes until they droop at the corners. He looks older than he should. You forget just how young Thomas is until your gaze traces along his tangled hair and his fawn eyes. He squeezes them shut, terrified of the feeling cutting through his chest. Through denim, and skin, and boneâstraight to his trembling heart. Â
You lick your lip and say, âAnd you were only twelve.â
His eyes peel open slowly, and Thomas looks surprised to see your painfully genuine expression. âSo were you,â Thomas says, shrugging with his hands in his pockets.
âYeah,â you say, but you say it to the sand.Â
Warm, calloused fingers cup your chin. They gently tip your chin up until Thomas can see your eyes. When he sees how lost they are, he rubs a broad thumb along your jaw. âYouâre going to live a long lifeâyou'll get to grow old and have a better life. Newt too. I swear.â
You sniffle. You donât even realize youâre crying; the tears only fall when they build on your waterline and you blink. âWrinkly and gray, huh?â you tease with a watery smile.Â
Thomas thumbs away the wetness on your cheeks and smiles, small and boyish. âWrinkly and gray.â
âThat sounds nice.â You let out a little sigh, allowing yourself to fall into his impossible promises. Just for a moment. Just while you can feel the heat of his skin.Â
âParadise,â Thomas agrees quietly. âWeâll get there; I promise.â
Thatâs the thing about bitterroot: blossoms grow from withered roots.
#thomas x reader#tmr newt#tmr thomas#thomas tmr#tmr thomas x reader#thomas tmr x reader#tmr thomas imagine#thomas tmr imagine#dylan o'brien#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#dylan o'brian x reader
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Hi, I was just wondering if youâll be continuing your TMR - Howling? Itâs quite difficult to find good TMR-Thomas x OCâs and I really enjoy the female character youâve created
yes! i wish i had a regular enough schedule to have a set update list for my tmr and tw fics, but it kind of just depends on what my adhd and work schedule allow lmao. iâm actually halfway through chapter 4 for howling and almost done with igniteâs chapter 7. the howling one is especially dark which isnât out of the norm for me, but it does take me more time to make it right. i am definitely planning on finishing it though!
#thomas tmr x reader#tmr thomas x reader#tmr thomas imagine#thomas tmr imagine#thomas x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien x you#;; answered
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omg ok i just have to tell you, cause like, ive been wigging out over everything you write, that its incredible!! From one writer to another, i hope you never stop writing, even if you dont post it, even if your motivation falters as it is bound to do. You have something potent and real in your words, a true talent, a skill many hope to master, and I see that in you!! I hope this isnt too simpy lmao but just know, youve got the shit fr girl <3
you really canât say such wonderful things to me and expect me to normal about it. thatâs all it takes for me to fall in love. i write grants and research papers for a living, so sometimes the art of writing gets lost for me and i forget oh i actually do love this thing and itâs something special to a little group of people like me. this little revamp of mine has been a good reminder for me, and the fact that Other people get joy from my maladaptive dreaming and nonsense is still nuts to me. you all get me through the daily irb and spss grind
in conclusion,

đ ~ lizzie
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đđđđ
đđđđđ đ đđ // stiles stilinski imagine Characters: Stiles Stilinski, fem!reader, Scott McCall, Lydia Martin, Isaac Lahey, Malia Tate, Kira Yukimura, Allison Argent Pairing(s): Stiles x you, Word Count: 8.9k Tags: human!au, fluff, childhood friends to lovers Warnings: there are a few little nsfw mentions in the middle, so MDNI. Stiles does go out on a window ledge, but i have to make it clear he has no intention ever of jumping lmao.
A/N: this is basically just one day i thought what if stiles had a nick x jess first kiss because he seems stupid and awkward enough to jump out a window. and thus this nonsense was born. also the pov switching was new, so youâll have to let me know if youâre a fan or not.
The thing is, Stiles isnât an idiot. Heâs stupid, but he isnât dumb. He knows that itâs not normal to think about your best friend like this. That being so intensely attuned to the curve of her spine when she stretches or the hint of citrus that clings to her hair after she showers isnât exactly platonic.Â
And he really doesnât want to be that guy. You know, the guy who just wants more, who gets upset when he canât have moreâthe guy who canât be friends with the girl who doesnât love him back. So. Stiles stuffs it down. Deep down. And heâs content to die like this because he needs you.Â
There are other girls. Boys too, after a latent discovery freshman year ( one that surprised no one but himself ). They come, and they go, and Stiles makes due with what he can have because he knows this is how it has to be.Â
But they arenât you.Â
A blatant fact that ruins anything real before it even has the chance to start.Â
So here he is: 24, single, and perpetually in love with one of his three roommatesâbut, hey, at least he does his own laundry now.
Stiles watches you on your bed, sitting on the floor like a child, while he pretends to work on a case report. He feels a little like a child too, the longer he stares at youâlike a little boy with his hand in the cookie car.Â
He plays with the fluff on your rug to keep his hand busy, tugging on it a little too harshly when you pull your hair back with the scrunchie on your wrist. Stiles feels like a cretin when his eyes follow the rise of your breasts as you fiddle with the knot on top of your head. They trail over the flex of your collarbones, and he sinks further into his shame when he imagines tracing the lines with his tongue.Â
You catch him staring, and his throat bobs with his swallow.Â
âWhat?â you ask with arched brows. You grin at him like you know something.Â
Fuck, what if you know?Â
You asked him something. Stiles knows you asked him something, but he canât remember what. He just swallows again and fumbles for his coffee. Stiles knows that he should be desensitized to it all by now: your clever mouth, your deft fingers, your fluttering lashes, but heâs still startled by it every so oftenâlike right now, when you look like youâre about to say something snarky at his expense.Â
âDoes it look that bad?â A few strands of your hair slip from their loose hold when you shake your head at him. âAre you moonlighting with the fashion police? I thought youâd be a little busy living in the murder capital of the world.â
Stiles laughs a little, mostly because of the simple fact that your hair always looks pretty. He said it the first time he saw you, blurted it out like a little lamb. Stiles knew, even at six, that he should be embarrassed, but he just couldnât help it. He was so little and completely overwhelmed by his first case of puppy love; the words had nowhere else to go.
Heâs gotten better at swallowing the praise-vomit, but he still notices. Youâre always pretty. Heâs doing his best to ignore it.Â
âThatâs St. Louis actually,â Stiles says. He burns his tongue on his coffee and pulls a face that he knows gives him a double chin.Â
You slide off of your bed and kneel down next to him. Your knees press into his thigh, and it feels like something more, something profound, but he knows it doesnât mean anything. Youâre generous with your affection; you make everyone feel special when theyâre around you. Stiles loves that about you, how you make him feel like heâs so smart, so vital when he knows that heâs moderately clever at best and really a lot closer criminally obsessive most days.Â
âCan you tell me anything about it?â you hum, nestling your chin in the hollow of his shoulder.Â
Stiles can smell your body wash. Itâs sweet, fresh, and tickles his nose pleasantlyâmarigold and aloe. Heâs seen the bottle in the shower. Sometimes, he has to bite his fist and turn the water to freezing when he accidentally imagines your wet, sudsy body, lathering the scent of marigold from neck to toe. Itâs the in-between bits that make him especially nauseous with guilt.Â
âHuh?â Stiles mumbles, pressing his singed tongue to the roof of his mouth.Â
You poke his cheek and say, âYouâre eating your lip. You only do that when you get stuck in a case.âÂ
Stiles can think of several other things that make him suck his top lip between his teeth, but he is stuckâmost likely because heâs spent the last hour watching you.Â
You frown, and he smiles a little at the wrinkle between your brows. You smooth out his own forehead wrinkles with your thumb and say, âIt helps you sometimesâtalking. You think best out loud.â
He does. Stiles swallows a little. You know him so well. You know everything about him. Everything except, of course, that the crush he had on you in elementary school has metastasized into an all-consuming, all-encompassing, honest-to-god, tried-and-true-blue, last-of-dying-breed, core-of-the-sun, probably-caused-the-big-bang kind of love.Â
Stiles has tried, and failed, to think of a way to casually confess how he feels. How do you even begin to break something like that to a friend? Over Chinese food? After a few beers at your favorite bar? During one of your Buffy binge nights? How is he supposed to say, âHey, so Iâm kind of totally and irrevocably in love with you, and itâs ruining my life a littleâbut thatâs okay âcause I canât be happy unless I know that youâre happyâ without blowing up his entire life?Â
He canât. So Stiles stuffs it down again with a sip of his coffee: black and bitter, a little like his heart when your not-boyfriend, boyfriend texts you. And he knows thatâs so incredibly unfair of him. He knows that heâs needy, and pathetic, and far too possessive of your attentionâit all makes him a little sick with self-loathing.Â
You have every right to remove your warmth from his side to respond, and Stiles thinks that if a guy can make you smile like that, he must not be all bad. You seem happy. When isn't feeling sorry for himself, Stiles is happy for you.Â
âThe local police think itâs gang-related,â Stiles says eventually. His voice is raspy from his burnt throat and too loud in the silence of the near-empty apartment.Â
You slide your phone back into your pocket, and Stiles tries not to feel victorious. âAnd you donât,â you scooch back to his side, ducking your head over his shoulder to see his screen.Â
âNo,â Stiles combs his fingers through his hair and sighs, âI donât. Itâs too easy.â
âFollow your gut,â you say, poking his abs, âhe usually knows whatâs up.âÂ
âYou know what heâs sayinâ right now?â Stilesâs back clicks as he stretches and rolls his neck around in slow circles. It does little for the perpetual ache along the ridge of his skull, but it gives him some space from you and your stupidly sweet smile. âItâs time for chimichangas.âÂ
You smile at him again, and Stiles blames the swooping in his stomach on hunger. âI think you deserve a little more than off-brand, freezer-burned Tex-Mex.âÂ
âDonât knock Great Value,â Stiles grumbles, rubbing a hand over his face. His lips, swollen from an afternoon of tearing into them with his teeth, tug into a tired smile when you wave your hand impatiently in front of his face. He wraps his long fingers around yours and says, âSheâs been there for me through everything.âÂ
âHigher standards, Stiles,â you roll your eyes, crinkled at the corners with your grin, âyouâre in desperate need of higher standards.âÂ
Stiles wants to laugh, feels the impulse itch his throat. High standards are precisely his problem.Â
âMaybe you should stop being such a brand snob,â Stiles pokes you in the side, a spot between your ribs that he knows is ticklish. You laugh and shove him away with a firm hand; Stiles goes willingly, stumbles into the doorframe just to make you laugh again.Â
âI am not a snob,â you push yourself onto a barstool, socked-feet dangling below. He smiles as you swing them and then knock your ankles together. You used to do the same thing on the playground swing set. âNot liking over-salted garbage is not snobbery.â
Stiles reaches for the open bag of corn nuts on the island, needlessly resting his palm on your lower back under the guise of balance. Your skin is warm, and heâs too busy thinking about how his hand mustâve been molded around the shape of your hip to notice how hard youâre biting your lower lip.Â
He tosses a few corn nuts in the air and catches them in his waiting mouth, smacking his lips together until theyâre free of nacho cheese seasoning. He grins at the look on your face, and he wants to kiss the tip of your scrunched nose. âSee,â Stiles sucks the leftover orange dust off of his fingers. His voice is muffled by his thumb when he says, âYouâre snubbing my snacks right nowâlike a little munchie elitist. How dare you; they probably wonât ever recover.âÂ
You laugh, as expected, and snatch the bag from the counter, not expected. âYouâre literally biting your thumb at me!â
Stiles leans against the counter, rests his forearms on the granite, and watches you chew with a dumb, fond smile on his face. Youâre just so clever, all wrapped up in keen smiles and sharp wit. You keep him on his toes, always haveâStiles hasnât ever met anyone else who can spar with him so well. He doesnât think he ever will. Admittedly, he hasnât looked that hard; his heart just isnât in itâwho else would paraphrase Shakespeare in the middle of a mock debate? Who else could possibly look so wily and wicked while doing it through a mouthful of, objectively, terrible gas station eats.Â
âPurely accidental,â Stiles taps his fingers against the counter, and his shoulders lift with a small, oh-so innocent shrug, âitâs what we professionals call a âserendipitous turn of eventsâ.â
âA professional what?â You grin at him. Itâs one of his favorites, the one that says youâre about to tease him. âSadist?â
âOh,â Stilesâs brow quirks as he leans forward onto his arms, âso I torture you? Being around me is torturous?âÂ
âYes.â Your chin jerks with a small, sharp nod, but the only thing Stiles can see is your pouty bottom lip.Â
Sometimes, Stiles swears you do it on purposeâturn him on in the most inconvenient of moments. Make his heart swell into his throat until he devolves into a lovesick caveman. You have to know what youâre doing to him when you walk around in those little tank tops with the lace trim and the sleep shorts that ride up to the swell of your ass. It canât be accidental, the cute laugh-snorts youâre so embarrassed of, or how you get so excited when you see a bird in a parking lot. Itâs all too effective to be a coincidence.
Like right now, the way your lip balm shines under the kitchen lights and exaggerates your pout. You must know how completely and utterly kissable you look, and Stiles canât do anything about itânow thatâs torture.Â
You give him mercy and tuck your pout away for a solemn line instead. âYouâre evil; you never close the cabinets or take the trash out.âÂ
âCareful,â Stiles grins and snaps his teeth in the air, âI bite too.â
You lean across the island, and itâs torture, the way your arms squeeze your chest and push your cleavage to the neckline of your shirt. Stiles pointedly avoids looking at the round flesh. It just looks so soft, so plushâso ripe. His teeth ache. His tongue salivates. He craves with reckless abandon, and heâs never satiated.Â
Stiles knows youâre a smart girl, but sometimes he forgets. Youâd have to be pretty dense, after all, to not see the ravenous gleam in his eyes. You certainly donât seem to notice it now, not with all that fondness twisting your lips into a grin. Stiles often wonders, worries, how youâd look at him if you knew. Disgusted most likely; heâs disgusted with himself half the timeâbut youâre so sweet, and so understanding, youâd probably forgive him.Â
Pity, Stiles decides, if you knew, youâd pity him. He canât decide if thatâs worse.Â
You rest your finger between his brows, and his dark lashes flutter, brushing against his freckles like they stamped the specks onto his skin. âEat your nuts, monster,â you drag your finger along the slope of his nose and then âboopâ the tip, âand then preferably something with a single gram of protein.âÂ
Stiles grumbles to himself and searches the fridge for something that will placate your relentless bullying. He picks up the whipped cream and rolls the chilled can around in his hands, squinting at the label. 0 grams of protein. Stiles scoffs. Reddi Whip is, like, 75% milk, right?
His phone buzzes in his pocket, and he forgets to shut the fridge door until it starts beeping at him like it's a personal offense.Â
âWork?â
Stiles barely hears you, nose almost smooshed against his screen. âHuh?â He stares at his phone, eyes rapidly flicking back-and-forth, brain turning over how to counter the latest move on his ever-changing chessboard.Â
Stiles finally registers what you said when he begins his reply to his unit chief. âOhâŠyeah.â His thumbs fly over his screen at a speed that, frankly, shouldnât be humanly possible, âOne secâŠâ
âYou need a break.â You stand and place your hands on your hips in an adorable show of strength. He knows that youâre going for stern, so he bites his twitching mouth lest he invoke your actual wrath. âYouâve been working 18-hour days for the last two weeks.âÂ
Thatâs an exaggeration, but Stiles doesnât argue. He feels like itâs true. His stubble is out of control, and heâs afraid to look in the mirror and see exactly how dark his eyebags are. He only stopped by to shower and get a fresh change of clothes, but you came out of the bathroom in your little pink bathrobe and distracted him.Â
Stiles hates that robe. Detests it. He wants to burn it. He wants to rip the flimsy tie off with his teeth.Â
Mostly, Stiles wants to tuck you under his blankets and snuggle into the fuzzy fabric until he falls asleep.Â
He wants, he wants, he wants. Thatâs the problem.
You pry his phone from his hands and slip it into your back pocket. âWeâre getting drunk tonight,â you say, and you say it in a way that he canât even argue with. You say it like itâs a factâyouâre informing him, not telling him. Stiles is usually happy to comply.Â
Thatâs how youâve always worked, after all: You point at a crocodile infested river, and he goes merrily, merrily, merrily down the stream, with a stupid, dreamy smile on his face.Â
Itâs just. Heâs functionally useless at doing anything without you. You take care of him. Always have.Â
Way back, when he was pre-Adderall Stiles, all baby energy and undiagnosed ADHD, you shoved a kid off of the swings when he made fun of Stilesâs babbling and twitching. He still babbles and twitches, but at least now he knows why. He doesnât have some parasitic monster inside him; heâs just Stiles.Â
Youâve always known thatâhow was he supposed to not fall in love with you?Â
And after his mom died, you let him cry on your shoulder until your shirt was soaked through. He got snot all over your collar, and you just squeezed him tighter. Held onto him until he could breathe again, and then you said, âWant a grape soda?â and he almost started crying again because right then, at that moment, that was somehow the only right thing to say. Maybe because it was you, or maybe it was because you knew him so well. Maybe, it didnât matter.Â
You spent the rest of the night starfished over your bed, and after a minute of staring at your ceiling fan, Stiles whispered, âDo you think weâll be best friends forever?â
You looked at him and grinned, all teeth and sparkly eyes, and said, âYou better hope so, boy blunder. Who else is gonna watch Twin Peaks with you a zillion times?â And Stiles knows that he was only eight, and he knows that maybe it was just because you made him laugh after all the emptiness, but he thinks that he fell a little bit in love with you then, even if he was too young to put a name to the feeling.Â
He finally figured it out when he was seventeen. Stiles wanted to be an adult so badly back thenâand he felt like he was sometimes, after everything heâd gone through, but in so many ways he wasnât. He definitely didnât know how to handle his breakup with Malia like an adultâhis first breakup, his first real relationship.Â
Stiles drank a lot that night. He canât remember exactly how much, or anything that happened after 11 pm, but he does remember how you stroked his hair. He remembers how you wiped the foul mix of bile and sweat from his face with a cool washcloth and tender hands. He remembers how you tucked him into bed and curled up next to him when he asked you to say.Â
He remembers falling in love with you.Â
The epiphany felt a lot better when he was warm and limp from his dadâs scotch. It hurt a bit, when he woke up hungover and in an empty bed. You were in the kitchen, making him breakfast: greasy eggs and hashbrowns. After he got over seeing you in one of his t-shirts, he wondered if youâd ever get tired of cleaning up after him and all his issues.Â
Stiles still wonders that sometimes, even after you crawled into bed with him the night you found out your college sweetheart was cheating on you. He stroked your hair and ignored the wetness soaking into his neck, and you whispered against his skin, âDo you think we'll best friends forever?âÂ
Stiles wanted to laugh. And then scream. And then kiss you. He didnât do any of those things. He just said, âCanât picture it any other way.â He didnât say that whenever he thought about the future, whenever he pictured forever, you were always there.Â
He didnât ask, âIs it okay if Iâm in love with you forever?â
Stiles wants to ask it now, while you rattle off your plans for him this evening, but he doesnât. He chews on a corn nut instead.Â
âLydiaâs looking for the right opportunity to make a move on the guy in 2B anyway,â you finish, blowing a strand of hair out of your face.Â
Youâre looking at him like heâs supposed to say something, so he nods dutifully, âThe guy with the mullet, right?â
You roll your eyes and poke around the cabinets, taking stock of the chips and tequila. âItâs not a mulletâyouâre so obtuse when youâre jealous.â
Stiles blinks becauseâŠwhere the hell did that come from? âIâm good on the perm front, thanks,â he snarks through the food lodged in his cheek.
âNot of him,â you say, tongue trapped between your teeth and distracted by the mixers on top of the fridge. Your back is to him from your perch on the counter, and Stiles watches you with wary eyes. It would be so much easier if you'd just ask him to get things down from the top shelves, but you never do. Refuse to, actually. Vehemently. You'll do it yourself, even if it means breaking a limb. Â
You manage to keep a hold of the pile of bottles cradled against your chest through your dismount, and Stiles breathes easier when your feet are pressed against solid ground. Heâs glad your eyes are still on the kaleidoscope of sugar and citrus because youâd mock the relief in his eyes without mercy.Â
You line the bottles up in order of emptiness and absently hum, âWell, yes of him, I guess, becauseâcan you check on the vodka and gin?âÂ
Stiles sticks his head in the freezer, grateful for the blast of frigid air, and tries to untangle the crumbs of meaning in your flimsy accusation. He comes up with absolutely nothingâon every front of his mission. âNo gin.âÂ
You let out a long, heavy sigh and shake your head at the dangling light fixtures. âLydia.â
Lydia was the only person in the apartment who liked gin, but Stiles didnât have any room in his brain for commiseration. âSo, Iâm jealous of little orphan Annie from 2B becauseâŠ?â He leans against the counter and tucks his hands under his arms, squinting skeptically, âJust so weâre on the same page nâ all.âÂ
Youâre texting someone. Heâs sure itâs Lydia, probably asking her to pick up more gin on her way home, but Stiles canât help but wonder if youâre inviting yourâŠwhatever you call three decent dates and one evening of alright sex. ( Oh, how Stiles loved hearing all the details when you came home. )Â
âHmm?â Your smile is lit up by your screen and the kittenish glint in your eye, but Stiles knows itâs not for him. He swallows his pettiness before he chokes on it. âOh, right,â you put your phone down on the counter and smirk. This one is for him, but Stiles actually wouldnât mind if it was for someone else; the look in your eyes is downright diabolical. âYouâre so adorably, blatantly jealous that Lydia is into another no-neck, illiterate jock from the gymâbut the perm is pretty bad, Iâll give you that.âÂ
Stilesâs jaw falls, and you laugh, completely misinterpreting his stupor. He stares at you and just shakes his head, scrambling for a grasp on at least one of the million questions pinging around his skull. âYou think I want Lydia?â
âUh-doy,â you roll your eyes like heâs said something particularly stupid, âonly since forever.â
Heâs struck again at how you can simultaneously know him so well and not at all. âYou donât think that wouldâve come up in the last, I dunno,â Stilesâs head jerks with his choppy hand gestures, âeighteen years?âÂ
You wave your hand and then grab his wrist, âItâs been intermittent.âÂ
You lead Stiles back into your room by his hand like heâs a wayward dog on a leash. Heâs grateful for it. Stiles canât do much else besides blink and breathe when heâs like thisâwhen heâs wrapped up in a case he canât crack.
Stiles drops onto the edge of your bed with a solid thud, feeling a bit like someone slammed a 2x4 into his gut. His tongue seems to be useless, glued to the back of his teeth. All he can do is watch you flit around your room, gathering an armful of skirts and dresses.Â
You hold up a black dress in one hand and a black mini-skirt layered under a red baby tee in the other, âPick.â
Stiles wants to pick the sweats youâre currently wearing because theyâre his, but he points at the skirt. He knows itâs your favorite; youâd pick it anyway.Â
You sit down in front of your vanity and pull the scrunchie out of your bun. Stiles watches your hair tumble over your shoulders. Youâre insecure about it, always have been. One day itâs the color, and then itâs the texture, and he, for the life of him, doesnât understand why. Your hair shines so prettily under the light, and it always smells so sweet, like citrus and honeysuckleâStiles canât decide if he wants to bury his nose in it or wrap it around his spindly fingers.Â
Graciously, you twist it into an artful arrangement before he can do either.Â
âI donât want to be with Lydia,â Stiles finally says quietly.Â
You stop fiddling with pieces of hair framing your face and meet his gaze in the mirror, âItâs okay if you do.â
Stiles nods and stares at his lap, twiddling his fingers. âI know,â itâd be easier if he did, âbut I donât.â
You turn around in your chair and give him a little smile. Itâs fond and sweet, and Stiles feels like a hand is closing around his heart and twisting it behind his ribs. âWeâll find you someone tonight, then,â you say, popping up from your seat. You grab your clothes off of the bed and squeeze his shoulder on your way to the full-length mirror next to your closet.
Stiles turns his head when you start to wriggle out of your shirt. He knows you donât care what he sees after years of sleepovers and lake vacations, but you donât know what it does to him. How all your dips and curves slip behind his lids when heâs alone with his fist and too much lube. If heâs really being honest, it also happens when heâs not alone, but that makes him feel like a piece of shit for a whole other list of reasons.Â
All of it feels pretty awful when itâs overâwhen Stiles is left with the unpleasant sensation of drying cum on his stomach and the very unpleasant realization that youâd never wear a swimsuit around him again if you knew exactly what he does with the image.Â
So. Stiles does what he can. He doesnât look when you change, tries to avoid seeing you in a towel altogether, and watches so much porn of people who look nothing like you.
It doesnât work, of course, but he tries. That has to count for something.Â
Stiles swallows and taps his fingers against his thighs. âI canât think of anything I want to do less than interact with a bunch of drunk strangers partying in myââ
âNot a bunch,â you say around a grunt, tripping over the dragging hem of your borrowed sweats, âand not a party. Just a chill get-together of like-minded peers.â
He scoffs and tips his chin up, rolling his eyes at the ceiling. âIâm sure I have so much in common with Lydiaâs guest list. Yeah, we can talk about how they can bench-press two of me and that I also love me some stackingâpancakes, not steroids, but close enough.âÂ
Thereâs a whoosh of a zipper and then youâre in front of him with your arms folded over your chest and thinned eyes. âYou better behave.â
Stiles grins; itâs decidedly obnoxious. âIâll be perfectly cordial, promise. Iâll even speak slowly.â
You laugh, and Stiles knows youâre only pretending that you didnât want to.Â
âI think itâll be good for you.â You return to your vanity and pilfer through your mess of earrings. âYâknow, to get out of your head for a little bit. It really is just gonna be us and a few plus ones. I know you, boy wonder, no parties shall ever be thrown in your honor. I solemnly swear.â
He smiles at the childhood pet name, a private little grin Stiles keeps tucked in his chest and at his feet. It falls, however, when he remembers the middle bits of your speech. âSo,â Stiles gnaws on his thumbnail and jiggles his knee, âdid you invite a plus one?â
You slide a gold hoop through your ear and grin at him, âNah, Iâm all yours tonight, Stilinski.â
Good. God.
Stiles wants to kiss you. He always wants to kiss you, but sometimes every inch of you rips the air from his lungsâcleaves him right in two. Like right now. He forgets how to speak, trying to remember what he can say and what he absolutely canât say, while he imagines a life where you really are his and you know that heâs always been yours.Â
Youâre just so pretty in your little skirt and cherry t-shirt, and youâre so clever, and funny, and youâre looking at him like heâs your favorite person in the entire world, and Stiles feels all of it spilling over the edges of his restraint. He almost says something so heavyâso categorically, catastrophically stupid, it would ruin your friendship for good. Â
Stiles swallows it back into his chest, but his voice is still thick when he says, âAll mine, huh.â
Heâs sick with yearning, and heâs petrified for a moment that you can tell. It seems so obvious to him. It would be obvious to anyone, Stiles thinks, if they heard how weak he sounded, how soft in his throat and reverent in your presence.Â
But you donât notice. You never do. Itâs a relief, and itâs endlessly frustrating.Â
âYep,â you smack your lips together, blotting your red lipstick until itâs perfect, âI wanna win, and everyone knows you canât win True American with a noob on your team.âÂ
His brow arches, and a lazy grin smears across his mouth, âOh, so weâre getting drunk drunk tonight.â
You wink at him in the mirror, âIf you play your cards right.â
Stiles does, in fact, play his cards right. He picks Scott as the third member of your cabinet, possibly because Scott can outdrink anyoneâŠor maybe itâs because Scott knows that Stiles is pathetically into you and canât keep his mouth shut at the best of times, but especially not when heâs drunk.Â
Whoâs to say, really?
Honestly, Stiles doesnât need the advantageâLydiaâs voluntarily stuck with Isaac and the guy from 2B who canât follow the rules no matter how many times they shout them at him, and Malia and Kira care far more about making goo-goo eyes at each other than they do helping their friend from yoga make any progress towards the Kingâbut heâs competitive by nature and feeling exceptionally stupid tonight.Â
Lydia introduced the Clinton Strip Rules solely to ogle her latest man candyâs aggressively sculpted six-pack and show off her bewitching dĂ©colletage, and it was going along swimmingly until the idiot forgot how to count.Â
It was so simple. All the guy had to do was hold up three fingersâthatâs all. He wouldâve matched Lydia's count, and then they could've made out behind the Iron Curtain. But he didnât. He held up two fingers and in doing so single-handedly crafted Stiles Stilinskiâs demise.
Ironic. Considering the moron can't craft a compound-complex sentence to save his life.Â
For a single, endless moment, you and Stiles just stare at each other, more specifically, at the four fingers plastered against your foreheadsâand then the spell is broken by drunken cackling. Lydia grins like the cat who caught the canary, and Scott laughs until his face turns red. Heâs loud and obnoxious with the four drinks heâs downed, and Stiles wants to shove him out the window.Â
âGuys,â Stiles whines, âyou donât reallyââ
You finish the beer in your hand and shrug your shoulders, âItâs fine.âÂ
Stilesâs head whips towards you, big-eyed and fish-mouthed. He canât form words. Canât speak any of the five languages he knows. Heâs become a Stiles Stilinski skinsuit held up by a skeleton of gelatin and faulty survival instincts.Â
You smile at him a little and shrug again, âItâs just a game, right?âÂ
You donât say it, but Stiles can hear it with painful clarity: It doesnât mean anything.Â
Stiles doesnât know how to say no without telling the truth. Itâs not that he doesnât want to, not exactly. Stiles wants to kiss youâof course he wants to kiss you, feels like the whole goddamn world knows he wants to kiss you and is conspiring against himâbut not like this. He doesnât want to kiss you when itâs nothing. Heâs thought about it far too much, imagined it on his bedroom ceiling in the safety of darkness too many nights, to blow it all on a stupid drinking game. A stupid gym-broâs mistake.Â
Stiles had a plan. A plan he never actually had the courage to act on, but a plan nonetheless.Â
He was going to hold your face with shaking hands, smooth his thumbs along the sleek line of your jaw, look you in the eyes so that you could see the disbelief, the wonder, the awe. Youâd see that he was overwhelmed to the bone, to all the nerves shivering inside the marrow, and youâd have to forgive him for being so tongue-tied and awkwardâfor taking so long.Â
And then, heâd kiss you.Â
Heâd kiss you again, and again, and again, until one of you started laughing, but thatâd be okay because it would give him the chance to kiss your neck and whisper, 'Youâre the sky, and the mountains, and everything in-between.'
'Youâre dark matter; youâre gravity,' heâd kiss the words into your skin and sigh, 'youâre the only thing holding the universe together.'
But he canât say that, so Stiles follows you into Lydiaâs bedroom and wipes the sweat on his palms off on his jeans.
Youâre a little giggly while you fumble for the light. Itâs breathy, and you canât meet his eyes. Stiles feels a little better knowing that youâre almost as nervous as he is. You arenât usually the nervous kind, after all. Thatâs his thing.Â
Stiles slides his hands into his back pockets and rocks onto his heels, âWe donâtâŠwe can just pretend that weâŠdid it.â
âDid it?â you arch a brow, lips curling into a wry grin. âItâs just a kiss, Stiles. I thought you wanted to win? We gotta end Lydiaâs streak, or sheâll be insufferable.â
Stilesâs mouth goes dry: cottony with wanting, brittle with misery. He canât pretend anymore; he canât pretend that he's not dying from this. Â
You canât look at Stilesâs face. Canât see the panic. Itâs why you shuffle closer to him, stiffly reach for his shoulders and awkwardly search for the least romantic place to rest your hands. Stilesâs back thuds against the wall, and you finally dart your eyes to his. âItâs fine,â you say weakly.Â
Thereâs a loud chorus of, âKiss, kiss, kiss,â through the door, and Stiles watches the resolve harden your face. His chest rises and falls with quick, shallow exhales. He can hear his pulse ricochet around his ear canal, can feel the sweat gathering on his palms, can taste the anticipation in the air.
You roll your shoulders back a few times and shake your hands by your side, rotating your neck in a few slow circles. âJust kiss me, Stilinski. No biggie. I think we can catch up to Isaac if you hurry the hell up and plant one onââ
âNot like this!âÂ
Your mouth parts into a perfect little âoâ, and Stilesâs eyes bulge when he realizes that the pathetic, desperate cry came from him.Â
You fold your arms over your chest and tilt your head with an expression on your face that Stiles canât read for the life of him. âWhat,â you lick your lip, and Stiles squirms with shame when he canât stop himself from tracking the movement, âwhat does that mean?â
Stilesâs face spasms, and he can feel his IQ drop by tens the longer you stare at him.Â
âNo, I didnâtâŠâ Stilesâs stutters, flicking his gaze to your forehead, your chin, between your browsâanywhere but your eyes. His nose scrunches as he shakes his head, âNothing. I justâI didnât mean like that.â Stiles isnât entirely sure what you think he meant, but considering he canât decide what he means, itâs a safe bet that youâre wrong.
Stiles's hands take over for his melting brain matter, gesturing wildly every-so often like the flexing and contracting add any actual meaning to his meaningless babble. âI just, we canât like that because thatâs notâŠDo you know, likeâŠ? Itâs very, like, you donâtâŠâ His eyelids seem to have forgotten how to blink, and Stiles thinks heâd do just about anything for a piano to fall out of the sky right about now.
The chanting outside the door gets louder; Stiles isnât sure if itâs real or just his anxiety. Through his narrowing pinprick vision, the only thing he can see at the end of the dark, dark tunnel is Lydiaâs window. The heavy purple curtains frame the opening like serendipitous velvet gift wrapping.
Stiles swallows and nods sharply, âIf youâll excuse me.â
Stiles steps around you, and you follow his path with your eyes. Theyâre pinched with suspicion, but mostly concern. âStiles, what are you doââ
âIâm fine,â Stiles tries to wave off your worries with a shaky hand.Â
And then he unlatches Lydiaâs window and crawls on top of a chair to reach the opening.
âOkay, this makes sense. I just need a little air,â Stiles mumbles to himself. His dirty sneakers leave a clear outline of his soles on the white fur. Under any other circumstances, youâd both be desperately trying to scrub the fabric clean before Lydia found the stains and rained her wrath down upon your very fragile, bruisable bodies. Under these circumstances, youâre preoccupied with the half of Stilesâs body thatâs hanging outside the window of your 3rd-story apartment.
âStiles!â you stumble to the wall and freeze, unsure how to pull him back in without accidentally tipping him onto the concrete three floors below.Â
Stiles manages to slip the rest of his body through the window without breaking any limbs. Yet. âThis is what I needed. Yup, this isââ his eyes engulf his face, a wide pool of churning honey, when he finally realizes just how small the ledge is and just how far away the ground is, âah, ha, ha!â
âStiles!â You cover your face with your hands and shake your head over and over again. You hope, childishly, if you spin fast enough, you can rewind time back to 10 minutes agoâwhen Stiles was safe on the floor and you could stop yourself from giving into the silly, stupid desire to kiss him. Just once. To finally find out how it would feel. Â
You peek through your fingers and wince as he stumbles towards the left. âYou donât have to kiss me!â
Stiles disappears from view, and you tumble into the hallway. You let out a low hiss when your hip slams into a sharp corner. The flare of pain is soon forgotten, however, when Stiles slams his hands against the living room window. Everyone turns to gawk at him, eight mouths wide open and not a single word is spoken until Stiles presses his entire body against the glass.Â
The window hasnât been cleaned since you all moved in, so you canât quite make out his expression through grime and dirt, but you can hear the shrill urgency in his voice. âThis is a regretâI immediately regret this.â It would be funny, how high his voice isâapproaching autotuned chipmunk territory, honestlyâif he wasnât six inches away from certain death. You can all laugh about it later when Stiles is safe on the couch, you decide. After youâve punched him in the arm for doing something so bone-shatteringly stupid, obviously.Â
Malia does laugh, and Kira smacks her shoulder. You almost appreciate the levity; it reminds you that your brain needs oxygen to function.
Scott cups his hand around his mouth and shouts, âDonât move!â
Stiles smooshes his button nose into the glass. He inhales and exhales with mad abandon, creating and erasing a cloud of condescension with every breath. âI've made a very bad mistake! Iâm not trained for this!â his lips smear against the glass, muffling his cries for help. Stiles pulls back, and leaves a streak of saliva behind. At least, that patch of the window is clean now, biohazard be damned.Â
Itâs Scott who ends up saving the day. No surprise there. He gets Stiles through the window and shoves him onto the couch, teeth ground in what can only be described as parental frustration.Â
Scott folds his arms over his chest and narrows his eyes, âYou scared me half to death out there.â
Isaac snorts and rolls his eyes, quipping over Scott's shoulder, âAre you not getting enough attention?â
âIâm fine!â Stiles groans into his hands and pinches the bridge of his nose. Itâs still red from being smashed against the window, and the rest of his face matches with his embarrassed flush. âI am fine! I was partly joking and at least 64% drunk!â
âStiles, we will talk about this in the morning,â Scottâs face is stern, and his grip on Stilesâs shoulder is just as firm, âbut right now, Iâm gonna go do stuff with a girl.â
Scottâs face is still solemn when he high-fives Isaac, mostly out of habit. You do laugh then. Canât help it. A little bit of relief creeps through your constricted chest when Stiles smiles. Itâs brief, a little twitch at the corners of his slightly-swollen mouth, but itâs there.Â
Allison rolls her eyes when Scott holds out his hand, but she still takes it and follows him towards his bedroom.
âShut the door!â Stiles shouts at their backs. He slumps back against the couch cushions when the thudding of Scott's door closing echoes through the hall.
Itâs quiet for a moment. Kira shifts awkwardly, clinging to Maliaâs arm for balance when the fog of alcohol spreads from her flushed cheeks to her platform combat boots. Malia doesnât look that concerned, but sheâs always been cool under pressureâŠand any other emotion.Â
You expect Lydia to look as worried as you do, but she has a strange, calculating look in her eyes. Theyâre sharp in the light of her brilliance; the jade almost looks feline.Â
Lydiaâs beaux ends up breaking the silence with a loose laugh. His head tips back with his chuckle, and he throws his meaty arm around Lydiaâs shoulders. âThat was freakinâ hilarious! I mean, dude jumped out on a ledge instead of kissing a 10. Can you believe that?â
Lydia looks wholly unamused and says flatly, âI really canât.â She fixes Stiles with a look you canât read, but Stiles seems to understand.Â
âI know.â Stiles drops his face into his hands and digs his face into the cradle of his wide palms. "Iâm an idiot.â
Everyone seems to hear a cue that you missed while watching Stilesâs chest rise and fall. Malia, Kira, and their plus one filter out the door one-by-one, and Isaac kisses your cheek before wrapping his scarf around his neck. Youâre relieved again when you hear Stiles scoff; itâs something he always does when Isaac puts on one of his pretentious kerchiefs in the balmy, LA weather. Itâs nice to see some things are still the same.Â
Lydia stares at Stiles, and they have a silent conversation that ends with a patented Lydia Martin glare and a quintessential Stiles Stilinski squint.Â
Lydia leaves with her late night delight and kiss to your other cheek, and suddenly itâs just you and Stiles.Â
You wring your fingers together, gnawing on the lining of your cheek. You canât think of anything to say. To Stiles. You never thought youâd see the day.Â
The couch creaks with Stilesâs shifting weight. He pushes himself to his feet and stands in front of you. The redness in his face has faded, baring the smattering of freckles across the bridge of his nose that youâre so fond of. His lips part. Your breath stills, waiting. Wanting. His silence washes over the room like a flood, and you close your eyes. Youâre afraid of it, witnessing the inevitable wreckage.Â
It doesnât come.Â
You hear the quiet padding of Stilesâs footsteps. When you open your eyes, heâs gone, slinking down the hall to his bedroom. You stare at the place he was just standing, feeling the chill of his absence, and then itâs gone. A glaring blaze of anger warms your face, and you allow it to carry you to Stilesâs closed door. What a metaphor; the thought grinds your molars together until they screech. Â
You wrench his door open, and Stiles jumps, halfway out of his jeans. He stumbles over the cuffs and almost falls on his face. You wish you could tease him, laugh until you snort and Stiles glares at you through his pathetic attempt to hide his smirk. But you canât. Not yet.Â
âYouâre really just going to leave it like that?â you say, closing his door behind you. Itâs preemptive; you feel a little like yelling. âThat was a whole other level of stupid, Stiles, even by your standard.âÂ
Stiles quickly yanks his pants back up and buttons them, struggling with the zipper and his twitching fingers. âCan we just not,â Stiles rubs a hand over his face, looking infinitely older than he is, and mumbles a hollow, âactually, can we never.â
The words hang heavily in the air. In the harrowing quiet, you think: Oh god, is this it? Is this really the end?
Stiles stares at his feet, at the hole heâs wearing in the oak floor. He hears it too, the weight of what heâs done. Fucking hell, he thinks, I didn't know cowardice could be so loud.
You smooth your hands over your hair, clasping for any semblance of composure. âI justâŠI didnât realize that the thought of kissing me was soâŠtraumatic.âÂ
Stiles jerks his head from the floor and tugs his fingers through hair. He pulls at the roots until it stings and shakes his head, âThatâs notâŠyouâre,â he gestures towards you helplessly and swallows the millions of things he wants to say, âyou.âÂ
âYeah,â your shoulder lifts in a tiny shrug, arms winding around your torso like a brace, âthat seems to be the issue.â
Stiles just looks at you for a moment. The lamp on his desk bathes his skin in a wave of warmth when he tilts his head. The tip of his nose casts a shadow over his lips, and you want to trace the divot in his cupidâs bow, the little lines by his nose, the hollow space under his eyes. You want to trace them all with your fingertips and then memorize them with your mouth.Â
Stiles's eyes are golden in the light, and theyâre stuck on yours.Â
âYou areâŠâ Stiles closes his eyes, and his voice is so soft, so devout, âyou are so fucking...inescapable, you know that? You areâŠyouâre so deep inside my head, I canât do anything without thinking about you. Itâs becoming a serious fuckinâ problemâa nuisance, actually, a nuisance. And itâs not like I havenât tried to stop, yâknow, like it would be fuckinâ awesome if I could just forget how you smell like going home and a goddamn spring meadow, or if I could go fuckinâ grocery shopping without looking for those impossible to find chips with the Elmer Fudd lookinâ fucker on âemââ
âHot fries,â you whisper hoarsely.Â
Stiles stops pacing for a moment and nods at you, âThank youâhot fries. And I would love it if I could walk down the street, just once, and not look for a dog to take a picture of, just so I have an excuse to text you without looking like I was just thinking about youâeven though I was obviously just thinking about you because, re my previous ranting, thereâs literally not a single second of the day that you're not on my mind. You're justâŠinevitable.âÂ
âAndâŠI am Iron Man?â your smile is wobbly.Â
Stiles gives you a flat look over his shoulder, âYouâre a smartassâbut I love that. I love everything about youâeven the way you talk through my favorite movies and force-feed me a vegetable once a week.âÂ
âStiles,â you swallow shallowly and rest your hand on his chest. Stiles stops pacing and meets your gaze with big, endless eyes and blinking butterfly lashes. Tipping your head to the side, you swipe your thumb over his thudding heart, âWhat are you trying to say?â
Stiles rests his hand on top of yours, clunkily lacing your fingers together for a little stability. âI love you,â he whispers, because he has to. It has to be this soft. It has to stay just between you and him, in the little bubble of air between your lips. âIâve been in love with you sinceâŠâ Stiles chews on his lip, trying to pinpoint when he knew, when he knew that youâre it for him. There are so many moments that come to mind, and he canât pick a single one. Itâs just that the line between mud pies, and t-ball, and this is so blurry. Stiles canât tell where it really begins and where it ends.Â
It feels boundless, Stiles thinks, infinity. Itâs something, somewhere, past the edge of the universe. Heâs yours infinitely. There is no before he loved you, and there is no after. Itâs just always.
Stiles breathes and sighs out his answer, âForever. Iâve loved you since forever, and I couldnâtâI canât kiss you if it doesnât mean anything.â Â
Your lips curve slowly. Itâs a nervous smile, one thatâs afraid of the rug being yanked out from under happily ever after. âYou love me?â you say quietly, voice little and meek.Â
The tip of Stilesâs tongue darts out, wetting his lip. He nods slowly and rubs the back of his neckâan anxious tick you know very well. Youâve watched Stiles for eighteen years, after all. Youâve studied the tendons in his neck, how they flex when he crooks his head down to read, how it makes your belly warm more than it should. You know he flexes his fingers exactly three times before starting a test, and you know that the long veins in his arms are the most stupidly attractive things youâve ever seen. Heâs the most attractive thing youâve ever seen, and youâve loved him for so long itâs written in your bone marrow.Â
Stiles scratches his neck until itâs pink and raw, and you pull his hand away instinctively. He smiles at you so timidly it breaks your heart, âIs that okay?âÂ
You nod, and nod, and nod. âVery okay. Very, very okay. The most okay of all the okayâs.â Itâs so fast, and itâs been so long, but mostly itâs right. Like this is the only logical conclusion, the answer to a cold case that took eighteen years to solve. Your life has always been youandstiles, and that sounds a whole like forever.Â
Slipping a hand to the back of his neck, you run your thumb along the knobs of his spine and whisper, âI am so ridiculously in love with you, boy wonder.âÂ
Stiles grins. It starts small, fond, tenderâbut the more times he hears it, every time she loves me, she loves me, she loves me bounces around his ribcage, his grin gets a little bigger, a little brighter. Soon, it stretches across his entire face and swallows you whole. He looks more than alive like this; you want to taste the electricity in his mouth.Â
You smile at each other for a long time, and you look at Stiles through your lashes. âSo,â you tip your chin and bat your eyes, âyou gonna kiss me?â
Stiles is going to kiss you. He swears. Heâs justâŠheâs thinking too much after an evening of not thinking at all. Heâs been waiting for this for forever, and what if his lips are dryâor, worse, what if theyâre too wet? What if his hands are cold and clammy, and you can feel his sweat when he cups your cheeks. He definitely feels sweaty. And nervous. Andâ
You rock onto your tiptoes and kiss him. Itâs a little kiss, soft and short, but everything goes static and neon around you. You let out a little sigh, start to pull awayâand Stiles whimpers. His hands surges forward and latches onto the back of your neck, pulling your mouth back to his.Â
Stiles slides the breadth of his large palm up and down your back, chasing the rhythm of your breath. There isn't much to chase, you think deliriously, you arenât really sure if you need oxygen to survive anymore. You like swallowing his sounds and tasting his tongue far more than breathing. It feels like Stiles agrees with you when he wraps his arms around your waist and pulls you into his chest, digging his fingers into the small of your back until thereâs nowhere else for you to go. Silly boy. As if youâd rather be anywhere else.Â
He makes the sweetest little noises in-between your kisses, softening the wet smacking of lips and tongues. You chase them, learning what he likes by unraveling him one sound at a time, with a tug on his hair here, a nibble on his lip there, and your hands just about everywhere.
Itâs hot. Literally. You can feel heat licking your skinâor maybe thatâs just Stiles. Your head is a little fuzzy from his kisses and not enough oxygen, and logic is a distant thought. Breathing. People need to breathe.Â
Stilesâs nose bumps against yours when he pulls back. He smiles drunkenly and leans in for one more kiss. Itâs quick and open-mouthed, two little brushes of his lips, and it steals whatâs left of the air in your lungs.Â
Stiles brushes your hair back and rests his forehead against yours. His breath chills your spit-slick, swollen mouth, and you shiver at the look in his eyes. âI meant something like that.â
#stiles stilinski#stiles stilinksi x reader#stiles stilinksi imagine#stiles stilinksi fanfiction#stiles stilinski fluff#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#teen wolf#teen wolf fanfiction#teen wolf imagine#stiles stilinski x you#stiles stilinski x reader
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IGNITE: A Teen Wolf S1 AU (Reader's Version)Â // Prev. / Chapter 6
Characters: Stiles Stilinski, fem!reader, ofc, omc Pairing: Eventual Stiles x Reader, but man are we talking slow burn Word Count: 6k Warnings: Canon typical gore/violence, parental death (rip to your fake mom), depictions of depression (apathy, dissociation, 'numb little bug' vibes) Tags: Canon has been lovingly scrapped for parts, author is a chaotic bi and it shows, prolific overuse of the em dash, the slowest of burns i fear
Summary: You can always smell ash long after the fire is gone. Perhaps, thatâs why you still canât breathe without choking on the past. Itâs been four years since your mom died. Four years since she burned alive. Four years since you didnât. You survived, but they must have buried your heart with her because most days you feel like a shadow, some horrifically sad creature caught halfway between a ghost and a lamb for slaughter.Â
You canât scrub the bitter smell of hospital from your memories, not even with denial. Maybe, thatâs why death and disease follows Stiles wherever he goes now. Itâs been eight years since his mom died. Eight years since he didnât. Eight years since he decided that he wouldnât let anyone he loved die ever again. He survived, but Beacon Hillsâ bloody underbelly is making it pretty damn hard for him to keep his promise.
Time never stops turning. The grief never dissipates. Children soldier onâbut in a town where all the monsters under the bed are real, and old family secrets rattle in every closet, how long can two fragile, breakable humans survive?
Maybe, the real question is: How long will they want to?
Chapter Summary: You go full Charlie Kelly and start to put all the pieces together. Stiles knows more than he lets on, but for some reason you trust him anyway.Â
A/N: check me out on ao3 (dork_knight) for the full lore version!
Taglist: @eaterof-concrete, @m30wk1ttycat
You played and replayed the video at least a hundred times, over and over again, examining every poorly shot, grainy frame until your eyes burned. You were franticâa rabbit, picking her den apart, ripping her fur out, searching for all the minute flaws and misplaced straw; a girl, chewing her cheek bloody, tearing at her tights, desperately looking for some kind of explanation that wouldnât completely shatter her fragile grasp on reality.Â
It would be one thing if it was just the video. You could easily rationalize the video away; youâd seen enough fan-made edits of Buffy and Twilight to know that amateur editors were hardly amateurs anymoreâbut it wasnât just the video. It was the video, and the gutted video clerk, and the mangled bus driver, and the severed woman with wolf fibers found her butchered corpseâall interconnected by one very furry, clawed, fanged⊠thing.Â
Rolling onto your back, you scrubbed at your eyes, fingers cruel and violent in their attempt to scour away images of blood, and death, and monsters. There had to be an explanation. A rational explanation. Your gaze reflexively drifted towards the charm bundle on your windowsill, propped up against a few of your favorite novels.
The books were old, spines creased and splitting at the corners from little fingers and a lot of love. They were your momâs before they were yours; you read them together under the covers whenever it rained. For a long time, you kept them hidden away under your bed with all the other things that might crumble your brittle will, but the yellowing pages steeped in memories didnât seem so haunting anymore. You were already halfway through the stack, consuming the faded ink like a fiend in the night. It was odd; there wasnât much that had changed since now and then. Really, only one thing. It made sense, you supposed after some thought. Your childhood favorites: Nancy Drew, Sherlock Holmes, the Hercule Poirot novels, they were exactly the kind of thing a sheriffâs son would appreciate.
The largest book in the pile was your complete collection of Sherlock Holmes. You chewed on your lip, eyes tracing the elegant swoops and swirls illuminated on the spine. Words curled along your brainstem in time with the loops, breaking through the buzzing in your mind with quiet British flourish: When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.
Your nose scrunched, bottom lip trapped between your teeth. Surely, you hadnât eliminated all logical explanations yet. Surely.Â
The metallic embellishments glinted at you, taunting you with their unmistakable presence and insistent reminder of your eveningâs unavoidable ending. There was only one place to go for the improbable, after all; you just had to get past your pride and everything you believed to be true.Â
Before you could finish putting on your shoes, your dad found his way into your room. He lingered on the border of the black cherry floor. His stance was awkward, unsure of his footing, and you froze with your shoelace in hand. After a moment of stilted silence, he cleared his throat and loosened his tie from its chafing Windsor knot, âI just wanted to let you know Iâll be out later than usual.â
Nodding, you tied your laces into neat bows and pulled the wrinkles in your tights straight, âParent Teacher Conferences, right?â
âMhm,â he paused and attempted a smile. The edges were stiff, as if his mouth had forgotten the movement, at least when directed at you, âShould I be worried?â
It was his attempt at a joke; you knew that. You still felt a flutter of anxiety. Despite Stilesâs reassurances, you weren't so cavalier about breaking the rules. âAll Aâs,â you finally said, quietly to your feet.Â
Your dad gave you a real smile; smaller than his previous attempt at playfulness, but this one was your favorite. He was proud. Itâd been a long time since heâd looked at you with anything other than grief and unease. âThatâs my girl.â He rapped his knuckles against your door frame and said, âThereâs takeout money on the table. Donât stay out too long; thereâs aââ
âCurfew, I know.â You slung your bag over your shoulder and fiddled with the strap, âIâll be back soon.â
He didnât ask you where you were going. He never did. You weren't sure what that said about your relationship, but you didnât want to think about it any longer than you had to. There were far more pressing things to dwell on.
Maggie was in her kitchen when you opened the door to her house. It was cozy, small; she'd inherited it from her mother when she passed years ago. There were still signs of her 70s nostalgia all over every room. The shag carpet was horrendous, but you kind of liked the color. The muted green almost looked like a bed of moss, like something out of a fairytale. You had your own key; youâd had one since you were old enough to be a latchkey kidâeven though you were never really on your own for long. There was always someone around to help you with your homework, bake you brownies without getting shell in the batter, read you stories about far away places and imaginary worlds. Youâd had a wonderful childhood until it ended; some people werenât that lucky. You knew that you were fortunate to have twelve years of Rockwellian bliss; it was more than a lot of people got. Knowing, however, still didnât make the after any easier.Â
âWant a scone?â Maggieâs head was buried in the oven, steam curling around her shoulders. She emerged with a tray of browned lumps in pink oven-mitted hands, âThey're slightly burnt, but itâs not my fault. My timer betrayed me.â
You didnât reply. You chewed on your lip and studied the plants hanging from the ceiling. The Angelica was in full bloom, little clusters of white fuzzy fireworks. The roots were supposed to ward off evil. You wouldâve scoffed at the thought a week ago. Now, there was a lingering âwhat ifâ you couldnât shake.Â
You sighed quietly, the exhaustion rattling through your chest, and trailed your gaze to the next plant. Skullcaps were your favorite, not because they were supposed to induce visions, obviously; you liked the blossoms. The fluted periwinkle petals certainly looked magical. You picked a flower from the lowest stem and rolled it between your fingers, âYou really believe in this shit, right?â You looked up from your hands and studied Maggieâs face carefully, âItâs not all a scam?â
The anticipated gasp carried through the kitchen, followed by the clang of a plonked baking sheet, âI resent the very implication.â
âIâm serious.â You stared at Maggieâs back, watching for any tell-tale signs of tension or rigidity, âDo you really believe that witches are real and wolfsbane can kill werewolves?â
âI will not be abused in my own home,â there was a lilt in Maggieâs voice, a flippancy that usually made your lips twitch into a smile, but Maggie's hand trembled and sent the scone on the edge of her spatula to the floor. Maggie dropped to her knees and scooped the crumbling pieces into a pile with desperate hands, oddly frantic for something as silly as a dropped pastry.Â
You squatted next to her and rested your hands over Maggieâs until they stilled. âMags,â you were quiet, gentle in your sweeping, but Maggie didnât seem soothed by the clean floor.Â
Maggieâs chin lifted, but her eyes zeroed in on the tip of your nose instead of your eyes. âBabe.â
You gripped your knees, clinging to the caps with ragged nails and flexed knuckles, like your bones were the only solid thing left in the room. âCan you be serious for once in your life, please.â Your tongue went heavy, adhering to the floor of your mouth, effectively sealing everything else you couldnât bring yourself to say: Please, I think Iâm losing my mind, and I donât know how much longer I can white-knuckle it. Â
Maggie turned towards the counter carelessly, and her pinky brushed against the cookie sheet. She let out a sharp hiss through her teeth and shook her hand in the air. âWhy does it matter?â Her words were muffled through the blistering finger in her mouth, âPeople buy what they want to buy.â
Your empathy was thinning and so was your patience. Your teeth gnashed, and you winced when your tongue got in the way. âI donât give a shit about your delusional customers. You know what I mean.â
âSee, âdelusional,ââ Maggie stuffed a scone into her mouth even though it was still steaming. Her eyes watered as she struggled to swallow the wad of blueberry and oatmeal lodged against the roof of her mouth. âWhy are we even talking about this?â she said thickly, throat clogged with congealed crumbs and something skittish in her eyes. She bent over the sink and turned the water to cold; you weren't entirely sure if she was soothing the burns on her tongue or simply avoiding eye contact.
âThereâs something happening here,â your voice trembled, much to your disdain, and you were further horrified by the stinging in your tear ducts, âand I donât know what to do.â
Maggieâs head whipped towards you, wetting her hair and splattering her lenses with water droplets that dripped onto her nose, âYou donât have to do anything. Thatâs not your job.â She clutched your shoulders with desperate fingers, digging into your scapulae until it hurt, âYour job is to go to school, get good grades, and live happily ever after.â
You shook off her hands and wiped your nose against your shoulder, âWhy wonât you just give me a straight answer?âÂ
âWell, I am biââ
âMaggie,â you struggled for words until there was only one left on your tongue, âplease.â
A blank expression fell over her face, and then Maggie seemed to sink through the floor even though she was still standing. âDid you read the book?â
You could barely hear her. Your nose shriveled towards your brows, âWhat book?â
Her eyes shined with something; you couldnât quite define it. There was a glimmer of remorse, but you couldnât make out the rest. ââBeacon Hillsâ Bloodlinesâ.â
For a moment, you were too confused to be frustrated, âNot really.â
Confusion became bewilderment when Maggie left the kitchen without a word. She returned with a thick book; though, book wasnât quite accurate. It was really a stack of pulp parchment barely held together with a piece of threaded twine. It looked older than the Bloodlineâs journal; you could see a few pages sticking out from the others, and the spine was in desperate need of re-stitching. You reluctantly took the pages from Maggieâs hands after she shook it in your face a couple times.Â
Maggie was quiet when she finally spoke, âRead the journal.â She nodded towards the new book, âThat too.â
You frowned at the cover and held it out in front of you like it was contaminated. âWhy are you being so weird about this? Just tell me.â
Maggie looked at you, and the most peculiar sensation rolled down your spine. Maggie's eyes were so present, like a shotgun blast, like a meteor shower. Her voice wasnât even close to loud, but it was just as piercing as her stare, âI made a promise; I have to keep at least part of it.â
Your forehead creased, âWha...thatâs even weirder. Are you fuckinâ Gandalf? Just say it.âÂ
âTrust me,â Maggieâs gaze shifted to the floor, and you almost melted with relief, âthere are some things that youâre better off not knowing.â
âGreat. Thanks, Obi-Wan,â you rolled your eyes and crammed the bound parchment into your bag, âIâll figure it out myself.â
A cool hand cupped your cheek before you could leave. You grudgingly met Maggieâs gaze, adjusting your grip on the strap of your bag. Â
Maggie held onto your shoulders, a breath away from shaking you. âPromise me, you wonât do anything stupid.â
You grimaced, âIââ A flash in Maggieâs eyes dried all the words on your tongue.
âPromise.â
âPromise,â you mumbled.
Maggie finally let you leave, and your feet felt heavier than they did when you walked into Maggieâs apartment. Your bag was heavier, so perhaps it wasnât all an illusion. The guilt, however, was certainly playing a part in your sagging shoulders. You chewed on a thumbnail and slipped into the comfort of denial. It didnât count as a broken promise if you didnât really know what you were promising.
Your dad was still gone when you got home, and you were relieved. Solitude was your only comfort with all this dread chilling your blood. You weren't good with the unpredictable, not anymore. You tried to study it, the way you did with dead languages and theoretical physics, but the methodology wasn't clear. You just wished, for once, you were as scary as people believed.Â
There was one thing you could doâor rather two. One was on your desk, and the other was at the bottom of your bag.Â
You started with the journal, and your hair quickly became a nuisance. Every time you bowed your head to get a better look at the messy scrawl, wispy strands obscured your vision. You tied your hair back and nibbled on your lip, struggling to determine if a smudged loop was an âaâ or an âo.â They didnât have computers in the 1800s, you knew that, but it wouldnât have killed Maggieâs great-great-great-grandmother to quill with a little less ink. Neat cursive was hardly as taxing as cholera.Â
The pain at the base of your skull was unbearable by the time you made it through half of the entries. Your impatience was rapidly fraying, with yourself and with the lack of insight. Maybe, this was all an elaborate stallâor maybe Maggie really didnât know anything.Â
You flopped back against your pillows and starfished your limbs across your bed until all your joints and muscles unkinked. âFuck me.â Your eyes flicked down your legs, and you glowered at the journal. It was goading you, opened to the middle and sprawled across your thighs, staring at you and all your incompetence.Â
Your thumbs dug a trench in your skull as you tried to rub the throbbing out of your temples.
One more page. You could read one more page.Â
You flipped the page, careful with the crumbling corner. The parchment was cluttered with names and arrows; there were a few illustrations too, sketched portraits of the people memorialized on paper. It was inked chaos, but only one word stood out to you. In a large curling script, Hale was spread all over the complicated family tree. You gnawed on your lip and bent your head closer to the small description at the top of the page: The Hale pack founded Beacon Hills in 1856, saving the town from desolation with their wealth. The pack has several branches, extending across the state. They continue to be a prevalent force in their world.Â
The bloodlines were difficult to follow with all the different branches and untimely deaths. As far as you could tell, the line was documented all the way to 2002. There were a few different sets of handwriting; the style changed every few decades or so, and you flipped to the end of the family line just to check for Maggieâs chicken scratch. You didnât find her handwriting, but you did notice something familiar on the last line. Derek Hale.Â
You knew, of course, that Derek would likely be included, but your breath hitched when your finger traced over the notation inscribed next to almost every single one of his family membersâ names: Deceased: Arson. Laura Hale was still alive on the tree, and the thought of documenting her deathâof giving her an end date âit stole all the air from your lungs.Â
Your eyes burned, and you quickly flipped back to the start of the Hale bloodline. A few dozen county death records later, the burning in your corneas was due to the strain of one too many computer searches. Still painful, but you much preferred blue light sting to the threat of tears. You focused on it, on the ache; it was so much quieter than all the thoughts fighting you for their turn. They were so loud, a million ravenous locusts buzzing, feasting on your ear canal. You couldnât make out what they were saying, what they were trying to tell youâwhat they wanted you to believe.Â
Derek Hale couldnât be a werewolf because that would mean werewolves were real, and if werewolves were real, how many other monsters were lurking in the dark? How many creatures from Maggieâs stories were waiting for someone to separate from the herd, biding their time until they could sink their teeth into human flesh?
There was only so much you could find online and in Maggieâs books. Certain secrets had yet to be written.Â
It was disturbingly easy to find out where Stiles lived. The receptionist at the Sheriffâs station was all too happy to give you his address when you gave her your name. You finally stumbled upon the one perk of being an infamous, pathetic half-orphan: blind faith.Â
His house was smaller than yours, and you were jealous. All the empty space just made the silence worse, you found. You could see a few spots where the paint was peeling when you got closer, and you smiled at the shoddy patch work. You wondered who tried to fix it. You hoped it was Stiles; you could see the paint in his hair, maybe smeared across his cheek from an ill-advised attempt to scratch his nose. It was adorable.Â
You knocked on the door and clutched Maggieâs books tighter to your chest. Youâd expected Stiles to answer the door, but he didnât. You didnât know why it hadnât occurred to you that someone else would be home until Sheriff Stilinski opened the door, but you felt stupid for not thinking of it sooner. The Sheriff looked just as surprised to see you; at least, he had an actual reason.Â
âOh.â You blinked and devolved into a monosyllabic moron, âHi.âÂ
Obviously, you knew Stiles was Sheriff Stilinskiâs son, but for some reason the idea of them occupying the same place at the same time was dumbfounding. YOur mind couldnât make sense of it. There was the Sheriff in one box, with all your grief, all your pain, and then there was Stiles. You didnât fully know what was in his box, but you knew it was good.Â
âHey, kid,â Sheriff Stilinski smiled through his confusion, âyou okay? Did somethingââ
âIâmheretoseeStiles,â all your words were smooshed together in one big exhale.Â
The Sheriff looked even more confused for a moment, and then he gave you a little conspiratorial grin. âHeâs up in his room. Go ahead.âÂ
You nodded absently and followed him inside. You stopped thinking about the hefty pile of books in your arms when you noticed the slight limp in Sheriff Stilinskiâs step. âAre you okay?âÂ
The Sheriff followed your gaze and waved his hand, âItâs nothing. Barely a scratch.âÂ
You hesitated at the foot of the stairs, looking for blood or something equally horrific. He had no reason to lie to you, but youâd gotten used to the worst case scenario. âYou sure?â
The wrinkles at the corners of his eyes deepened with his smile, âYou sound like my son.â
You mouth ticked up slightly, âThatâs not an answer.â
Sheriff Stilinski had a nice laugh, you thought. You grinned as his head shook with another rumbling chuckle. âNow you really sound like my son. I hope he hasnât driven crazy too.â
âEh,â you shrugged a little and smiled, âheâs alright.â Your voice dropped a little, like you were telling a secret, âMore than, actually. HeâsâŠgood.â
The Sheriff looked surprised briefly, a spasm of disbelief, and then all the muscles in his face seemed to melt with fondness. âHe is,â his voice was a bit gravelly when he spoke, like it got lodged halfway up his throat. He loved his son; it was obvious. You wondered if your dad ever looked like that when talked about you. You wondered if he even talked about you at all.Â
âNot a lot of people are,â you said quietly, looking down at your sneakers. The white wasnât even white anymore. They were graying from years of stepping on your own feet, kicking car doors closed, tripping over asphalt. You weren't the kind of girl who could keep shoes clean; that was one thing about you that hadnât changed. Sometimes, it felt like everything else had, and none of it was for the better.Â
Sheriff Stilinski waited until you looked up, and then he smiled at you, almost as fondly as before. âYou are.â
You were overwhelmed with feeling, so close to an emotion you couldnât name, but you knew youâd felt it before. Once upon a time, when parents were parents, and children were children.Â
The Sheriff rested his hand on your shoulder and squeezed. You were tipping into tearful, and youâd never been so grateful to hear Stilesâs voice.Â
âDad, whoâsââ Stiles stopped at the top of the stairs and stared at the two of you. His jaw dangled, and it didnât snap shut until his dad snorted. Stilesâs eye twitched, and you could see the reboot loading behind his eyes. You wholly understood the sentiment.
His brain regained function, and apparently all he could come up with was, âHey.â
You grinned to yourself, a small secret smile at his predicament, and your hand cocked in a little wave, âHey.â
Sheriff Stilinski cleared his throat, âIâllâIâm going to get something to eat.â Neither of you looked at him; you were too busy playing a strange staring contest with equally stupid looks on your faces. Â
Stiles recovered from his stupor once you were alone. His face settled into something bitter, stony at all the edges, irritation tucked into the creases. It was hardly the face you expected to see when you finally paid him a surprise visit.Â
Your brow curved, and you tried not to shrink in on yourself. âYou look pissed.â
Stiles snorted and drummed his fingers against the railing, âYeah, well, youâre in a perpetual state of pissiness, so weâve all got problems.â You must have crumpled this time, at least a little bit, because his scowl thawed and his hands fell limply by his sides. âSorry. Thatâs notâdisplaced aggression, itâs my sweet spot.â
You shrugged and smiled slightly, a little stiff, a lot amused, âYouâre not exactly wrong.â
âStill.âÂ
You played another game of eye-contact chicken, and Stiles scratched the back of his rapidly flushing neck. Your hair, still damp from the light drizzle, fell in front of your face as you tilted your head towards the stairs, âSo, you gonna invite me up, orâŠâ
He nodded a little too quickly and definitely too fervently, âYeah, sorry. Iâm justââ
âPissed?â you smirked and adjusted your grip on your books, trekking up the stairs. Stiles narrowed his eyes at you, but he was smiling. He had a nice smile; it was big, looseâunrestrained in a way a lot of people were afraid to be. It was the kind of smile you couldnât help but return.
Stiles let out a profound sigh and shook his head, âItâs all Scottâs fault.â You shot him a dubious look as he pushed his bedroom door open for you. He shrugged, âIf I only tell it with carefully selected parts of the story, itâs all his fault.â
Your mouth twitched. Your smile was small, but it peeled back a good deal of the person you thought you should be. So much so, there was a little you peeking underneath. âWe can pretend it is. Just for today.â
Stilesâs throat bobbed with his swallow, and when he smiled back at you, slowly, fleetingly, but ever-so sweetly, you finally realized you were awkwardly standing in the middle of his room. Like an idiot.Â
His room was exactly what you expected, and that wasâŠyou didnât realize that you knew him well enough to expect plaid bedding and posters of cringey emo bands that were heavily featured on most of your playlists.Â
His desk was cluttered with various books and papers, stacked with no apparent rhyme or reason. You recognized the bestiary he bought from Curio Killed the Cat; the burgundy and gold binding was striking against all his monochrome textbooks. There were a few papers poking out from the aged pages, printouts of something furry and familiar. Before you could get a better look, Stiles bustled past you, doing a quick but rather poor job of hiding his dirty laundry under his bed and behind his closet door.Â
Stiles was slightly out of breath when he finished, dropping onto the foot of his bed, âSoâŠyou stalkinâ me now?âÂ
You rested your hip against his desk and hummed, âSeemed only fair.âÂ
âWell,â his face split into a bright, infuriating grin, âI am flattered.â
âShut up.â His grin widened, and you rolled your eyes, glaring at your bowed reflection in a chrome lamp on the edge of his desk. It was in grave need of a good dusting, along with most of the room. âYouâre literally my only option.â
âSo, youâre sayinâ Iâm the one.â Stilesâs smirk was audible, and you sputtered.Â
Your ears were unnaturally hot, and so was the back of your neck. You meant to groan, wanted him to know just how unamusing you found him, but your throat failed you. Your complaint came out airy, huffy, and it trembled against your soft palate. Truthfully, it sounded awfully similar to a whine; you scowled at the sound and squeezed your books tighter to your chest, âIâm leaving. Right now. Iâve reached my maximum capacity for bullshit.âÂ
Long fingers circled around your wrist before you could go too far. They were blistering against your cool skin, but a shiver shuddered through your arm all the way to your skull.Â
âDonât go,â Stiles hummed softly, close enough to warm the shell of your ear. âI owe you one, remember?âÂ
You braved a look at him through your lashes, and he was smiling at you again; this one was nervous. He had forgotten, it seemed, to let go of your wrist until now. Stiles sat back down on his bed, and you absently brushed your fingers over the lingering sensation of his fingertips.Â
âRight,â you looked around the room and chewed on your bottom lip, âsoâŠwhat was that whole thing with Derek Hale?â
Stiles paused. You could feel him watching you, studying you like one of his puzzles. âHe needed a ride.â
You set your books on his desk, and Stiles nodded towards the chair in front of him. You hesitated before sitting down, feeling a bit like you were giving up the battlefield high ground, âYouâre likeâŠfriends, then?â
âAbsolutely not.â If the emphatic denial wasnât enough to convince you, the violent shake of his head was telling enough. âKind of wish he was dead, actually. It would solve so many problems.â
âSo you donât actually know him that well,â you murmured, sinking into the chair with all your hopes and plans.Â
Stilesâs neck craned as he studied your face, âWhy?â You just looked at him, keeping your face impassive, and his eyes went a little buggy. âI know he looks dreamy, but that would be nothing but a nightmare for everyone involved. Trust me.â
Your face twisted, lips curling around the unsavory taste in your mouth. âI donâtâwhat was wrong with him yesterday?â
Stiles didnât look entirely convinced, but skepticism did look a lot like concern. âStomach bug.â
You rolled your eyes. It wouldâve made you laugh under any other circumstance, but you didnât feel much like laughing now. Youâd been a tick away from the edge ever since you realized that Lydia had been this close to being butchered by that thing.Â
Your fingers curled into tight fists, knuckles straining, âIâm not an idiot, okay. I know thereâs something weird going on.â You looked up from your lap with sharp eyes, but if he looked a little closer, heâd see the desperation underneath, âAnd I know you know something about it.â
Stiles swallowed hard and twisted his fingers together, âIâm actually known for knowing nothing about anything. Ever.âÂ
He flinched when you stood up abruptly. The chair rolled back into his desk and sent a few pencils to the floor. You glared at them, like they did it on purpose just to spite you, and your glower drifted towards the glint of citrine and garnet on the corner of his desk. âThis.â You picked up the bestiary and tried to shake it in front of his face, but it was too heavy to do your frustration justice, âWhy did you buy this?â
His eyes, miraculously, grew rounder, âI told you. Dââ
âNâ D, I know, but I looked into it. This is real; itâs transcribed from a real Ancient Greek text.â
â...I like authenticity.â Stiles shrugged towards his fidgeting hands, âI take my craft seriously.â
Scoffing, you dropped the book on top of his bed, âSo youâre saying you believe the whole mountain lion theory?âÂ
âWell, obviously noââ
âThen what do you believe?â Your chest seethed with quick shallow breaths as you paced from one side of his room to the other, âBecause I was looking through this genealogy line, and the Hales have been here before Beacon Hills was even Beacon Hills, and thereâs a pattern ofâhold on.âÂ
You snatched Maggieâs journal off of his desk and flipped it open to the Hale family tree, bookmarked with the thick stack of county death reports youâd printed out. âLook, thereâs a series of premature, violent deaths in their line directly after a series of animal attacks on the town, and then all of it just stopped a few generations before Derekâs mom became the head of the paââ
You didnât know when Stiles stood up, but he was in front of you now, stopping you in your tracks. He brushed his fingers through his short crop of hair and shook his head, âHold on, okay. Take a breathââ
You didnât hear him, not really. Truthfully, you didnât even notice that heâd started talking. You shoved the pages closer to his face, and all your words rushed past your lips in one carved out breath, âAnd then it all started again after Laura Hale was killed, and she was found with wolf fibers on her bodyââ
Stilesâs brows flew towards his hairline, âHow do you knoââ
âShe became the head of the family after Talia died, right?â Your hair was as wild as your eyes after a series of urgent tugging, and you prayed to all the mythical gods in every game youâd ever played that you sounded saner than you looked. They might actually exist, after all. Who's to say that SelĂ»ne didn't exist in a world where werewolves did? ââCause sheâs the oldest living, fully conscious relative, and then immediately after she's killed, the animal attacks start up again, like she was keeping something in-check.â
âSlow down.â Stiles gripped your shoulders. You were closer than either of you realized until you looked up and your noses were almost touching. He swallowed thickly and let go of you after a moment, taking a step back, âA couple of days ago you thought this was all bullshit.â
You chewed on your lip and your indecision, looking for something in his face. You didnât know what, but you were pretty sure you found it when his mouth furrowed into a concerned frown. It was for you, you realized, not because of you. That wasâŠa rarity in your life as of late. You didnât hate it.Â
Sighing, you pulled your phone out of your jacket pocket and opened the video from Lydiaâs phone. âA couple of days ago I hadn't seen this,â you mumbled, shoving the phone into his hand.
Stiles looked at you for a moment longer and then pressed play. His face was unreadable, save for the small flinch when the beast shattered the store window, and you hated it. âWhere did you get this?â Stiles finally said quietly. His voice was low and infected with something dire.Â
You rifled through your papers, something to keep your hands busy and your eyes off of the dark look on Stilesâs face, âSomeone sent it to Lydiaâit was a blocked number, so donât ask who.â
âDid sheââ
âI deleted it before she could.âÂ
Neither of you needed to say it; you both knew Lydia was clinging to sanity by the skin of her perfect teeth. She couldnât see the proof that the monster under her bed was real. Not yet. Maybe not ever.Â
âGood.â Stiles rubbed a hand over his face, looking so much older than sixteen, and he flickered his gaze to your face, âYou canât show this to anyone. You know that, right?â
âBesides Scott,â you retorted dryly.
Stiles almost smiled. There was a ghost of one hiding in the corners of his mouth, but it faded before it could materialize. âBelieve me, he really doesnât need any more proof. Delete it.âÂ
He sighed at your scowl and tried again, âPlease delete it.â
You shook your head and grabbed your phone from his hands, âNot until you tell me what you know.â
âI donât know anything.â Stiles held up his hands and took a careful step towards you, âReally. I know as much as you do.â
You stared at him. You weren't sure if you were a good judge of character. Youâd like to think you were, but it wasnât like you spent a lot of time around other people. Even before you got trapped in your head, you really only had one friend, and you used to think youâd be friends with her for the rest of your lives. Maybe longer.Â
Youâd been wrong before. You didnât want to be wrong again.
Stiles reached for your hand, and you let him lace your fingers together. âI know how you feel. It sucks, and itâs kind of exciting, but mostly freakinâ terrifyingâand all you need to know is that itâs going to be okay. Okay?â
Your chin jerked in a rigid little nod. You softened slightly when he squeezed your hand. He wasnât telling you everything; you were almost 100% certain of that, but you were also pretty sure he wasnât lying. That was enough for you. For now.Â
âThe file room,â you said quietly.
Stilesâs lips drew together into a little pucker, âWhat?â
âThe evidence room with all the files,â you looked up at him, and the ember of hope was stoked in your eyes, âthereâs probably more there.â
He bit down on his cheek, âI donât knowââ
You folded her arms over her chest, chin lifting in defiance, âYou promised.â
Stiles sighed and ran his hand over his head. His smile was a little affectionate thing. He sighed and shook his head, âI promised.â
âWell, alright then.â Your shoulders relaxed, and you sat back down in his desk chair, âMiddle of the night break-in, itâs a date.â
#stiles stilinski x reader#stiles stilinski imagine#stiles stilinski#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#teen wolf#stiles stilinski x you#stiles stilinski fanfiction#stiles stilinksi x reader#teen wolf imagine#teen wolf fanfiction#stiles stilinski imagines
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"The worst thing to happen to Jason was his death" WRONG. The worst thing to happen to Jason was being written almost exclusively by Scott Lobdell for a decade straight.
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HOWLING: TST Rewrite // Prev. / Chapter 3 / Next.
Characters: Thomas, fem!reader, Newt, Aris, Teresa (bg), Minho (bg), Frypan (bg), Winston (bg) Pairing(s): Thomas x Reader (the slowest of burns as is my brand) Word Count: 4.2k Tags: Mix of book and movie canon, newt!sister!reader Warnings: Canon typical violence and gore, heavy gore and violence this chapter, sad times are ahead my friends
A/N: What is a writing schedule. I certainly don't have one anymore. Right now the inspo is only pulling me here bc she is a fickle, fickle mistress. Also, if you've only seen the movies, you might be a bit confused. Cranks are different in the books; they don't look like zombies exactly. The longer they remain a crank, the more injuries they get from fighting each other or hurting themselves bc they're, y'know, tragically insane. They can usually talk too, but they sound real messed up and, again, insane. From here on out, the lore will probably blend between movie and book based on what I remember the best lmao. Taglist: @m30wk1ttycat @mxltifxnd0m
Youâve heard about cranks. You know all the technical terms and definitions. WCKD told you about all of the stages, described the slow descent into madness during their lengthy justification of your two years in hell. They said the worst part is just before the end, when you know youâre about to turn, and thereâs nothing you can do to stop it. Thatâs when they leave, they said. Thatâs when they banish themselves to the hidden societies of the damnedâthe violent, savage world of the Gone.Â
None of it prepared you for witnessing it first-hand.
Thomas turns towards you, and his smile immediately twists into panicâthough, panic isnât quite right. Youâve seen Thomas panicked before, often, in fact. It seems to be a constant with him; thereâs always a little bit of unease crawling under his skin.Â
This is something else.Â
Thomas is in front of you, breathing heavily against your skin, before you can think of a better word. He grabs your arm and yanks you into his chest so quickly your shoulder clicks under the strain.
 A loud shriek answers all of the questions furrowing your brow.Â
A girlâan almost girl, throws herself against the chain link fence you were just leaning on. She snarls around the wire, teeth gnashing together without any regard for her tongue. Foam gathers at the corners of her mouth and dribbles down her chin. Sheâs more animal than human.Â
You know the terminology, Past the Gone; it doesnât make this any easier. It doesnât make this easier at all.Â
The first thing you notice is how small she is. There are more pressing things that require your attentionâlike the deep gashes carved into her skin and the large scars spread across her cheeks to her browbones. And her eye sockets. Fuck, her eye sockets are hollow and obscured with pink knitted tissueâand thatâs when you realize exactly what the scars are from. She clawed her own eyes out.Â
Such horrific, grisly details, and all you think about is how small she is. You finally realize what sheâs screaming. Help me. Sheâs screaming, âHelp me.â
âCome on,â Thomas tugs on your arm again and pulls you further away from the screaming, âwe gotta move. We gotta move now.â
A crank rushes from the shadows. A man this time, missing his nose, and you shudder through your shoulders when you notice the bite marks around the exposed nasal cavity.Â
Thomas drags you forward by your hand, forcing you to keep up with his sprint. His feet are nimble as they are quick; he snakes away from the cranks emerging from the darkness without missing a step. Your rhythm is a little less fluid, but every time you trip over a sudden pivot or scattered plywood, Thomasâs grip on your wrist hauls you back onto your feet. It hurts a little. Thomasâs blunt nails dig into the thin skin on the inside of your wrist, and his fingers squeeze the delicate bones hard enough to bruiseâand youâve never been more grateful for anything in your life.Â
You can hear the thrum of your blood rushing in your ears, your feet slamming against the concrete, and the muddy sound of someone shouting through the fog of adrenaline. Nothing else seems real.Â
Thomas has to scream directly in your face to cut through the haze. âHold âem shut.âÂ
The world refocuses with harrowing clarity.Â
Thereâs chilling laughter on the other side of the door, and Thomas clutches at your shoulder with his free hand. He nods towards the thin sheets of metal and glass separating you from savage teeth and feral eyes. âHold âem shut.â You donât have the mental capacity to question him.Â
It takes your full weight to keep the horde of cranks from breaking through the doors, and you know you canât manage it for long. Your heels start to slip against the floor, and you can just barely hear Thomas over the sound of your boots squealing and cranks asking for, âjust a little taste.â
Thomas yells, barks really, âGet out of the way,â from the corner, and you do.Â
You trust him in this primal state. You canât decide if that means more than how you feel about him when youâre in your right mindâand then a large filing cabinet crashes to the floor and wakes you from your temporary stupor.
Thomas takes your hand again and rushes forward. He canât decide, it seems, whether he should keep you behind him or in front of him, but it doesnât matter when a double escalator, broken-down and cluttered with debris from the ceiling, separates you. Your feet remember what to do now that youâre on your own.Â
You turn a corner, and a sudden burst of air whooshes through your lungs when you see that the rest of the group is okay. Newt cups a hand over his eyes and squints. You can see the exact moment he finally hears what Thomas is shouting, and then again when he sees the creatures nipping at your heels.Â
Newtâs eyes somehow grow wider, and you think, for a moment, that they might just engulf his entire face. âOh shit.âÂ
Newt, fool-heartedly, doesnât start running until you reach him. You grab his hand and wish you had the breath and time to shake the stupid right out of him.Â
âWhat in the ever-loving hell are those things?â Newt shouts, close to your ear.Â
You wrench him forward with a harsh tug when he tries to look over his shoulder again. âOh you know,â you wheeze slightly as you snag a broken piece of rebar from the ground, âjust Thomas and his groupies.â
âWell tellâem to take a bite outta him, then.â
You feel a little pinch of guilt in your gut as Newtâs struggles with his bad legâbut you donât let up your pace. You jerk him forward every time his joints get stuck or he trips over his uneven footing. Better he have an aching leg than no leg at all.Â
âWhat about the ones without ears?â You manage a flash of a smile, more of a spasm really, and Newt exhales a sharp breath of air that feels like a laugh.Â
He yelps when you pull him away from a pair of cranks on your right, swallowing the snark poised on his sharp tongue. Two more cranks swarm from the left, and Newt tries to push you in front of him, but you beat him to it. You shove him up the next set of escalators and stay a step behind him, ready to push himâhell, ready to carry him up the flight of stairs if need be. Youâd figure it out; adrenaline can make a person do crazy things, after all.
A crank manages to get ahold of your jacket, and Newt falters. âGo,â you shove Newt with one hand and rip your other through your jacket sleeve. You canât even feel the ache in your broken thumb, not with the panic sparking through every single one of your synapses. âGet out of here.âÂ
The crank still has a hold of your empty sleeve, and it seems like she isnât planning on letting go anytime soon. You swing the rebar into her arm and twist out of the other sleeve, sending your denim jacket and the crank spiraling down a long descent to the floor.
Newt is waiting at the top of the stairs, and you give him the fiercest glower you can manage while struggling for air. âI told you to go,â you snap.Â
Newt takes your hand this time and rolls his eyesâimpressively flippant given your current situation. âYeah, well you arenât the boss of me, are ya? Iâve already got one friend with a god complex; donât need two.â
Your lungs are burning, and your head is throbbing, and youâre too tired to launch into a tirade about just exactly how stupid he is. âShould be,â you hiss through your gasps. âYou make terrible decisions.â
âIâm older.â Youâre sure if Newt could breathe without coughing, he would be sticking his tongue out at you.Â
âSenile, you mean,â you reply, smugly and with emphasis. You can see the door ahead. Itâs so close; you think you might just make it.Â
Glass shatters behind you, and youâre filled with an all-encompassing sense of dread when Newt doesnât snark back.Â
Your head whips around just in time to see a crank crash into Newt.Â
Newt falls. It happens instantly and endlesslyâand you run straight towards the crank on top of him before you even realize you need to. Itâs instinct. Something deeper inside your mind than a thought. Something written in your bone marrow, coded in your DNA.Â
Something WCKD canât erase.Â
You smash the bar against hisâit, you think with an edge of desperationâits skull. The sound of the cranks' bones shattering makes your stomach turn and your eyes water. You have just enough time to kick it off of Newt and pull him to his feet.Â
You donât let go of his hand this time. You keep your sweaty palms, grimy with dust and dirt, pressed together until you see moonlight.Â
When you finally stop moving, your legs give out on you. You fall to the ground and lean back against a frigid wall. For a long time, all you can hear is soft panting; itâs almost comfortingâa reminder that you arenât alone. Youâre surrounded by humanity, maybe even friends in another life. You allow yourself to burn your fingertips on the thought as your eyelids droop towards your cheekbones.
The shelter Thomas found isnât very hospitable; the walls are precariously balanced slabs of broken concrete, and the only seats to be found are jagged pieces of rubble and rusted steel barrels. Perhaps, thatâs why the cranks give up their search, or maybe itâs closer to dawn than you think. Frankly, youâre fine with either option. Your legs have jellified, and the others donât look much better.Â
After a long, arduous hour, Thomas shifts and deems it safe enough to talk. He keeps his voice low. You canât hear what heâs saying to Teresa and his other friendâMinâŠsomething, you try to recall, definitely something with an âMââbut youâre pretty sure itâs about Winston. You do know Winstonâs name. Itâs the least you can do after he was nearly shredded in two while giving you enough time to escape.Â
Winstonâs quiet groaning masks the rest of their conversation. Selfishly, youâre more concerned about Newt anyway, and the feeling is far too familiar for comfort.Â
You nudge at Newtâs ankle with an admittedly pathetic kick. âProp your leg on that,â you nod towards a chunk of concrete in front of him.Â
Newtâs head lulls towards you, heavily, like it's going to snap off of his slender neck and roll to the ground. âAlready told yaâ, you're not the bossâf me,â he mumbles, words slurring together with his melting eyelids.
You roll your eyes and huff, âItâll help with the swelling.â You kick at his leg again, and you keep nudging him until he complies with a sigh so heavy it makes you roll your eyes once more.Â
He lifts his leg with shaky arms and drops it on top of the rubble without ceremony. âHappy?â
You stick your tongue out at him, just because you can, and give him a vexing smirk. âExceedingly.â
Newt mutters something under his breath that you donât bother to acknowledge. Heâs a blink away from sleep anyway.Â
You close your eyes, but you canât fall asleep. You canât tell if itâs lingering adrenaline or simply because youâre a bad sleeper, even when you arenât sleeping on concrete. Itâs the dreams. They come for you most nights, and theyâre never sweet. Theyâre caked with blood and laden with grief.Â
You sit up and pull your knees to your chest. Your cracked lips curve into a fond smile when you see Newt clutch your backpack close to his chest, like a child with their favorite blanket. Or their teddy bear. You swallow and scrub at your eyes. That girl in the cage, what was left of her anywayâshe couldnât have been more than six. Â
The back of your neck prickles with the warmth of someoneâs, or somethingâs, attention. You slant your head towards the sensation and meet Thomasâs gaze. His eyes are dark in the starless sky, almost black, but they still shine with concern. Worry. Heâs always worried, youâve noticed. Always on edge, waiting for something to lurch out of the shadows, waiting for something else to be taken from him.Â
Thomas tilts his head a little and then nods towards a pile of sand a little ways away from the concrete cave.Â
Dawn is just beginning to settle over the desert, and the sand looks golden in the light of the rising sun. A little sigh of relief slips through your lipsâCranks donât like the sun. Honestly, at the peak of day, you canât blame âem.Â
Thomas slips out of his corner and holds his hand out towards you. You look at it for a second, chew on your bottom lip, and then take it. He lets go after he pulls you to your feet, and your skin immediately misses the warmth.Â
Youâve come to find that the Scorch is a cruel, cruel mistress. It varies between freezing and blistering, and you canât help but find it incredibly unfair. Silly compared to everything else, maybe, but it irks you all the same.Â
You watch the beginnings of daybreak with Thomas by your side. After you let out a soft exhale, Thomas tips his chin down to look at you.Â
âYou okay?â he says quietly. You arenât sure if the quiet is for you, or the sleeping Gladers, or the stillness of early morningâbut itâs nice all the same.
âUh huh,â you yawn it more than you say it.Â
âYour hand?â Thomas presses, crooking his head down to examine your bruised thumb in the faint light.Â
âSâokay,â you shrug and shudder. You canât really tell if itâs the residual chill of night or the ache in your thumb. In the end, Thomas decides for you. He shrugs off his jacket and wraps it around your shoulders.Â
Thomas is left in a gray t-shirt that looks as thin as your tank top. You frown at his bare arms and tilt your head up at him, âNow youâll be cold.â
He shrugs, a little sheepish. It makes you smile. âI run warm.â
You rest your fingertips against his forearm and shiver as his chilled skin leeches the warmth from your fingers. âLiar,â you hum, but a tiny smile wiggles across your lips.Â
Thomas bites his lip, âIâll be fine once Iâm in my sleeping bag.âÂ
Your lips purse, and your eyes narrow, âYou gonna go put your sleeping bag on, then?â
He gives you a little grin, âMaybe. I think I could pull it off.â
You think that he could, indeed, pull it off. Truly, Thomas could pull anything off, and you think itâs also incredibly unfair that a person can be so infuriating and so pretty all at the same time.Â
You dig the toe of your boot into the sand and wrap Thomasâs jacket tighter around your torso. âIf I asked you a question, would you tell me the truth?â
He frowns, and you suppose thatâs fair. Itâs a loaded question, especially compared to the weather.Â
Thomas turns towards you and catches your illusive gaze, âYes.âÂ
You trap your lip between your teeth and look up at him with big, blinking eyes. Itâs not the answer you expected, and you think that he might be the only person in the world whoâd give it.Â
âDo you think weâre gonna make it?â you ask quietly. You glance out at the imposing horizon, a wasteland of nothing but sand and the sparse remnants of a world thatâs almost extinct. You look back at Thomas, searching his face with bloodshot eyes. âDo you really think weâll ever stop being afraid? That someday weâll beâŠâ your nose scrunches as you scour your mind for the right word. When you find it, you wonder if it was part of the girl WCKD wiped away, if thatâs why it took you so long to unearth. âFree,â you finish quietly, âdo you really believe that someday weâll be free?â
Thomas doesnât answer for a long time, and then he flickers his gaze to your face. His eyes are so big, lined with dark lashes that kiss his freckles. Like a fawn, you muse, he has the eyes of a fawn. Right now, theyâre resolved. âI have to,â he finally answers, quiet again, another thing for you to keep.
The corner of your mouth tugs into a soft smile, sad too, âThatâs not really an answer.â
Thomas shrugs slightly, and his mouth falls into a hard line. âIt has to be.â
You chew on your cheek and his answer. He did what you asked, you suppose. You asked for honesty, not logic. Dropping to the sand, you trace little swirls in the grains with deft fingers and hum, âCan I ask you another question?â
He nods and sits down next to you.Â
âHow do youâŠâ you shake your head a little and struggle for meaning, âdo it.âÂ
Thomasâs brow pinches, âIt?â
You run your tongue over your teeth, scraping away the grit of sand stuck between your molars, and shrug. It takes you a moment to come up with a question he can actually answer. âCare,â you look at him through your lashes and rest your cheek against your knee. Your jeans scratch your skin, but itâs a distant feeling against the warmth radiating from the sand below. âHow do you care so much and still have something left?â You canât think of the right word for âsomethingâ, but Thomas seems to understand this time. Good. You certainly donât.Â
âI donât know. I justâŠhave to.â Thomas winces a little at his repetition, but when he glances at you, he has a slight smile on his face. âWhy are you asking me? You do it just fine.â
You arenât sure why it offends you so, but it does. âI do not.âÂ
You kick a little pile of sand and watch it burst in the air. You imagine for a moment that the grains are stars, or fireworks, or something other than a product of a world destroyed. You realize eventually that Thomas went quiet again.Â
Heâs looking at you when you glance over your shoulder. His face is creased with whatever thought is sharpening his eyes. Theyâre more gold than brown in direct sunlight, and right now it feels like theyâre molten, like heâs burning through your skin, your bones, your air. You can feel him seeing you, and you have to look into the face of the sun to make it stop.Â
âI saw you,â Thomas says quietly.
Your eyes water from the glaring light. You divert your gaze towards your shoes and snort, âNot this again.â
Thomas grins a little, but it turns into something much softer when says, âI saw you in there, with the bear, and then with NewtâŠin-between all the screaming and running for our lives obviously,â his cheek twitches with a wry smile, âI still saw what you did for him. It was the only reason I felt like I could get us out of there, knowing you had his back.â
âLead, you mean,â you tease with a wicked grin, âyou led us out because youâre the leader. Grand Marshal Thomasâdaintiest feet in all the land.â Itâs a clear deflection, one Thomas doesnât take.Â
âAnd then after, with his leg,â Thomas makes you look at him with his unwavering focus, âyou care. You care a lot.âÂ
You pause, suddenly feeling far less playful. You stand up and brush the sand off of your jeans, turning away from the sun and the light in Thomasâs earnest expression. âYeah, well, I donât care about saving the world. I just want to save him.â
Thomas is by your side again, and you canât understand why. He stops you with a hand on your shoulder; his eyes are alarmingly piercing. âI donât even know if the world can be savedâbut I am going to save us. All of us. I promise.â
Your mouth parts, and all you can do is stare at him, eyes wide, heart thudding. The others start to stir, sparing you from coming up with a coherent response to...that. You walk away from Thomas and his disarming sincerity before you start to evaporate with the burning sun.Â
You offer Newt a hand when you find him, and then immediately withdraw it when a smirk slides across his face.Â
Newt props himself up on his elbows and blows his flop of feathery hair out of his eyes, âAre you going to make a habit of wandering off with Tommy? I already have a hard enough time keeping track of him.â
You rolls your eyes and nudge his shoulder with your knee, âThought we already established that Iâm the bosââ
A low, agonized groan cuts through the quiet chatter.Â
The makeshift bandages wrapped around Winstonâs torso are soaked through with blood. The worst of the pooling is almost black, and crimson seeps out from the center of his wound to the hem of his shirt. He struggles to sit up, and one of his friends is quick to lend a hand.Â
Youâve seen enough people die from blood loss to know the odds.Â
You swallow the thought and take Newtâs hand for balance as you climb down a steep pile of concrete and rebar. Everyone looks at Winston when they take a moment to breathe. Itâs not discreet, but it canât be helped. It seems like everyone knows whatâs to come when they see how far away the mountains are. Itâs going to take days to get there, maybe longer, and Winston doesnât have days. He might not even have hours. Itâs unspoken, and it looms overhead like the searing heat of the sun. Â
When Winston tumbles down the sand dune, you can see it in their eyes. They know.
Itâs a desperate, crawling feeling, knowing and not being able to do anything about it. Youâve felt it before, and when you look at the misery in their faces, you feel it again. You donât know what to say. Donât know what to do. Donât know how to help when theyâre about to lose another friend.
No one says much in the end. The boys load Winston onto a dodgy stretcher crafted from what little you could find in a desolate sea of sand and ruins. Frypan and Minho struggle through the sand with the added weight of their friend, but you wonder if itâs helping, being able to help in some small way. You wonder if anything can.Â
Aris ends up by your side, and you let him take your hand. You still arenât sure how old he isâneither is he, to be fairâbut heâs always feltâŠsmall. Strange, considering he towers over most of the group B girls, but he does. Heâs scrawny, and awkward, and shyâand yet another person you canât do anything for.Â
âYou know them,â Aris says quietly, simply.
You glance over your shoulder at Newt. His face is grim as he mutters something to Teresa. âNot really.â
Aris tilts his head, ducking his eyes away from the glare reflecting off the dunes in the distance. âYou did once.â
âWas that even me?â Youâd let out an exasperated sigh, but opening your mouth for that long seems like a bad idea with the wind picking up behind you.
His bony shoulder lifts with a tiny shrug, âYou can know them now.â
Biting down on your cheek, you shake your head and look over your shoulder briefly. The sun reflects off of the thick lines of slow, silent tears slipping down Frypanâs face, and Minho looks like heâs about to bite off his own tongue with the effort to hold back his own.Â
âWhatâs the point?â you say it so quietly you think you might have imagined it, that maybe this is all a horrible dream, and youâll wake up frozen to the Maze walls in the morning.Â
Aris squeezes your hand, and you sigh. Heâs real. This is real. Another nightmare thatâs bled into daylight.
âI think he can do it.â Aris nods towards Thomasâs back. âI think heâs the right one.â
âPretty risky,â you drawl, digging your nails into your palm when you hear Winston cry out in pain, âmaking a pigheaded kid with a death wish into Jesus bloody Christ. Good way to crush your faith.âÂ
Aris looks at you, in that startlingly perceptive way he does when heâs working out a puzzle, and then smiles a little. Itâs a smidge, but itâs there.Â
Your brow arches, âWhat?â
âHe sounds a lot like you.â
Your scoff is lost to the gale cutting across the desert. It whips against your cheeks, and the gusts of sand billowing in its path blind you.Â
Thomas shouts something in the distance. You canât hear him over the wind wailing in your ears, but you can guess what he's saying. Thereâs no choice but to take shelter until the storm passes.
You hope that tonightâs nightmares will at least be a little sweeter than what awaits you when you wake.
#tmr thomas#thomas tmr x reader#tmr thomas x reader#tmr newt#thomas tmr#newt tmr#thomas x reader#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien imagine#thomas tmr imagine#tmr thomas imagine
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HOWLING: TST Rewrite // Prev. / Chapter 2 / Next
Characters: Thomas, fem!reader, Newt, Teresa Agnes (bg), Minho (bg), Aris (bg) Pairing(s): Thomas x Reader (the slowest of burns as is my brand) Word Count: 3.4k Tags: Mix of book and movie canon, newt!sister!reader Warnings: Canon typical violence and gore, sad times are ahead my friends
A/N: V fun new game, drink every time you see a trope. Also thank you for the nice comments and messages tbh inspired me to keep going because I don't see a lot of Thomas content out there in the Tumblr great beyond. Taglist: @m30wk1ttycat, @mxltifxnd0m
You stay far away from Newt now that you know. It feels wrong, unnatural. You canât eat or sleepâconstantly fighting every single one of your instincts makes you feel sick, like your organs are rejecting your body in protestâbut itâs necessary. Itâs only a matter of time before he disappears, or you disappear, or cranks break through the compound walls and drag you all to an early grave.Â
You canât remember losing Newt the first time; you donât want to ever have to.
Newt notices. He watches you from afar with a furious little divot in his brow and his lip between his teeth, but he doesnât press. Heâs busy, after all. You donât know what Newtâs friends are planning, but you can see the itching under Thomasâs skin. The constant tapping, the darting eyes. He never rests in one place for long. Itâs conspicuous amongst the complacent. Not many people see this place for what it truly is, but Thomas does.Â
So do you.Â
As naĂŻve as you find them, you canât blame the others. Hope is an addictive thing. After so many years of nothing, a glimpse of happiness is so incredibly tempting. Whoâs to say whatâs better anyway: waiting to die in numb anticipation or being blissfully unaware. It all ends the same.
Thomas doesnât fit into either category. It seems to be a trend for him, youâre gathering, along with his friends following his lead. Youâre both impressed and irritated by the way people get caught up in his current. Itâs like they canât fight it, like heâs a black hole of a person. The more you watch him, however, the more you realize that isnât quite right. Thomas doesnât steal light; he burns with it. The realization leaves a bittersweet film on your tongue, and you do your best not to look at him anymore.
You force yourself to be content this way: alone, numb, head buried in your pillow and denial. You ignore them all and suffocate on the cold, hard truth: You donât know your own brother, and you never willâand then he spills out of a vent and into your room.Â
The vent creaks under Newtâs weight. Itâs a small sound, but itâs so loud in the silence of night. You reach for your fork before you recognize his mop of downy hair and wide eyes.
âChrist, Newt,â the strength of your relief sends you reeling back onto your cot, âthought you were a crank.â
âIn the air shaft?â You see the flash of Newtâs grin, white teeth gleaming in the dark. You can also see the tension creased in corners of his mouth.
You push yourself onto your elbow and hum, âSeems like exactly the kind of place a crank would lurk.â
He snorts, âFair enough.â
Your eyes finally adjust to the dark, and you can see Thomas now. Aris pokes his head out of the vent behind him. Youâre struck dumb for a moment. The past and the present clashing together in the dark of your temporary prison makes your head hurt.
You swing your legs over the side of your bed, scrubbing your knuckles over your eyelids. âAris?â
Aris gives you a little smile. Itâs more emotion than youâve seen from him since you arrived at the facility.
Newt wraps his spindly fingers around your ankle and tugs your foot into a sturdy boot. âCom'n, bug, weâre getting out of here.âÂ
Youâre frozen as he ties the laces into neat bows with shaking hands. The endearment wrenches you into another world, dragging you heart-first into a muddled memory with a white-knuckled grip. Your cracked lips part, and you can only think of one word at a time, âOut?â
âYeah, as in not in here,â Thomas finally speaks from the shadows. Heâs on edge, like always, but tonight you can almost see the feverish energy radiating through his skin. He crouches down and nods towards the vent, âLetâs go.â
âInto the Scorch?â You scoff and shake your head, âYouâre insane.â
Newt grins: a little frantic, a lot familiar. He holds his hand out for you to take and says, âOnly slightly.âÂ
You stare at his palm for a long moment, and then a loud groan rattles through your chest. You wrap your fingers around Newtâs and glower at him, âWhen we all end up dying a horrific death, Iâll never let you live it down.â
Newt pulls you to your feet and laughs. You arenât sure if heâs more amused by the scrunch of your nose or Thomasâs surly huff. Youâd like to think itâs the latter. âTry to think positively,â Newt chirps. Heâs quieter than normal, so that the sound doesnât echo off the ventâs aluminum walls, and you finally realize that this is real. Youâre on a covert mission to escape WCKD and venture into the unknownâand Newt wants you to think positively.Â
You scoff. The Scorch. A barren desert. Crawling with cranks. What a positive venue to vacation in. Your shoulder twitches with a piddling shrug, âAt least weâll probably die quickly.â
The boy with spiky hairâfree of blood this timeâsnickers behind you, âThatâs the spirit.â
You grin and then immediately scowl when Thomas shushes everyone. No one disobeys him, not even you, and that just makes you scowl harder. Your mouth strains with the effort, but you keep it closed and imagine all the things you could say to make Thomas hit his head against the low ceiling.
Newt guides you through the tight corridor, taking great effort to keep your head and injured thumb away from the sharp corners and steely walls. Itâs all a bit of a blur from there.
The Maze, as horrific as it was, at least prepared you for running away from the guards and dodging the hail of taser shells sparking over your head. The shots are blinding, bright lightning-flashes that shatter glass and heat your skin with frenzied static. You almost stop, lost in the glare sticking to your eyelids, but Newt doesnât let you.
Newt drags you behind him and doesnât let go of your hand, not even when the guards close in on your ragtag group of panicked children. Newt pulls you behind him, firm against his back, and you canât see anything over his lofty frame. He squeezes your hand, and it occurs to you with startling clarity that he would take a bullet for you. The thought sits heavily in your stomach like a rotten peach pit; you choke on it while you wait for the end.
When the final door wonât open, you think that youâre going to die before you even see the Scorch, but Thomas surprises you again.Â
He gets you out. All of you. Alive.
For how long, you arenât sure.Â
Outside the compound, the world is bigâempty of anything good and filled with imminent peril. The wind is fittingly sinister. It howls like a caged dog thatâs been kicked one too many times, but the chilling echoes canât drown out the shrieking in the distance. The tortured cries frost your blood and nip at your skin. Theyâre coming from the lost souls just beyond the dunes, and you know that theyâre out there somewhere, prowling in the shadows of an unwelcoming indigo night. Barely human. Begging for death.Â
Itâs a place you arenât supposed to be, a night that banishes youâbut you have no choice but to run into the thick of it.Â
Thomas is fastâfaster than you, you note with a bitter biteâeven on sand. Everyone struggles to keep up with him, especially Newt. He has a limp. How could you forget that he has a limp? Guilt burns your throat as badly as the sand in your eyes; you canât shake it, no matter how hard you try.Â
The wind kicks up the further you venture into the Scorch. The gusts turn almost silver with the grains caught in their path. Lightning strikes the ground, too close for comfort, and the dusty haze lights with electricity. The glow looks toxic, like a suffocating smogâa cancerous ray trying to eat away at your flesh. It's a strange thing to be grateful for, but the shroud of sand gives you just enough time for Newtâs hand to slip back into yours.Â
A collapsing building is another strange thing to be grateful for, but the decomposing shopping center hides you from the searchlights and the storm outside. As you look around at the crumbling walls and shattered windows, you wonder whatâs worse: WCKDâs soldiers or a horde of cranks.Â
For a moment, the only sound in the remnants of a world long-gone is heavy breathing. There are a few coughs here and there, lungs trying to expel all the inhaled sand, and then silence. Thomas barely gives the group a moment to catch their breath, and then heâs urging everyone forward. Panicked. Breathless. This time, you think itâs justified.Â
The girl they arrived with stops Thomas, demanding an explanation that you probably shouldâve wondered about before now. It was so simple for you at the time. Newt held out his hand, and you took it. Youâd follow him anywhere, you realize, just to make sure he was okay.Â
You arenât really surprised by Thomasâs revelation or his complete and utter lack of a plan. Maybe you should be, but stringing kids up and bleeding them dry seems exactly like the kind of thing WCKD would do in the pursuit of a cure that doesnât exist. At least, you finally know where all those kids disappeared to, even though the knowledge doesnât actually provide you any relief.Â
âCâmon, letâs find you some warmer clothes,â Newtâs voice is soft so that he doesnât startle you, but you jump anyway, âyouâre more goose-pimple than girl.âÂ
Your mouth dries as you look at him, and all you can see is a bullet ripping through his chest, frying his bleeding heart with 3,000 volts of lethal electricityâall because someone aimed a gun in your direction.
âI can look by myself. We should split upâŠcover more ground.â You pull your hand out of his and step back, stumbling over a rotted plank of wood. Large hands wrap around your waist, righting you before you can fall to the floor and break another bone.Â
Newt squints at you and eventually lets out a little sigh, âAt least take Tommy with you. What good would you be with two bum hands.âÂ
You tip your chin up and see the sharp line of Thomasâs jaw. He doesnât look down at you. If you had to hedge your bets, youâd say heâs glaring at Newt. You scowl at the ground and mutter, âI donât thinkââ
Thomas interrupts you, âNewtâs right. No one should go anywhere alone.â He lets go of your sides, and the chill left in their absence tingles through your hips to your toes. Thomas doesnât move from his spot, just slants his head to stare at you until your shoulders sink and you turn to follow him.Â
Neither of you speak for a long time. You poke around empty rooms, examining the belongings of a society youâve only heard stories about. It would be fascinating if you weren't aware that they belonged to the dead and the damned. Thomas wanders towards a string of broken lights, and you walk towards a pile of water jugs coated in a thick layer of grime and dirt.Â
Thomas breaks the silence, âYou canât avoid him forever.â
You frown at an empty water bottle, âI'm not.âÂ
Infuriatingly, Thomas doesnât look at you. He traces the wiring of a lamp with lithe fingers and says, âI understand why you want to.â
You stand up and brush the debris off of your sweatpants, rolling your eyes, âOh, you do, do you?â
Thomas doesnât move for a moment, and then he curls and uncurls his fingers, âYou think itâs easier.â You watch the muscles in his back ripple as he rolls out an invisible ache in his shoulders. âIt might be.â
Your lips purse. Youâve never liked being seen, especially by someone you donât know. How dare he, you think, how dare he see past the scowls and stone. You kick at a small piece of rubble and fold your arms over your chest, âYouâre a great comfort, Thomas.âÂ
âHe would say itâs worth it if he knew.â Thomas turns around and mirrors your position. You arenât sure if heâs mocking you, but when he crosses his arms you can see the shape of his biceps through his thin jacket. Your eyes jerk to his face when he starts talking again, âIt might not even matter. He cares, not just about youâhe cares about people. You canât do anything to change that.â
âIâŠI canâtââ
A loud clanging in the background interrupts your reply. You hear one of the boys curse under their breaths, and Thomasâs gaze follows the sound. His eyes get stuck on a glimpse of the girlâTeresa, you remind yourself. You can just barely make out her dark curls through a broken window and a collapsing archway.Â
âYou care about her.â You chew on your lip and look at Thomas through your lashes, âArenât you scared?â
He looks down at you, and his throat bobs with his swallow. âAll the time,â Thomasâs voice is a soft wind, a gentle breeze that almost gets lost in the empty corridors, âbut scared is better than nothing.â
You wonder if heâs ever admitted that beforeâthat even the great Saint Thomas is afraid sometimes. It feels like a secret. He whispers it into the small space between you like it's something he wants you to keep. For some reason, you intend to.Â
âWhat about grief?â you whisper, because the room is calling for softness, and shiver. âIs grief better than nothing?âÂ
Thomasâs dark eyes trail over your face, âI havenât decided yet.â
You both step back at the same time, too raw and too exposed to stay in the light for another second.Â
You drift towards a large pile of clothes and brush your fingers over it. Itâs a disorienting mix of scratchy denim and soft cotton, all riddled with dust and moth holes. You stop when you feel something fuzzy. Thankfully, it isnât a dead animalâor even worse a live, rabid animalâitâs a stuffed bear. You clutch the teddy bear close to your chest and inhale deeply. You donât know what you were expecting, maybe something sweet like baby powder or something musty like spilled juice, but it just smells likeâŠnothing. Just dust and earth, not even a note of something human.Â
Your heart gets stuck in your throat as you blink rapidly, fighting the ache in your eyes. Thomas rests his hand on your shoulder and bows his head a little to look at you. His face is more worried than questioning, and it softens your resentment.Â
Swallowing hard, you fiddle with the teddy bearâs fraying bowtie, âItâs justâŠitâs soâŠlittle, andâŠthey wouldnât leave this behind.â Unless. You both know what comes after unless.Â
Thomas gently pulls the bear from your hands and sets it on top of the pile; he does it all so gently it makes you ache. He takes your empty hand and nods towards the string lights, âThink you can help me find out where these wires lead to?â
You nod, grateful for a task, and wipe the dust and damning wetness from your face with the back of your good hand. Thomas pauses and glances at your other hand, frowning at the swelling, âThey didnât splint that?âÂ
The corner of your mouth tugs into a dry smirk, despite the constant ache of your shifting thumb, âBlood bags donât need bones.â
You expect a smile, but Thomasâs mouth is an unmoving, severe line. He looks around the wreckage until he finds a dirty sneaker, ripped at the toes. Your brows furrow until he pulls the laces from it and holds out his hand, âCan I?â
You hesitate and then nod, bottom lip trapped between your teeth.
Thomas is heartbreakingly gentle. His lamblike touch startles youâyou didnât know until now that a warrior could be so delicate. It still hurts when he wraps the laces around your thumb and palm, but his tenderness distracts you from most of it. Itâs the strangeness of it, you think. It's disorienting how confoundingly tender he is with the thumb that gave him his black eye.Â
Thomas finishes the make-shift splint with a tight knot, and his attention shifts to your face, âFeel okay?âÂ
You nod again and gnaw on a sore spot in your cheek, âWhy are you being so nice to me?â You look towards his bruised eye and then look down at your shoes, digging your toes into the concrete. âI kind of punched you in the face, in case you forgot.â
The corner of Thomasâs mouth twitches, âDidnât forget. Youâve got a pretty unforgettable right hook.â
You stare at your shoe-lace splint and murmur, âIâm sorry.â Youâre a little surprised when you realize just how much you mean it.Â
âI had it coming.â Thomas shrugs and rubs his palms over his biceps, âI donât feel like himâŠI donât even know himâbut that guy, the one who sent you into the Maze, heâs still me. We have the same face.â
Pausing, your voice becomes little more than a breath, âI knew him...I donât know you.â You tentatively reach up and brush your thumb just below the bruises mottled under his eye.Â
His eye has gotten worse since you last saw him. The welt is darker now, more plum skin than pink flesh, and itâs seeped around his entire eye socket, pooling in the shadows of his face. Frowning, you brush your fingertip lightly over his cheekbone; it doesnât alleviate much of your guilt. It all feels a little like a red wine stain you canât scrub clean.Â
Thomas freezes for a moment, and your heart lurches into your ribs. He probably doesnât get a lot of skin-to-skin contact, you realize, and you have to strangle the thought before it swells into something painful. Thomas slowly relaxes and turns his face into your hand slightly, âDo you want to?â
You lick your bottom lip, and a slow nod rolls up your neck to your head, âYeah. Yeah, I think I do.âÂ
His smile is a timid little thing, and you want to keep it in your pocket for the dark days ahead.Â
âYou two need another minute? Perhaps a room.â
Your chin whips towards Newt, and your face burns. Thomas grumbles something decidedly unfriendly under his breath as he bumps Newtâs shoulder on his way towards the wall of dials and switches.Â
You can feel Newtâs gaze on you, and you ignore the warmth creeping up your ears. âShut up.â
Newt holds up his hands and grins, âI didnât say anything!â
Youâre just pouty enough to forget youâre supposed to be avoiding him, âYouâre going to regret teasing me when I become a crank chew toy.â
âPlease donât croak just to spite me,â Newt throws his arm over your shoulder and squeezes you to his side, âIâd be awfully upset about it.â
You remember again. You can almost picture Newtâs face if you told him what you know, but it's the image of Newt's face watching you die that truly haunts you. You slip out from under his arm and mumble unconvincingly, âIâm gonna see if Thomas needs help.â
The smirk on Newtâs face tells you that heâs severely misinterpreted your intentions, but thatâs okay. Itâs better if he doesnât knowâeven if the alternative is utterly humiliating.Â
You crouch down next to Thomas, and he gives you a small smile thatâs drenched in melancholy. There's some understanding in there too, but you try to ignore it.
âWeâll get out of this," Thomas says softly as he fiddles with the generator's cobwebbed dials. He catches your eye and doesnât look away, âIâm going to get us all out of this, and then there wonât be anything to be afraid of. I promise.â
âWell,â your smile wobbles, âthereâll still be spiders.âÂ
Thomas smiles back at you, soft and little, âIâll squish âem.â
Your lips twitch, âAnd snakes.â
Thomasâs nose wrinkles, âCanât help you there.â
It surprises a laugh out of you, and Thomas smiles again. Itâs the first time youâve seen him truly smile, and the stretch of his mouth lights up his face, even in the gloom of darkness and desolation. Youâre blinded by him for a moment. Somehow, he outshines the lights that wash the building in a golden haze when he flips the generatorâs final switch.
No one is smiling, however, when the screaming starts.
#tmr thomas x reader#tmr thomas#thomas tmr x reader#tmr newt#newt tmr#tmr thomas imagine#thomas x reader#tmr fanfic#tmr fanfiction#dylan o'brien x reader#dylan o'brien imagine
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