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#Soap Opera fanfic
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Nights at the Circus: Masterlist
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Gifted with powers at the age of sixteen, you thought you could avoid being ‘discovered’ by S.H.I.E.L.D by working as an act in a traveling show, but when the jig is finally up, you find yourself having a hard time fitting in at Avenger Tower, where Loki Laufeyson seems to be giving you a particularly hard time. Will you lose your mind navigating this new life, or will someone make everything worthwhile? _
PAIRING: **Loki x Reader, possibly others   CONTENT WARNING:  Smut, injury, bondage, BDSM, various praise/degradation kinks, Switch! Loki and Switch! Reader (but mainly Dom!Loki, Sub!Reader, sex magic, occasional dub!con, possible threesomes, other kinks, general melodrama **RATING: 
**18+ MINORS DNI****
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PART I PART II PART III    PART IV    PART V    PART VI    PART VII  PART VIII   PART IX    PART X    PART XI    PART XII    PART XIII  PART XIV    PART XV    PART XVI  PART XVII    PART XVIII   PART XIX  PART XX    PART XXI    PART XXII   PART XXIII    PART XXIV    PART XXV  PART XXVI  PART XXVII    PART XXVIII    PART XXIX    PART XXX   PART XXXI    PART XXXII    PART XXXIII  PART XXXIV   PART XXXV    Epilogue
ONE-SHOTS/MIDQUELS The Chair...Again  A Frost Giant’s Lullaby
@huntress-artemis @el-zef​ @lokisprettygirl​ @mochie85​ @mischief2sarawr​ @michelleleewise​ @lokisninerealms​ @toozmanykids​ @xorpsbane​ @lokisasgardianvampirequeen​
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pizzaqueen · 4 months
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A snippet from a future fic I'll probably never write, where Steve is a widower with two teenage kids, and he and Eddie randomly meet up, rekindling their old flame. This is when they've been together a while:
“Thank you,” Steve says, coming up behind Eddie at the bathroom sink.
Eddie pauses, catching Steve's eye in the mirror. “What for?” he asks, mouth foamy with toothpaste.
Steve slips his hands along Eddie's hips, hooks his chin over Eddie's shoulder. “For loving my kids.”
“You don't—” Toothpaste dribbles down Eddie's chin and he stoops to spit what's left in his mouth into the sink, gathering his hair to one side. He rinses his mouth out, wipes his face with a towel, then turns to Steve. “You don't have to thank me for that. Of course I love them.”
“Not everyone I've dated has.”
“They're idiots.” Eddie grabs the hem of Steve's shirt, pulling him close. “I mean, first of all, they're part of you, and I don't think I could love you and not love them. But...” He trails off, a small smile tilting his lips. “They're amazing kids.”
Pride swells in Steve's chest; he slides his arms around Eddie's waist and says, “They are.”
“And I'm pretty damn honored I get to be part of their lives,” Eddie says, “so thank you,” and he butts his head gently against Steve's.
Steve huffs and slides his hands up Eddie's back, pulling him into a tight embrace. “I love you.” He presses a kiss to Eddie's neck.
“I love you too.”
“And they both love you as well.”
Eddie lets out a shuddering breath. Steve knows how nervous Eddie was, when they started dating, that he wouldn't be welcomed, but it's almost like he's always been part of their family now. “Good to know,"”Eddie says.
Steve holds Eddie a little tighter. All those years ago, back in Hawkins, when they ended things, Steve thought he'd never see Eddie again. But here they are, together—a family—and Steve's never letting him go this time.
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atlabeth · 1 month
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(not so) simple pt 4 - anthony bridgerton
pt1 pt2 pt3
summary: coercing lord bridgerton into pretending to court you to avoid the affections of a baron is very simple — that is, until it isn’t.
a/n: SO. UM. once again this took fucking forever to come out which is kind of insane when you think about it because i've had 7000 words of this chapter written for like 4 months. truly wild. 2 babies have been born in the time that it's taken me to write this mini series but anyways there’s a lot happening here, shoutout to anthony for finally getting some more pov parts, the fun thing about your mc being out of commission for a while is that you have no choice but to write for the other characters. equality we love to see it. anyways most of it is angst, but it’ll all be wrapped up with a little regency romance bow i promise
wc: 7.6k
warning(s): aftermath of the end of last chapter which is angst. stab wound, talks of death, mentions of edmund's death, quite a bit of crying, anthony bridgerton's inner angst, miss worthing makes poor decisions. not a happy chapter but WHAT CAN YOU DO
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“What were you thinking?” Violet demanded.
Anthony could barely hear his mother over the sound of the blood pounding in his ears, the pure terror gripping his heart. He’d no idea how to respond to her. He doubted she would like to hear that he, indeed, was very much not thinking. 
And he was certainly not thinking much now, what with you on the brink of death with their doctor and his apprentice the only thing there to stop you. He could be of no help to you, bent half over in his chair, head in his hands, the image of you collapsing burned into his mind. 
“Anthony Bridgerton, answer me.” Violet stood over him, her face flushed and eyes filled with anger and fear. “What were you thinking, bringing Miss Worthing out into the city?” 
“I cannot deal with your questions right now, Mother!” he snapped, something letting loose inside of him. Anthony would have been ashamed had he any sense. “My future wife is in that room fighting for her life, and it is because I was not able to protect her. I am hardly able to form words at the moment, Mother, so please—” Anthony’s voice broke, and he ran a shaky hand through his hair. “Please just be quiet.” 
It took a bit of nerve to be such an ass in front of his very own mother, but Anthony apparently had plenty of nerve at the moment. After you collapsed, he’d done the only thing he could think of in the moment and brought you back to Bridgerton House—it was closer than your residence, and if their physician had been able to keep his mother alive through eight pregnancies, then surely he could bring you back. 
Now, though, he was not so sure. Every other option seemed to be plaguing his mind, for your blood still stained his hands and his clothing and Anthony didn’t know if he would ever be able to get it off. 
His father died in his arms from something so small as a bee, and yet you had been stabbed. How were you meant to come back from that?
The door suddenly slammed open, and when Anthony glanced up, his insides twisted. 
“Where is she?” Eloise demanded. Her windblown hair matched the wild look in her eyes, and the flush of her cheeks and haggard breathing told him everything. She was meant to be promenading with Penelope Featherington—her speed on foot was admirable. 
“With our physician,” Violet responded. She seemed more subdued now, and though Anthony knew he would apologize profusely later, he could not find it in himself now. He could hardly find anything in himself apart from panic.
“With our physician—” She turned on Anthony, her gloved hands clenched into fists. “What in God’s name happened, Anthony?”
He allowed himself a moment to breathe before he responded. “She was stabbed.”
“Stabbed?” Eloise cried. “She was with you! How could she have been stabbed?”
“I was not with her when it happened—”
She scoffed. “That is a likely fucking story.”
“Eloise,” Violet said, “language.”
“I do not care about my language,” Eloise spat, gesturing wildly with her hands. “My best friend has been stabbed— I will say whatever I please!”
And then, as if to just add fuel to their fire, Benedict rushed in. Anthony held back a slightly unhinged laugh and shook his head. You were dying and they were out here arguing. 
“I’ve made sure this hallway is off limits like you said, Mother.” Benedict looked just as shaken as the rest of them, and in a strange way Anthony was grateful. You’d grown closer to his family than he’d known. “Your lady’s maid is outside the door alongside a footman ensuring privacy, and your driver is on route to the Worthing residence to alert her parents. They’ve all been sworn to secrecy—no one will be disturbed, least of all Miss Worthing.”
“Thank you, Benedict.” Violet sighed, and she collapsed into an armchair. “At least one of us is in order.”
Benedict sat down on the sofa, his words coming out in a mumble. “I am hardly in order.”
The fire seemed to have died down in Eloise, for however temporary a time, and she settled down next to Benedict. She leaned her head on his shoulder, and he wrapped an arm around her.
“She’ll be okay,” Eloise whispered, “right?”
No one answered for a moment. At last, Anthony looked up, his hands clasped in front of him.
“Yes,” he rasped, hoping with everything in him that his words would be true. “She will be okay.”
He would not have been able to live with any other outcome, not when it was his fault in the first place that you were in this position. 
Anthony didn’t know what he should have done, but he should have done something. He should have brought you to your senses and suggested a promenade in the park instead. He should have called on you at your estate, safe and sound in your drawing room. He should have been arm in arm with you, his heart steadily melting as you smiled and laughed and made him aware of all things good in the world. 
He could not lose you. Not when he still had so much to tell you, so many words left unsaid. 
Not when you didn’t know he loved you. 
“I’m sorry, Anthony.” He looked up at the sound of Eloise’s voice—though she did not look at him and her arms were still crossed, the sincerity of it was not lost on him. “I know it was not your fault.” 
His chest tightened. It was his fault. 
“You clearly care about her,” she said. “It is not fair to pin this on you.” 
“Sometimes we hurt the people we care about,” he said, his voice hollow. 
“Sometimes,” she agreed. “But not this time.” 
His eyes shimmered with unshed tears. Eloise had been at odds with him for nearly this entire season because of their ruse. Though she knew of its falsity, she still chastised him for taking up time that could have been spent with her, still rolled her eyes when he announced his leave to go see you, still questioned why he had to go after her best friend. 
But Eloise was driven by her emotions, no matter how red hot or icy cold they may have been. At this moment, her concern for you outweighed anything, and she recognized the same in him. 
So Anthony nodded. Once, twice, hardly moving but a clear acknowledgment. He glanced at his mother and brother, both unfocused with glassy eyes. His mother’s were red-rimmed, and she held a handkerchief tightly in one hand. The guilt hidden from earlier struck. 
He silently thanked their governess for keeping Gregory and Hyacinth occupied, thanked that Francesca was on an outing of her own. The last thing he needed was for his littlest siblings to find out that the woman they believed to soon be their sister was one misstep away from death. And thank God for Colin’s decision to spend the day with Mondrich—one of his younger brothers in the heat of the moment was enough. 
Anthony let out a shuddering sigh, screwing his eyes shut for a moment before he ran a hand through his hair then planted his palms on his knees. He could hardly sit still but he hadn’t the slightest idea of how to get his nervous energy out. 
All he could think of was you. Of how the last word you spoke was his name. Of your dried blood on his hands, staining his clothing where he had held you. Anthony barely kept you from hitting the ground when you collapsed, and he nearly did the same once he reached his residence. 
Yelling at any servant in the proximity to call for the physician, unaware of his mother trying to calm him until she shook him by the shoulders, having to literally be forced out of the room by the physician’s assistant once they arrived because he refused to leave your side.  
It all felt like a blur, and yet he remembered it perfectly. It all played on repeat in his mind no matter how much he tried to block it out. 
The door slammed open this time, and when Anthony looked up, he felt as if he could wither away.
“Where is my daughter?” Cecilia Worthing demanded, her husband trailing after her. She was all out of sorts, with an even wilder look in her eyes and a deathly grip on her skirts. Mr. Worthing’s expression made his heart sink, with his haunted eyes and taut lips. 
“I am so sorry, Cecilia,” Violet rasped, and she crossed the room and enveloped her in her arms. It took a moment for your mother to respond, but she returned the hug as a sob escaped her. 
“Your footman said she had been injured,” your father said levelly, though his voice shook ever so slightly. “How?”
“She was stabbed,” Anthony spoke up, forcing himself to look at your parents. “Some zealot in the city. I brought her here as quick as I could.”
“The city—” your father started.
“Stabbed?” your mother interrupted, halfway into hysterics. “How?”
“We got caught up in the midst of a riot,” he said quietly. “We were separated, and I assume it happened then.”
Mrs. Worthing let out another sob as she pulled her husband into her arms, and though he kept a semblance of solemnity as he whispered to his wife and held her close, Anthony could see the fear in his eyes. 
How could he possibly offer reassurance? It felt different, staring at the desperation of your parents. The horrific realization that they might leave a family of two, might have to bury their only child. 
His stomach twisted and Anthony’s head fell into his hands again. He couldn’t. 
Eventually, Philip helped his wife onto the couch, and she remained curled into his side. No one said a word—how could they?
Apart from whispered reassurances between your parents and even shorter conversations between Benedict and Eloise, their saddened group continued in silence for the better part of an hour. No one spoke louder than a whisper, no one rose and left—they just sat together in their fear, hoping and praying that the inevitable could be denied. 
Until the door creaked open and each of their heads snapped towards the noise. Anthony shot up at the first glimpse of their physician’s assistant. 
“What news?” he asked immediately. The tension in the room had grown to be near palpably thick. 
“The surgery went well,” the assistant said, and all the air dissipated from Anthony’s chest. “Miss Worthing lives. The doctor is ensuring a final few things, but provided our treatment is followed, we believe she will recover fully.”
Anthony fell back against the couch with a breathless laugh, and Mrs. Worthing sank against her husband, wrecked by thankful sobs. Eloise’s smile was enough to brighten the whole room, Benedict’s relief just as obvious. Violet just let out an exhausted sigh, her hand pressed to her heart. 
“Thank you,” your father said. “Can we see her?” 
“Miss Worthing is resting,” he said. “You will not be able to speak to—” 
“We do not care,” your father asserted. “I need to see that my daughter is still alive.” 
The physician’s assistant nodded after a moment, and the tension lessened in his shoulders. He helped your mother up, their hands clasped tightly together, and Mrs. Worthing looked at Anthony. You truly had your mother’s eyes. 
“Will you come with us, my lord?” she asked. 
“Oh, I—” 
“You are family,” she said softly. “You’ve a right to join us.”
Emotion swelled in Anthony’s chest, and it took a moment for words to come to him. 
“Of course,” he finally said, inclining his head. “And it is just Anthony between us. Please.” 
The slightest smile spread across her lips as she nodded, and they all stood up together. Anthony took her offered arm and they started down the hallway together, your father on her other side. 
How strange it was to be arm in arm with your mother. She thought the man beside her would be her future son-in-law, when he was truly nothing but a liar. 
No, he thought, not wholly a liar. Not anymore. Because they believed that Anthony was to be your husband. And if there was anything this had proven to him, it was that he wanted nothing more than for it to be true.
Anthony just had to figure out a way to tell you. How strange that it would be the most difficult part of this ruse. 
Violet’s maid and the footman stepped aside when they arrived and the assistant opened the door. Anthony followed your parents in, and his heart nearly stopped upon seeing you.
Your mother’s eyes filled with tears as she approached your bedside, and, after a nod from the doctor, brushed a loose strand of hair behind your ear and laid the back of her hand against your forehead. 
“She’s burning up,” she whispered. 
“It is typical after surgery,” the doctor said. “With any luck, she will sweat it out. I will monitor her throughout.” 
Your mother nodded, a shaky sigh escaping her, and she took your hand. 
“I am so sorry, darling,” she whispered. “I am so sorry I was not there for you.” She brought your intertwined hands up and lightly kissed the back of your hand. “I love you more than anything. Please, come back to us soon.” 
Your father joined her, and he pressed a kiss to your forehead. “I do not know if you can hear us,” he said, voice slightly shaky, “but we are here for you. We will be here when you awaken, and every moment onwards.” 
Mrs. Worthing looked back at Anthony, inclining her head towards you. Anthony swallowed his doubt as he moved forward, but the breath was stolen from him when he could fully see you. 
Your eyes were closed. Your chest rose and fell just so, hardly noticeable, thin linens provided by the doctor rested over you, and sweat beaded on your brow. Alongside the discoloration of your skin, you looked… 
You looked as if you were dead. 
And Anthony knew that you were not—for God’s sake, you were breathing—but all he could think about, all he could see, was his father, all those years ago, dying in front of him while he could not do a single thing to stop it. And he felt that same helplessness with you; just standing there, watching, unable to do anything but hope. 
“We are here for you,” he whispered. “...I am here for you. No matter what, I am here for you. Just know that, if nothing else.” 
Your mother’s watery smile made him look to the doctor for fear of the same emotions eliciting even further in him. 
“When will she wake?” Anthony asked. His voice sounded almost foreign to him. 
“In a few hours, with any luck,” the doctor said. “At the very most, it will be the end of the day.” 
“We will gladly host her until she is able enough,” Anthony said, looking at your parents. “And we have plenty of spare rooms for you to choose from if you wish to remain by her side during those days.” 
“Thank you, Anthony.” Your mother placed her hands on his shoulders, though she had to look up at him, and she smiled. “You make her so happy. It will be my greatest pleasure to officially welcome you into our family.” 
Anthony’s throat bobbed. God above, he hoped that was the truth. 
“Thank you,” he murmured. “She… she means a great deal to me.” 
“You’re a good man, Bridgerton,” your father said. “I’m thankful my daughter will end up with someone like you.” 
“Your approval means the world,” he said, and he found he meant it wholly. 
The doctor cleared his throat. “It would be best for her visitors to be limited as of now. The parents can stay, but…” 
Anthony nodded, smoothing his lapels. “Of course.” 
“We will alert you of anything,” your mother said. Anthony nodded again, and he allowed himself one more moment to look at you before he left. 
You were alright. You would be alright. That was all that mattered. 
Still, when he found himself alone in the hallway, finally able to breathe again, he still had that weight on his shoulders. 
A revelation such as the one he’d had should have been a blessing, a relief. A man in love was meant to be a happy one. But a man in love did not usually find his feelings in the midst of season-long ruse whilst his beloved fought on her deathbed.  
Anthony blew out a loose sigh, shaking his head as he continued through the halls. Being on his own, he found, was worse than sitting in silence with his family. He was trying to think of something to say, trying to gather his emotions and push them aside so he could be the man of the house as he was meant to be, but when he reached the room from before he was only met with Eloise. 
She looked up from the floor, and he noticed the puffiness of her eyes, her slightly blotchy skin. His heart sank yet again. 
“Benedict helped Mother to bed,” she explained, her throat bobbing. “All of this exhausted her. I’ve no idea where he is now.” 
Anthony nodded, his mind still wandering. “Ah.” 
“How is she?” Eloise asked, her brows knit in concern. 
“As well as she can be.” Anthony sighed. “She has a fever, but she’s resting. Her parents are with her and the doctor is watching over her. He said she should awaken before the end of the day.” 
The furrow softened as she smiled. It was good to see her smile. “Good. That— that’s good. I’m glad.” 
“And how are you, Eloise?” Anthony asked, folding his arms. 
“As well as I can be,” she responded wryly. Anthony’s lips twitched in a momentary smile, but she leaned against the couch and let out a sigh of her own. “This all certainly ended in the best way it could have.” 
“The best way would have been for it to have never happened,” he said. “I should have prevented it—I was meant to keep her safe.” 
“Brother,” she said wearily, “I already told you that you cannot blame yourself.” 
“And I’ve never been one for listening to you,” he said dryly, “have I?” 
Eloise huffed a laugh and shook her head. “I am not a fool, Anthony. I know what is happening between you two.” 
Anthony frowned. “Eloise—”
“You love her,” she said bluntly. “Do you not?” 
He tried to say something, but no words would follow. He could only stare at his sister and her nerve, resulting in a small smile from her. 
“You are not that talented an actor, brother,” she said. “It is easier for me to believe the two of you are truly in love than that you could actually trick me in such a way.” 
He blinked. “You believe she loves me?” 
Eloise laughed, turning her head slightly. “I do,” she said. “And seeing as you are not denying it, I believe that means you love her.” 
Anthony bit the inside of his cheek. So the two of you could fool the entirety of the ton for over half the season, but apparently not Eloise. How typical. 
He walked over and took a seat on the couch next to his sister, leaving a bit of space between them. He took a deep breath before he spoke. 
“I do.” He glanced at her. “I love her.” 
Saying it aloud—admitting the truth of feelings he’d been fighting for so long—brought him an unexpected lightness. One other person knew both truths: that they had been lying about their love, and that Anthony had been lying about his lies. 
It would have been laughable had he not been so unsure of everything else. 
It took Eloise a moment to say anything back. For a while, she merely looked at him, unreadable depths in her eyes. He didn’t think he would ever be able to fully decipher his sister. 
“I know my blessing means very little in the scheme of things,” she finally said. “But know that if this does come into fruition… I will support you two. Every step of the way.” 
The smile that spread across Anthony’s lips was brighter than anything he’d experienced today, and he inclined his head. “Truly?” 
“Yes, truly,” Eloise said, a smile of her own growing though she tried to hide it as she glanced away. “It is not a big deal. Do not make it out to be one. There are far worse men that she could end up with.” 
“Alright,” he said, unabashed in his joy. For such a solemn day, Eloise had turned his mood around. 
“And I will also keep your secret,” she said breezily, “again, so do not worry about that.” 
“You say it does not mean much,” Anthony said, “but you are wrong. Your support means more to me than you know.” 
She shifted, seemingly bolstered ever so slightly by his praise. “...I’m glad.” 
He smiled as he stood back up, smoothing out the wrinkles in his outfit. Anthony grimaced as his hands came into view. He was in dire need of a bath and some new clothes. He could not deal with your blood on him for much longer. 
“I must be going,” Anthony said. “I need to clean up. And,” he sighed, “ensure that none of this has spread to the rest of the ton.” 
Eloise hummed, and Anthony was nearly at the door when she spoke up again. 
“...Thank you. For being here for me.” 
His expression softened as he glanced back at her. “I will always be here for you.” 
Her lips curved just so. Anthony had never been so thankful to no longer be at odds with one of his siblings. 
-
Your head hurt. 
That was the first thing you could truly understand as your eyes slowly cracked open, squinting while you came to. You blinked a multitude of times, trying to regain your bearings and relieve the dryness of your eyes. 
It took another moment for them to adjust to the darkness—the curtains were closed, but no light filtered through. How long had you been asleep? 
You grimaced as you shifted ever so slightly, a dull but constant ache in your chest leaving you stiff, but there was a weight of a hand in yours. You glanced over and recognized your mother, asleep but still grasping your hand. 
You smiled. She came for you after all. 
But as you tried to shift further in the bed, you groaned, a sharp column of pain shooting through you. Your mother’s eyes shot open, her body starting from instinct, but it took a moment for her to truly realize it all. 
“Nice of you to wake up,” you said wryly. 
“You—” tears sprung in her eyes, and her lips spread in a grateful grin— “You must be alright if your first words are to antagonize your mother.” 
“I am still here,” you said. You didn’t want to tell her you didn’t think you would make it. That you thought your fate was sealed when you pulled your hand away to nothing but blood. 
“That you are,” she said breathily. “Are you alright, though? How do you feel? Does it hurt?” 
“I believe I am alright,” you responded, “I feel… tired. And my chest aches.” 
“The doctor said that would be expected,” she murmured. “What do you remember?” 
“...That depends,” you said. “What do you know?” 
Your mother gave you a look as she said your full name. “This is not the time for games.” 
Your cheeks heated and you averted your eyes. “I was in the city with Anthony. I was stabbed after a riot broke out. That is all I remember.” 
“Lord Bridgerton is the reason you are alive,” your mother said. “He brought you back to Bridgerton House, and their doctor saved your life.” 
Somehow it was possible for your face to burn even more. You dragged Anthony out to that meeting, and you repaid him by making him drag your near lifeless body all the way back to his estate. 
You were the worst fake fiancee a man could have. 
You felt your eyes begin to fill with tears and you rapidly blinked them away. 
“Where is he?” you asked quietly. “Where is Anth— Lord Bridgerton?” 
Your mother gave you a knowing look. “It is alright to call him by his name, darling. It is quite clear how much he cares for you.” 
You swallowed the lump in your throat. You could not do this. “Where is he?” 
“He is with his family,” she said. “You caused everyone quite a fright.” 
“I can imagine,” you said hollowly. 
“Would you like to see him?” she asked. “Because I am sure he—” 
“No.” The haste with which you sat up drew out another wince. “No— I…” 
You closed your eyes, biting down on the inside of your lip. You could not do this. 
Your mother said your name softly. “What is it?” 
You opened your eyes, ignoring the wetness around them as you looked at her. “Anthony and I cannot marry.” 
She blinked. It looked as if it took a moment for your words to sink in. “What?” 
“We cannot marry,” you repeated. “We— we never could marry. Our courtship is a ruse.” 
Your mother blinked again, this time wholly taken aback. “What?” 
“It is a ruse,” you repeated, more forcefully. “I wanted to escape the baron, and Anthony wanted to escape a thousand desperate debutantes. I proposed a mock courtship between us, and he accepted.” 
Her brows furrowed deeper than ever before, as if she still couldn’t fully believe it. “You lied to me.” 
“To everyone,” you said. You hadn’t a clue what had gotten into you, tearing apart a story carefully crafted throughout nearly the entire season, but something burned inside of you. You couldn’t keep going with this—you couldn’t keep stringing Anthony along, not when your feelings were far more real than they had any right to be. 
“I don’t understand,” she said. “Why would you do such a thing?” 
“Because I did not want to marry,” you repeated. “The baron is nothing more than a lecher, and the thought of any sort of marriage to him disgusted me, but you and Father refused to listen to me. The only way to get out of it was for you to believe I had caught the affections of someone better. Anthony Bridgerton’s word was certainly better than mine in the eyes of the ton.” 
Your mother stared at the floor for much longer than you anticipated, and you could not tear your eyes away from her. 
“Mother,” you said quietly, “say something. Please.” 
“I do not quite know what to say.” She finally looked at you, and your throat bobbed. “All of our plans have hinged on this marriage for the entirety of the season. What am I to tell your father?” 
“Do not tell him,” you begged. “Please. It is enough that you know— I could not handle the shame if he were to as well.” 
“I do not keep secrets as well as you,” your mother snapped. “Marrying into the Bridgerton family would have saved us, both in riches and name. Even your dowry would have gone to use for something of your choosing.” She shook her head, clasping her hands together.  “And now you have almost died and we will have to control this and I just—” 
“I will marry Lord Cardew,” you interrupted. 
That ceased her arguments quite quickly. “What?” 
“I will marry Lord Cardew,” you repeated. “He has both riches and name.” 
Your mother frowned as she gripped your hands tighter. “You despise him. You got yourself into this entire mess in order to avoid him—you’ve said so yourself.” 
“What choice do I have?” you asked desperately. “His name is enough to weather the scandal I’ve created. His money will secure a life for you and Father, and he has a fine pedigree. It is the only way to save the Worthing name.” 
“Have you not considered the very man who has been courting you this season?” Your mother gestured with her hand. “Look where you are, darling! Lord Bridgerton has offered up his estate to us so we can be near you as you heal. Your courtship may have started as a ruse, but the man clearly feels something for you!” 
“We have become very good friends over the course of the season,” you said, “and I am thankful for it. But I cannot taint the Bridgerton name further.” 
“Dearest—”
“It is necessary,” you interrupted, but your quick movement brought on a sharp thread of pain in your chest and you winced. 
“Do not push yourself,” your mother whispered, and you nodded. 
“It is necessary,” you repeated, though slower. “My rebellion was just… naivete. I will not be the reason for our family’s ruin borne from my own stubbornness. I will secure our legacy, I will secure my future—I will marry Lord Cardew, and… and I will finally stop trying to resist my fate.” 
Your mother stared at you, and you stared back. “You said it yourself—our family’s well being hinges on my marrying into wealth. What sane man would consider me after what I’ve done?” 
She continued to look at you long and hard, her expression one of unreadable depths. “You are sure?” 
No, you wanted to say. You had never been less sure of anything in your life. But you could see no other choice. So you nodded. 
Your mother glanced away from you with a sigh, eyes searching the room for a moment before she nodded as well. “...Alright. If that is what you wish, your father and I will contact him once you are recovered.” 
“Mother—” 
“That is non-negotiable,” she said, and she smiled at you. “You may be blossoming into a true lady, but you are still my daughter. And I will not allow my daughter to do anything until she is fully healed.” 
You nodded. “Alright.” 
“I am sure that it goes without saying that you are never going to be allowed out of our sight until you are married and settled?” your mother said, and though it caused a sharp pain in your chest, you couldn’t help but laugh. 
“I assumed just as much, Mother.” 
-
Dearest Reader,
It is a fact well known throughout Mayfair that the social season requires the full attention of every single person, frantic mamas and bored bachelors alike. It is a game of wits unlike any other, and this season has proven no different. The middle of our merriment marks many of the most eligible debutantes as engaged — this author pays special attention to the season’s diamond, Lady Adelaida Kennington, who has found her happy ending with the young Earl Pembroke.
Though congratulations may be due to another lady of the ton, one of the simple yet highly discussed Worthing family — as it seems, Miss Worthing has tossed aside the much desired Viscount Bridgerton for the hand of the Baron Jonathan Cardew. One can only be left to wonder what Lord Bridgerton must have done to go from an obviously incoming proposal back to his rakish ways in little more than a night, but it most certainly has to do with Miss Worthing’s recent disappearance from society. Word has passed around of her frequent visits to the lesser parts of London, engaging in activity that can only be described as scandalous. Perhaps it was not the fault of the viscount indeed—Miss Worthing may have finally pushed Lord Bridgerton to his limits. 
No matter the reason for the ending of the courtship, this author must extend her thanks to the pairing for providing such material for my pen. It is not every day a nobody in the ton manages to bring down two families at once. Perhaps Miss Worthing deserves congratulations for conducting this fantastical feat all on her own. If it was outrage she was searching for, she has certainly earned it. 
Yours Truly, 
Lady Whistledown 
You huffed a sigh and threw the leaflet across the room, letting your head fall back against the wooden headboard. It was one thing for Lady Whistledown to criticize you, it was another thing entirely for her to bring your family and the Bridgertons into it. You deserved everything that came towards you for what you had done, but your parents, the Bridgertons, Anthony— they were not a part of any of it. 
Especially when all your father had done was visit the Cardew estate to have a conversation with the man, see if he was open to the possibility of a marriage with you. Nothing was at all set in stone, but the way Whistledown told it, you were already steps from the chapel with a ring on your finger. 
So now, as if it weren’t enough that you were bed bound until your physician deemed you recovered for regular activity, as if it weren’t enough that you were likely set to be married by the end of the season, as if it weren’t enough that you were constantly denying Anthony’s requests to visit you, every single one of your idiotic mistakes was revealed to the ton through a woman too cowardly to write without a pseudonym. 
If you ever found Lady Whistledown, you thought bitterly, you would strangle her. 
The silence in your room was broken by the door opening, and when you looked up you were greeted with Julia’s face. The usual smile she bore when around you was not there, but before you could ask she answered your unspoken question. 
“I apologise for the interruption, my lady, but you have a visitor. He insisted on seeing you.” 
A small part of you knew who it was even before she stepped aside, but when Anthony Bridgerton walked into your room your breath still hitched the tiniest bit. 
“What are you doing here?” you asked immediately, holding back a grimace as you pushed yourself into a sitting position. 
“I had to see you,” Anthony said. 
“And you chose to do so by invading my privacy.” 
“I have not heard a single word directly from you nor your pen since the accident,” he said, his voice not without a slight barb. But underneath it all, an uncommon hurt festered inside of him. You could not see it, exactly, but you could sense it. “Forgive me for wanting to confirm with my own eyes that you were still alive.” 
“I will remain here as a chaperone,” Julia said, closing the door behind her. “You may talk as freely as you please — I will not repeat a single word.” Anthony nodded and pulled the stool away from the vanity so he could be closer to you, then sat down. 
Despite Julia’s reassurance, neither of you spoke a word. The silence began to weigh heavily, the tension growing so thick it could be cut with a knife. For so long you had been rejecting Anthony’s requested meetings, not wanting to see him after what you had done. You feared for how he would react, both to your complete ignorance of him after your nearly fatal injury and your acceptance of Lord Cardew’s courtship. 
You left Bridgerton House without a word mere hours after your ill-fated decision despite the protests of your parents—you could not stay there for another moment under Anthony’s good graces, not when you had doomed any possible future with him. You did not deserve a single millimeter of Bridgerton good will. 
You stared down at the covers you laid under, fidgeting with your hands in your lap as you focused on everything except your visitor. You could not bring yourself to meet Anthony’s gaze, though you’d felt his own on you for the past five minutes. 
“Is it true?” 
You finally looked up at his sudden question, meeting the intensity of those dark brown eyes you’d lost yourself in so many times. “Is what true?” 
“Your marriage to Jonathan Cardew,” he said stiffly. “Is it true?” 
Just as quickly, you glanced away. It was near impossible to even be in the same room as the viscount since you had made the decision, even more so to think of the reason why it was that way. So instead, you just nodded. 
“Yes. If all works out, we are to be wed at the end of the season.” 
“Why?” Anthony leaned forward, his arms resting on his knees as his hands clenched into loose fists. “You openly despise the man—you asked me to court you to avoid him. Why in the name of all things rational would you willingly enter a marriage with him?” 
“He will provide for me,” you said. “He has money, he has land, and he is a respectable member of society. He has already been content with the possibility of marriage once, and his name is enough to weather the scandal I have created. It is the smartest choice available.”
“And what of us?” He had an almost wild look in his eyes, and the worst desire took root in you to root your fingers in his hair and ease the troubles you’d caused him. “We have spent the near entirety of the season becoming closer, and you are willing to just throw it all away for a man like Cardew?” 
“I could not trap you in a marriage you do not want,” you insisted. “You deserve more than a woman you share no love for, Anthony, and to be married to the woman who made a fool of your entire family. Lord Cardew is the only option.”
“Even if all of that is true, that does not mean it is a smart choice!” he exclaimed. “He is not a safe man to be around! If he has been pursuing you so strongly and only backed off because of my influence, what do you think will happen when you are his legal wife with no sort of protection?” 
You swallowed thickly at his words. “He is not that sort of man, Anthony. He may be… horrid, and a complete egoist, but it will be a life of comfort. And that is the life that I need.” 
Anthony laughed breathlessly, completely devoid of mirth as he frowned. “You cannot be serious. I have been by your side for an entire season of feminist rants and marriage complaints, half of which revolved around Cardew himself, and now you are telling me that you are just— just alright with this sort of compliance?” 
“Nearly dying because of my own idiotic choices has forced me to reexamine my life,” you said plainly. “If I had been even the slightest bit unlucky, I would have perished on those streets, and what would I have had to show for myself? A rebellion that I was only able to take part in because of the privilege I so often fought against?” 
“You have made a difference,” Anthony insisted. “You provided for women that no one has the gall to look out for. You’ve spoken out for your own rights, you’ve stood up for your own interests rather than sit around and take what you have been given.”
“I have been fighting against a life that so many less fortunate than myself would kill for,” you said. “I believed death to be a better fate than being forced to marry a man I did not love, but when I was on death’s door, I realized how foolish I was— how utterly selfish.” 
“You are not selfish,” Anthony said, but you shook your head. 
“I am. Unbelievably so.” You huffed a mirthless laugh as you looked at him. “My parents did not love each other when they married, but they were friends. They could tolerate the other’s presence, and neither of them were fortunate enough to be able to care about anything else. They have grown to love each other in their own way, of course, and they are in a better situation now, but they could not have known it would turn out that way. They did what they had to for the sake of their families and themselves, and it is time I do the same.” 
“Love matches are rare,” you murmured. “And even if I were granted the opportunity… I would not deserve it.”
Anthony shook his head. “Do not say that.” 
“It is the truth,” you said, letting out yet another humorless laugh. “I have been horrible to my mother when all she has ever wanted is a better life for me than she had. I have fought her for every step of the way for no other reason than my hubris and the dim belief that I deserved different than everyone else simply because I wanted it, no matter what the greater good was. How can that not be selfish, Anthony?” 
“You do not have to do this,” he insisted. “You said you dreamed of unmarried life! You told me your fantasies of escaping from society, of living on your own and depending on no one but yourself. You are willing to give all of that up, just like that?”
“I was a fool for ever doing so!” you exclaimed. “Anthony, this world is hard enough on its own for married women — what do you think will become of my family if I do not marry? What do you think will become of me?”
“But you are strong.” Anthony leaned forward, his brow knit in determination. “You are strong, and intelligent, and fully capable of managing on your own. Spinster brand be damned, if it is what you wish, you will flourish completely!”
“Will I?” you questioned, and you gestured at yourself. “I am bound to this room of my own doing because I refused to see the truth of the world around me. I was young and naive to believe I could achieve anything of the sort I dreamed of without consequences, and I will be naive no longer.”
“If you insist on marrying, at least find somebody else,” Anthony begged. “You will be miserable for the rest of your life if you marry Jonathan Cardew.” 
“I cannot afford to marry for love, my lord,” you said simply, “and even if I could find a man who loved me, I could never love them back. I would not force anyone into a marriage they did not want, not when…” You trailed off, the words catching in your throat.
You shook your head, choking them down. “It is not important.”
“Please do not marry him,” he said, his voice barely more than a whisper, “I beg of you.” 
“Then who should I marry?” you asked, almost brazenly. “Who should I marry, if not him? I am certainly not one for options.”
You did not know what you wanted Anthony to say. To marry him? That he felt the same for you as you did for him? That, while you were indeed a fool for falling for him, he was one as well. That he would not leave you, not now, nor ever. 
But instead he just stared at you with those dark brown eyes that even now could make you melt, a million emotions brewing inside of them yet none of them being given an outlet. 
“I do not know,” he murmured, and your heart sank. “But I beg of you, do not let it be him.”
“It is not your decision to make,” you said quietly. “Soon I will be engaged to Lord Cardew, and I will be out of your life.”
There was an underlying desperation in Anthony’s eyes as he looked at you now, that storm of emotions thundering inside of him begging to be expressed. “I do not want you out of my life.”
The words felt like poison leaving your lips. “You do not have a choice.” 
Before Anthony could protest any further, you stood up and looked over at your lady’s maid. “Please escort Lord Bridgerton outside. I wish to be alone.” 
“My lady, are you—” 
“Julia,” you said, your voice strained, “please.” 
She nodded and she gestured for Anthony towards the door, but he did not move a centimeter.
Anthony said your name with such pain that you could not even stand to look at him, the inside of your lip drawn so tightly between your teeth that you could taste blood all in the effort to prevent tears from emerging.
“Do not make this harder than it has to be,” you whispered. “I beg of you, Anthony.”
“Lord Bridgerton,” Julia said quietly, “please obey my lady’s wishes.”
He stared at you with desperation before he finally nodded and walked out the door, Julia closing it behind him. 
You screwed your eyes shut as you dug the heels of your palms into your forehead, letting out a frustrated sob as your hands dropped back down. The pinpricks of tears were already starting, and while you were thankful you were alone, you already longed for Anthony’s presence. 
You wished, more than ever, that things could be how they used to be. You wished you’d never even made this ridiculous deal with him—then you would not be in such pain, yearning for a man you could never have while the reputation of you and your family was destroyed and your life fell to pieces around you. You could not do a single thing about it, and you could not blame a single soul for it other than yourself. 
You’d never felt so useless.
-
taglist, only bc this series has been going on since i still had a taglist lmao. pls dont ask to be added because i do not do tag lists anymore!! follow me or rb the masterlist or something idk @ifilwtmfc @readers-post @fangirling-galore @funkydinosaurs @baby-i-am-fireproof @mess-is-my-aesthetic @likeballet @mdkfh @brezzybfan @magical-spit @lafy-taffy @miss-celestial-being @mercurysrhapsody @evilsailorsenshi @mainstreambitchlife @aangsupremacy @chloepluto1306 @lostaudfound @panhoeofmanyfandoms @blhemmings @my-acrylic-heart @seninjakitey @vlodi @arianagrandes-things @preciousbabypeter @youraliendaddo @stupidlittlebei @illuminwtesz @eringaitskill @otheliesstuff @users09 @chloepluto1306 @lady-loki-barnes-djarin @m-rae23 @the-horror-and-the-wild-simp @diemdurantia @theyoungestchild0w0 @mschievousx @alwaysreading1019 @ibelieveindragons141 @pretzywetzy
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kat-rose-griffith · 2 months
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Don’t mind me I’m just imagining a scene where Colin’s help pays off and Penelope finally gets to dance with a suitor and the song that’s playing is the orchestra version of Mamma Mia. At first Colin is really proud and happy for her because he can see how happy she is, but then as the song goes on he slowly starts getting more and more jealous to the point where he can’t stand it anymore and he needs to step in to dance with her himself. That’s when he realizes his lessons have worked too well because she has so many men lining up to fill her dance card that there isn’t any room for him for the rest of the night and he’s just standing there with the realization that something big has shifted in how he feels about his friend Pen
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wicked-jade · 1 month
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WIP Wednesday
Tagged by @russolaw.
This is from "Heroes in a Half Shell", an AU I'm writing where Johnny ends up raising Robby on his own. For context, Robby wants to go the Halloween carnival at Bobby's church, but Johnny can't afford to buy him the Ninja Turtle costume that he wants.
Sure enough, he was still looking at him expectantly, his eyes wide and full of hope. “Please, dad? It says here that the carnival ends at eight. We don’t even have to stay the whole time! Just for a little while. I won’t make you late for work again, I promise.”
In his head, Johnny cursed Bobby to hell and back. Because as much as he hated to tell Robby no, there was no way he could justify the extra expense. Not right now, when he was barely managing to keep a roof over their heads.
And Bobby knew that. It was shitty for him to get Robby’s hopes up. The second Robby left for school, he was gonna call that bald bastard and give him a piece of his mind. Because as good as his intentions might’ve been, it felt like he was deliberately setting him up for failure.
And he didn’t need any help in that department. He was failing spectacularly, all on his own. At adulthood, at fatherhood, at life in general…
“…and can I be Donatello? He’s the purple one, with the staff.” Robby babbled, blissfully unaware of his dad’s latest existential crisis. When he didn’t respond, he tugged on his sleeve to get his attention. “And if you can’t find him, I guess Leonardo’s okay, too. Hey! Hey Dad, are you listening to me?”
Johnny could feel the tears of frustration pricking at his eyes. He blinked them back and forced another smile. Time to try another tactic.
“Donatello, right,” he said absently, struggling to focus through the haze of pain and mounting anxiety. “You know, at this late date, I bet all the really cool costumes are already gone. Like, there probably aren’t any Ninja Turtles left. And if there are, they probably won’t be your size. Maybe if we wait and go to next year’s carnival, I can get you a really badass costume so you can win that contest. How about that?”
Robby looked at him like he’d grown a second head. “But I don’t care about winning. I just wanna go.”
It took all of Johnny’s willpower to not roll his one good eye. Jesus. Didn’t care about winning? Sometimes he really wondered if this kid was even his. Sure, he had the DNA test results to prove it, but those things could be faked, right?  
They did it all the time on Days of our Lives.
Tagging: @phoomwhoosh, @lulamadison, @desolateice, @pfaerie, and whoever else might want to do it who wasn't been tagged yet.
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oldfritz · 14 days
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gilbert and fritz have a long overdue conversation
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sudzandthings98 · 2 months
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First Kiss (Sprina, GH drabble)
@soap100drabbles Inspired by the March 6th word set. Pairing is Spencer and Trina from General Hospital. Revisiting their first kiss at the gallery. Enjoy.
First Kiss
The gallery is dark, the air warm. His scent tickles her nostrils - an alluring blend of cologne, woodsy spice, and temptation.
Arching up onto her tippy toes to reach for him, she is grateful she wore four-inch heels. He gently cradles her face with his large hand as they kiss. His lips are full and impossibly soft. He teases her mouth open with his tongue as her fingers curl in the folds of his jacket. As many times as she’s secretly wished for this moment to happen, the fantasy pales in comparison to reality.
“Spencer,” she whispers huskily, “don’t stop.”
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apparentlyautistick · 6 months
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Summary:
Twin sisters Venus and Leonora lost their everything at a young age. The mystery of their lineage is shrouded in bloodshed with no one to help them understand. It just might take more death to uncover the truth. Will they find their true family? Or will they be forever lost?
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lonelyzarquon · 5 months
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:(( just gonna throw some of my disenchantment out there ig.......
literally what in the ao3 fix-it scenario was that. fourteen gets a tardis. he's still the doctor. but suddenly he can just live a normal life™️? pls be fr. and fifteen IS the doctor too so he carries all the memories all the pain and loss, and fresh out of the oven he's fine and behaves like a therapist. yeah. what the fuck
and fourteen. you're telling me that this mf has gone native and lives like a human? while having his tardis to pop to whenever? tenagain? tentooagain more like. EXCEPTTT tentoo is half human hence the ability to heal & have a normal happy life with rose. this doctor is STILL an ALIEN. makes noooo sense to me babes <3
oh rtd. the same man who wrote "this song is ending. but the story never ends" went fUCK IT the song will never end!😁
i loved ncuti he's fucking excellent but if with him they throw away all the alien-ness & make him this accessible human-like no mental burden doctor... don't know if i'll vibe with that but to each their own soo
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myevilmouse · 1 year
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I’m working on something to bingo the Ch’elenovela prompts...This is unedited and barely started but here you go...
It was a joke.  Or a mistake.  It had to be.  Thrawn had been her secret lover for over a year, and he wouldn’t have kept something like this from her, no matter how long ago.  She’d have the tabloid’s editor thrown into a detention block for this.
Her polished red fingernail hovered over the screen, not wanting to read and knowing she had to, no matter how preposterous the fabrication.
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tux!thrawn by @blackmonitor​​, six sentence banner by @celinamarniss​
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I’m sorry for the stupid questions :(
If Jenova never crashed on the planet, how do you think the events of original FFVII would have played out? What other direction do you think the developers would have gone? In your opinion, how would you have liked the game to have played out if Jenova was never in it?
As a whole, how do you think the FFVII franchise would have turned out if there was never a Jenova? Many thanks :)
If there were no Jenova in FFVII, we would have just jumped from Terra Branford to Squall Leonhart because there wouldn’t be a functioning plot for a video game.
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Episode 395: Stay on as master of the Old House
It is 1795. In the foyer of the great house of Collinwood, young gentleman Barnabas Collins stands on the staircase, his father Joshua stands on the floor. Joshua forbids Barnabas to marry lady’s maid Angelique on pain of disinheritance; when Barnabas declares he will marry her anyway, Joshua announces that they are no longer father and son. Barnabas on the stairs, Joshua standing on the floor.…
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xyronian · 8 months
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New OMORI AU Idea
Not sure I'll do more with this, I'm pretty busy at the moment, but I came up with this idea a while back and wanted to share it. Maybe it can inspire someone else?
Anyway, it's an everyone lives AU. Mari and her father go on a trip to Japan, during which time he pressures and gaslights her into agreeing to an arranged marriage with the heir of a wealthy Japanese megacorp. Mari agrees partly out of the same sense of familial duty and perfectionism that caused the recital incident in canon.
Back in Faraway, everyone is understandably freaking out, especially Hero. So now the gang has to fly to Japan, find Mari and talk her out of it before the wedding. The story would probably end with Hero taking a katana and dueling Mari’s new fiancée on the roof of a Shinto temple. Mari would step in when Hero is about to get his ass kicked, then in the wreckage of what was going to be Mari’s wedding to the heir, Hero proposes and they decide to use their already decorated venue to tie the knot.
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smilingformoney · 10 months
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Sins of the Father
Summary: Snape x OC | Persephone faces a fear, and learns a shocking truth.
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Read on Ao3 or below:
July 1999
Persephone took a deep breath and approached the grey-haired man. His back was turned, his attention turned to clearing up his sermon notes, but even after so many years, still she recognised the man who’d raised her.
She cleared her throat. “Hello, father.”
“‘Father’ is Catholic, I’m afraid,” came the reply. “‘Reverend’ is more Anglican, though you can call me –”
He stopped mid-sentence, having turned around, and his eyes widened with shock.
“...Persephone?!”
“Actually, I’ll stick with Father. Persephone’s my name, it might get confusing.”
Several emotions flashed over Reverend Payne’s face in a few moments. The surprise became a twitch of a smile at her joke, then confusion that she was there at all, then finally, relief.
“You’re here!” he breathed. “My word, you’re - you’re here!”
To Persephone’s complete and utter shock, the Reverend threw his arms around her in an embrace.
It was the last thing she’d expected. Disgust that she would dare show her face again, perhaps - or, at best, a disinterest in seeing her again.
She wasn’t sure she recalled him ever hugging her before.
He stepped back to stare at her, as if trying to convince himself she wasn’t an apparition.
“I never thought I’d see you again, my child. What are you - why -?” He stopped himself. “I’m sorry. A thousand questions. Would you like a cup of tea?”
Persephone smiled politely. “Yes, I’d love one, thank you.”
“Of course - let me just get out of my vestments.”
A short while later, Reverend Payne entered the kitchen at the rear of the church to find Persephone had already prepared two cups of tea.
“I remembered where it is,” she said nonchalantly. “Do you still take yours black?”
“Yes, thank you. Come, let’s sit outside, shall we? We have so much catching up to do.”
The cemetery hadn’t changed a bit. The same old weathered bench sat against the stone wall of the church, although it looked to have been repainted.
“Where’s Mother?” Persephone asked as she sat.
The Reverend’s face fell slightly. “She passed,” he replied. “Not long after you left, actually.”
“Oh. I’m sorry.”
To her surprise, Persephone really was sorry to hear her mother had passed so long ago, leaving her father to his own devices.
The Reverend nodded gratefully. “An unfortunate accident at the market. They said a gas pipe exploded… a lot of good people were lost that day.”
Persephone’s heart skipped a beat. Gas pipe explosions were real phenomena, of course… but it was also the usual cover story for Death Eater attacks back then. Explosions without bombs, fires without fuel… gas, like magic, was an invisible assailant, and easily blamed.
“Have you been on your own?” Persephone asked.
“Oh, my, no. I never remarried, but you know well enough that my parishioners are my family. I’ve never wanted for company, though of course I miss Nancy… and you. I have sorely regretted losing you, Persephone. I don’t blame you, of course, for never coming home… but I always wished you would, so I might tell you how very sorry I am. I’ve ruminated and prayed over the years, and I’ve realised just how hard your mother and I were on you. More concerned with our own image than the wellbeing of the child we’d promised to care for. I don’t expect you to forgive me, but… I am glad of this chance to tell you.”
The conversation wasn’t going at all how Persephone had expected. This man was so much older and softer than the man who raised her - already he’d given her both a hug and an apology, neither of which he had ever given before.
“You haven’t asked why I’m here.”
The Reverend chuckled. “I expect you’ll tell me soon enough, dear.”
“Well, someone recently told me something I sorely needed to hear. I’ve always held grudges close to my heart, never letting the anger die down… and I was helped to realise I do it because some part of me believes letting go is weakness. And to be strong I need to learn to forgive.”
“And that starts with me.”
It wasn’t a question; it was a statement of fact, as if it was something he’d accepted a long time ago.
“I didn’t think you’d make it so easy by offering an immediate apology,” she laughed. “I can’t say I immediately forgive you, but… I was only eighteen when I left. Still a child, really. Now I’m forty, and not remotely the girl I was. It would be foolish of me to assume you’re the same man.”
“I hope I’m not,” the Reverend replied with a sigh before sipping his tea thoughtfully. “You’re right, of course. You’re not a girl anymore - you’re older now than your mother and I were when we found you. And of course I don’t expect your forgiveness, Persephone. But perhaps you might allow me the boon of knowing more about you. What has your life been like?”
Persephone laughed. “That’s a big question,” she replied. “I’ve been many things. When I left, I became a spy.”
“A spy?!” The Reverend gasped. “What, for the government?”
“No. Well… not the one you know. The… wizarding government.”
“Ah.”
“You know that wasn’t a school for purification, right? That was a lie. The first big lie I ever told.”
“Yes, a wizarding school. I know. I think I always knew. But, obsessed as I was with my image, so long as we could pretend… I ignored my suspicions. And are you still a spy now?”
“No. I’m more of a… researcher. I study obscure branches of magic and consult with the Ministry when they need my expertise.”
“And… is there a family?”
“Yes. I have three children.”
“Three! Gosh, I’m a grandfather and I had no idea. Boys? Girls? Tell me about them.”
“The oldest is Abigail. She’s nineteen soon. And I have two twins, April and Ariadne - they’re just over six months old now.”
“That’s quite an age gap!”
“Well, a lot happened in between. Their father and I went our separate ways while I was pregnant with Abbie. We reconnected only five years ago.”
The Reverend glanced down at her hands as they held her mug. “You’re married?”
“Yes, we’ve been married just over a year now.”
A glimmer of disapproval flashed across her father’s face, but it soon disappeared.
“Actually, you may be interested to know… do you recall the day you found me, there was a woman at the hospital? Her son was sick and you prayed for him.”
A curious expression crossed the Reverend’s face, and his jaw tightened.
“Yes. I remember Eileen Snape.”
“I married her son.”
The brow that had just furrowed relaxed only to shoot up his forehead.
“The sick boy?”
“Well, he’s not sick anymore. Or a boy. But, yes. A strange coincidence, isn’t it?”
“Well - I -” He blinked rapidly, as if trying to catch up with the neurons firing in his mind. “But how did you meet him?”
“Well, Eileen was actually a witch. Severus is a wizard, and there’s only one wizarding school in the country, so we met there.”
The Reverend let out a sad sigh. “Eileen was a witch?” he enquired.
“She died when Severus was sixteen.”
A great sadness passed over Reverend Payne’s eyes. It was a sadness deeper than empathy for a child losing his mother - as if there were some other reason for him to mourn Eileen Snape.
“And Tobias?”
“In prison.”
“...I see.” The Reverend gazed out across the cemetery thoughtfully. “She named you, you know,” he said. “She had an interest in Greek mythology, and we found you as spring broke, so she suggested Persephone, the goddess of spring.”
He glanced at Persephone, who was frowning.
“How do you know her husband’s name?” she asked. “She didn’t tell you at the hospital. Or that she liked Greek mythology, only that that was where the name came from.”
“You may have been there, but you’re hardly old enough to remember it,” the Reverend admonished.
“Maybe not, but I’ve seen it.”
“How?”
“Magic.”
“You have time travel, do you?”
“No - well, yes, but it’s tightly regulated. I can, however, view people’s memories as accurately as if they were there. I viewed Mother’s memories of finding me after I discovered I was adopted - how could I not? I saw that day. I saw you speaking to Eileen Snape. She never told you her husband’s name.  How do you know?”
Her father sighed. “Well, I suppose you’re more than old enough to know the truth.” He drained his tea, stood and beckoned her to follow.
They began strolling through the cemetery, and after a few moments, the Reverend began to speak.
“After we met at the hospital, Eileen began coming to the church on Sundays, usually with Severus, but Tobias stayed home. In fact, you and Severus met before school - you were playmates in the church nursery, though of course you were both babies - I certainly wouldn’t expect you to remember each other. But you were frequently the only two left, as Eileen would stay late after the sermon; sometimes to pray alone, sometimes to talk. She became a good friend of ours, and after some months of attending the church, she and Severus would visit for Sunday dinner. Again, her husband never came.
When Nancy’s mother became sick, she began to visit her after the sermon, leaving the four of us alone together. Then, one day… Eileen came alone. Tobias refused to allow her to bring Severus to church anymore. A few weeks after that, Nancy began bringing you to see her mother. That left Eileen and I alone.”
Reverend Payne stopped very suddenly. The grave they stood next to, Persephone realised, was newer than the rest. The cemetery had been full for decades even when she was a child - but occasionally space could be found for those with a connection to the church. Those including her mother.
“I am a man of God,” the Reverend said, as if he were reminding himself. “But I am a man. I am weak. The Lord tests me and… I do not always pass.”
He gazed sadly at his wife’s gravestone.
Persephone glanced up. At the end of the pathway, she saw Severus, waiting patiently as he had been at the front gate.
“It was brief,” Reverend Payne continued. “But, I am ashamed to say, more than a single occasion. When Eileen told me she was pregnant, that was the slap in the face, so to say, that I needed. I’m pregnant… the words I always craved to hear from Nancy’s lips, coming from Eileen’s.”
There was a pause.
“Severus has no siblings,” Persephone stated.
“No. The doctor did what was necessary. Nancy never found out. Whether Tobias did, I never knew… I never saw Eileen again after that. By then you were learning to talk, and you’d ask after Severus, but I could only tell you he had left.” He looked up at her, a sad smile on his face. “I’m glad you found him again.”
Persephone’s eyes hadn’t left Severus’ - until now, when she looked at her father with a hard stare.
“He can’t know,” she said quickly. “It would shatter him. Apart from our children, Severus can count on one hand the people he’s loved in his life. The first was his mother. He thought the world of her - he still does, in fact. Ariadne’s middle name is Eileen. Severus cannot know.”
Reverend Payne looked over at Severus. He almost seemed to recognise him, and he smiled.
“Of course. I’d love to meet your husband.”
Persephone gestured for Severus to come over, and he joined them, his face unreadable.
“You must be Severus. Reverend Payne - but you can call me Christopher. I understand we’re family, after all.”
The Reverend smiled and put his hand out. Severus glanced at Persephone, who nodded, and he shook his father-in-law’s hand.
“A pleasure,” he said. He didn’t enquire after her mother.
Persephone had seen a handful of photographs of Eileen Snape. She was the spitting image of Abbie - which meant that, to Reverend Payne, Severus must starkly resemble the woman he’d had an affair with almost forty years ago.
“Father just told me the strangest coincidence!” Persephone said jovially. “I told you that your mother met my parents at hospital when we were both babies, but did you know your mother went to this church for a while after you were born?”
Severus’ raised eyebrows clearly told her that no, he had no idea.
“She brought you along to the church nursery,” Persephone continued. “Apparently we knew each other as babies!”
“Did we now?” Severus said curiously. “That must be why I always felt so drawn to you. I must have imprinted on you.” He turned to the Reverend. “You knew my mother, then?”
“Oh, yes, but not very well, I’m afraid. I mainly remember our meeting at the hospital, fortuitous as it was. She came to the church for a little while after our meeting, but she stopped after some months. Persephone told me she passed when you were still young - I’m truly sorry to hear that, my son.”
Severus blinked - whether he was surprised at the sympathy or being called my son in a tone other than venomous, Persephone wasn’t sure. Perhaps both.
“Father, I’m sure you’re busy today, and this was quite the surprise visit, but perhaps you’d like to come for dinner tonight? I think it’s about time you meet your granddaughters.”
Reverend Payne smiled wide. “Why, my dear, I’d love to.”
After making arrangements, Persephone and Severus left the churchyard to walk an appropriate distance away before apparating.
“I take it that went well,” Severus said once they were out of earshot.
“Nothing as I expected,” Persephone said thoughtfully. “I suppose as time passed I remembered only the key moments… the moments that made me hate him, that made me leave and not look back. And I was young, of course, and I know well enough now that parents hide so much of themselves from their kids. It’s easy to forget your parents are human too.”
“Are you sure you want him for dinner tonight?”
Persephone nodded. “Yes. I want him to meet the girls. I know Abbie will want to meet him.” She chuckled. “Oh, Merlin, he’s going to have his work cut out for him with her.”
“She’s going to absolutely destroy him.”
They both laughed, turned the corner into an alleyway, and disappeared into the air.
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just remembered i once had a dream where snufkin was royalty and proposed to me and i did this like really dramatic “its not a no................. its a not yet............................  😔 💔 “ type rejection and he was like super heartbroken and i had to comfort him really upset this was y/n and not snufmin like god damn where was moomintroll in all of this
WAS I MOOMINTROLL????????? BHASSAGSA??????????/
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celia-bracali · 1 year
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My "The Old Guard" fic recommendation for today:
"Dream On" by smilebackwards
Summary:
“Yusuf and Nicolo are friends now,” Quynh told her, a year after they’d watched the two men disembowel each other under the walls of Jerusalem.
Or: The Yusuf & Nicolo slow burn soap opera as dream-watched by Andy & Quynh c. 12th century
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