#(kind of😭)
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sunsestart ¡ 10 days ago
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Happy let Papyrus say fuck day!
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xpurplepiex ¡ 5 months ago
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found out about the existence of this pairing like a month ago and im already in love with these two <33
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samgiddings ¡ 2 years ago
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@staff @support @engineering @music @books
Have you ever considered this is a really stupid layout to have when there’s no way to easily get your account back if you accidentally hit the wrong button???
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elfboypussy ¡ 1 year ago
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sass master astarion
screenshot paintover! bg is just from said screenshot lmao. total time: 10h
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nyanrial ¡ 6 months ago
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making little snowmen ⛄⛄
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anna-scribbles ¡ 1 year ago
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adrinette exes. and marichat. part 2
(part 1 / part 3 / part 4 / part 5)
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malone-fanart ¡ 7 days ago
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kerdly slop
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yes image quality is shit on purpose lmfao i felt like that added to it
chapter 4 weird route spoilers!!
alternatively, if you’re a berdly hater, then don’t worry i got you covered too 🔥🫡 /silly
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og images and normal quality + no text version of first image under cut
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eulchu ¡ 1 year ago
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double whammy at the eurocup kiss cam
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caur-exe ¡ 7 months ago
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AU where did jambalaya get timely psychological help (no toxic yaoi, give them a chance for health relationships ಥ‿ಥ)
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jaerockyaoi ¡ 3 months ago
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soundwave for my dad's birthday 👍 he likes soundwave too so yaheee
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falafels ¡ 2 months ago
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pt.63: Jean Q&A!! <pt.62 pt.64>
kevin day piĂąata for jean. as he deserves
tags for the homies ❤️ @andrewsleftarmband @blurryhour @you-know-i-get-itt @notexactlythatgirl @longspacerat @tessasilverswan @minyard-05 @carbon-dated-gal @bisexualchaosdemon @stormiiflies @watercoloureyes01 @vampire-overlord @iron-sides @azure-wing @buffalo-fox @ohgodnotagainplease @pink-hydrangea @jaywalkerss @ohmynoggin-blog @cosmic-marauder @min-getoutofmy-yard @plazybones @disastersappho @leestars13 @the-witch-forever-lives @minyardsss @post-historical-posts @andabuttonnose @hidinginmyhands @aftg4l @allfor-thegames @yaoishida @inafieldofstarflowers @snowcoming @mooniism @jeanmoreausautismstickers @prometheusthedragon @graveyardviolence @bustedleftshoe @beatrix33 @aftg-bs @yes-i-exist-shutup @milktemproom @all-for-exy @moon-over-ruined-castle @meta-breakers @oneandonlystarshine @dragonslayer26806 @malepresentingleg @lesbiansforkevinday
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soapbbox ¡ 5 months ago
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I absolutely adore your TF One drawings!! The one where the High Guard finally learn about the cogless miners send me cracking (in a good way). Really, just thank you. Have a nice 2025!! - FanFromSpain
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I’m really happy you enjoy them!!
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hatethysinner ¡ 22 days ago
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I’ve been reading stories where Remmick meets the reader whose in a bad marriage with a cheating spouse. They’re good but I now want a different kind of AU, I want to see Remmick meets pregnant reader which the baby’s father dipped the moment he heard the news so basically Remmick steps in to take care of the reader and the baby. If it’s no trouble can you write it please? I don’t mind if you do or don’t add smut in the story
ɴᴏ ᴏʀᴅɪɴᴀʀʏ ʟᴏᴠᴇ
ᴡᴄ: 5.1k
ᴀ/ɴ: title taken directly from this incredible song. I LOVE THIS IDEA ANON UR SO SMART! i was kind of hesitant to write this for some reason but the more i thought about it the more i was like oh my god this is gonna be so good! one thing led to another and well... is 5k words still a drabble? i'm not in love with my writing in this but i truly hope y'all enjoy it. as always, white girls you can have your fun with this too! i don't do taglists personally, so just follow me if you want to be updated when i post c:
ᴡᴀʀɴɪɴɢꜱ: familial abandonment, grief, light religious mentions, birth though i don't think it's that graphic but mileage may vary, excessive divider usage, amateur knowledge of maternity(!!!), domestic lonely!remmick fluff
fanart!
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You hadn’t planned to be alone.
Not like this.
Not with your belly round and aching, your fingers too swollen for the ring he slipped on with shaking hands that spring. Not in this creaking old house with lace curtains and porch swings and enough room for a family that hadn’t come.
The Mississippi heat hadn’t let up in weeks. It clung to your neck like grief, heavy and humid, the cicadas too loud to ignore and the crickets too quiet to trust. You moved slower now, out of necessity, not grace. The floorboards groaned beneath your bare feet as you made your way from the bed to the kitchen as if the house missed a second set of steps too.
You still caught yourself reaching for him at night.
Still caught yourself dreaming of the way he used to hold your waist like it anchored him. The way he kissed the back of your neck in the kitchen when you were stirring something sweet. How he'd whisper that you were going to be the best mother Mississippi ever saw.
He loved you.
He loved you.
Didn’t he?
But the day you sat him down, palms damp, breath caught somewhere between hope and dread, and told him you’re gonna be a father, everything shifted. Not all at once. Not with shouting or slamming doors.
Just silence.
First, he started staying late at the shop.
Then the notes stopped showing up with the groceries.
Then you woke up and he was gone.
No suitcase. No goodbye.
Just the weight of knowing his absence wasn’t an accident.
You’d told yourself it was a mistake. That maybe he was hurt. Maybe something happened. But the bank hadn’t seen him. The rail station hadn’t, either. He left. Left you.
Left this.
The whispers in town followed you like gnats. Women with their husbands at church, nodding politely, eyes drifting down to your stomach before flicking back up with something like pity, or judgment, you couldn’t quite bear to name. No one said it outright, but you heard it anyway.
Poor girl.
What a shame.
You still sat in the same pew. Still sang the hymns, even when your throat ached. Still held your chin high. But it was getting harder. Harder to feel beautiful. Harder to feel strong.
Harder to believe there’d be anything left of you once this child came into the world.
You’d made peace with that, sort of. With being a mother, even if you couldn’t be a wife.
Until the night he showed up.
It was late. So late, the world felt folded in on itself. The moderate rain only exemplified the quiet. The porch light had burned out weeks ago, and the only glow came from the oil lamp you kept near the window. The town had gone quiet save for the occasional bullfrog croaking out near the creek, and you’d just settled into your rocking chair, fingers pressing gentle circles into the small of your back, trying to coax the ache away.
Then the knock.
Soft. Barely a sound at all.
You startled.
Knocks didn’t come this time of night. Not unless someone was dead or dying. You wrapped your robe tighter and eased yourself upright, hand on the edge of your belly, heart already ticking faster.
You stood slowly, one hand on your lower back, the other braced against the wall as you moved toward the door. You didn’t bother to make yourself look presentable. Just adjusted your chest, padded barefoot to the front of the house, and peered through the fogged glass of the window beside the frame.
There was a man on your steps.
Not your husband.
A stranger.
Tall. Lean. Barely cloaked in a threadbare coat. He stood crooked against the porch railing, eyes tilted toward the sky like the rain was speaking to him. His hair was damp and clung to his forehead. His hands were empty.
You should’ve locked the door.
Should’ve turned off the light and walked back to bed.
But something in the way he looked up when you touched the knob, like he’d sensed it, like he’d been waiting, froze you in place.
You opened the door.
He didn’t move.
“Sorry to trouble ya, miss,” he said, voice rough, worn down like old gravel.
You didn’t answer.
He cleared his throat. Rain had slicked down the collar of his coat and soaked through the fabric at his shoulders.
“I ain’t askin’ for much,” he added. “Just a night. I won’t touch nothin’. I just-” He hesitated. “It’s cold.”
You looked him over.
The way he stood didn’t scream threat. Didn’t scream drunk or high or desperate. But it didn’t scream safe either. He looked pale. Tired. Gaunt in the cheeks, but not unwell. Just… small, somehow, despite his size.
You shifted. Felt the baby stir gently beneath your ribs.
He noticed.
His eyes dropped to your belly. His whole face changed. Not pity. Not disgust. Just something sharp and unfamiliar, like recognition.
“I’ll sleep on the porch,” he said quickly. “Didn’t realize... I wouldn’t’ve knocked if I’d known. Honest.”
You didn’t know what possessed you then. Maybe it was the ache in your ribs. The absence of someone who should’ve been there to keep you company through all this. Maybe it was how needy he sounded. How soft his voice got when he said honest.
Or maybe it was the look he gave you when you gave him permission to step inside.
He didn’t smile.
Just nodded. Like you’d saved him from something you didn’t have a name for yet.
“Thank ya,” he said, voice almost hoarse now. “Thank ya kindly.”
You still didn’t ask his name.
You didn’t ask where he came from.
You just shut the door behind him, gestured toward the blanket chest by the hearth, and said, “There’s a quilt in there. Floor’s all I’ve got.”
He nodded again. Didn’t complain.
You watched from the corner of your eye as he lowered himself down, slow and careful, folding the blanket once before curling beneath it. No pillow, no cushion. Just wood and wool and whatever weight he’d carried in with him.
And when you eased yourself back into your rocker, listening to the soft tick of rain on the windowpanes, the baby shifted again, sharper this time. Like it knew something had changed.
You didn’t sleep well.
But when you woke the next morning, he was still there.
And that was the last night you ever spent alone.
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It started with the dishes.
Not all at once. Just one plate, then another. A rhythm, like he'd done it a hundred times before. You’d woken from your afternoon nap to find the washtub full and your best rag already soaked, the scent of lye soap and something copper-tinged filling the air.
He hadn’t even looked up at first. Just kept scrubbing slow circles into a plate with that strange, methodical care of his. You’d stared at him for a full minute, waiting for him to stop, to say something, maybe even look guilty. But he didn’t. He just nodded toward the table, where he’d made a small spread of breakfast, only for you.
“Thought ya might be hungry,” he said.
That was all.
You didn’t ask him why he’d done it.
You didn’t need to.
He’d been quiet like that all week. Hovering without hovering, close but never quite imposing. You noticed the way he watched you when you moved around the house, hands tucked behind his back like he didn’t trust himself not to help too quickly. He'd fixed the door latch before you'd even thought to mention it, patched the hole in the roof where the rain got in, even dusted your kitchen shelves with one of your old slips of cloth tied around his wrist like a makeshift cuff.
You hadn’t asked for any of that either.
But maybe that was what made it bearable. Strange, yes, but not frightening. Not threatening. He wasn’t a loud man. Wasn’t messy, either. He stepped light, didn’t slam doors, always kept his boots by the back steps and his sleeves rolled neatly to his elbows.
He didn’t touch you.
But he looked.
You caught him at it often enough. When you were washing greens, when you were folding linens. His gaze always softened around the edges, like he was watching something breakable and didn’t trust the room to keep it safe.
At first, you’d looked away.
Now you didn’t.
You weren’t sure what changed. Only that something about the way he moved, how slow and deliberate it all was, made your chest ache in a way you didn’t expect. Like you’d forgotten what it meant to be seen without being expected to perform.
He watched you differently than your husband had. That man, gone now, though not without taking a piece of your heart with him, had looked at you with something close to love. Maybe it had been love. You still didn’t know. But there had always been a shadow in it. A hesitation. Like he was trying to hold on to who you were before. Before the baby. Before the curve of your belly started showing in every dress. Before you started humming lullabies under your breath.
He didn’t do that.
He just brought you warm water for your feet in the evening and kept the fire going when the wind picked up through the walls. He hung herbs on the porch rail to dry, even though you hadn’t taught him how. Got it wrong the first time. Rosemary bundled with sassafras, but corrected himself without complaint. He had sharp eyes. Paid attention. Knew your schedule by heart now. When you took your walks. When you liked your tea. When the baby liked to kick.
And Lord, the way he fussed over that baby.
He listened for the kicks like they were gospel. Dropped to one knee anytime you winced or shifted, one hand already hovering like he could ease the weight of your belly just by being near. He’d murmur soft nothings to it sometimes, voice low and warm as molasses. Called the baby sweetheart, sugarplum, his little dove, like it already belonged to him, like he'd been waiting for it longer than even you had.
When the baby turned in the night and made your whole spine ache, he was already there with warm cloths and gentler hands. He never made a show of it. Never asked for thanks. Just laid his hand where it hurt most and waited until your breath evened out again. Sometimes you’d wake to find him asleep beside your chair, his head resting lightly against your thigh, still half-dressed from whatever he’d been doing before he heard you stir.
He carried buckets of water in the mornings without you asking, swept the porch, patched the leaks. Cleaned the chicken coop even though he hated the smell. Anything to spare you the strain. Anything to make things easier.
And he never touched your belly without permission. Not once. Always waited for a nod, for some small sign that it was alright. Then he’d press the flat of his palm against your skin like it was sacred.
He didn’t ask for much in return.
Just to be close.
Just to stay.
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It was strange, all of it.
You’d said that to yourself more than once, lying awake with your belly high and heavy under the quilt, the fire crackling low in the stove and his footsteps creaking through the kitchen. It wasn’t fear that kept you up. It wasn’t discomfort either, not exactly. It was something quieter. Thicker. A feeling like you’d wandered into someone else’s story, someone else’s life.
You’d never expected company. Not after what happened. Not after the man you married, the one you’d whispered vows with in a sun-warmed church, turned pale and silent when you told him about the child growing inside you. You weren’t stupid. You’d known it would be hard. But you hadn’t expected the look he gave you, like you’d broken something between you. And then he left. Just like that. Like the baby had made you unrecognizable.
But he didn’t seem to flinch.
He hadn’t run, hadn’t stared at your stomach like it was a problem that needed solving. Hadn’t looked past you like he was trying to remember who you used to be before the swell of your belly changed the silhouette of your body.
He just stayed.
And that was strange.
So was the way he moved through the house now, your house, though it hadn’t felt like yours in a while, with a sense of purpose that made no sense. You never asked him to scrub the floorboards or polish the handles or oil the hinges, but he did. Quietly. Methodically. Like he wanted to earn the space he took up.
Strangest of all, though, was how he spoke to your belly.
He didn’t talk to you about the baby. Not directly. But he murmured to your stomach like it was a person already. Asked questions. Told it things. Ran his hand, cool and callused, gently over the curve of you like he wasn’t even aware he was doing it.
“Evenin’, little one,” he’d say, crouching to place a soft kiss right above your navel after bringing you tea. “Ya givin’ your mama trouble again?”
And when the baby kicked, he lit up like a man who’d just heard the voice of God.
The first time it happened with him, just a nudge, a little flutter against your ribs, you’d gasped and pressed your palm to the spot. He'd rushed across the room with a towel in one hand and a pail in the other, dropping them both like they were meaningless and was at your side in an instant.
“Was that ‘em?” he whispered. “Did they move?”
You nodded. And he reached for your hand so gently it made your throat ache. Placed it over his own, right where your skin had jumped. You watched his eyes flicker red in the dim candlelight as he waited. Then brighter. Brighter still when the baby kicked again.
You didn’t mention the glow. Not then.
You’d noticed it before. Brief, flickering, like something hiding behind glass. His eyes weren’t blue the way other white men in town had them. They weren’t even just blue. They had depth. Layers. Like river water after a storm, with light trapped somewhere deep inside. The red only came when the light hit just right, and was brightened when he was emotional. Happy. Or upset.
Or something else.
His teeth, too, were strange. White, yes, but sharper at the corners. His canines lingered a little too long. He didn’t smile often, but when he did, they always showed just a little too much. He never seemed to eat, not really. Said he had odd hours. That his stomach didn’t take kindly to most food.
But he cooked for you. Always. Carefully. Like the act of preparing your plate meant more to him than eating his own.
All of it was strange.
But you didn’t stop him.
Because when he sat beside you and ran a hand over your belly, there was nothing selfish in it. Nothing claiming or hungry. Just awe. Just devotion.
That was the word that kept coming to mind lately. Devotion.
He followed your pace. Matched your rhythm. Learned your moods before you even knew them yourself. If you sighed, he brought a shawl. If you shifted, he offered his arm. If you cried, when the tears came without warning, in the middle of cooking or brushing your hair or just trying to read, he said nothing. Just held you. Let you soak his shoulder and said your name like it was a promise.
Sometimes you caught him watching you.
Not in a lurid way. Not even in the way your husband used to, back when things were good between you. He looked like he was trying to memorize you. The way your breath hitched when you laughed. The way your ankles swelled at night. The way your fingers danced over the pages of your herbal guides even when you were too tired to really read.
You didn’t ask why he stayed.
You told yourself it was pity. Gratitude. Maybe a sense of guilt.
But something about the way he looked at you, like you were the only tether he had left to something real, made you wonder.
And more than once, you found yourself leaning into him just a little longer than needed. Letting your hand rest on his when he passed you a cup. Letting the silence stretch between you when the fire burned low.
It was slow.
It was strange.
But it was real.
And maybe, just maybe, it was enough.
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It had been almost a month.
Four weeks of him sleeping on the floor beside the hearth. Of you waking up to the scent of ash and chicory. Finding the kitchen swept, the kettle hot, your shoes waiting near the door like you had a man who knew where you liked to go. Four weeks of strange cohabitation, of watching each other without asking too many questions, of wordless routines built out of necessity and slow, quiet trust.
And yet, still no names.
You knew the cadence of his footsteps. The shape of his shadow in the yard. How he always tucked his hands behind his back when he thought too hard about something. You knew the way he’d squint at the firewood pile before choosing a piece. And he knew you. When your hips started to ache. When your breathing changed. When the weight of everything, not just the baby, but the world, got too heavy and you needed silence more than you needed talk.
Still, he had never asked for your name.
And you had never asked for his.
It should’ve been strange. Should’ve felt unfinished. But it didn’t. Not really. Because whatever he was, he had never felt like a stranger. Just something old. Something waiting.
That morning, the sky had opened up with thunder and mean gray light. A storm sat heavy over the treeline, wet wind slicing through the cracks in the wood. You stood barefoot at the back door, mug in hand, and watched the trees sway like dancers out of rhythm. He was already outside, boots deep in the mud, securing the herbs he’d hung on the rail.
You saw it before he did. The string snapping, the whole bundle of thyme and yarrow whipping into the wind. He reached for it too late. You nearly called out.
But then he moved.
Fast.
Not just quick, but wrong. Not human. A blur of striped clothing and sharp motion. His feet barely touched the porch before he was in the yard again, herbs in hand.
He caught them. All of them.
And when he turned back toward the door, he looked surprised to see you watching.
His smile faltered.
But he walked toward you anyway, hands full of dripping stems and his coat soaked through to the elbows.
You opened the door.
“Got ‘em,” he said, like that explained anything.
You stepped back to let him in.
He didn’t speak again until he’d shaken the rain off his shoulders and laid the herbs gently on a dry cloth near the stove. You were still watching him. Something you’d been doing more lately. Not because he made you nervous. Not exactly.
But because you didn’t understand how someone could be so careful with the smallest things and yet move like that. Unnatural. Unsettling. And beautiful, somehow. Like a storybook thing.
He noticed your eyes. Of course he did.
“What is it?” he asked, quiet.
You didn’t lie.
“Just thinkin’ how strange this is,” you said, wrapping your hands around the warm mug. “You. Me. This.”
He didn’t answer.
“You sleep in my home. You touch my things. You know how I take my tea. And I don’t even know your name.”
That made him blink.
He stood there in the center of the room, rain still clinging to his lashes, one hand trailing over the spine of a chair.
“I suppose ya don’t,” he said after a beat, almost sheepish.
You raised a brow. “What is it, then?”
He looked at you a moment longer, then stepped forward and said it in a voice like wet moss and river stones:
“Remmick.”
You let it sit between you for a second. The shape of it. Strange and clean. Like something unspoken finally made solid.
Then you nodded.
“Alright.”
He tipped his head, that small, half-hopeful smile curling at the edge of his mouth.
“Ya got one for me?”
You didn’t smile back.
But you said it, soft. Like you were reminding yourself it belonged to you still.
And maybe to him now, too.
You watched the way he turned it over in his mouth after you gave it to him. Like a word he’d chew through all winter, rolling it on his tongue like a secret, like a prayer.
He said it again.
Once.
Like a promise.
You shifted your weight from one foot to the other, the ache in your lower back sharper now. You pressed your hand gently to the curve of your belly. He noticed. He always noticed.
Without needing to be told, he crouched in front of you and helped guide you to the rocking chair near the stove. His hands were still cold from the rain, but his touch was steady. He adjusted the cushion. Draped a shawl over your knees. Then sat beside you on the floor, arms draped loosely over his knees like always.
Neither of you spoke for a while.
The rain softened. The fire popped.
He reached toward your ankle, thumb brushing where your skin met the top of your sock. Not asking for anything. Just anchoring.
“I’m glad ya let me stay,” he said.
You didn’t answer.
But you reached down and covered his hand with yours.
Because somehow, so were you.
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The pain started low and slow, like a tug at the deepest part of you. You were in the kitchen, barefoot and brushing dust from the windowsill, when it hit hard enough to make your breath catch. You gripped the edge of the counter, then looked down.
Water.
A slow trickle at first, then more, pooling between your feet.
You didn’t panic. Not really. You’d read enough, listened to enough, prepared enough. Still, your heart kicked up in your chest like it was trying to warn you of something big coming down the road.
And it was.
“Remmick,” you called, steady but loud enough to shake the rafters.
He was there in an instant. Not from the garden or the porch like he usually was this time of day, but already in the hallway, already moving toward you with that eerie stillness he had when he was trying not to look like he was floating.
His eyes snapped to the floor, then to your face. "It’s time?"
You nodded once, slow.
Then the contraction hit, sharp enough to knock the air from your lungs.
He caught you before your knees buckled.
“It’s alright,” he murmured. His hand was at your back, the other already slipping under your knees. He lifted you like you weighed less than the apron still tied around your waist. “I've got you.”
You didn’t ask how he moved so quick. You didn’t ask how he got the basin already filled, or how the towels had been laid out on the bed before you even stepped inside the room. You barely remembered the lamp being lit.
But it was.
Everything was ready.
Remmick had prepared.
He moved with a purpose that didn’t belong to a man who had never done this before. There was no fumbling. No panic. He worked like someone who had learned the rhythms of birth from midwives long buried, had seen a thousand labors begin and end under candlelight and wood smoke.
He guided you through it all. Let you curse and sob and grip his arms so tight you left bruises.
"Good girl,” he whispered, again and again. “You’re doin’ so good. Keep breathin’, baby. Just like that.”
You didn’t have the energy to wonder how he knew what to do. You couldn’t ask. Not with the pain hitting like waves, not with the pressure bearing down. But somewhere in the middle of the storm, when your vision blurred and your body ached in ways you didn’t know it could, his voice was still there.
Low. Calm. Constant.
“Push now. There ya go. You’re safe. I got you.”
His hands were slick with water and blood, but steady as stone. He never looked away. Not once.
And when the final push came, sharp, terrible, blinding, he caught the baby in his hands like he’d been waiting his whole life to do it.
There was a moment after. A long one.
Where everything stopped.
And then, the cry.
Thin, high, beautiful.
You fell back against the pillows, sobbing harder than you thought you would. Not from pain. Not from fear. Just the release of it all.
Remmick didn’t speak at first. Just held the baby in both hands, his face unreadable.
And then he looked at you.
“It’s a girl,” he whispered, voice cracked and full of something you couldn’t name. “She’s perfect.”
You let out a breath that rattled your whole body.
He brought her to you, wrapped in a cloth so soft it must’ve been hidden in the dresser for weeks. And there she was.
Dark skin. Curling hair already damp against her forehead. Tiny hands twitching with life.
And Remmick, pale, bloodstained, glowing faintly in the dim lamplight, looked down at her like she was something holy.
She was.
To you both.
His fingers shook as he touched her cheek. Shook like he wasn’t sure he deserved to, like the smallest movement might shatter the moment into pieces he couldn’t gather again. His knuckles were bloodstained, and his hand was far too large, too scarred, too rough to be so gentle, but it was. He moved like a man touching glass.
“I’ll take care of her,” he said, barely above a whisper. “I’ll take care of ya.”
There was no promise in his voice, no boast, no plea.
Just fact.
You looked at him then. Really looked. Not through the fog of pain or the veil of exhaustion. Not with the wary glances you’d grown used to offering him in the first weeks. But truly. Fully.
His eyes were still wet. Still glowing. Not bright, not loud, but pulsing softly. Faint and sure, like something not ready to die.
His shirt clung to him in wrinkled, clumsy lines, soaked with sweat and streaked with all the effort he'd poured into your labor. The collar was limp and stained with blood, yours and hers. His sleeves had been rolled back at some point, but they'd slipped again, damp fabric bunched at the crook of his arms.
There was blood under his nails. Streaked across his jaw. A smear dried along the side of his throat like he'd wiped his face without thinking.
And his teeth, those strange, terrible things, peeked through when he spoke. Elongated. Cuspate. Pressed just barely over the curve of his lip like he hadn't remembered to pull them back yet. Like maybe, in this moment, he didn’t care to hide anything at all.
But they didn’t scare you.
They never really had.
This strange man. This mystery with calloused hands and a voice like river stones. This creature who could build fires from the dampest wood and wash clothes better than you ever had patience to.
This father to your child.
You nodded. Slow. Steady.
“I know.”
The way his shoulders dropped then, just slightly, made your chest ache. As if he'd been holding the weight of that doubt for weeks. Maybe longer.
He held the baby again, arms curling around her like she was the most delicate thing he’d ever seen. Like she might disappear if he looked away too long. She made a soft, squeaking sound in her sleep, and Remmick’s whole body tensed around her as though the world might threaten her simply for breathing.
“She’s yours,” he whispered, voice crumbling at the edges. “And now she’s mine.”
You didn’t correct him.
Didn’t want to.
There was no logic that could define this thing between you. No words that could make it neat. But you weren’t looking for neat anymore. You weren’t looking for anything.
Except this.
This house. This moment. These people.
There was no sense to be made of it. Not tonight. Maybe not ever. But the three of you, somehow, you fit.
Remmick settled beside you on the bed. Not with the hesitant edge he used to carry, not like he was afraid you might change your mind and ask him to leave. But with something close to reverence. He moved slowly, gently, as if even sitting beside you might unmake the calm if done wrong.
One arm stayed curled protectively around the baby. The other slipped behind your back and pulled you close, cradling you like he didn’t know where else to put his warmth. You let your head fall against his shoulder, heavy with everything you’d just endured. Your body still ached, hollowed out and raw, but it wasn’t empty.
It was full in every way that mattered.
The fire popped in the next room, slow and lazy now, just embers and ash. Wind rattled the windowpane above your heads. The familiar kind of wind that came in every winter, dry and loud and aching through the trees.
But everything else was still.
The hush of the house held you like a lullaby.
Remmick kissed the top of your head, his lips barely brushing your damp hair.
The kiss wasn’t romantic. It wasn’t even expectant. It was steady. It was sacred. Like sealing something between you.
“My girls,” he said, voice breaking just a little at the end. “My girls.”
His hand cupped the back of your neck. His chin rested against the top of your head. The baby shifted against his chest, small and soft and unaware that her world had just been born with her.
You closed your eyes.
Let the weight of him, the heat of her, the ache in your body, all of it,anchor you.
And for the first time since that long, lonely night on the porch when the world had changed forever, you didn’t feel afraid. Or alone.
You were home.
And Remmick would never let you forget it.
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bubblingsteam ¡ 1 year ago
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Disco dump
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starspilli ¡ 11 months ago
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batkid fit doodles
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hugs-and-stabbies ¡ 1 year ago
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The self-awareness on this guy 😞 someone pls send him an "are you bi?" quiz STAT
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