"i would rather die of passion than boreadom."đ„ Van Goghđ„đłïžâđđđ§đ·
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Text
drenched in white. (e.w.)
SYNOPSIS: after all your time alone, youâre finally not, but youâre definitely not prepared for your new life. [jackson AU]
WORD COUNT: 7.1K
WARNINGS: readers mute and taller than ellie, death, murder, blood, mentions of alcohol/starvation/hypothermia, a bit of gore, near death experience, trauma and sadness, brief girls kissing, some fluff because kids :)
A/N: tbh idk where this came from but i missed ellie so yeah prob wont write anymore of this but yeahÂ
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Apocalypses are fucking stupid.
Humans are born into nothing, forced to run all their lives from blood-lustful beasts that can rewire their entire brain chemistry into one that sadistically matches theirs, and if that doesnât happen, you die anyway with nothing but the clothes on your back and a horse with no rider. Thatâs fucking stupid.Â
You werenât alive when the world was thriving⊠presumably so â whatever the old world considered thriving. Those history books you stole in adolescence would argue otherwise, but there were some happy moments. On occasion. Maybe? Whatever. But you werenât there, and you can only imagine how you wouldâve turned out if you were. Would you be married? Have children? Own property? Businesses? Whatever other luxury the old world prioritized although it all seemed exhausting?Â
Would you be an addict, a trainwreck, someone who had it all then nothing in the blink of an eye? That seems to be reoccurring in some of those biographies you found about people called celebrities. They have everything then die too young or way too old and eventually fade into a nobody, just like everyone else. History is so heartbreaking. Such cruel fate.Â
Youâve been by yourself for a long time. Some would still consider you young, but you feel like a zombie thatâs risen from the grave most of the time. You steal and live selfishly and waste your life reading because you can. Youâre lucky enough to no longer have anyone you care about. Your recklessness doesnât hinder anyone but yourself, so you read read read. Sometimes, you hunt for books more than you do for food. Youâre not a fighter â it surprises you every day how you havenât died yet â but a decent amount of people would consider you book smart. This one group you crossed paths with some years ago called you a genius because youâre self-taught in practically everything: reading and writing, starting fires, planting food, sewing, mapping plains. Whenever youâre harmed, you can heal yourself kinda. When you were 14, you stepped on a rusty nail and, instead of living the short remainder of your life as an amputee, you heroed through a disgusting infection that left you ill for 2 weeks, then sewed your own wound up. You couldnât walk for days.Â
That same group also called you mute.Â
You donât think you are, but rightfully so. Thereâs no one for you to talk to, so you donât talk, simple as that. Everyone you knew died when you were a kid, maybe 7 or 8 â spending the majority of your life alone and in hiding doesnât make for much conversation. Plus, the fucks that rule the Earth are nosy as hell. Being as quiet as possible is needed.Â
Reading passes time. Itâs the last phase of winter, but itâll be Spring in no time, thanks to the bag you drag through snow: stuffed with one jacket, a rusted chefâs knife, and 46 different novels and counting.Â
Your bodyâs gonna shut down on you. Itâs so fucking cold and youâre barely layered but you havenât finished The Cable Companies, One Hundred and One Best Songs. The pages filled with piano notes are almost enough to make you hear the songs⊠Or maybe the lack of nutrients is making you hallucinate. Guess youâll find out when you finish. Just 22 more pages.Â
No food, no water, no warmth, no antique piano. Youâre fucked any direction you turn.Â
There was a small cave somewhere around here. You used to sleep in it during the summer; the dark was always cooler. Maybe itâs buried underneath heaps of snow. You hope not. Fuck.Â
The closer you get to the cavern, the grosser the air becomes. Death carries a certain mugginess. Whyâd they have to die next to your one retreat?Â
You drag and drag on like your legs weigh a ton all the way to the cave and⊠Great.Â
Death and no entrance. Red coats the snow and it reminds you of the twisted tale of Snow White. The decaying carcass of a deer should alarm you, but you only sigh in defeat. Where the fuck are you supposed to read without disturbance?Â
You only make it two more steps before you collapse face-first into ice. Your lungs wheeze in pain and youâre trying to get yourself up but you canât. When you blink, you see colors.Â
Is this death? Or karma? A squirrel runs past you just to rub it in. Furry little bitch.Â
Itâs only when your brain whispers for you to give up that you fully submerge into the snow. Small cries of pain are the only proof of your survival.Â
Fuck everything. Fuck people, fuck people that turned into monsters, fuck all the stupid trivial shit that the other world loved so deeply. Call it jealousy. Everythingâs for nothing nowadays.Â
Your final thought before the world goes dark.Â
â
Why is there annoying beeping in heaven?Â
Maybe youâre naive in believing you made it there. Maybe this is hell. You thought itâd be more fucked up than this. The beeping is irritating though. Besides that, itâs peaceful.Â
Is this an in between world? Half dead, half not. You remember being into paranormal shit in horror stories years ago. Ghostly entities and whatnot. Maybe youâre⊠that. Thereâs whispers in the background. Bleary and distant but you kinda hear them. Maybe someoneâs conjuring you up. Why you of all people?Â
ââ ne⊠deâŠâÂ
Need? Your ears are failing. Why is everything suddenly hurting? Pain in your eyes and behind them and all the way down. Itâs hurting everywhere.Â
ââJus⊠there⊠Not sure.âÂ
Itâs hurts so bad everywhere make it stop make it stop â
BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP
White overtakes your vision. Too bright and too cold and you canât stop heaving but you want to because it fucking hurts everywhere
âHey! Hey! CalmââÂ
The voices are clearer and so is the beeping and so is the pain. Gentle hands land on your shoulders and you thrash when faces, needles and medical equipment clear in your vision. Thereâs something sharp in your arm. Where the fuck when the fuck how â
âYou needa calm downââ
You try to tell this blonde freak to go fuck herself but your voice is shot, coughing and spit flying everywhere.Â
âThe fuck is her problââ
âBe quietââ
A crackling scream ripples through you, tears streaming down your face because suddenly more hands are holding you down. Malicious intent or not it makes you fucking sick. The beeping only gets faster.Â
âMY â my nameâs Maria! Listen to me! My nameâs Maria! Some of mine went out on patrol a few days ago and found you almost buried. Weâre tryna help you!âÂ
You continue to sob but theyâre a little less guttural. Her voice is nice. Very motherly.Â
âYou were halfway dead out there,â She huffs like itâs funny and you wanna throw a chair, âWhatâs your name? Gotta name?âÂ
All the hands are off you except Mariaâs. Maybe because youâre not trying to kick her face in anymore. Youâre trying to tell her you donât fucking remember but nothing comes out. Just more coughing.Â
âTake your time. Deep breaths, shhh, youâre alright.âÂ
You finally meet her eyes and theyâre pretty. Pale blue like spring water. The beeping starts to slow bit by bit. It took you all this time to realize thatâs your heart. You glimpse at the monitor and⊠those squiggly lines mean fuck all to you. Why couldnât you just die?
Your eyes travel, albeit less frantically, but on high guard. Skeptical as ever. You couldnât even defend yourself against these incredibly polite barbarians if you wanted to. Your bagâs gone. Everything thatâs yours is gone. The beeps increase all over again. Maria must sense your anxiety.Â
âHey, hey, we have everything. We just had to make sure you were⊠alright to come in. No bites or nothing, âk?âÂ
⊠Fair. Whatever. Gimme my shit.Â
âWe were snoopinâ,â Your vision follows the new voice. A man this time, average sized and bearded, âYa like târead?âÂ
You squint and nod.Â
ââS a good habit.âÂ
⊠Awkward. Itâs quiet now.Â
âHow ya feelinâ? Any pain?â Maria pries gently. You shrug. Not as bad as it was 2 minutes ago. You eye everyone in here, study as much of them as you can. Face, hands, guns latched around their thighs and shoved in their belts. Theyâre all threats while simultaneously being unthreatening. For now, at least.Â
âYâall can get on. I got it from here.â She waves the remaining people off and they leave with tense smiles. The door clicks behind them. The beeping is the slowest itâs been since you woke up.Â
âBout that nameâŠâÂ
You only stare at her.Â
âDon't remember?â
You scratch at your neck, and she sighs, âNot much of a talker, huh?âÂ
You mime writing in a notepad, and Maria quirks with interest. She searches the room before digging through a drawer on the farthest dresser. She returns with a small book and marker.Â
The aches in your fingers donât halt your scribbling. You turn the book towards her.Â
ARE YOU GOING TO KILL ME?Â
The corner of her mouth lifts, âNo point in fixinâ ya up if that was the case. No offense, but youâre not threatening.âÂ
You snort.Â
âYou been by yourself for a while?âÂ
You ponder before scribbling.Â
I WATCHED MY FAMILY DIE. PRETTY FUCKED UP CHILDHOOD. IâM ALWAYS ALONE.Â
She stares sympathetically and shakes her head in apologies. All you can do is shrug. Youâd be more surprised if a kid grew up in this world without experiencing mass destruction. Trauma practically raised you.Â
âThereâs not many people that can do what you do, yâknow? You gotta gift.â She jerks her chin at the booklet. âSomebody taughtâcha?âÂ
You point to yourself.Â
âDonât let that head get big now.â She smirks and you smile sorta.Â
âWe got kidsâŠâ Maria blindly points towards the door.Â
âA lot of âem, and weâve been tryna get them to read more but⊠I donât know, some of these old bastards think itâs pointless and that discourages them.â
Oh.Â
âI donât know what you got goinâ on out there, but⊠If you choose to go back out there, I wonât fault you, but if you donâtâŠâÂ
Uh oh.Â
âHow do you feel âbout teaching toddlers their ABCs?âÂ
⊠Shit.Â
You scowl.Â
âI know itâs not the best⊠position to be in but, I donât know, I just want something they can look forward to everyday. A new story, some new conversations⊠anything to get their little brains crankinâ.âÂ
âTheyâre so sweet and I feel like theyâd gain so much from someone who cares just as much as they do.âÂ
You donât write anything. Her pupils shroud with dejection.Â
âThink about it?â Sheâs quick to turn away, but not without one last look over her shoulder, âRest up.âÂ
And the door closes. Your eyes shut in no time, and a comforting darkness overtakes you once more.Â
â
Leave with nothing but your annotated novels or stay where youâre well fed and warm but surrounded by snotty nosed orphans. Something to think about.Â
Youâve been in Jackson â you learned the town is called â for less than 48 hours, most of which you were recovering from a severe case of hypothermia. You donât remember the last time you had a meal that hot. Maria had to reassure you that no one would take your plate.Â
You still havenât given Maria a clear answer for her teaching proposal, but she doesnât bug you about it. She is very eager to show you the daycare though. Sheâs subtle. You respect it.Â
Your books are still couped up in the infirmary because, frankly, you hate dragging them everywhere. Maria offered for you to keep them in the library, but you refused. Theyâre not up for grabs; You nearly died for every single one of those pages and youâll be damned if someone touches them under your nose. Theyâre yours. Itâs all you got right now.Â
You might even leave with a horse if Maria still likes you after telling her no to teaching. Tomorrow morning will wrap up your little dead-then-alive journey. Couldnât hurt to ask.Â
Itâs your first time back outside since your near-death experience. The sun is barely peeking from behind the clouds and your face is so cold itâs almost retraumatizing, but itâs pretty out. Maria was nice enough to give you new boots that werenât hanging on by their laces.Â
Jackson bustles like a real, non-apocalyptic town. Lights shine and pick-ups honk and people are fucking smiling? Maybe this is heaven.Â
Those walls⊠Theyâre still high and barricaded. Scouts babysit those gates like clockwork. To think you were on the other side of their scrutiny just a day ago. The twinkling sound of joy confuses the fuck outta you. Laughter. Not only that, but from children. Not starving, nearly dead children, but well-fed, genuinely happy kids. Why does your stomach twist with jealousy? They deserve peace, of course, but so did you. So does every child.Â
Your eyes search for them â curiosity overtakes your limbs and you step with determination, guided by your ears. The twinkles grow in volume â there must be at least 10 kids playing in the snow.Â
âHEY! GET OFF, YOU FUââ
âLanguage!â
âHOWâS THIS FOR LANGUââ
âBOYS! ENOUGH! IâM SICK OF YOUR SHIâ!â
âLANGUAGE, MS. DINA!â
âI CAN SAY THAT! YOU CANâT!â
What a sight this is. Happy kids. Your heart swells. Slightly; youâre glad Maria isnât here to catch your fondness.Â
âAlright, vermins, get up, Iâll miss the party.âÂ
â5 more minutes, pleeease!â
âIâm not freezing for you. Câmon!âÂ
The kids seem to love Ms. Dina. They dangle off every single one of her limbs, begging her to throw at least 10 more snowballs. Maybe your ice-cold heart isnât as frosty as you thought. The sight is disgustingly endearing.Â
âMs. Dina⊠Whoâs that?âÂ
And the laughter stops. A bunch of eyes attached to tiny bodies all gawk at you, some with intrigue, others with fear as they cower behind their teacher⊠babysitter? Whoever she is.Â
âNot sure, dove. You all have 10 minutes!âÂ
â20!â
â10 or freeze to death! Go!â
Excited screams filter through the wind when said vermins squabble in snow like puppies, pushing and shoving and chucking icy bullets at each other. You never had to worry about being the oddball out, but you sure do look like one now.Â
âHey. Maria told us about a scrounger.âÂ
Creases bunch in your forehead, and Dina raises her hands defensively, âJoking, relax. So, are you staying, orâŠ?â You shrug unknowing, and Dina chuckles.Â
âI think you should. If I had the option to stay here 24/7, Iâd take it in a heartbeat. We could use an extra hand with the kids. Maria said you read?âÂ
You nod. âCool. We have a decent amount of readers â more than most, but, uh⊠yeah. Our kids need help.â
Your lip twitches alongside your pondering. So many questions rest on your tongue but none can leave. Dinaâs eyes are consoling. It shouldnât spark irritation in your stomach but it does.Â
âDo you sign?âÂ
You stare in confusion, and she elaborates, âLike⊠Sign language?â Her hands make a bunch of gestures you donât understand and your head shakes.Â
âDarn. No worries. If youâre ever interested in learning, just holler. We got some people that are hard of hearing so we all kinda use it occasionally. But, umm⊠yeah. Iâm Dina.â She extends a polite hand but you donât accept it. Your head jerks in greeting, and she smiles.Â
She drops it back to her side, âWhat should we call you?âÂ
You donât know. You donât care. Youâre not staying long. Your shoulders rise and fall nonchalantly.Â
âShould I have them pick?âÂ
Before you can oppose, sheâs hollering forâÂ
âDYLAN! COME HERE!â
A rascal with a beanie and bright red boots sprints towards the two of you. His cheeks are so plush and scarred. Dina fixes the color of his sweater, âDylan, whatâs a good name for a teacher?âÂ
âMs. Dina, obviouslyââ
âAnother name.âÂ
Chipmunk Boy ponders for a moment before snickering, âMr. Octopus.âÂ
âFucking hellââ
âLanguage, Ms. Dina! SWEAR JARââ
âWe donât even do that here!â
âOkay, okay⊠just call them Dove or something! Donât think we donât notice you calling us that when you forget our names!âÂ
Dinaâs eyes widen, âThatâs not true! What the⊠freak!âÂ
Red-Boot-Ranger smirks when Dina catches herself before getting pelted at the back of the head with a snowball.Â
âLittle BITCHââ
Dina shouts, âHEY!ââ
âMS. DINA, FRANKIE CURSED!â
âNO, I DIDNâTââ
Arguments break out between all 13 children, loud and boisterous and your head pounds. Too much for one day.Â
âSTOPâ sorry, I gotta handle this, but it was nice meeting you! BOYSââÂ
Dina throws you one last wave before rushing off to scold Dylan and his⊠bully? You think thatâs what they were called in some books you read. A kid messing with another kid or something like that.Â
You take this last bit of alone time before you depart to explore.Â
Despite your eagerness to disappear, Jackson is nice. You donât know what Christmas entails, but itâs often described as festive: a day for togetherness and family and whatever the hell else âcanât be boughtâ yet everyone buys. Jackson is visually festive. Celebratory scenery. What exactly theyâre celebrating goes over your head. Thereâs nothing to be joyous over. Death traps Jackson at every corner.Â
Loud music pulls you from your thoughtful stroll. One look through a very large window is enough to scare you shitless. A seemingly cozy space is filled to the brim with strangers who dance and drink and laugh their heads off; Their familiarity with one another makes you physically ill. The scene is like a bullet to the chest. Reminds you of what was once home.
Your nausea doesnât overtake your curiosity, though.Â
The moment you step into the bar, warmth suffocates you, heat sizzling through your legs as your face defrosts. The entire bar screams out lyrics to a song you never heard while cups get refilled with burning liquid and itâs overwhelming. Thereâs so much movement. Too much.Â
Blonde hair swings out the corner of your eye and youâre instantly relieved. You hustle to where Maria chats with partygoers from across the bar. Sheâs shocked to see you.Â
âHey! Youâre upân moving!âÂ
You wave awkwardly. Gawk back at the people that gawk at you before Maria hands you a glass.Â
âYou drink?â You deny with a raised hand, and she smiles.Â
âProbably not the best time to ask,â She hollers over the jukebox, âIâm hoping this is your initiation?â Her eyes are hopeful, and your throat dries a bit. Why are you hesitating to answer?
Mariaâs nice enough⊠probably the nicest stranger youâve ever met in your entire life, and it seems more comfortable in Jackson than anywhere youâve been. It doesnât seem so bad⊠but you donât like children. You barely liked yourself at age 10; short and clumsy and vulnerable. Children are too exposed and trusting, even in this life. They get people killed because theyâre not careful. It shocks you that a fortress like Jackson carries so many.Â
A pen and paper get slid on wood and placed in front of you. You eye Maria, and she nods encouragingly. You waste no time.Â
I DONïżœïżœT THINK IâLL BE A GOOD TEACHER. DINA HAS MORE PATIENCE IN HER PINKY THAN I DO IN MY ENTIRE BODY. IâM SORRY.Â
You meekly hold the note up for Maria, and you know sheâs disappointed. You patiently wait for her to tell you to get your shit so she can kick you out herself.Â
It never comes.Â
âI hope that girl didnât scare you,â In reference to Dina, and you deny, âI had a feeling youâd say no. Itâs alright. Kids are⊠a lot.âÂ
You set the paper down in relief that sheâs not angry. About that horseâŠÂ
âDoesnât hurt to ask⊠You still wanna leave?âÂ
That stuns you. Oftentimes, large groups arenât so welcoming to⊠scroungers, or whatever Dina made you out to be. The less mouths to feed, the better. If a newbie holds no purpose, theyâre left out to die on their own. Itâs happened to you countless times. Why does she care about a stranger so much?
Maria chuckles at your stunned expression, âItâs, um⊠itâs hard out there. Weâve all seen it, and weâre lucky to have found somewhere⊠stable. It doesnât come often.âÂ
âThe choice is still yours, stayinâ or goinâ, but if youâre scared Iâll kick you out⊠donât be. We got nothinâ but space.âÂ
Your mind races yet not one cohesive response comes through. Maria laughs at your slack jaw. âHere. Sleep on it tonight, and let me know in the morninâ. Itâs a party! Let loose a little. Go mingle.â
You scribble on the last bit of remaining space.Â
IâM NOT A PEOPLE PERSON.Â
Maria huffs, âNeitherâs my niece. Sheâs like a niece to me, that one, over there.â She points at the end of the bar to a woman, girl â looks around your age, babysitting a drink: tatted, hair pulled back, and sulking. She talks with a guy with a mullet thatâs too movie-star ready. âYou twoâd get along, I think. Her nameâs Ellie. Jesseâs the one next to her, heâs a sweetheart. Very helpful. If Dina was here, theyâd be the Three Musketeers. She still with the kids?â
You nod, but your eyes are locked onto Ellieâs tattoo. Youâve never seen one in person. In romance books, people with tattoos are always trouble: good in bed with murderous tendencies. Maybe itâs wrong to assume, but Ellie doesnât seem like that. No one that pouty would kill a fly. You wonder if her friend has tattoos. Heâd fit the stereotype more.
âWanna meet âem?âÂ
Fire bursts underneath your cheeks. You vehemently shake your head at Maria, and mischief glints in her eyes.Â
âHEY, ELLIE, JESââ
You gawk at Maria, tugging at her wrist for her to stop, but she laughs, âHey, you two!â
Your face falls into your palm. âNeed somethinâ, Maria?â A deep voice blares. Jesse, apparently. Fucking great. Â
âNo, hun. Just introducing a new friend,â Maria whispers loud enough for you to hear before tending to other patrons, âConvince her to stay?âÂ
Your eyes roll and your heart pulses.Â
â⊠Hey.âÂ
You wave weakly. Annoyed, and Jesse laughs. âYeah, sheâs a lot sometimes. Iâm Jesse.â You send him a thumbs up.Â
â⊠Gotta name yourself?â
You shrug with agitation. If someone else asks you that, youâll scream.Â
â⊠Hm. Okay, then. Iâm gonna get another drink. Want one?â You decline as politely as your attitude allows.Â
âYou, El?âÂ
âMâgood.âÂ
âAlright,â He hums too uppity, âEnjoy the quiet.â He goofs before following Maria to the other end of the bar. Silence ensues between you and Ellie, and itâs fucking awkward. It wouldnât be if you were by yourself. You pick at the piece of paper in front of you.Â
Ellie adjusts her stance, attention on the dance that dominates the floor, her tatted arm propping her up against the bar. You can see the fine lines out the corner of your eye: leaves of a fern resting underneath a moth. A Polyphemus. Compulsive. A symbol of death, you once read somewhere. Regardless, itâs beautifully done.Â
âWant a picture?âÂ
You stiffen and your gaze drops to the paper. Your eyelids squeeze shut in embarrassment.Â
Ellie releases a hefty breath before sighing, âYou read?â She asks, and you shrug.Â
âYou donât talk?â You do nothing.Â
She already sounds annoyed by you. You hope she notices youâre in the same boat. âItâs better if you donât.â She mumbles to herself. You throw a glare in her direction, but she pays you no mind. Sheâs focused elsewhere, eyes much more delicate. You discreetly follow her line of vision.Â
⊠Dina. Hilarious. Is she a god here? Good with children and the annoying and aloof? Everyone here claps and hoots at her being dipped by her partner like theyâve never seen dancing before. When did she even get here? Where are the kids? Maybe theyâre all snowballed out and went to bedâ
⊠What. What the fuck? You donât care, what the hell.Â
You turn back to Ellie when Dina waves at her, wide-eyed and princess-y, before waltzing towards Jesse to throw her arms around his neck, which he eagerly returns around her waist. Ellieâs expression goes from lovestruck to tense in an instant, jaw clenched and eyes burning through the floor. You try to hide a snicker.Â
Ellieâs jealous. Adorable.Â
âThe fuck are you smiling for?â She grumbles at you, but her cheeks burn under the yellow light. Your laughter finally bubbles over.Â
âNothingâs funny. Shut the fuckââ
âWell, whatâd I tell you! Two wallflowers hittinâ it off! Look at that smile!âÂ
Maria graciously interrupts Ellieâs angered mantra. Your hand hides your grin before a light hand brushes your back. You flinch away on instinct. No one notices except Ellie.Â
Dina greets you first and you almost holler with joy, âHey, Dove! Sorry I didnât come over earlier! Had to get this circus goinâ since no one else did,â She casually takes Ellieâs glass and downs its contents with no problem, âThank you.âÂ
âSuch a dick.â Ellie says slowly, and Dina smiles. âYou love me.âÂ
You pinch your smile away.Â
âDove?â Maria inquiries.Â
Dina shrugs, âBetter than Doe. Makes her sound like a corpse. Doveâs cute.â
âCute for a bitch,â Ellie slips under her breath, and Dina slaps her arm in scolding. Tames her until she quiets like an actual bitch. This shit is hilarious.Â
âI like that. Dove.â Maria approves. âItâs⊠fitting. Joel found her buried in white, so.âÂ
âOkay, Mrs. Poetââ
Mariaâs married? Huh.Â
She hushes Dina playfully. The dark-haired girl interlaces Ellieâs fingers with hers before yanking her off the bar and onto the dance floor. The music slows as if cued just for them. Dina pulls Ellie into her, and Ellieâs hands rest on her waist.Â
Dina leads, surprisingly.Â
Ellieâs expression doesnât scream delight. Sheâs nerve wracked and her eyes flit over every body that surrounds her with anxiety. Even yours.Â
Dinaâs a good distraction. She's quite seductive when she brushes loose hair behind Ellieâs ear, caresses her cheek, touches her with tenderness that youâve only seen described on paper. Only in your imagination was it real.Â
Kisses her.
Oh.Â
You turn away. Your skinâs hot. Mariaâs distracted. Thank God. Youâve had enough mingling for tonight. You leave the bar without a trace, the pen and paper left on the stand the only evidence of your appearance.Â
âHey! HEY! Ms. Dinaâs friend!â
âTheyâre not friends, she just got hereââ
âShut up! Ms. Dina always said respect your oldersââ
âElders, dumbfuck. And she doesnât look oldââ
Ah, the potty-mouthed bully. Although, he doesnât seem so threatening in the darkness. Children are the bane of your existence. Youâre nowhere near the infirmary. Why are they out in the cold by themselves?Â
âHey, Ms. Dinaâs friend, how was the party! Ms. M said we arenât allowed to go in because people are⊠drunk, whatever that means!âÂ
The same voice from earlier. Red-boot-Ranger. Dylan.Â
âIt means theyâre alcoholicsââ A girl this time. Shorter than Dylan but just as expressive.Â
âI thought alcohol made people happy?â
âCould be, but my aunt drank herself to death so I guess itâs different for everyone!âÂ
Goddamn.Â
âWhatâs your name, miss! ⊠Maâam?â Dylan corrects shyly.Â
âMa'am means grandmaââ
âRuth, shut the hell up, Jesus!âÂ
âNO, YOU SHUT UPââ
Dylan waits expectantly while the other two kids attempt to rip each otherâs heads off. You flap your hands like wings.Â
â⊠Fly? Your nameâs fly?âÂ
You shake your head and point upward.Â
âOH! Sky!ââ
You wave your hands in denial and flap your arms while squawking.Â
â⊠Bird? Bald Eagle? UmâŠâÂ
You yank at your hair in exasperation before pointing down at untouched, white snow beneath your feet.Â
âSnow? Snow bird? Uhh⊠Swan⊠Lake?â
Decent guess. This fucking sucks.Â
âI donât know what your name is, miss, Iâm sorry.â Fucking Christ, the poor thing looks so upset. Youâre suddenly the worst human being on the planet. âAre you mad at me?â Dylan asks, voice laced with insecurity, and something cracks in your chest. What the fuck. Your hands wave in denial apprehensively, and he exhales a held breath before smiling.Â
âI like you! Why donât you talk?âÂ
You sigh before scribbling on your palm like you did with Maria, and all three kids excitedly demand writing utensils from each other.Â
âI DONâT HAVE A MARKER!â Frankie hisses when Ruth slaps him on the shoulder.Â
âDO YOU ALWAYS HAVE TO BE SUCH AN ASS? FREAKO!â
âFreako! ARE YOU FIVEââ
âWhat are you kiddos still doinâ up?âÂ
âMR. JOEL!â
Ruth and Dylan practically jump onto this old man and he groans mockingly. Joel. Hm.Â
âYouâre all supposed to be sleep. Did Dina not tuck you in?â
âShe did, but we snuck out. Weâre bored! Please throw snowballs at us!â Frankie whines.Â
Joel calmingly caters to the children and their hyperactivity; his voice is very soothing. Gentle enough for the kids to accept that heâs not chucking snowballs at them this late at night.Â
Joel addresses you. âMaria decided to keep you âround?âÂ
It was him. His eyes are calm and welcoming, but thereâs a hollowness behind them. Itâs hardly noticeable, but heâs bothered by something. He masks it well enough for the kids. He must be a dad. Maybe one of them is his. You just shrug, and he chuckles; crackles like fire. Breaks a bit. His eyes grow sadder the longer he stares at you. Is this man about to cry?Â
âIâll, uh⊠Iâll walk âem back,â He nods at Dylan whoâs already half asleep on his shoulder, and you nod. He gives you one last look before turning. You clutch onto his hand before he can go any further. He seems shocked by the gesture, but you squeeze it with all your might. You hope every clench reads as a thank you thank you thank you.Â
He swallows before nodding down at you, returning your gentle squeezes. The last breath he takes before leading the kids home is unsteady. Who broke that poor manâs heart?Â
You watch his back all the way down the trail until the door to the bar slams shut. Itâs Ellie all bundled up and seemingly about to strangle somebody. You can see Dina and Jesse scrambling to follow her through the window, but Ellieâs determined to get the fuck outta range.Â
You donât know why, but you whistle loud enough to get her attention. Her cheeks are blazing and her eyes are pained and angry.Â
âThe fuck do you want?â Her breath frosts with each spit she throws. Youâre not really sure, so you throw her a thumbs up. Two just in case she read it as good work instead of are you good?Â
She scoffs a laugh that sounds like a sob, âFuck off.â And sheâs off again. The opposite direction from Joel.Â
Alright. Fuck her too.Â
â
The past 5 days have been a blur.Â
The morning after the party, your brain wracked to put every single interaction together but came up short. So much happened that you can barely grasp it. You died, came back, met at least 100 people, experienced acute peer pressure, and got cussed out by some short, tattooed psychopath with an equivalent amount of people skills as you.Â
Youâve met teachers, medical professionals, rambunctious kids with a hunger similar to rhinos, a potential dad with an insane amount of patience, but all you can think about is Ellie and her fucking tattoo.Â
You think that same moth appeared in your dream last night, flapping around and pissing you off.Â
Mariaâs been in a good mood, at least. Maybe because youâre staying in Jackson until further notice. Youâre glad she didn't make a big deal about it: the inquiry was short and over breakfast the morning after the party. You slid her note that read CAN I STAY?, she said yes, and now you have a two story home all to yourself, floor stacked to the ceiling with your books and some she lent you.Â
The first thing you did after she left was scream bloody murder for no reason other than relief. After years of instability, you finally have something consistent. You donât know how to react to that besides weeping.Â
Thereâs only one downside. Ellieâs your neighbor. Life will always humble you.Â
Sheâs the first person you see every morning and the last every night and you hate it. The only time you experience true peace is when sheâs out on patrol. To think you assumed Ellie wasnât violent. She returned one morning on her horse covered knee-high in blood as she wiped her switchblade on her dirtied jeans. Even Jesse seemed intimidated.Â
Meanwhile, youâve been everywhere: tending the garden, handing beers out to men twice your age, fixing lights. Joel even asked for assistance on a car repair even though youâve never seen one in your life. You both finished, though. Drives good as new.Â
You think Dylanâs grown attached. Heâs very clingy and you hate it but he also has the chubbiest cheeks youâve ever seen so you have no choice but to forgive him for his sins. Whenever he jumps on your back while youâre squatted in front of the garden, you just deal with it. He rambles enough for the both of you.Â
Now youâre serving dinner with a homophobe. Yippee.Â
Seth sucks gorilla balls. When Maria first introduced you both, he thought you were deaf and asked if you had to be put with him. When you glared at him, he went red in the face. You understand why Ellie hates him. Apparently he called her and Dina dykes at the party and she and Joel almost strangled him. The canteenâs already filled with people, but the patrol group hasnât returned. They usually make it back before sunset, but itâs dark now. Sethâs set on closing the kitchen down, but you decline everytime. Theyâre probably starving wherever they are.Â
Itâs not until an hour, then 2 passes when you wrap all 12 of their individual plates.Â
Youâre scared shitless, but itâs time for Dylanâs bedtime story.Â
â
You always have to remind Dylan to keep his volume down during story time so he doesnât wake the other kids.Â
âWhy would anyone give up anything magical for a cow? Okay, sure, youâre betting that they actually are magic, but why on Earth? Iâd never give away my magic! Am I wrong, Ms. Dove?âÂ
You smile and deny.Â
âSEE! Exactly! Anyway,â He refocuses on the page. âYou numbskull! I canât eat! You ruined my appetite!âÂ
Dylanâs a great reader, but he loses his place very often. You showed him the follow-your-finger trick and itâs helped, but the poor thing always has to comment on everything. At least heâs entertained.Â
You donât realize you dozed off on the floor until youâre frantically awoken by a teary-eyed Dylan. The big and small babies cry while they barricade the door with blankets and dressers. Your heart sinks.Â
âMs. DoveâŠâ Dylan whispers.Â
Screams echo from outside and the windows have orange hues. Somethingâs burning.Â
âSomeone bad is outside.âÂ
The patrol group is back.Â
â
You don't meet Clickers often.Â
They come and go and kill as they please and you donât bother them, simply take your plans in the opposite direction as stealthy as possible. Even with your avoidance, they somehow always find their way back to you. Back to everyone.Â
You hear everything from the daycare; hollering, gunshots, Clickers wailing, but you canât fucking see. Protocol for a daycare lockdown is fairly simple: turn off the lights and take all the brats up to the nursery. Itâs the most child-safe section of the building while simultaneously having a locked drawer filled with glocks. Great.Â
Now youâre locked up with whimpering toddlers with a weapon you barely know how to use. If Joel hadnât done that runthrough with you yesterday, youâd be fucked and so would the kids. You rock Dylan who sits on your lap while hushing the toddlers. Youâre doing whatever you can to keep them quiet, but theyâre babies who cry a lot. You hum to them, braid their hair, roll scratched-up dice but nothings fucking working. You never thought youâd regret staying in Jackson this early on.Â
The younger ones start wailing when pounding on wood echoes from downstairs. Dylan holds you closer.Â
Protocol is simple.Â
Donât open the door. Maria told you that. Keep it locked and donât open it.Â
The thuds get louder and so do the children and panic bombards you. Itâs starting to feel too familiar. Those bangs are so fucking loud. Toddlers to 13 year olds are looking to you for guidance while youâre crumbling. How do you make them stop crying why wonât they stop fucking cryingâÂ
Someoneâs trying to beat the door down. Dylanâs practically choking you with his little arms as he sobs quietly into your neck. You donât realize youâre crying until a small hand wipes your face and tiny bodies snuggle closer to you.Â
Are you going to die surrounded by children all over again? One time wasnât enough, God? The best moment of your life turns to the worst in a matter of seconds. Youâll have to run away like you did the first time. You shouldâve never slid the note asking for more time with the kids under Mariaâs door, fuck fuck fuckâ
3 deafening pops bang from outside, and then thereâs silence. It sounds like wood is breaking and thereâs footsteps rushing upstairs and the babies are screaming so loud. When the nursery door lock gets shot off, Dylan screams right in your ear.Â
âEVERYBODY OUT, LETâS GO!âÂ
âMr. Tommy!â Relief washes over your kids before they start hustling.Â
âOUT, OUT, LETâS GO!âÂ
All the kids scramble to grab their coats and socks and boots before rushing out of the nursery. Your hands wonât stop shaking. You barely get onto your feet before Tommy shoves you against the wall with fire for pupils.Â
âYou never fuckinâ wait to die when thereâs kids around, you understand me!âÂ
Youâre nodding but you canât hear because youâre still sobbing. âWhatever bullshit you learned outside is over with now. It donât matter what happens, always give them a chance to live even if it means youâre done!â
Tommy doesnât waste another second on you. He leaves with a tense back and a rifle and you allow yourself to break. You heave and sob because thatâs all you could do when you were a child and your brothers and sister were all killed in front of you.Â
â
You vacate the daycare hours later. The doors need fixing.Â
Your head and eyes hurt terribly but nothing compares to the emptiness in your chest. Maria told you that the kids would be separated into different houses until the daycare is safe for them again. Even she stares at you with disapproval despite her indifferent tone.
You feel like a ghost on the walk back home. Your hands are clenched in fists and your breathings slow. Why didnât you stay downstairs and check the windows to make sure there were no intruders? Why werenât you holding the gun in preparation for battle? Whyâd you allow the kids to believe you couldnât protect them?Â
Because you couldnât. In that moment, you were a child all over again, just as lost and confused and scared as they were. It was all too familiar.Â
Jacksonâs asleep, minus the painful groaning coming from behind Ellieâs home.Â
Youâre immediately in defense. So many patrol members had to go to the infirmary after their arrival. Maria never mentioned anything about Ellie.Â
Your concern carries your feet until you round the corner, and her gunâs already drawn and pointed at you. That barely shakes you; itâs what surrounds her thats confusing.
Sheâs leant back against the foundation of her home surrounded by towels, a large bottle of clear liquid, and her profusely bleeding, non-tattooed arm that wraps around her stomach.Â
When you take a cautious step toward her, her gun clicks. Her eyes are vicious and untrustworthy, and you know sheâd kill you in a second. She watches every move you make down to the ragged rise and fall of your chest. Youâre unsure how long you stand there before she winces in pain. Itâs slight but you catch it. You slowly point to the open wound on her forearm.Â
âWhat.â She rasps. You mime wrapping a bandage on yourself. Her snicker is pained.Â
âGet the fuck outta here. You done enough for tonight.âÂ
You swallow thickly, unmoving.Â
âFuck off before I blow your brains out.âÂ
You take 2 more steps.Â
âGET THE FUââ
When your knees hit the snow in front of her, sheâs stunned silent. Youâre already reaching for the bandage and bottle of disinfectant. You canât see her injury that well, but she might need stitches if itâs still that bloody. When you reach for her injured arm, she pushes you into the snow. You groan in frustration before getting up and trying again.Â
Ellie swallows a pained noise and maneuvers her injury away the closer you get. Youâre trying to help her! Whyâs she being so difficult! You crack open the disinfectant and your nose instantly burns. You gasp before moving the bottle away from your face.Â
âJust go the fuck home, goddamnitââ
Thatâs not disinfectant. Itâs acid.Â
Ellieâs gun is still on you, but sheâs not as steady. Thereâs a tremor in her weapon and her bottom lip is pinched between her teeth. Any movement she makes seems to hurt her.Â
You move closer, and Ellie wheezes like an injured gazelle. Itâs not until you see the small indentation when you realize her bleeding isnât from a knife or a gun.Â
Those are teeth marks.Â
Ellie got bit. Your heart thrashes and your legs beg you to run.Â
You know, and she knows you know. Itâs a misunderstanding, it has to be. A human or a dog or a bear bit her, not a Clicker, not one of them.Â
She smirks but itâs sinister.Â
âIf you tell anyone, Iâll tear out your windpipe and feed it to one of those fuckers.â Her head jerks towards the gate, and as if on command, the lot of them squeal into the night like hyenas.Â
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I had an ideađĄ
Basically I've been having this for some time as if the reader in the universe of The Last of Us was with Tess and Joel when they went to resolve the whole plot which leads them to meet Ellie.
The reader would be, I don't know, a year older than Ellie to be able to have a better understanding of this, while with Joel he would be the one who doesn't dislike the reader and sees it as an inconvenience but as a kind of company. How he taught the reader to shoot and a few other things (this was before they met Ellie).
Obviously when they started crossing the country with Ellie, a kind of family dynamic was created, calm down, I'm not crazy, I'm creating itđ€Ą... Like a reader who has known Ellie since she was 14 and has know Joel too!
I'm going crazy, this has been on my mind for ages (â  â ïŒâ ââ ïŒâ )I don't know what to do anymore đ„Čđđ».
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Ekko: oh my gods I can finally have Powder back even if it's for a short While! I get to tell Benzo that I love him. I have the comfort of knowing they're alright in another timeline. My inner child is healing!
Meanwhile Jayce: Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death-
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~last look~ ARCANE S2E07 - "Pretend Like It's the First Time"
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âSometimes your heart needs more time to accept what your head already knows.â
â Unknown
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I saw this on YouTube and my god... Oh, that hurt... Riot nailed it đ„Č
Nightmare on Reroll Street: Part 2 | Into the Arcane Launch Cinematic - Teamfight Tactics
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âIâve found that growing up means being honest. About what I want. What I need. What I feel. Who I am.â
â Epiphany
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