pandorahurtsx
pandorahurtsx
procrastinate
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gaming ♤ animanga ♤ studio ghibli ♤ books ♤ piano ♤ strawberry milk
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pandorahurtsx · 5 months ago
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𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙏𝙞𝙚𝙨 𝙏𝙝𝙖𝙩 𝙈𝙚𝙣𝙙 [𝘿𝙖𝙧𝙮𝙡 𝘿𝙞𝙭𝙤𝙣 𝙓 𝙍𝙚𝙖𝙙𝙚𝙧]
Chapter 3: Catatonia
Series Masterlist: The Ties That Mend
Summary: Three-hundred-and-ninety-six days after the outbreak, you are discovered in an abandoned community college, covered in filth and barely able to speak a word. Despite the showers (multiple) and rehabilitation attempts (also multiple), it's apparent that your mind is elsewhere. Beyond saving.
This new world is chaos, but you're lucky to find good people in it. More so than any is a man named Daryl, patient enough to let you put yourself back together—one stitch at a time.
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The medical bay smells faintly of antiseptic. You sit stiff on the edge of an examination table, a paper sheet crinkling under your jeans; you try not to rip it as you readjust. Before you, the doctor—former vet, as he corrected—rifles through supplies with practiced care.
“Any trouble sleeping?” 
The question weighs heavy on your chest. From anyone else, it would sting, but Hershel’s tone isn’t discriminatory. He has no knowledge of last night—wasn’t there at breakfast, either. He didn’t notice the faces too tired to hide their disdain for you. To him, you’re just another patient. 
It’s ironic. The vet is the first person here not to look at you like an animal.
“Some,” you reply, after a moment.
It’s a lie, of course. A big fat one. 
Back at the college, sleep was a thing that took you only when it was lucky. Even then, it was never peaceful. It was something stolen in fits and starts as you held the door shut from whatever lurked on the other side. Here, those nights still haunt you. 
“Just a new place,” you add. “I’ll g—get used to it.” 
Hershel doesn’t press. Whether he believes you or not, he drops the subject for now, opting instead to examine your hands. You flinch at first, instinct pulling you back. But the warmth in his old fingers seeps through your skin, coaxing you to unclench your palms.
He studies the callouses lining them: the handiwork of your hatchet. 
You feel dismembered without it. 
After the last three-hundred-and-ninety-seven days, you could hardly remember a time you before it. It had been with you since the outbreak. Ever since you smashed that glass box near the fire escape, in search of anything to defend yourself. 
You’d been near catatonic when Rick had pried it from your hands the night before. “There are children here,” he’d reasoned, conjuring an image of a boy in a Sheriff’s hat—too curious for his own good. 
You couldn’t bring yourself to refute him; you’d nearly taken the heads of two of his group already. Even now, Daryl’s expression still burns behind your eyes, not particularly angry nor pitiful. Just sort of… Disappointed? 
Somehow that was worse.
“You’re a lucky one, my dear,” Hershel notes, his thumbs brushing over the rough patches between your fingers. “To be in this condition… It’s nothing short of miraculous.” 
You raise a brow, trying to discern any humour in his words. What about you could possibly be lucky? 
“Besides the malnourishment and sores,” Hershel continues, his smile so genuine you almost don’t believe it, “you’re healthy.”
Healthy. The word sounds foreign. Impossible. You can’t be healthy—not in the head, at least.
You say nothing, choosing only to watch as Hershel pulls a small jar from his medical kit. He unscrews the lid to reveal a pungent salve. As he spreads it over your hands, the sting is sharp, biting—but like everything else these days, it fades quickly into nothingness.
“I’d suggest bone broth for the first couple of meals. Meat will be too rich,” he says, matter-of-factly.
Grimacing, you nod; you’d already discovered that. 
But as Hershel works, you can’t help but notice the kindness in his actions. He applies the salve with gentle ministrations, retreating out of your space as soon as he’s done. It’s refreshing. There’s something about him that calms you. Whether it’s the crinkles of his eyes, or the way he rounds his sentences, it has you speaking before the words have even taken shape in your head. 
“Hershel?” 
His gaze flickers to yours.
“What do you know about…” You hesitate, swallowing hard. “The m—mind? Can you fix it?”
His expression softens, though the weight of his answer is clear before he speaks. “Unfortunately, that’s one of the toughest things to mend,” he says. “Takes time. Patience.”
How many days? you want to ask, but your better judgement cautions against it. That’s not the right question. This isn’t something that can be measured by tally marks on a wall. 
“Where do I start?” you ask instead.
There’s a pause. Hershel chooses his next words with care. “A good night’s sleep,” he says. “Then ten. Then fifty.”
You try not to let his answer deflate you.
Does he know you can barely manage one?
“Those tremors, too,” Hershel leans back slightly, considering you, “They’re no good. Have you burning through energy quicker than you can replenish it.” 
He takes a second to deliberate, pawing at the white hairs of his beard. Then, something flashes behind his eyes—a recollection. An idea. “You know what they used to suggest to old war vets?”
You keep quiet, waiting.
“Repetitive action,” he explains. “Something you can do without thinking.”
His raised brow prompts for an answer.
 “Guitar.”
It comes to you immediately, dredged up from another life. Free classes at the college, teaching music to a bunch of ragtags dumped by their parents after church. You never loved it—it was just something to do.
Hershel chuckles softly. “Haven’t seen many of those around these parts, I’m afraid. What about something a little more… accessible? Sketching, knitting—”
“I can sew,” you interrupt.
The admission feels small but significant. It was your mother’s trade, just poor seamstress trying to make ends meet. She’d only passed down two things to you when she died: her needlework and her debt. 
“That’ll be handy,” Hershel replies. He makes no show of it, but you catch him reaching over to open the drawer beside him. After some calculated rummaging, his hand emerges with a biscuit tin—an odd find amongst prescription bottles and bandages. As he pops the lid open, you’re met with a familiar sight: a sewing kit filled with buttons, thread, and patches of mismatched cloth.
Hershel locks eyes with you before speaking, “This is what I want you to do. Each time you thread this needle, visualise yourself letting go of whatever it is that’s holding onto you.” He places it into your palm; it’s a little rusted, but you’ve seen worse. “I want you to practice it—each stitch, mending those parts you want to fix.”
You glance between him and the needle, trying to process his words.
“If you ever feel like you’re losing control—which you will—I want you to imagine you are here. Threading the needle. Safe, focused.” Before you can reply, Hershel plucks it from you, dropping it back into the small biscuit tin for safe keeping. With the lid secured, he gestures for you to put it in your pocket.
“But first, you need to clean yourself up. You might not be sick now, but staying covered in filth,” he says, taking a pause to look you up and down, “it’s only a matter of time.” 
You find yourself agreeing.
It’s strange, you think. In this moment, the old man could tell you anything—to stick your hand in flames or jump from a tall building—and you fear you would. It’s a dangerous countenance he has. One that instills trust. 
You don't argue when Hershel offers to walk you back through the winding corridors to Cell Block D. His gait makes you feel a little guilty—he's missing a leg, after all—but your appreciation for his presence outweighs it.
As you pass by the windows overlooking the courtyard, the air carries the faint smell of damp concrete, rusted metal, and people—too many people, their voices filtering in with the breeze. You prepare yourself to face their scrutiny. The nicknames they thought you didn’t notice:
Loony Bin 
You had keen ears, and that one was loud.
In an obvious attempt at distraction, Hershel begins to tell you about his daughters. “You’ll like Maggie,” he says, a faint smile in his voice. “She’s strong—headstrong, sometimes—just like her mother. And you’ve already met her husband.” He notes the confusion on your face before adding, “Glenn.”
Your steps falter. Glenn. The realisation sinks in slowly as you draw the thread between them all. Hershel’s warmth, the glimmer of trust in his eyes—it wasn’t random. He had Maggie’s smile, Glenn’s optimism.
And you’d almost killed his son-in-law. 
“Though he might be off on some errand,” Hershel continues, oblivious to the tangle of thoughts in your mind. “That boy never sits still.” He then chuckles softly, like he’s sharing an inside joke. It does little to calm your nerves.
By the time you reach the entryway to Cell Block D, you’re already on edge. The low hum of voices carries through the open door, a stark contrast to the relative quiet of the medical bay. You spot a small group gathered near the common area—a brother-sister duo whose names you’ve already forgotten, Carol, Maggie, and a young woman you can’t quite place. 
“One of my girls will show you to the washroom,” Hershel announces, nodding towards the brunette in the corner. She offers a polite smile but seems less than thrilled at the prospect. “And this is my youngest—”
“Beth?” 
The name tears out of you before Hershel even finishes.
Across from you, she stands motionless. Unaware. There’s a good ten years between you—at least—but her face, though older and sharper, holds the same softness you remembered. You still see her as the kid who played piano, sang shy and did good. Beth Greene. You’re certain it’s her, recognised her from the recesses of your memory. Sweet, quiet Beth. Alive.
But she can’t be real—can she?
Her face is full of confusion at first. But that disappears the moment she takes a step forward, her hand coming up to cover her mouth. “Sweet Jesus,” she breathes, “Is that really you? What happened?”
You chew over the question: what happened? What didn’t? The answers feel too jagged, too large to fit into words. Your mind is racing, unraveling. She’s not supposed to be here. The auditorium—you’d been so sure. You’d seen them fall, heard the screams, the countless bodies. She’d been there. Hadn’t she?
Hadn’t she?
“Beth Greene?” you whisper again. You’re not even sure if it’s a question or a plea.
She moves again, tentative but willing to close the distance. “Oh my God,” she mutters. “It’s really is you.” Her fingers brush yours, grounding you to the moment, to her.
Beside you, Hershel clears his throat. “You two know each other?”
Beth retracts her hand to acknowledge him. “Yes, Daddy. She—” She glances back at you, taking in the sight. “She used to teach music at the old college. On Sundays. I used to beg to go.” 
 A silence lingers for a moment; you catch Maggie's stare, Carol's intrigue.
 “She could sing real good,” Beth adds, barely above a whisper.
Her words slam into you like a punch to the gut. You see it now—her sitting on the edge of the stage, pouring over sheet music in her lap.
Before you can say anything, her eyes are suddenly wide, frantic. They pin you in place. “Oh my goodness. Were you there?”
You try not to cringe, to give yourself away. But your silence speaks volumes.
“I think it's time our newest arrival took a shower,” Carol announces, shielding you from the question. “Here.”
 She hands Beth a set of clippers. They’re the old kind. You squeezed; they buzzed.
 “You’re going to have to crop that hair,” she says briskly, gesturing to you. “It’s too matted.”
You shoot her a look. Neither of you exchange any words, but you can tell Carol understands. You're thankful for her redirection. She's definitely good with children.
“No.”
Beth's voice brings you back to the moment. To the group of people and their prying eyes.
 “It was pretty,” she says, but it's mainly to herself. “I remember bein’ jealous, it was so long.” 
You look down at the tangles hanging over your shoulders, at the filth caked in the strands. You're not precious of it. In fact, you couldn’t care less.
 “It’s disgusting,” you counter. “I don’t want to turn p—people off their food.”
Beth shakes her head, her brows drawing together in protest. “Give me a day,” she says. “If I can’t fix it… we’ll shave it.”
Your eyes find the clippers in her hand before coming back up to meet her.
“One day,” she reasserts, her voice soft but firm.
One day. A single tally mark.
You nod.
It takes the full day.
Not just an hour or two. No quick fixes or shortcuts. It’s a full day of prying away the layers of filth that had buried themselves into you over the past three-hundred-and-ninety-seven days.
You’re sitting beneath her on a wooden chair in the corner of the washroom. The place is damp, steam rising from the water you’ve drained three times already. Your body aches from the scrubbing—you’ve lost count of the hours—and beneath your fingers, the skin feels almost new.
Then there was your hair…
At first, you thought it was futile; the clippers were a far easier alternative. But now, as the last few knots on your head give way under Beth’s patient fingers, you can hardly believe it. You’d gone through the prison's entire supply of shampoo. Four near-empty bottles now lined the edge of the sink, their contents spent in the battle against the god-knows-what was in your hair.
When you’d muttered an apology for using up so much, Beth had only waved you off. “Don’t worry about it,” she’d said casually. “Daryl and Michonne can find more.”
The thought made you wince; another burden, another thing you’d added to their list. But Beth hadn’t seemed bothered in the least. If anything, she worked with more determination, as if this—your restoration—was her personal mission.
But she never overstepped. 
Besides her odd instructions, “pass me that comb, tell me if it hurts, try not to move,” the two of you barely spoke. Beth had made the effort at first, but your mind was far too loud for her to get a word in edgeways.
When was the last time someone had touched you like this? When was the last time you’d let them? You can’t remember. It’s easier that way—to keep people at a hatchet’s length. Safer, too.
Yet, here she is. Beth Greene, picking you apart, piece by piece, like she’s unearthing something she’s determined to save.
Why?
The question gnaws at you as you sit there, letting her hands work through the last of the tangles. You can’t fathom what she sees in you that’s worth saving: a patchwork of sores and sins, held together by whatever instinct still clings to survival. Even now, you’re barely hanging on.
“Why weren’t you there that day?” you ask her.
The question’s out before you can stop it. Your heart pounds behind your ribs. 
“What?”
You swallow hard, forcing the words out again. “That Sunday. Why weren’t you there?”
Beth doesn’t answer right away. Instead, she resumes her work, her fingers methodical as she begins to braid a lock of hair. “My daddy wanted me to stay home,” she says eventually. “Maggie was sick, and he thought she needed me more.”
You nod, a hollow kind of relief settling in your chest. If she was there, she’d be rotting in the auditorium with the others. Those first few days, the faces all seemed to blend together—one corpse at a time. You’d been so sure she was among them. 
Her voice pulls you back. “I’m glad I wasn’t there,” she admits quietly. “But I hate that you were.”
You don’t reply.
“Was it bad?” 
You feel tremors picking at your skin as the memories come back to you. The screams. The blood. The bodies piled on that same stage where you used to hold concerts. Your throat tightens. “It was…” You pause, searching for a word that could do it justice. Somehow, none feel adequate. 
A bloodbath? Carnage? Despair?
“Hell,” you say finally, barely above a whisper.
This time, Beth stays silent. 
“Why are you doing this?” you press. The words come pouring out, circling the drain like four bottles of shampoo.
It’s been weighing on you the whole day. The girl behind you can barely be called an acquaintance. She’s just some kid you saw every other week for a-half-hour when her parents—like most folks—likely needed a break. 
She has no reason to be here.
Beth stills. You feel her hands rest on your scalp. “Because I remember what it’s like,” she finally answers. “To lose everything. To feel like there’s nothing left of you.”
As she reaches for her comb, you see it again: that scar on her wrist, too perfect and straight to be accidental. You don’t reply, but she doesn’t seem to expect you to. “You might not remember, but my aunt died a few years back,” she says softly; you hear Hershel in her voice. “The last thing I wanted to do after the funeral was go to that damn music class—sorry—but my daddy thought it’d be good for me. Couldn’t stop crying in the truck.”
You glance at her, something tugging at the edges of your memory.
“I don’t know if you did it on purpose,” she lets out a faint laugh, “but you sang a good song that day. My favourite. Did your best Dolly impression for all us kids.”
Beth ties off your braids with a gentle tug, stepping back to survey her work. “It brought some life back to me, you know? And I wanted to do the same for you.”
As she circles the wooden stool, coming into your view, you see the sincerity in her eyes. In truth, you could hardly remember it; the image was as foggy as the room in which the two of you stood. Did you even do it for her? Possibly. Or maybe you were hungover and Jolene just had it coming.
Either way, it had made her smile. And that was enough.
“Alright,” she says, nodding toward the mirror across the room. “Let’s see it.”
You hesitate. You’re not sure you want to see. Not yet. It’s just a mirror, you know, but you can’t help remembering the reflection you saw yesterday, at the end of the hall in Cell Block D. 
“Go on,” Beth urges, nudging your shoulder just enough to make you move.
You can’t avoid it. You shuffle closer, the tiled floor cool beneath your bare feet. The mirror looms before you, its surface slightly fogged from the lingering steam. For a second, you don’t look. You focus on your breathing, on the steady rise and fall of your chest.
Then, slowly, you lift your eyes.
The person staring back at you is familiar.
Your hair is neatly braided. Two long plaits trail down your back, each bound with a simple tie. The scent of lavender clings to you, fresh in contrast to the mould you’d grown used to. And the clothes—borrowed from Beth—fit like they belong to a version of yourself. 
She watches you, arms crossed, expectant. You catch her gaze in the mirror. “Well?” she asks, one brow arched in challenge. 
The outfit it nice, simple. The body in it could use some square meals. But overall, it's not bad. You’re more weedy now, all elbows and knees, but you could grow to accept this.
“It’s me,” you say.
Beth’s reflection joins yours as she sways slightly on the balls of her feet. “Yeah,” she agrees. “It is.”
The image holds you in place, locking you into this moment. Somehow, you’re still here. Not the person you were before, nor the hollow shadow you’ve been dragging behind you. Something in between. Someone half-stitched back together, the seams raw but holding.
Beth leans in. “So, what do you think?”
You glance down at your hands—rough but yours—and when you look back at the mirror, you almost don’t recognise the faint curve of your lips.
“It’ll do,” you say.
Beth laughs, and for a small moment, you feel it—something fitting into place.
— It's too damn late.
Daryl’s boots echo over the metal catwalk, one dull thud after another. He’d been hunting most of the afternoon, causing a ruckus out there in the woods. But now it's dark, quiet, and he's reminded just how little sleep he's gotten these last few days. How he'd kill to be one of these snoring bastards in the cells next door.
Last night was rough.
He'd cursed you at first, tossing and turning in his bed as he tried to shake the image of you curled up on the floor. At breakfast, too, he could barely stomach you. But as soon as he got out of those gates, into the world and the trees and everything beyond four concrete walls, he felt nothing.
Well, he felt something.
Just not the burning contempt he felt initially when the sun first shone into his eyes. This was different. He'd realised it some hours ago, during the time he spent tracking a deer. It was a small thing, barely enough to feed the kids, but once Daryl had it at end of his arrow, wide-eyed and frantic, he couldn't bring himself to shoot it.
 It's the first time he'd come back empty-handed from a hunt.
That stupid look on it's face reminded him of you.
Rick had filled him in earlier, told him that you were looking... different. Better, he’d said. Like some semblance of a woman now, instead of the half-dead thing Glenn had brought back from the brink.
Daryl doesn't know what he expected, but as he passes your cell—still illuminated by candle light—he's surprised by how much that change has settled in. You don't notice him, which gives Daryl time to survey you from afar; he knows better than to cross the threshold. You're sitting near the door, back straight, eyes wide, not a hint of sleep on you. No blankets, no covers—just you, focused on something in your lap.
You're wearing Beth's clothes, they fit better than Glenn's, and long, twin braids fall down your back. But the biggest change is your face, warm in the candle light—
It's less biting now.
Daryl almost doesn’t know what to say. No quips come to him, no bitterness held from the night before. Instead, he speaks honestly, “Ya look better.” He shifts on his feet, then adds, “Smell better, too.” 
A huff of dry air escapes him. Lavender. That’s new.
“You have Beth to thank,” you respond, without missing a beat.
Daryl blinks, thrown off by the reply. You knew he was there, and your stutter... It’s gone.
He should leave, he thinks.
But instead, he watches you fiddle with that fabric—sewing, he realises—and takes in the way your fingers work the needle. He knows nothing of the stitch you’re weaving; he’s more concerned by the fact your hands have finally stopped shaking. It's a kind of concentration, the same way he focuses when he hunts. Steady and unbroken. 
“Ya know,” he says after a long pause, “‘M pretty sure whatever tha’ is can wait.” He gestures at the remnants of a shirt in your lap. “Ya should get some sleep.”
His words are meaningless; you don’t even look up. But when you shake your head, it's with certainty. “If I do, you won’t.”
Daryl scowls. The memory of earlier—of how you looked trembling in the dark—flashes in his mind.
“I’m sorry,” you add. Then, using your sewing needle, you to draw a line in the air across your throat.
Daryl would’ve laughed at that, usually. But not from you. He doesn’t know you like that. Hell, he’s still not sure you won’t decapitate him the next chance you get. “Quit sayin’ sorry,” he says instead, more sharply than he meant to.
“Sor—” You catch yourself. “It won’t happen again,” you finish. 
And it can’t, Daryl thinks. He’s made damn sure of that. Rick’s got that thing reserved for firewood only—a duty he’ll make sure you’ll never have.
But he doesn't tell you that, so instead the moment stretches out, the soft scrape of your needle stitching through fabric. He should really leave now. Yet, his tired eyes catch something on the cell wall across from him, pinning him in place.
One faint, vertical line, followed by chicken-scratch words he struggles to decipher:
Loony Bin 
His eyes flicker over them before snapping back to you. He’d only said it once—muttered it under his breath at breakfast—but he had a feeling you’d heard. If not, you’d surely felt it in his stare.
He swallows thick. “Ya best be careful,” he says, trying to think of something—anything that comes to mind. He tries a joke. “A head ain’t something ya can just sew back on.”
The laugh that follows catches him off guard. A dry sound, but genuine. It cuts through the tension like scissors through silk, and seems to surprise you, too.
Daryl clears his throat. “Get some sleep for real,” he says, stepping back from the door. He tries to sound like he’s giving an order, but it comes out more like a suggestion. “Tomorrow, Rick wants ya to learn ‘bout this place. How we all keep it runnin’.”
He’s not sure what the hell you’ll be doing; he can’t imagine you playing well with others. Maybe watch duty. Something distant. Something that’ll keep you out of the way.
But then, before he can leave, he tests his luck. “You know how to shoot?” he asks. Tiredness is thick in his voice. “Could use more eyes on them walls.”
You pause, and for a moment, Daryl thinks he’s gone too far. He’s half-joking, but there’s something about you that makes him feel like a kid again. A kid too stupid for his own good, who wants to push, prod, and only find out where the line is once he's crossed it.
You look up. Daryl catches the flash of something in your eyes—defiance, maybe. It’s gone as quick as it surfaces. “No,” you say, quietly. “I can’t.”
Daryl’s shrug is automatic. He hadn’t expected you to say yes, wouldn’t trust you if you did. “Mm. A’right.” 
He leaves without a goodbye, halfway to his cell before he hears it. That flicker of a voice calling out to him:
“But I’m pretty good with a hatchet.”
A/N This chapter was bloody massive. I deliberated on the structure for ages, but I felt each part was necessary to paint the picture I'm going for. In all honesty, I was a little worried you guys would think ''there's not enough Daryl'' and considered interjecting more of him. But at this stage, it's just not realistic. It doesn't feel natural. I want each of their interactions to mean sometime, so please be patient with me as I set them up. And let me know your thoughts -do you appreciate this style? The relationships she's building with others? I'm keen to know :) As always, thanks for reading! x
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pandorahurtsx · 6 months ago
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𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙏𝙞𝙚𝙨 𝙏𝙝𝙖𝙩 𝙈𝙚𝙣𝙙 [𝘿𝙖𝙧𝙮𝙡 𝘿𝙞𝙭𝙤𝙣 𝙓 𝙍𝙚𝙖𝙙𝙚𝙧]
Chapter 2: Wide-Eyed
Series Masterlist: The Ties That Mend
Summary: Three-hundred-and-ninety-six days after the outbreak, you are discovered in an abandoned community college, covered in filth and barely able to speak a word. Despite the showers (multiple) and rehabilitation attempts (also multiple), it's apparent that your mind is elsewhere. Beyond saving.
This new world is chaos, but you're lucky to find good people in it. More so than any is a man named Daryl, patient enough to let you put yourself back together—one stitch at a time.
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Daryl had seen eyes like that only a few times before.
The first, he’d been seven-years-old, roaming the streets of Northern Georgia with his no-good brother. Their parents never did care a rat’s ass about where they ended up, and this time, they’d found themselves in the bad part of town. The epicentre of trouble. 
Merle had been hanging around some older boys back then, the type who got off on taunting his kid brother. Sneak up on the local kook, they’d told him. It’d be funny; he’d be a chicken if he didn’t. So Daryl—filled with a newfound sense of bravado—agreed, and dumped his can of orange Crush over some man too cracked out to notice.
Until he did.
The way the guy’s eyes popped open—bloodshot, bulging—was burned into Daryl’s memory. Even now, thirty-some years later, he could recount them in astounding detail. They were the same shell-shocked eyes as those nasty bastards his daddy used to hang about. The ones hardened by their daddies and so on. 
They were eyes Daryl saw far more often these days. Came across them in the fleeting glances of their ragtag community—from the stragglers of Woodberry to the drifters that had no place else in the world. After a few weeks of decent meals, sleep, and a safe place to shit, most of them lost that look. Replaced it with all sorts of stuff he didn’t really care for.
But most recently, Daryl had found it again, stamped onto the face of Glenn’s newest rescue. Whilst he’d pitied you at first, shaking like a newborn gazelle on Carol’s arm, that pity quickly morphed into something colder.
Catching your eyes, Daryl suddenly felt seven-years-old again. It wasn’t a passing thing, that look, nor did it mask something deeper. It was simply a fixture of your face. The result of whatever shit storm you’d endured.
Even with all the time in the world, Daryl wasn’t sure you’d ever shake it.
“Man, I’m telling you. Shit felt like The Shining—” 
A voice drags Daryl back into the room. Around him, a group had gathered in their usual corner, chairs pulled together in a circle. Bob has the floor, soaking in the attention as he recounts an abridged version of the day’s events. 
He’s new, too, and Daryl hadn’t taken to him yet. 
“—Glenn will tell you. Suddenly, she’s staring at us with those big bug eyes,” Bob goes on, bringing his pointer fingers to his face. “Kept getting wider by the second.”
Across from him, Glenn shifts uncomfortably. “It wasn’t that bad,” he retorts. “She’s not deranged just because she doesn't blink much.”
Daryl feels himself scowl. He’s got his back against the stone, arms crossed as he watches the exchange. He doesn’t usually involve himself in these little powwows, but something about this one is wearing his patience thin.
“Fifteen times,” he gruffs. Eyes turn to him as he pushes off the wall. “Tha’s how much most folks blink in a minute—fifteen.” 
Daryl moves in closer, stopping just short of the circle before shaking his head. “She blinked once in three.”
The chatter is replaced by silence, thick and uneasy.
“I’ve seen people like that,” Bob says after a moment. His voice is more subdued now, like he's been grounded back to that floor and not the pedestal he'd been put on. “Usually, it’s on their way back from war.”
The words hit hard. For once, Daryl finds himself agreeing. There was something about you, something off that made him feel like a kid again, standing in the shadow of a stranger’s unpredictability. He crosses his arms over his chest. “Wha’ever shit went down there,” he says, “ya can bet yer ass it weren’t pretty.”
“It wasn’t,” Glenn confirms.
His tone leaves no room for elaboration. 
At the other side of the room, Rick, who—like Daryl—had been doing his utmost to not get involved, straightens. “Glenn, brother,” he starts, “I know you mean well, but do you think she’s—” 
Rick doesn’t say it, but Daryl can hear it in the silence. They all can.
Beyond saving.
Carol clears her throat. “A bit of a feral cat,” she adds, after a beat. 
It’s a poor attempt to lighten the mood; no one laughs. Least amused is Glenn, who rakes a hand through his hair before letting out a hefty sigh. “What was I meant to do, just leave her there?” 
He doesn’t aim the question, but the lack of response only urges him on.
“You didn’t see it—that place was hell.” His voice tightens, the day’s frustrations bleeding through. “Not everyone’s lucky enough to have someone to pull them out of it. That could’ve been me, or you, or any one of us.”
The group slinks back as Glenn gestures around, trying not to let themselves land at the end of his pointer finger. 
Michonne—who’s been sitting quietly at the edge of the group until now—finally speaks. “Give her time,” she says simply. Her words are directed at no one in particular, but carry the kind of weight that can’t be disputed.
Daryl glances at her, and for a brief moment, their eyes meet. 
He’s come to appreciate Michonne; her short replies made life easier in the months they’d spent tracking the Governor. She never wasted breath on stuff that didn’t matter.
She has a point now, too. You hadn’t been here long—a couple hours at most. Hell, Daryl had taken longer naps. And it’s not like you were going anywhere. Not on those weak knees. 
For the time being, Cell Block D was the best place for you. It was the only one still needing repairs, a little dingy and a whole lot of space, which worked out fine. You likely wouldn’t cope well in the ones filled with people.
That’s why Daryl slept in Block D, too.
In the minutes that follow, an air of deliberation settles over the group. It’s an uncomfortable sort of quiet, with everyone seeming to retreat into their own thoughts. Daryl considers leaving; he’s got plenty to be getting on with. In truth, he’s not sure how he ended up here in the first place. But before he can make it across the room, he crosses paths with Maggie, coming in like a storm through the main entrance.
She looks dishevelled: her shoulders rounded and tiredness evident in the contours of her face. Sidestepping Daryl, she picks out Rick in the crowd. She shakes her head at him. “That pregnant lady in Block E is having trouble again,” she says, “My daddy’s gonna keep an eye on her tonight. Beth too.”
She takes a moment to flatten her hair, willing the stray strands into submission.
“They’ll come see the new girl in the morning,” she explains. Then, with a sidelong glance toward Glenn, asks, “What’d you call her again—loony bin?”
Glenn cringes. He reiterates your name, which he’d likely pried from you earlier in the truck. 
The sound of it takes Daryl by surprise. It’s a pretty name—one he’d never pin to you. He almost wonders if hearing it can give him a glimpse into your past, at the person you used to be. But then again, not everyone suits their name. Perhaps you never had.
“Well…” says Rick, more decisive now, “let’s get ‘er to eat in the meantime.” He stands to dust off his jeans. “Or clean up.”
There’s a collective murmur of agreement, and almost immediately, the group starts to disperse. Daryl’s first to move, but Carol catches his arm before he can make it out the door.
He throws an annoyed glance back at her.
There's an apron tied around her waist; Michonne had brought it back from some tacky gift shop they’d raided not long ago. The fabric was already stained—the pattern made dull from hard work. Carol was on cooking duty again; Daryl knew because he unintentionally looked forward to those days. 
“Any chance you could get something for her?” she asks, gesturing to the crossbow over his back. “Fresh?”
There’s hesitation in her voice, her lips pressed together like she’s bracing for something.
Daryl raises an eyebrow. “Sure. Ya want ribeye or sirloin?”
Carol bats him lightly across the shoulder. Then she offers him a small smile—one that doesn’t quite reach her eyes. 
Daryl dislikes it.
“She’s just so skinny,” she eventually says. That teasing tone he’d grown to expect is gone now, replaced by something more serious. “I lifted her, and—well, it was like lifting Sophia.”
The name lands like a stone. Daryl stills, his jaw setting. 
“I’ll find something,” he mutters.
Carol nods, sending him off with a small ‘thank you’. 
Daryl readies his crossbow and hunting gear before heading out into the yard. It’s bustling, as it always is these days—children weaving around him, adults trying to strike up conversation. He shuts them down with a look that says he could care less for chit-chat right now. There’s too many of them for him to handle.
Already got another damn mouth to feed.
He has half a mind to turn around, but Carol’s words propel him forward, clinging to the back of his mind like burrs.
He'll find something.
The cropped-haired woman comes to collect you at dinner. 
She tells you her name is Carol, and that she has something special prepared for you. Her tone is light, airing on excitement as she helps you along the metal catwalk and down the stairs. It’s an easy, practiced motion—her arm brushing against yours. But with each stroke, you feel it: that itch in your chest. 
You’ve never been fond of surprises. In fact, you hated them. The uncertainty, the lack of control, the unfamiliarity of this place… Every step tightens the grip around your lungs.
Breathe, you remind yourself. In. Out.
Carol notices the shift in your demeanor, must feel it in the stiffness of your shoulders. So she opts for distraction. As the two of you walk arm-in-arm, she attempts to fill the space between you with reassurance—even if it doesn’t quite reach you. 
She details life at the prison—everything they’ve worked towards in the last few months—and the other refugees who now called this place home. There's a semblance of stability behind her eyes as she recounts it all. “We’ve come a long way,” she says. “It’s been hard, but we’re getting there. You’ll see.” 
You want to believe it; you almost do. But talk of warm-water showers, birthday celebrations, and even tending to livestock leaves you doubtful. It’s too reminiscent of life before everything fell apart. 
There had to be a catch. There’s always a catch. 
Whatever it is, Carol doesn’t let on. But you’re not convinced she believes the narrative she’s selling, either. She won’t say it, but you can hear it in the pauses. It’s something you’ll have to decipher for yourself.
When the two of you pass a mirror at the end of the hall, your step falters. 
Who is that?
You recognise Carol, of course. Her face is familiar enough, grey hair catching the light like silver, but the one beside her—you—is someone else entirely. Your throat tightens as you take in the face staring back at you. 
That’s not you; it can’t be.
When had you become this gaunt—this filthy? 
Your cheeks are hollowed out, their colour lost entirely. The lips below are dry and cracked. Whatever was on your head, you could no longer call it hair. It was a matted thing that trailed like rope to the backs of your knees. 
Staring into the mirror, you find nothing of yourself in that reflection. Everything you’d ever thought endearing, gone. Even your voice is not as it was. You doubt it could still carry a tune. 
It’s all too much. The sight of yourself—the thing claiming to be yourself—triggers emotions you hadn’t encountered in quite some time. Before you can stop it, your eyes are burning.
You fight the sensation. Squashing it down to the depths, you stamp it dead. You can’t afford to break now. Not here. Not in front of her.
“Come on,” Carol says gently, nudging you away from the mirror. 
Could she feel it? The way your heart jumped in your chest—how your legs threatened to give way? 
You try not to think on it. Instead, you nod.
Once you reach the communal area of the cell block, you’re escorted to the same dilapidated table you’d noted earlier. People are still gathered there—some you recognise, others not. They don’t stare outright, but you feel their eyes. You begin to tremble in response, as though your body is trying to shake them off. Wordlessly, you let Carol guide you to your spot.
A plate is already set in front of you. There’s meat on it; you're told it’s rabbit. One look, and you’re reminded of the bunny you raised as a kid—a fluffy white thing, pure as snow. It was decapitated by the neighborhood fox one evening. You never did find it's head. At the thought, nausea grows within you, but like everything else, you push it down. 
No one else is eating, you notice. You’re aware that you’re likely turning their stomachs just sitting here. The word ‘shower’ had been thrown in your direction more times than you could count, but nobody had followed through with the threat—yet. Instead, you are offered a bucket of water to rinse your hands. It turns brown from just a few passes.
“Thought you could use some meat on those bones,” Carol quips, the words blunt but not unkind. “Daryl caught it fresh.” She then gestures for you to take a bite, to eat rather than stare.
You nod. Stowing your hatchet safely on a nearby seat—you had refused to leave it in the cell—you reach for the cutlery laid out on the table. There’s a knife and an odd spork-like utensil. They seem intentionally blunt, and in your hands, too, they don’t properly fit. 
It’s been far too long. How did you use these, again?
With each stroke of the knife, your anxiety mounts. You can’t seem to get a clean cut. The meat is sinewy, too alive—nothing like the canned mush you’d survived on for the last year. It takes everything in you to keep the tremors from taking over, to keep your hands steady enough to continue.
As you poke about the rabbit on your plate, a woman who introduces herself as Maggie strikes up a conversation. “The old community college, huh?” she asks, in spite of cautionary glances. “My sister used to go some weekends. Probably finger paintin’ or singing kumbaya,” she adds. 
You catch the playful hint in her tone, and when she laughs, it’s a sound you’re not sure you remember how to respond to. It’s pretty—the kind that’s easy, like it hasn’t been twisted by everything bad. 
“Did you start there, or just end up there?” she asks, casually.
“St—started,” you manage. You’re not sure she hears you, but she leans in, trying to catch the words.
“Hmm?” 
“Started,” you repeat, louder, though it feels like a strain.
Beside Maggie, a darker, leaner woman shoots her a look. “Let the girl eat,” she says. There’s something practiced about the way she carries herself. You sense she’s the type not to pry, and you’re thankful for that. Her kind are few and far between. 
"You're right, Michonne," replies Maggie, and with her answer, you learn another name.
Despite the warning, a boy, not even in his teens, lingers near the table. You’d noticed him earlier, coated in a sort of pessimism unsuited to his age. “Were there a lotta walkers?” he blurts. He’s wearing a sheriff’s hat—one he hasn’t quite grown into—and is eyeing you from under its rim. “My dad said the worst place to be is somewhere like that. Bet there were a bunch of people during the outbreak.” 
The leader of the group, Rick, flicks his hat in warning. But it’s too late—the question’s out. Your stomach twists again as you focus on the meat, trying to chew through the knot forming in your throat.
Across from you, your eyes meet Glenn's. He’s the only one here who saw it: the halls rotting with bodies, the blood-soaked floors. Even then, he still doesn’t know the full extent. 
And what would he do if he did know? If he found out what happened there—what you did? Would he have brought you back?
Your mind starts to spiral. You shove a piece of the rabbit into your mouth, hoping to distract yourself. It goes down like tar. Your hands are shaking now, clattering the mismatched cutlery against your plate. No matter how hard you try,  you can’t prevent the shudder that rips through your body.
Carol, tempered by concern, leans in. “Did you get separated from your group?” she asks gently. “Is there anyone—”
Before she can finish, Daryl speaks up. “Would y’all quit it?” he says, his eyes flicking from Carol to the others. The gruffness of his voice stands in complete opposition to their concern. “Yer givin’ me indigestion and I ain’t even eatin’.”
For a moment, all attention is directed away from you and onto him. You’re grateful for the space it grants you—no matter how small. The next breath you take is intentionally drawn.
“I—” you lock eyes with Daryl, hoping to convey your gratitude. Instead, something else makes its way to the surface. “I’m going to be sick,” you announce.
There’s no time to stop it. The first to react, Michonne dumps the bucket of water out over the floor. You can’t hold it in anymore. Your head falls into it just in time to let the bile spill out. It’s a pitiful sort of retching. There’s no vomit; your stomach is too empty to give up anything more.
Behind you, someone rubs your back. You don't know who, but their cool hands are a welcomed reprieve to the clamminess of your skin. Your body betrays your mind as you instinctively arch into them. It’s only for a split second, before you pull away.
What have you done?
Head emerging from the bucket, you force yourself to look up. There are eyes on you again, more persistent than before. And in them, you see it, the swell of emotions:
Pity. Annoyance. Indifference. Disgust—
Your chair screeches against the floor as you dart out of it. You leave the table smelling even worse than before.
It’s mid-evening when Daryl catches sight of you again, scurrying along the catwalk to your cell. 
You’re still a mess, though slightly improved since dinner. He takes a passing look. You haven’t bathed yet—probably still shaken by that whole interrogation—but there’s something less rabid about you now. Your hair, still a matted mess, is pushed behind your ears, and you’re wearing an odd ensemble: jeans far too big for you and a shirt likely belonging to Glenn. They were clean, at least.
Daryl crosses you without a word. Tired eyes and heavy steps, he’s hell-bent on returning to his own cell for the night. He’s halfway down the catwalk, hand on the door, when he registers it. A voice, barely above a whisper:
“D—Daryl?” 
He stops upon hearing his name. Turning, he finds you right behind him—staring up with that wide-eyed expression.
He tries not to flinch. When the hell had you gotten there? You were just… 
Daryl’s gaze drops instinctively. Bare feet. That’s why you hadn’t made a sound. 
“—m sorry about the food.” 
He tunes in to your words. They’re coming out too haltingly, too polite for the situation. 
Daryl doesn’t know how to respond. Eat the food, don’t eat the food. Normally, he wouldn’t care. But something about the way you say it—so fragile, so damn apologetic—leaves him grasping at straws. He’s not good at this, never has been.
You keep going nonetheless. “It wouldn’t stay down... I’m sorry to w—waste it.”
A nervous stammer creeps into your words, and with it, fans Daryl’s agitation. He wants to bite back. To let you know he’s got better things to do than watch you throw up food he went out of his way to catch. But something inside of him chooses restraint.
You’re teetering on the edge; everyone within a five-foot radius can see it. And when he looks at you, for some reason, his mind deciphers it as fear. He’s just unsure whether it’s the fear of breaking you, or the fear of what you’ll do if broken. 
He shrugs his shoulders. “Mm,” he mutters. “Don’ matter. Can always get s’more.”
You don’t say anything after that. The silence hangs between you, heavy and awkward. Daryl shifts on his feet, mapping out the route back to his bed, and how quick he can get there.
“Jus’ eat the next one, a’right?” he says, with finality.
You nod, your gaze not lifting from the floor. “Goodnight.” 
“Night,” Daryl mutters back. Then he watches you disappear into the darkness of your cell, waiting for the clink as you lock it shut.
But it’s not a good night. 
It starts a few hours after they all turn in. Daryl bolts upright at the curdling scream ripping through the air. His heart slams against his chest, and instinct kicks in. He’s already got his crossbow in his hands before the panic can register.
Torchlight flickers along the catwalk as the others begin to scramble awake. There’s a cacophony of voices, footsteps on metal, guns cocking, and Rick barking orders as he joins Daryl to locate the source.
The sound echoes again. It’s coming from your cell, a god-awful shrieking that has him preparing for the worst. Rick’s master key turns in the lock, and the door swings open.
Daryl steps in behind him, crossbow aimed high as he searches for walkers—hell, for anything that could warrant those screams of utter terror. His heart pounds in his ears as he sweeps the room.
There’s nothing. No threat—no you. 
A flashlight shines over your cot, but it’s empty. Daryl follows the edges of the light,into the shadows and all four corners of the room. He finds you in one of them, curled up in a ball, rocking on the soles of your feet.
He gestures to Rick, who—spotting you there—lowers his gun. “Hey,” he says, with a tone like he’s negotiating you off a high-rise building. “Hey, it’s okay.” 
There’s no response. Your head is buried in your knees, arms wrapped around your legs as you sit twisted in blankets. The shrieking has stopped now, but your silence, Daryl finds, is far more unsettling.
Rick steps aside, exchanging a glance with Daryl. It’s a subtle signal for him to take the lead. He’d rather not, but it’s Rick, so he listens.
Lowering his crossbow, he edges forward. “C’mon, snap outta it,” he growls. The cut of his voice makes him cringe; he’s never been good with words.
When you don’t react, Daryl tries again—a little closer this time. His hand reaches for your shoulder despite his better judgement. 
A switch flips the second he touches you. Without warning, your arm shoots out, a blur of motion that sends your hatchet swinging wildly. The instinct to defend yourself—to fight—is so ingrained that it comes as natural as a breath. 
Daryl barely manages to dodge the assault. He pivots back, feeling the blade against strands of his hair. Then, as quick as it started, it's over.
You're looking at him now—not through him. Sweat is beading on your face, running down your cheeks like tears. Daryl knows better than to wipe it. As he stands out of his crouch, realisation flashes behind those massive eyes of yours. 
“God—I’m sorry,” you gasp, breath ragged. “I’m so sorry... I thought you were—” You don’t finish. You don’t have to. He knows. Everyone knows exactly what you thought you were seeing.
Rick let's out a sigh: half relief, half exhaustion. He throws a backwards glance at the gathering crowd, raising one hand in a calm gesture. “Go on,” he says to them, “back to bed.”
Daryl hears their protests. It's understandable; they'd raced from their rooms only to find the source of the threat was some raging loon having a nightmare—as harsh as it sounded.
“You gave us quite the fright there,” Rick continues, turning his attention back to you. At this moment, he's demonstrating more tact than he shows his own children. “Do you need someone to stay with you?”
You shake your head, barely lifting your eyes. “No.”
Rick shifts his weight, searching for something else to say. He doesn't believe you, Daryl can tell by his stance. But that's not his problem.
By now, Daryl had already retreated to the door, watching you from a safe distance in the dim light. He’s seen this in people before—the way the world cracks them open like an egg. It’s never pretty. And it would have been less pretty if he'd been standing just a half-step closer to you.
“Well, if ya do,” Daryl says, his voice still edged with sleep, “it ain’t gonna be me. I wanna keep my head.”
The words come out harsher than he intends, but he doesn’t care enough to fix them. He’s tired, irritable, and the way you can’t meet his eye right now is getting under his skin. So Daryl steps back into the corridor, leaving Rick alone to deal with you.
He cell isn't the same as it was a-half-hour ago. It looks the same, doesn't feel it. It's quiet, but in his mind, that scream still rings like an alarm he can't shut off. On his cot, too, he fights with the covers. They're everywhere—too hot, too stifling. Too reminiscent of your emaciated body, tangled in bedsheets as you looked to Daryl for answers.
And he'd just left you there: wide-eyed and afraid.
Daryl doesn’t sleep that night.
Neither do you.
A/N Merry Christmas and happy holidays, lovers! I hope you've had a good one. I have eaten such ungodly amounts of cheese. That said, enjoy this lil gift from me. I busted my balls to get it out today - alternating between stuffing me face and putting words on the page. So do let me know if you like it! I also hope the change in POV isn't too confusing. I want to tell this story from both of their perspectives, since reader is a little bit of an unreliable narrator haha. Enjoyyyy x
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pandorahurtsx · 6 months ago
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𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙏𝙞𝙚𝙨 𝙏𝙝𝙖𝙩 𝙈𝙚𝙣𝙙 [𝘿𝙖𝙧𝙮𝙡 𝘿𝙞𝙭𝙤𝙣 𝙓 𝙍𝙚𝙖𝙙𝙚𝙧]
Chapter 1: Tally
Series Masterlist: The Ties That Mend
Summary: Three-hundred-and-ninety-six days after the outbreak, you are discovered in an abandoned community college, covered in filth and barely able to speak a word. Despite the showers (multiple) and rehabilitation attempts (also multiple), it's apparent that your mind is elsewhere. Beyond saving.
This new world is chaos, but you're lucky to find good people in it. More so than any is a man named Daryl, patient enough to let you put yourself back together—one stitch at a time.
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There’s no space left on the walls.
The thought sickens you; bile backs up into your throat before you swallow it down. There has to be something, somewhere—a small patch of unmarked paint for you to draw your next tally line. Desperately searching, your hands shake with realisation. There’s no more space on the walls. Nowhere left for you to mark the day. 
How many had it been, again? Four-hundred—more?
You start counting the tallies in multiples of five, beginning with the wall nearest the door and working clockwise around your bedroom. It had been a supply cupboard initially, scarcely big enough for you to lie flat. Blankets were scrunched at your feet, the result of yet another restless night, and your few belongings sat tucked into built-in shelving. You had committed it all to memory—every inch, a map of your isolation.
Three-hundred-and-eighty-five… Three-hundred-and-ninety… Three-hundred-and-ninety-five—
A sound interrupts your counting. 
There’s a thunk in the distance, barely there. You pause mid-breath. Soon enough, another follows. It’s a distant, hollow thud that sends ripples of panic through your body. 
The response is immediate. The tremors start with your fingertips before spreading upwards. Every breath exacerbates them, and soon you find yourself violently shaking. Something is approaching. You know it before you hear the next noise, a clink some ways off that cuts through the stillness.
Instinct takes over. You’re on your feet before you can think it through. The hatchet under your pillow is cold, its handle familiar. It becomes an extension of your limbs as your fingers mold around it. Your voice, alarmed, races through your head:
How’d it get in—what entrance had you missed? How many? How many?
You find your footing. The supply door creaks as you toe it open; it needs greasing again. There’s a jerry can in the music room downstairs—you know—but you’d lacked the energy for the trip. The hunger pangs had been keeping you bedridden, and only when dark spots crept into your vision did you dare venture out. 
Now you have no choice. Something’s coming, and you need to deal with it.
As you creep through the door, the smell of decay hits you. Gore and innards have seeped into the floorboards, your bare feet squelching atop the ichor. Before you, the corridor is lined with undead, their bodies shoved up against the walls to form a pathway through the middle. 
At first, you’d made an effort to clean them away—burying and burning and scrubbing and praying. But as the days went on, they just kept piling up. There were only so many bodies one person could attend, and even that took its toll. Before you knew it, they were under your nails and in your hair, then sometimes your head.
It was pointless.
It didn’t matter if you locked them away in the auditorium; you were never truly rid of them. Eventually, you gave up altogether. They were just another fixture of your life. Another layer of filth that had come to define this world.
They’re watching you now. You feel them. Judging you, condemning you. Stop it, you think, fixing onto one—it’s face half-shredded, an eye hanging from the socket. Don’t look at me like that. But its gaze is unrelenting. You swallow hard, and continue past the corpse. He was a kind man, once. Back when he had been one.
Your hatchet is weighing you down. It’s far heavier than you remembered, and your body, more sluggish. Most of the food has perished by now—only a few cans left rolling about the cafeteria. You didn’t pick through them anymore. There were too many memories in there. Too many things left behind. 
Malnourishment had taken its toll on you. Despite covering all the mirrors, you couldn’t avoid the contours of your hands, skin stretched taut over boney fingers, topped by brittle nails. In certain lights, you were not dissimilar to the undead—slowly wasting away.
“Man, this place is god-awful.” 
You freeze. Voices slice through the cloying air. 
“I’m telling you, something ain’t right here,” one says, close enough to spit. “Bunch’a dead walkers and you don’t stop to think, why? We got the meds, food’s nothing but dust, so what are we sticking around for?” 
A second voice, lighter, and a bit strained rebuts, “I don’t remember making you in charge. Keep walking, and I’ll keep pretending like I didn’t see you stuff that bottle of pills down your pants.”
Pills? You blink, your mind struggling to piece the words together. There were pills in the sick-bay down the hall—yes. That was true. So these people… Were they real?
You deliberate for a moment. In your entire time here, you hadn’t seen another person since the outbreak. Not a real one at least—or living.
No, you decided. They were undead. They had to be.
The shuffling of footsteps grows louder. They’re close now. Too close. You’re shaking so viciously that your bones ache. It’s now or never. As the undead round the corner, you are decided.
You aim for the head when you swing.
Thwack. 
The impact is solid—satisfying. But beneath the hatchet, the wall crumbles. There is no corpse, no contact with flesh. Before you, a man stares wide-eyed, his jacket crumpled in the fist of his companion, who had pulled him backwards in the nick of time. 
Your breath catches in your throat as you ready yourself for another go. 
They won’t fool you. There’s space in the auditorium—you’ll make space.
“Jesus Christ, put the axe down!” yells the man.
Each word is raw, grating on your ears. You don’t move; you can’t move.
Beside him, the other one reaches for his gun. Your mind flashes—weapon. They want to hurt you. They’re going to kill you. Your knuckles turn white. “Bob, stop,” snaps the first man. His hands are up now, palms flat as though facing off with a wild animal. “Look, we’re not going to do anything,” he says, punctuating each word. “You don’t have to be afraid.”
Your head shakes of its own volition. You know fear; you’re looking at it in his eyes. 
Was he… afraid of you?
No reply comes. Your head swims. You don’t trust him. You can’t trust him. But something in his tone—something warm and steady—pulls at you. You’re not sure why. “You’re alone, right?” he asks, unmoving. “We can take you back with us.”
Something stirs inside of you. Back?
Despite your silence, your expression must have given you away. The man stands straighter, slowly letting his arms retract and settle in at his sides. 
His eyes flicker to your hatchet before he clears his throat, “We have a community. It’s not much yet but we’re making it into a home,” he says, gesturing between himself and the cautious man. “Us and a few others.”
Your body is screaming from exertion at this point. The hatchet trembles in your hands, but you don’t lower it.
“Th—there—” 
You pause; your voice isn’t coming out. It’s ragged and the stutter is a new development. 
All this time… had you forgotten how it felt to speak?
You force a swallow and try again. “There are o—others?” you eventually manage.
The man with the frightened eyes doesn’t respond, but his companion—Bob, you recall—crosses his arms over his chest. “How long’s it been since you seen someone, huh?” he asks brusquely.
Three-hundred-and-ninety-six days.
You shake your head. The action seems to irritate him. He dares an approach, and like a trigger pulled, your trembles evolve into full-blown convulsing. Your heel slides back on a pool of blood, the shift in balance unsettling you. 
“Hey, hey—” A voice breaks through, fixing your attention. “Look at me.” 
The man whose name you do not know crouches just enough to toss his gun to the floor. The weapon lands with a dull splatter. Bob’s follows—much to his dismay.
The action does little to ease your concerns.
What if these men weren’t real? 
Your mind has done this before—crafted strangers out of silence. It wouldn’t be the first time you mistook the undead for a familiar face. Worse thoughts suddenly cross you:
What if they are real? What did they want with you—what would they do to you?
Quick as a blink, you’re back on guard. 
The weaponless man sighs. “Look, I don’t know what you’ve been through, or how you’ve managed to hide out here this long…” he says, pausing for a moment. “But you can’t stay. This place reeks of death.”
The word lingers in the air. He directs a grimace at the audience of blue-black corpses behind you.
“God, it smells so bad.”
Before you can reply, he's back looking at you—through you, almost—like he’s staring into the very foundation of your being.
“You don’t want to rot away here, do you?” 
You stand frozen, unable to respond. Your throat tightens as you search for words, but none come.
Bob’s impatience cuts through the moment. “Glenn, let’s get out of here already. You can’t save ‘em all. This one’s bat-shit,” 
The words don’t sting; they barely register. In this moment, your eyes are only trained on the man whose head you almost dislodged from his shoulders—Glenn. 
He’s waiting. You can discern no pity in his face, no judgment. Just an offer.
You say nothing. 
After a beat, Glenn gives you a small nod and concedes. Bob counters with a told-you-so sort of look before retrieving his pistol from the floor—wiping it over his jeans. 
They prepare to leave.
“W—wait.” 
It’s barely louder than a breath, but Glenn hears it. He stops, turning just enough to face you. 
Your chest is heaving now, the anxiety, palpable. Every instinct screams at you to run, to hide, to stay locked in the little supply cupboard at the end of the hall.
“I’ll go,” you say instead.
Glenn doesn’t smile—there’s nothing triumphant about it—but his own fear seems to have left him. He keeps a good distance but beckons you with his hand; it’s clean. 
“Come on then,” he says. “Let’s get out of here.” 
Bob is dry-heaving in the passenger seat. 
The heat of the truck only amplified the stench of death clinging to you. They were right; it is awful. Back at the college, you did your best to bathe somewhat, with whatever water you could scavenge. But it was never enough. The foul miasmas had seeped into everything: your clothes, your skin, your sweat. It would take some time to air out. 
Curling tighter to the door, you try to avoid Glenn’s strained expression in the rearview mirror.
“Told you it was bad,” he says. His tone is light, far too casual; it makes you want to sink into the seats. “Nothing a good shower won’t fix, though?”
You can’t bring yourself to nod. Perhaps you’d feel ashamed had it not been for the unadulterated panic ripping through you. Everything is too much: the thrum of the engine, the weight of the hatchet on your thigh, the sunlight—
How long had it been since you’d seen it? Four months?
That’s right. It had been four months since the generator had sputtered out, leaving you to exist in the dark for the remaining two-hundred-and-sixty-odd days. In truth, you’d grown used to it. Most windows you’d pasted with newspapers from the old art room, so even the sunniest days were reduced to a shadow. The open sky feels wrong to you now, like it’s exposing you to things you’d forgotten how to face.
You try not to blink. Each time the sun slices through the trees, it adds to the utter overstimulation. Your muscles are spasming, sapping the little energy you have left. The movement is making the smell worse. Glenn flicks the fans in a poor attempt to cycle the air, and almost immediately, you’re greeted by warm wafts of your own stench. 
Bob sticks his head further out the window. You cough wetly—trying not to vomit.
“Deep breaths,” Glenn reminds. You catch his eyes flicking between you and the road. “We’re almost there.”
You don’t answer; you can’t.
“Though I am going to warn you about something,” he adds. Hesitation lines his voice, doing nothing for your nerves. “I don’t want you to freak out, but… our community is, uh, in a prison.”
A prison?
The word ricochets in your head.
Your jaw slackens as you process the words. Glenn hurriedly continues. “Hey, it’s okay,” he blurts, “We’re not gonna lock you up or anything.”
His reassurance does little to stem the panic.
“We’re locked up now anyway,” Bob mutters from the passenger side. “Stuck in this hotbox with a raging loon.” 
Glenn smacks him. The truck veers as he forfeits the wheel, but he's quick to correct it. He finds your eyes in the mirror again. “I promise it’s safe. Safer than anywhere else we’ve found.”
You don’t believe him.
But before you can spiral any further, the truck slows, rolling to a stop in front of a chain-link fence. Beyond, a prison looms in the distance—a great hulking thing absent of any colour—and from it, a figure comes jogging to open the gates. You're here.
At the sight of another unfamiliar face, your doubts make themselves known.
Run. You have to get out. Run. Run. Run—
The door handle is in your hand before you realise it. The truck hasn’t fully stopped, but you shove it open anyway. The rush of motion tilts the vehicle, and Glenn curses as he hits the breaks.
The ground comes up fast. Your legs give out the moment they hit dirt. Above you, the sunlight is blinding. This time, you’re sure you’ll be sick.
“Whoa, hey, hold up!” 
A woman’s voice brings you back. Before you can react, there’s a pressure under your arm—hands, firm but steady. You instinctively jerk away but you’re too weak to pull free.
“Don’t struggle. It’s okay,” she soothes. Trembling, you force yourself to look up. 
Crouching before you is a woman with cropped hair, her features delicate yet hard. As her eyes sweep over your body, you catch a flicker of sadness in them.
“Goodness, you poor thing,” she murmurs. “Seems like Glenn’s brought home another stray.”
Her arm slips under yours again, and this time you let her help you up. There’s no fight left in you; it’s taking every morsel of strength to hug your hatchet to your chest. Each step is heavier than the last, but her encouragement—almost motherly—keeps you moving.
You try not to stare as she leads you toward the main building. People move around the yard. Real people. More than you’ve seen in months. Their voices blur together, too loud, too close, and you want nothing more than to shrink away from all of it.
As you make it inside, the air is cooler but no less stifling.
You're in a cell block. It's stark, structurally plain. Metal bars, concrete floors, and the faint scent of bleach that doesn’t quite mask something darker. In the center of the room is a makeshift cooking area, a hodgepodge of furniture surrounding a lunch table poached from the outer yard. A small group gathers there.
You do a quick count: Man. Man. Child. Woman. Baby—
Your brow furrows. Baby?
The woman cradling the infant has dark skin and neat locs, as opposed to the child, whose parents were probably another casualty of this world. She maintains her distance.
“Rick,” the woman at your side calls out, garnering the attention of everyone. 
A man responds to the name. He cuts through the group with measured steps. His stature is lean, his features weathered. He’s dressed simply—dark jeans, boots, a tan button-down rolled to the elbows—but his stance, the set of his jaw, that air of gravitas… It all screams leader. 
You plant yourself firm into the floor. 
The man—Rick—scarcely spares you a glance. “Another one?” he asks Glenn from over your head. “Where d’you pick ‘em up this time?”
“Old community college,” Glenn answers.
Rick lets out a short, tired breath. “Okay,” he says, before directing his attention toward you. “Then answer me this: how many walkers—”
He stops mid-sentence. For the first time, he really sees you. His expression sours as he does a quick scan, taking in every detail from your bare feet to the stained-red hatchet embedded in your chest. You see his nose twitch as he inhales.
“Rick...” the short-haired woman interjects, placing a hand to his chest. “Not now,” she says firmly.
“Not now,” Rick echoes. The frown lines marring his brow soften slightly. “It’s okay,” he says instead. “You’re safe now.”
You blink once.
Safe? Why does everyone keep saying that—Like it’s some guarantee?
Something in his eyes tells you he doesn’t believe it either; like he’s said those words too many times before.
“It’s not much, but it’s a roof and four walls. It’s a place to raise our kids.” Rick nods his head at the child with his likeness, a brown-haired boy in a deputy hat, and then to the woman holding the baby. “We’ve got water here—food. Daryl’s a hunter, and a damn good one. We’ll make sure you’re taken care of.”
You’re only half-listening. At the mention of another name, your eyes drift past Rick, settling on the figure at the edge of the group.
That’s the hunter—Daryl. You can tell by the crossbow slung across his back, and the dirt stains on his skin, far greater in number than the rest of them. His stance was casual but guarded, his sleeveless shirt exposing corded muscle. You catch his eyes, pinned under a mop of tawny fringe. 
They’re the kind that don’t miss a thing. 
You can tell he’s studying you just as closely as you’re studying him. There’s a tension in his posture, like a rubber band ready to snap at a moment’s notice. It unsettles you.
It frightens you.
“She should lie down,” Glenn says, breaking the silence, “Let Hershel take a look at her when he’s back.”
Rick nods. Instinctively, he reaches out to steady you as you sway on your feet. 
“I can walk,” you mutter, words barely audible. “I can walk.”
No one listens.
There’s an exchange of glances between Rick and the short-haired woman. Then, with a gesture so slow it feels deliberate, she steps in close again, threading your arm through hers. Her grip is firm but unobtrusive; you feel yourself leaning into her without meaning. 
Glenn attempts to relieve you of the hatchet, but you twist away, eyes flashing with warning. He raises his hands in surrender.
“Okay. You can keep it,” he placates.
The next thing you know, you’re being led into the prison’s interior. The cell they bring you to is small, the cot inside neatly made. But the room feels too open, too exposed. You hesitate at the doorway.
“This one’s yours,” Rick states simply. As he points, a keychain jingles at his belt. 
You fixate on it. “The—The key?” you question.
Rick’s brow furrows at the question. He hesitates, then thumbs through the chain until he finds the one he’s looking for—a long, slender thing with a dull shine. 
“Here,” he says. “Take it if it makes you feel better.”
It does.
You don’t mean to snatch it from him, but the warmth of his hand is unexpected, and you find yourself clawing for the key. Tucking it into your palm, you slide the gate shut. It latches with a clink, and a shaky breath escapes you.
“Right, well...” Rick steps back, giving you space. “Get some rest. We’ll come check on you in a bit.”
He lingers for a moment longer, his hand hovering over the bars like he’s deliberating prodding an animal at the zoo. When you don’t respond, he straightens and beckons Glenn to follow him out. The kind woman gives you one last reassuring nod before retreating, her boots echoing down the corridor.
Alone again.
Despite your fatigue, you don’t move to the cot. It’s far too clean. Instead, you yank the sheets from it, piling them onto the floor in the furthest corner of the room. They bunch at your feet, turning the colour of rust as dried blood flakes from your skin. Quietly, you sink down into your new bed.
For once your mind is empty. Your eyes, unblinking, stare at the expanse of wall. It feels wrong in some way you can’t quite place. Instinctively, your fingers find the loose match in your pocket—the one you kept for emergencies. You strike it and watch the flame quiver for a brief moment before blowing it out.
With the blackened end, you draw a tally mark on the stone before you:
One.
There’s plenty of space on these walls.
A/N And that's chapter one! It's been years since I've written anything like this, but I have big things planned. My style has definitely changed (hopefully for the better) and this series will be heavier than my previous stuff... But that hopefully means better payoff. I'd love to hear your thoughts. In all honesty, I was a little nervous about sharing this. I don't know if anyone still reads my stories, or even cares, so some feedback would be appreciated :) See you in the next one x
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pandorahurtsx · 11 months ago
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Wild-flower [Astarion]
Chapter 1 - Little Flower
Summary: “Once upon a time, you would have led me to that crypt—and not some pretty clearing in the forest.” His brows knitted with guilt. The laugh lines she's grown to love fall into a frown. “For what it’s worth. I thank the gods every night that they didn’t let me have you.” - Jessamine’s too trusting. If wild, blind naivety was a race, she would win it. Astarion’s a close second, only because he can’t help but follow her. A/N This is the start of a multi-chaptered fluff fest I've been mapping out for quite some time. The next part will likely come within the next day or so. Masterlist
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Despite the wine haze she’d found herself in, Jessamine’s certain of one thing. He’s watching her. 
She glances back at the door where he lingers, propped with his arms crossed at his chest. He doesn’t belong here; he's far too clean. Far too handsome. But he’d caught her eye when she came down from the upper dorms, and she likewise hadn’t left his sight since. 
So instead of heading out like she ought to, Jessamine instead settled in at the Flophouse bar, glass of wine in hand—which had been mead before she discovered how utterly foul it tasted. 
Jessamine’s on her third glass by the time the silver-haired man makes his move. “Very rare one stumbles upon a wood elf in the heart of Baldur’s Gate,” he announces. “You’re a long way from home, little flower.” 
His words barely register. Through Jessamine’s bleary eyes, she finds the man. An elf, like herself, though more moon-like than forest-coated. His skin is paler than hers, and his eyes, much darker. Her breath catches; she really ought to reply.
“How could you tell?”
The man grins. He takes to the barstool beside her, as though her question had been an invitation. “I can smell it on you. The earth, that honeyed sweetness…” His hand raises and strokes the air between them. “You wear it well, my dear.” 
Jessamine’s lips part; she was being hit on. 
It shouldn’t have come as such a surprise at her age. Yet, she wasn’t quite used to such direct attentions, either. Not without her sisters as buffers, or her father’s influence in the back of everyone’s minds. Something stirs inside of her.
“I— umm. I’m flattered,” she manages.
There’s a chuckle, and her gaze finds the bar.
Neither one of them speak for some time. Jessamine’s mind struggles to make sense of the nightly buzz: the bard tunes, the chatter, the clamour on the streets outside. It’s all a world away from the quiet birdsong she’d grown up with.
She feels the man’s breath on her neck. “So enlighten me…” he eventually says, “how did a creature as radiant as yourself end up in Fraygo’s Flophouse? Doesn’t your kind prefer frolicking about in a forest somewhere?”
The compliments seep right into Jessamine’s skin. He has her cornered. She’s acutely aware of their knees, ever-so-slightly touching, and his fingers, deftly circling his glass. In the span of a few minutes, he’d made her feel so nervous, so—inexperienced? 
Feeling his eyes on her, Jessamine musters every ounce of liquid courage to beckon him closer. And as he leans forward, she whispers through his hair, “It’s a secret.”
The man’s brow quirks. “Oh?” When she doesn’t elaborate, his eyes run over her, searching for any hint of a clue. By the time they return to her face, it’s burning. “I’m good with secrets,” he says back.  
Jessamine’s heart pounds. This is dangerous, she thinks. All alone, away from home—and she’s never had this much wine in one sitting. 
“Won’t you indulge me?” the man presses. “Let me guess, you've come seeking adventure... A scandalous affair, perhaps?” He pauses to gauge her reaction. "Or maybe, family disagreement?” 
Jessamine falters; he catches it immediately.
“Hmm, yes. How I relate to that! They made you feel stifled—trapped.” He takes a moment, fingertips ghosting over Jessamine’s flushed skin. “And what better place to seek freedom than the city proper. The one and only, Baldur’s Gate.”
Jessamine shudders.
“My, my, what a sweet thing you are.”
He edges closer. Jessamine loses herself in the contours of his face: his sharp jaw, sly smile, and the faint laugh lines bookending it. She barely notices when his thumb brushes against her ear, tucking fine wisps of hair behind it. 
The smallest of sighs escapes her. With not a single thought between her eyes, Jessamine leans into his touch. “Fresh as a daisy,” he whispers, “just waiting to be picked—” 
A damp rag slaps the bar between them; Jessamine jumps a mile.
“That’s enough of that, boy,” warns a man's voice. “I know your kind and the young miss ‘ere don’t deserve to be used by the likes of you.” 
Jessamine straightens in her seat. “Dashkent—” she sputters at the innkeep.
His expression is hard.
Despite his stature, Jessamine thinks the halfling is more intimidating than most men twice his size. And at this moment, there’s something fierce radiating from him.
Jessamine averts her eyes. She was undeserving of his worry. It was only by chance she'd been there to put out a fire in his storeroom a few days back. But since then, her lodgings had been free of charge, and she was no longer bothered by men in the dorms.
She barely knew him, yet as Dashkent looks down his nose at her companion, Jessamine's reminded of an overprotective uncle.
“Jessa,” he says, wringing out the rag in his hands, “keep yer wits about you with this one, a’right?” He shoots a look at the pale elf. “You’re too kind ‘a girl for someone like him.”
Harsh, Jessamine thinks. Yet a glance toward the man in question makes her second-guess herself.
Dashkent dismissed her before she has chance to think on it. “Off with ya now,” he says. “Go swig some water an’ get some rest, Jessa. Your next show’s tomorrow.”
Jessamine cringes at the reminder. She can only nod as the innkeep disappears into the back room. And with him gone, it becomes apparent. Whatever had been building between her and the other elf had been struck dead. She’s once again aware of her surroundings: the Flophouse and its drunkards (of which she's sorely included).  
Somehow, she almost feels as though she’s been trancing.  
A cough prompts Jessamine’s flight response. “I'm sorry about him,” she says; I should go, she thinks. But as she wobbles out of her stool, there’s a hand to steady her. 
“No need to run off, my sweet. I’m not scared away so easily.”
Something about the nickname stops Jessamine in her tracks. It disarms her enough that she doesn’t notice that she's being guided away from the bar. Her escort leads her to the Flophouse staircase, where she somehow finds courage to ask him his plans for the next day.
“If you've nothing to do, won’t you come to the Blushing Mermaid? I'll be performing there tomorrow night.” When he doesn't reply, Jessamine's heart quickens. “Only if you like—” she pauses.
She doesn’t even know his name.
“Astarion,” says the elf.
“Astarion,” she repeats. It's a pretty name, and it sounds pretty when she says it. “Tomorrow, then?” 
“Tomorrow,” he confirms, with a flash of teeth.
And Jessamine’s elated. 
They exchange goodnights, and promises to meet again. But as Jessamine returns to her lodgings with a new name on her tongue, it doesn’t register that she'd never given hers.
-
A/N She falls first, but he falls so hard his knees break x
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pandorahurtsx · 2 years ago
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Giveaway on my Instagram! @shed.gurl
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pandorahurtsx · 2 years ago
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whats the point of being a teenage exocolonist without PROM!
bonus: all these fucking shoes i drew. look at them
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pandorahurtsx · 3 years ago
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My sailor moon gaming shed 🌙✨
See more on my Instagram @shed.gurl
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pandorahurtsx · 3 years ago
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Drawing Geralt on Twitch! @shedgurl
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Got obsessed with the Witcher recently and have been drawing Geralt live on twitch! This is what I got done in part one, and I'm going to stream part two tomorrow!
Make sure you have notifs turned on, and I'd love to see you over at twitch!
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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Built my PC! 💖
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I wanted to show you guys! I'll be streaming some games tonight on my twitch - not sure what yet 💓
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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I posted 714 times in 2021
599 posts created (84%)
115 posts reblogged (16%)
For every post I created, I reblogged 0.2 posts.
I added 2,015 tags in 2021
#ask - 362 posts
#daryl dixon x reader - 286 posts
#daryl dixon - 269 posts
#daryl dixon fanfiction - 189 posts
#twd fanfiction - 174 posts
#twd - 168 posts
#daryl dixon x you - 151 posts
#the walking dead - 145 posts
#twd fanfic - 136 posts
#daryl x reader - 135 posts
Longest Tag: 56 characters
#either way i'll probably be doing both at some point lol
My Top Posts in 2021
#5
𝙷𝚎𝚛𝚎 𝙲𝚘𝚖𝚎𝚜 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚂𝚞𝚗 - 𝙼𝚊𝚜𝚝𝚎𝚛𝚕𝚒𝚜𝚝 [Complete]
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Pinterest Board I Spotify Playlist
Pairing: Daryl Dixon x Reader
Era: S2-S5 (Farm - Terminus)
Summary: Daryl Dixon scares the hell out of you climbing out of that damn creek. It takes hauling his ass halfway across Georgia and taking a bullet for him to realise that you're not half bad. He slowly starts to come around, despite grumbling about how much he doesn't like your singing, or that you can't use a gun for shit - and don't get him started on that ugly yellow tent of yours. It takes him a while before he starts to see for himself that he's found a best friend for life, and that he doesn't actually mind the colour yellow that much, after all.
Edits:
Fanart
1. Mood Board
2. Mood Board
3. Mood Board
Chapters:
I. Yellow Submarine
II. (Get off Your) High Horse
III. Shoot to Thrill
IV. White Wedding
V. Welcome to the Jungle
VI. Handbags and Gladrags
VII. (Don’t Fear) The Reaper
VIII. Zombie
IX. Don’t Look Back In Anger
X. All These Things That I've Done
XI. Time is Running Out
XII. Highway to Hell
XIII. Are You Gonna Be My Girl
XIV. Jailhouse Rock
XV. With Or Without You
XVI. Fortunate Son
XVII. I Predict A Riot
XVIII. Seven Nation Army
XIX. Carry On Wayward Son
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597 notes • Posted 2021-04-10 23:11:30 GMT
#4
Look Straight Ahead
A/N This is a little different to what I usually write, but I wanted to challenge myself! I got the idea and just went straight ahead - finishing it in about a two days. I hope you enjoy it; please let me know what you guys think!
Summary: You are the only person Daryl Dixon will ever let cut his hair.
Words: 3796
Masterlist
Buy Me A Coffee
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The air was heavy, and thick on his tongue.
It was hot — the type of Georgia heat that put hell to shame.
The sun hung high above the clouds, and cast long shadows from the trees that looked like hulking towers of summer.
But Daryl didn't have the luxury of sitting in the shade.
He stood out in the field, feeling the grass tickle him between his toes — because you'd insisted he take off his boots so as not to get heatstroke. The breeze was gentle, but it might as well have been stagnant because Daryl couldn't breathe.
Sweat trickled down the nape of his neck, and gathered on his brow. He wiped it away, but his hair remained wet — stuck to his skin, inescapable.
He wanted to leave this weather behind. Part of him even missed the winter days he'd spent huddling near small newspaper fires and cursing the cold. At least back then he had an excuse to hold you closer, and feel your skin against his without it sticking together.
You had been so clingy on those snowy nights — bundling the two of you up in tattered blankets that bordered on thread-bare. Now, it was impossible to sleep too close to one another.
Everything was just too warm, and sticky, and miserable.
Daryl let out a sigh that consisted of hot air, and blew away the stray strands of hair that had fallen in his eyes.
That's when he saw you.
At first, he watched amusedly as you dragged that little plastic garden chair out onto the field, but his smile soon faltered when beckoned him over with your eyes.
"Sit," you instructed, pointing to the seat that Daryl was certain would collapse on him.
You had an old towel in one hand, and a pair of sharp, shiny scissors in the other.
And Daryl groaned — not this again.
Lately, you'd been on his back worse than the beating sun, trying to coax him into enduring one of your haircuts. He shook his head, but he knew it wouldn't matter.
You had him cornered — and had stolen his boots.
"Can you even see?" you quipped back, outstretching those very sharp scissors in his direction.
Daryl wanted nothing more than to avoid having his ass stick to that deckchair for the next half hour, but he didn't have any fight left in him. The heat had absorbed it.
He sat down tentatively, not trusting those thin, plastic legs to hold his weight. The chair creaked a little, but otherwise seemed solid enough.
"Nothin' worth seein' 'round here these days," he muttered below his breath. But you still caught it.
You always did.
"Careful, Dixon," you warned, opening and closing those salon shears so that they made a snipping sound near his ear. "Or I might just poke your eyes out."
He felt you lay that raggedy towel over his shoulders, blocking his reddened skin from the rays of sun — and he stayed perfectly still.
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732 notes • Posted 2021-07-22 21:41:14 GMT
#3
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The Walking Dead - Daryl Dixon
Hello, my amazing readers! 
First, I want to thank you so much for all of your support. Your comments and feedback really mean the world to me. I’ve made so many friends on this platform, and I utterly adore getting to talk with you all.
If you have enjoyed my writings, then maybe you'd like to buy me a coffee or commission me? I'll always love writing fanfiction, but it'll go a long way for a caffeine-addicted uni student lol x
(you can also find my work on Wattpad and Ao3 under @pandorahurts)
♡ = favourites
Each section is ordered by oldest to newest
Art Masterlist
General TWD Masterlist
See the full post
769 notes • Posted 2021-04-25 21:08:36 GMT
#2
Peek-A-Boo
A/N This is a Daryl / Reader story told through Judith’s perspective. This is what most of you wanted to see from the vote - so I hope you enjoy the fluff!​
Summary: The story of Aunt and Uncle Dixon told through the eyes of Judith Grimes.
Masterlist
Buy Me A Coffee
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The very first memory Judith Grimes had of her uncle and her aunt was from back when they weren’t even known as Aunt and Uncle Dixon — well, not to her at least.
She’d been two, or maybe even three years old at the time. She knew she was young, since the memory itself was fuzzy, blurred like an old photograph left out in the sun — like the picture of her and her brother as the years drew on. But even then, their faces hadn’t really changed, nor had the way they looked at each other.
Judith Grimes had been two and a half, perhaps bordering on three, when her world went dark.
That sounded ominous-
It hadn’t really — but at the time she didn’t know any better.
So, according to Judith, her world had gone pitch black, making her lip quiver in fear and her little palms tremble as the light was zapped away from her forever.
It was silent, cold, empty.
But then, that darkness dropped away from her eyes, and a man stood before her in its place — with a fuzzy beard, pulling a strange face.
And giggles erupted from Judith Grimes.
“Oh my god, Daryl,” a woman cried — perhaps the same one holding her, covering her eyes with her gentle palm and pinching her cheeks every now and then — “just listen to her!”
The man had a hint of a smile on his face, but he still looked grumpy. He always did.
Well, except for a moment ago when he pulled that face at Judith.
“Do it again,” he muttered, his eyes looking up from her — resting on someone else who she couldn’t yet see.
And suddenly, her world went dark once more.
Judith whimpered. Her eyes were wide open but everything was still black. Even the grouchy man with the itchy beard had vanished, leaving her all alone in this stranger’s arms. She spluttered on a cry, feeling it bubble up in her throat as she prepared to wail as loud as her little lungs could manage.
But then there was light.
And with it, came that man who made her laugh.
She laughed so much that it spread to the woman holding her — she could feel it as she bounced along with her. And this time, even the grumpy man smiled.
But Judith could tell that he wasn’t looking at her, because his eyes were up higher than where she was sitting — probably on that other lady whose voice was much louder than hers.
She pouted. She couldn’t compete with that.
But the man had gotten closer to Judith now, close enough this time for her to grab his nose. So she did just that, encasing it, trapping it in her little fist and squeezing until he paid attention to her.
“Now tha’ ain’t very nice,” he grumbled, untangling her fingers from the end of his nose. “Thought ya were raised better than tha’, lil’ asskicker.”
His hand was rough and big — almost as big as that other man’s who held her a lot. He had a beard, too.
“Hmm yes, I wonder who she could’ve picked this violence up from?” the lady replied, readjusting Judith against her chest as she slipped down.
But Judith wasn’t violent. It had been a loving squeeze, really.
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949 notes • Posted 2021-08-01 16:46:00 GMT
#1
Big Brother
A/N Here it is, another Daryl / Reader story from someone else’s perspective - this time Merle’s! Did any of you guess correctly?
Summary: Merle Dixon had always flaunted the big brother privilege over Daryl, snatching away toys and saving the best things for himself. But there was one thing he couldn’t take from his brother — and that was you.
[AKA the story of how Daryl Dixon won your heart, from the begrudging perspective of his brother, Merle].
Masterlist
Buy Me A Coffee
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Merle Dixon had always gotten what he wanted.
Okay, that might not have been the entire truth-
Merle Dixon had always taken what he wanted.
Ever since he was a kid, mere redneck trailer trash, Merle realised that nothing was ever going to be handed to him in this world. Whether it was that shiny new toy in the shop window, or even a damn speck of attention — Merle wouldn’t get it unless he took it for himself.
So that’s what he did as a man, too.
“How’s it goin’ darlin’?” he leered, followed by a gesture too obscene to be repeated.
“Bite me,” the woman snapped, flipping him off as she walked past.
And Merle scowled.
This time — no matter how much he wanted it — he couldn’t figure out how to make you his. He couldn’t just take you for himself, as though you were a sparkling nickel on the sidewalk, because someone had already beaten him to it.
And that person shared the same last name as him.
It was his brother — Daryl.
“Aww c’mon gorgeous, we ain’t gotta lie to each other like this,” he cracked, chasing after you. “Why lie to ol’ Merle when ya could lie with ol’ Merle?”
He laughed at that one. He always was one funny son of a bitch.
Except, you didn’t seem amused, and batted away his advances as he continued to trail after you — hot at your heels.
“Merle Dixon, the world might have ended but that doesn’t mean my self respect went along with it,” you shot back — wounding his pride more than he cared to admit.
But Merle still smiled, running his tongue over his teeth as he watched your ass when you walked away, wondering how the hell his brother managed to catch your eye in the first place.
“Saw tha’, ya sly bastard.”
Merle chuckled. Speak of the devil and he shall appear.
Daryl was leaning against a tree, arms crossed over his puffed-out chest as he sized up his brother where he stood.
“What’cha gonna do ‘bout it, baby bro?” Merle quipped, stuffing his hands into his pocket whilst he readjusted his jeans.
Daryl scowled, trying to look elsewhere.
“Leave ‘er be an’ we won’t have any trouble,” the man warned, through gritted teeth.
For the second time today, Merle just couldn’t believe it. First, that bird had given him a shoulder frostier than ice, and now his kid brother was actually standing up to him — showing off those balls of his that must’ve grown three times the size since he’d last seen them.
Next thing you know, Merle might even catch pigs fly.
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972 notes • Posted 2021-08-12 20:47:16 GMT
Get your Tumblr 2021 Year in Review →
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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Built my PC! 💖
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I wanted to show you guys! I'll be streaming some games tonight on my twitch - not sure what yet 💓
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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I got some new animal crossing joycons! 🍃💙
Follow my Instagram @shed.gurl for more!
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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My gaming chair 🌸🌸🌸
Follow my Instagram @shed.gurl for more!
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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Look at my profile pic!
Guys omg - so I know this is a TWD account but y'all know I like to share things with you like you're my friends 🤭
So someone drew me a profile picture for my Instagram account @shed.gurl and I wanted to show you because LOOK HOW BLOODY CUTE IT IS! 💓🌸💓
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I'm crying it's so adorable.
Anyway, that is all. Hope everyone's doing well!
My exam finishes on Thursday and honestly I'm so burnt out. Can't wait to relax over holidays ❄️
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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My favourite controller! I love the cherry blossom theme, so I got matching thumb grips to go with it 🌸🌸🌸
Follow me on Instagram, @shed.gurl for more 💓
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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🌸 Do you like my set-up? 🌸
Follow me on Instagram for more inspo! @shed.gurl
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pandorahurtsx · 4 years ago
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Do you like my stardew valley setup?
Follow my gaming Instagram @shed.gurl for more 🌸💗🐰
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