#lyla in the loop
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This Post is Brought to You by the Letter I, for Idiocy: Trump Administration Stops Grants Used For PBS Kids' Education and Animation
#Politics #PBS #PBSKids #animation #Education
#American Politics#Animation#Children#Corporation of Public Broadcasting#Donald Trump#Education#Educational Television#Kids#Lyla in the Loop#Molly of Denali#PBS#PBS Kids#Politics#President Trump#Public Broadcasting#Ready to Learn Grant#US Department of Education#Rosie's Rules#Alma's Way
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good morning this is
a charcter on pbskids show "Lyla in the Loop", named Stu, that has as far as ive seen NO explaination for being there, doesn't speak any human language, and the whole schtick of his character is doing exactly what lyla says and only lyla fsr?? mistakes happen in the show bc of the vague directions given to Stu, who can seemingly do anything. Powers I seen in 2 episodess were: walk on the ceiling, very fast, highly destructive, super strength?
basically this post is me being like okay we got a show for kids wit a brown girl who controls a demon that even her mom is like, perturbed by and doesnt seem to want to touch. Very cool win for schizophrenic girls everywhere IMO.
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I completely forgot to post this yesterday, lol, my bad. But Lyla in the Loop has now premiered! Over a whopping 10 episodes have already been put up on the PBS Kids Video App, and one new episode has been put up on YouTube already with more likely to follow. The episodes with interactive AI will release at a later date and be completely digital; i.e., only being on the app.
There's also a Work It Out Wombats cameo in there...see if you can find it!
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30 days of agere moodboards
Day 1: based on me
Picrew







Left - favorite older shows
Middle - About me
Right - favorite newer shows

#sfw agere#sfw agedre#sfw littlespace#age dreaming#sfw age dreamer#sfw blog#sfw little#agere#sfw age dreaming#pb&j otter#gabbys dollhouse#blues clues#bluey#ooh and aah#lyla in the loop
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youtube
New kids show, Lyla in the loop.
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If there' anything I have to compliment Lyla in the Loop for, it's that its not afraid to make the characters mean to each other. I watched the newest batch of episodes and Lyla is a bit of a jerk in some of them (ie: Lyla Bugs Out, Lyla Out of the Loop)
If anything, I think it elevates the show's message of problem-solving because it's not afraid to show the characters in these actual problems and stuff.
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instagram
#this is a reminder of why I care about and believe in the power of digital media#smile#Lyla and Stu’s hairdos#Lyla in the loop#Instagram
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Nuevo Episodio de Mes de Octubre
sabemos que el mes de octubre es Halloween, pero Tambien para los peques, Tambien está feliz, porque hay nuevos episodios de su serie favorita de Disney Jr, PBS Kids y Nick Jr
We know that October is Halloween, but the kids are also happy because there are new episodes of their favorite series from Disney Jr, PBS Kids and Nick Jr.
#bluey cartoon#bluey heeler#ariel#disney jr#elinor wonders why#firebuds#kindergarten the musical#lyla in the loop#preschool#mickey mouse fun house#molly of denali#paw patrol#pinkalicious#superkitties#xavie riddle and the secret museum#pbskids#nickjr#disneyjr#disneyjunior
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hobie when he finds out miles used the palm thing to not only shock the suit off miguel but put all of spider society on the back foot .......... show it to me rachael
#spiderverse#punkflower#🎸🌻#hobie x miles#miguel walking into his office: not you again#hobie wearing 3d glasses eating popcorn while lyla loops the train fight footage:
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Animation is the most satisfying art form for my ADHD like whenever I animate anything I have to just sit and stare at it for a long time afterward
#I still go to my profile to just sit and stare at my pinned post for a while lol#been workin on another satisfying animation loop to add to my reel 😌#will post soon!!!#lyla's talking again
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anyway i keep laughing at the thought of miguel & xina going out to dinner and xina is like "this is so romantic, how did you find a babysitter on such short notice?" & miguel is just like "oh i just left her with lyla" and xina is like MIGUEL
#its fine sharona is like 8 so lyla is her bestie but its still a shit idea#dont you want me (10 hour loop)
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PBS Kids is premiering a new narrative visual album film on July 26th titled Brambletown. The film is based off an album created by the Okee Brothers. More info here: https://www.anbmedia.com/news/2024/05/pbs-kids-summer/
Additionally, August 2024 schedules are now up, and the following shows get new episodes:
Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood (Season 7 premiere + 22-minute special)
Lyla in the Loop
It's the beginning of June, and that means we get a big old PBS Kids news dump! There's a lot of new stuff coming for this year's Summer of Adventure initiative, including a new and uniquely animated project called Brambletown. I do like this experimenting.
Advanced schedules have also been pushed to cover June-August. Among the shows airing new content in August specifically are DTN and Lyla, with more likely to come as June progresses. Keep an eye put!
To read the article in the ask, go here.
#pbs kids#pbs kids news#lyla in the loop#daniel tiger's neighborhood#brambletown#thank you for sending!
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the power play (part six)
pairing hockeyplayer! rafe cameron x tutor! reader
rating mature 18+
summary rafe is your complete opposite. the only thing you have in common with the hockey player you tutor is that he’s also recently had his heart broken. in a last-ditch effort to make the people who hurt you regret it, you agree to pretend to date.
< prev
Rafe drives down the dark street, silent while his mind races and whirls with regret.
He shouldn’t have offered to come with you tonight. He shouldn’t have let himself see you like that, with all your friends, with the guy who’s blind to how lucky he is that you love him.
Envy courses through him, burning and vicious. Who would he be if he had a life like Beck, surrounded by people who loved him? Why couldn’t he have that? Why couldn’t he be someone else? Someone you’d want?
“You might be right,” you say happily. “Maybe Beck is jealous. He wouldn’t stop looking at me tonight.”
Rafe is still in his head. He hated that your eyes wouldn’t stay on his at that party. That other eyes were on you.
“Neither would that guy who plays for Hatfield,” he mutters.
“Marcus?” You sink further into the passenger seat, settling in for the hour-long drive back to campus. “What do you mean?”
He rubs his jaw, reminded of how warm your cheek felt on his when you whispered to him during that stupid game of truth or dare.
“He likes you, too,” he says.
You have to laugh.
“No way.”
“So, he’s never tried anything,” Rafe states, unconvinced.
You look out your window as he turns onto a busier street. Through your high school days, Lyla had implied that Marcus had a crush on you, but you refuted it every time.
“Well…” You sigh. “Lyla thinks because he asked me to a dance one time, it meant something, but he told me himself he was asking me as a friend.”
“He said that to not look like a loser if you shot him down,” Rafe huffs.
“I’m not so sure,” you say.
His pain weighs even heavier. It’s messing with him how you imply that guys don’t look at you like that. It took you this long to say that maybe Beck’s jealous.
You’re oblivious to the effect you have on people. On him.
Frustration wrenches in his chest and his words come out unfiltered.
“You really are clueless about this shit,” he mutters, his voice clipped.
It’s the first time Rafe’s words truly cut into you. You’re used to his brashness, to how he doesn’t hesitate to let you know when you’re irritating him, and normally it makes you laugh or roll your eyes.
But this stings. And it throws away the joy you’d felt seconds ago. You’re already painfully aware that you’re inexperienced, having spent so much time stuck on one guy who kept you trapped in a confusing loop.
Despite the pang in your heart, it’s comforting to know, to really know, that you could never like Rafe like that.
You’ve seen bits of tenderness in him, but he’s more hard, icy edges than anything else, and he’s not the type of person you’d ever feel safe giving your heart to.
At least you know you’ll be able to avoid Rafe hurting you the way Beck has.
Rafe glances over to see you turned away, your dejected pout reflected in the window. He hates himself for being such a dick, but fuck, it kills him that you act like it’s ridiculous that someone could have feelings for you.
He’s falling off the edge right in front of you and you don’t see it. And it dawns on him that it’s a good thing you don’t, because you wouldn’t fall with him.
“That was mean,” you say quietly. You look over and catch glimpses of the writing you left on the inside of his wrist as the streetlights flood in and out of the car. “Even for you.”
The thinness of your voice is a razor that slices into him.
“You’re not always right about everything, okay?” Rafe says stiffly.
“I never said I was,” you reply. You look out the window again and take a moment before you continue speaking. “But what happened with Beck did mess with my confidence, if that’s what you’re getting at. And you’re not making it any better.”
Knowing he’s only adding to your baseless insecurities cuts him deeper.
“I’m sorry, alright?” he mumbles. He stares ahead as he pulls onto the freeway. “All I’m tryin’ to say is that you don’t need to be so jaded just because one asshole strung you along.”
Your ache numbs a little. In his own, tactless way, he’s attempting to help.
“Your approach needs work,” you say flatly, “but I see your point.”
Tension sinks between you, every sense of camaraderie gone. And Rafe is desperate to undo it, to make you feel better.
“You can tell you’re getting to him?” he asks.
“Yeah,” you say in a hush, although the high of witnessing Beck’s jealousy is gone now.
It’s satisfying to know he’s seeing what he’s missing, but it hurts that you had to go to these lengths for it to happen. It hurts that you still care.
“Good,” he says.
Rafe’s met with no response. And he wants to beg you to speak. His lips part, heart hammering.
“What are you thinking?” His deep voice fractures the silence.
You bite your lip, remembering the first time you were in this car, when Rafe suggested he drive you back home because you wouldn’t stop talking.
Now, he wants you to talk, and if he didn’t ask, you wouldn’t offer up your thoughts like you usually do. Not after that dig.
“You ever wish you could make yourself not care about something?” you eventually say.
“All the time,” he admits within an exhale of relief that you answered him.
“Really?” you ask, your brows lifted in surprise.
He knows he manages to seem like he doesn’t give a shit about most things. It’s a defense mechanism that works until his anger gets so heavy that he cracks.
He refuses to crack in front of you again. Right now, he’s okay with giving you the vulnerability you’re always trying to coax out of him if it means you’ll be you again.
“She told you I wouldn’t move on, right?” he says sardonically.
You gaze at him, reminded of the way his ex had laughed when she told you he wouldn’t stop bothering her.
“I kept trying to work things out and I – I wish I didn’t.” He shakes his head, embarrassed. “And I don’t even want to be with her now, but I care enough to want to piss her off. I know that’s not normal.”
Your eyes are fixed on the license plate of the car ahead of you. The things you know about his past relationship, things that Emma said, things that he said, come together to paint an ugly picture.
“I think it’s how a lot of people would feel,” you say. “It doesn’t sound like she was very nice to you.”
Rafe knows he could be just as poisonous, raising his voice and escalating fights, but Emma made him feel like he was insane for being human.
Any time he was hurt, she said he was overreacting. He wasn’t allowed to be angry. To be sad. To be anything.
And he always feared she was right. He was too much, felt too much. He’d heard it from so many people, the first and loudest voice being his father’s.
“She wasn’t,” he answers. “I wasn’t, either.”
You don’t doubt it. You can only imagine how vicious their arguments were.
“Can I tell you something?” you say.
He’s upset, but he takes a page out of your book, trying to lighten the mood.
“You’re going to do it anyway,” he mumbles.
Despite yourself, you chuckle.
“You already very kindly established that I’m no expert on relationships,” you say, your joke splitting the tension, “but do you ever think that maybe things were toxic between you?”
You’re prying again, but Rafe’s relieved you are, because it means you’re okay.
Maybe his relationship was toxic, but he doesn’t know otherwise. It’s how he operates, always on the cusp of chaos, always on the edge of imploding.
“What?” he asks, just to stall.
“You said you wanted to hurt each other when you fought, right?”
The tires continue to rapidly roll over the asphalt with rhythmic pats, the wind whooshing over the windows.
“Yeah.”
“What’d you fight about?”
“Everything,” he says. “I mean, yeah, I have a short fuse and I – I say shit I don’t mean, but she acted like she never did anything wrong.”
“That’s hard to deal with,” you sympathize. “What’d she do wrong?”
He grits his teeth. The memory of how Emma would shut him down whenever he had a problem with something she did flashes through his mind like a bad dream he wants to forget.
“She acted like she only liked me when I was happy,” he tells you, on edge, in disbelief that he’s hearing his voice admit these things.
“What would she do when you weren’t?” you ask.
His jaw tenses, the memories of Emma’s shouted words a punch to the gut.
“She’d tell me to grow up,” he says dryly.
Rafe is sure you’d never say something like that to him, but there’s still an alarm going off in his head that he’s opening up too much, giving you what you need to hurt him, sharing criticism that you might silently agree with.
Every piece that he shares with you could serve as proof that he’s a catastrophe of a man that you’d be better off staying away from.
You look down at your lap, your heart pinching. The space between you is delicate, fragile, a bond you never could have imagined growing between you.
You’re upset to think about how Rafe clearly already doesn’t really do feelings and was made to feel bad for showing his to his girlfriend.
Emma had called him pathetic, but you feel that the word describes her instead.
“That’s not fair,” you say. “Nobody deserves to hear that from someone who’s supposed to care about them.”
He only offers a rigid shrug.
You’re still curious about what he told you when you asked him why he liked her. He’d said things were simple with her, that she made him feel uncomplicated, but it sounds like all they did was bicker.
You want to know why he tried to get back together after they’d had such a rocky relationship, why he’d called her crying.
“You said she made things easy?” you say.
He tightens his grip on the steering wheel, not sure how much more of this conversation he can take.
“When we weren’t fighting, we had fun,” he explains. “I didn’t have to think about anything, you know?”
And she never pushed to see the pieces of himself that he hides. And all you do is push, so why the hell is he losing his mind over a girl who’s done nothing but try to make him face what he runs from?
But when he looks at you again through the darkness, it’s like he can see how good you are.
And that’s why.
That’s why you’ve taken him captive. You’re warm, the way you find joy in almost everything, the way you’re unabashedly yourself, the way you want to understand people for who they really are.
You take in his awestruck expression, looking like he can’t believe he just told you all that.
You get it now. Emma didn’t want to deal with the heavy stuff. And it worked for him. Until it didn’t. It doesn’t sound like they had that deep of a connection if she punished him for having feelings.
“I really don’t like her,” you say quietly.
“Damn,” he murmurs. “Brutal coming from you.”
You chuckle. Rafe takes a few breaths before he speaks again, hating that he actually feels shy right now.
“Sorry I said…” He trails off, not wanting to repeat the word clueless. He went too far. “You’re smart, okay?”
“You’ve mentioned that a few times,” you laugh.
“We friends again?”
You smirk.
“Maybe if you say please,” you say.
“Shut up,” he laughs.
“Hmm.” You squint. “Try again.”
You watch him with an expectant expression, a playful smile on your face.
“Please,” he mumbles, shaking his head in disbelief.
“Alright, you don’t have to beg,” you chuckle.
Rafe groans in annoyance and you laugh again, picked back up out of your low mood.
You get the feeling of being linked to him again, the one you had when you watched him from the stands before you even spoke.
He’s wading through the pieces of a broken relationship, and you’re trying to shake yourself out of infatuation, and they’re different circumstances, but you both need the same thing. To not care anymore.
“I read something about how the opposite of love isn’t hate,” you say. “It’s indifference. Eventually, you won’t care about what she thinks. And you’ll find the girl you need when the time’s right.”
Rafe stares ahead.
“Yeah,” is all he can say. Because he’s already found the girl he needs. She just doesn’t need him back.
════════
In the span of almost five days, Rafe has gone from bad to worse.
On Sunday, the team just barely won the first game of the tournament. He watched from the bench, pissed off beyond belief watching the gameplay. They were lucky the opponents’ offense was so choppy.
It was both frustrating and validating when his coach told him that he hopes Rafe can play game two, because defense is suffering without him.
Yesterday, he saw the team’s physical therapist. He managed to move his arm with full mobility, but still felt a minor, stubborn pinch. He was cleared for game two, so long as he saw a doctor to get imaging done and make sure he wasn’t putting himself at risk.
He had the appointment this morning and he’s already dreading the call with the results. He can’t lose hockey. It’s the one thing keeping him sane.
Now, he’s walking under the hot afternoon sun, on his way to an off-campus uptown cafe you’d suggested for your tutoring session. He had to park two blocks away after looking for a spot for ages.
He’s in a foul mood, rereading your text just so he doesn’t take it out on you. You gave him the head’s up that this place is usually busy and parking could be tough, offering to stick with the library if he preferred.
He went along with what you wanted, because he’d rather not let you down. At this point, it hurts seeing any hint of sadness on your face. He’s still pissed off at himself for what he said to you in his car last weekend.
He steps into the small cafe, the air smelling of coffee, the machines whirring over overlapping conversations. He finds you in the corner, your head adorably tilted in thought as you type on your laptop.
The knot in his stomach loosens once you look up and smile at him.
Every morning, every afternoon, every night, you’re on his mind. You’ve thrown him completely off center, dominating every second of his day, the longing to see you when he’s not with you insatiable.
Rafe strides towards you between full tables, and you take a moment to drink him in, the strong, self-assured way he walks, never the type to act like he thinks he doesn’t belong wherever he is.
“Hey,” you say. “Was parking okay?”
“You warned me.” He pulls out the chair across from you, dragging it across the hardwood. You shut your laptop. “Why are we here? I got that tattoo for nothing?”
You glance at his wrist to see that the marker has washed off.
“It’s gone anyway,” you giggle. “I thought we could use a change of scenery. Plus, this place has the best treats.”
You slide a small brown paper bag towards him.
“I’ll trade you for your laptop,” you say.
Minutes later, you’re checking in on his grades. Your stomach drops when you see a warning in red text next to last week’s submission link.
7 days late.
“Rafe,” you say soberly. “You forgot to send it in.”
You look up at him from across the table, confusion creased into his features as he finishes chewing.
“Remember, last week?” you say. “Your laptop died and I told you to submit the essay before midnight?”
He readjusts his posture.
“It’s not a big deal,” he sighs defensively.
“It’s 5% lost every day,” you reply. “I’ll submit it now.”
He scowls, agitation rippling over his features. It discredits the text that Lyla sent you the morning after her birthday party, not that you believed it anyway.
My mom said it’s cute how obviously in love Rafe is with you.
The way he’s looking at you right now is the farthest thing from love. Like he said, he’s a great liar.
“This matters,” you reiterate. Rafe glances away. It’s hurtful to witness how disinterested he is.
You submit the assignment, displeased by his apathy, reminded of how much his bad attitude and moodiness can get to you, but try to remain positive.
“Let’s see what you have so far,” you say, opening his draft document. “This week’s discussion question is about the significance of time in the novel. Did you notice it was sometimes spelled with a capital T?”
Your brows pinch in concentration as you lean forward, reading what he’s put together. It’s sparse, disjointed, just like his work when you first started tutoring him. It’s like he’s gone backwards.
You look up at him, but his eyes are downcast, lips turned down. Something’s wrong.
“You didn’t get much time to work on it?” you say, keeping a kind tone to your voice.
“This book made no sense,” he mutters.
“It is pretty convoluted,” you say. “But there’s substance to it. I like how it explores the idea of friendship. Speaking of, friends tell each other when something’s wrong, so get to talking.”
If Rafe didn’t know better, he’d think you're trying to hurt him.
Disappointing you was painful enough. It’s why his instinct was to act like that late assignment wasn’t a big deal; because then, he wouldn’t have to accept that he was messing up in front of you yet again.
And now, you’re rubbing it in that you only see him as a friend, adding salt to the wound.
“It’s been a shitty week,” he admits.
You lean over to push the bag of treats a little closer to him, earning a nearly silent chuckle.
“Is your shoulder feeling okay?” you ask.
“I had to do some scans,” he says. “I’m waiting to see if I can play. But I’m good.”
Your lips purse in thought. It’s like Rafe is nothing but knee-jerk reactions, snapping when he’s mad, direct about when he’s annoyed, but he hides everything else, as if he’s telling himself he’s not allowed to feel anything besides anger.
You wonder if he was always like that, or if his last relationship left that particular scar.
“Is midterm season getting to you?” you ask. “Because it’s getting to me. Studying’s hard enough and now I have a group project that’s been keeping me up at night.”
“It’s that bad?” he says, a hint of amusement in his tone.
“You know when you’re put into a group with guys who think dropping paragraphs into a slide deck counts as contributing?” you say. “And when you try to meet up outside of class to practice the presentation, they pretend they didn’t see your text? Does that kind of stuff not happen to you?”
A smile pulls on his lips.
“Just me, then,” you reply.
“Do I need to talk to anyone?” he asks, and he realizes he’s only half-joking.
“You mean like, to threaten them? Only if you can fit it in your schedule,” you joke. “I don’t want to put you out.”
You think he’s kidding. He’s not. He feels insanely protective over you, and while he can see that you’re not that bothered by this, he’d get those idiots you’re working with in line if you needed him to.
This is only getting more difficult. He wants to tell you that he’s serious. That he’d do anything to make things easier for you, that you don’t deserve to be ignored, that you should cut this act out and be with him for real.
But he has to accept that while he’s spent his life being ruthlessly honest about what he thinks about people, good or bad, he needs to swallow down his words around you.
He can’t talk like that with a girl who’d never want him. Who he’d never recover from getting rejected by.
“You know you can tell me when something’s bothering you, right?” you say. “It’s not like I’d…”
You don’t finish your sentence, your gaze soft. He can tell you’re trying to reassure him that you wouldn’t criticize him for being stressed like his ex used to, the reminder of your last conversation planting discomfort in his chest.
“I didn’t mean to forget,” he utters, eyes darting away again. You nod. So he does care. And now you feel bad if you made him feel ridiculed.
“Was I too intense?” you say dolefully. “I’m sorry. I just want you to do well. We worked hard on that assignment and it’s a waste of effort to lose points for lateness.”
You pull out your notebook, full of study notes you took last semester.
“It’s okay,” you conclude. “It’s just one assignment. We’ll finish up this essay and then start prepping for the midterm.”
Rafe’s muscles loosen, in awe of how quickly you just turned his mood around.
“Oh, before I forget,” you say, “do you want me to come to the next game? I can drive up with Lyla. It’s an away, right? This Saturday?”
“You did your homework.”
“Did you forget who you’re talking to?” you laugh.
“Yeah, you should come,” Rafe says after a beat. “If I play.”
“Deal,” you say with a grin.
He’s hopeful you follow through. Because even if you’re there as a friend, as all you’ll ever want to be to him, he plays better knowing you’re watching.
════════
Rafe sits on the team bus on the way to game two, his eyes following the dips and valleys of lush trees lining the road. Music buzzes in his earbuds, his fingers interlaced in his lap, his knees bouncing.
He needs this before big games; the closest he can get to solitude, confining himself into his own mind, finding focus.
He’d never liked quiet until he started playing hockey. He chased noise, commotion, distractions. And he still gets his dose of chaos with every game, but it’s always preceded by this stillness. This moment he gives himself for the calm before the storm.
He got the call yesterday. The scans came back fine. They showed nothing serious, no signs of tearing, no reason for him to be freaking out.
Rafe texted you right away, finding himself wanting to tell you of all people the good news first, even before his coach.
As expected, you responded with an enthusiastic message telling him you couldn’t wait to cheer him on. The focus he’s trying to find right now keeps getting derailed by thoughts of you.
The song fades out, replaced with ringing. He picks up his phone to see that you’re video-calling him.
His stomach flips and he feels like a little kid with a crush on a girl in his class. The effect you have on him is starting to get really damn embarrassing.
Your pretty face appears on his screen, the backdrop a well-lit ceiling and colorful display shelves.
“Hello,” you greet him cheerfully. “We just stopped at a gas station. Do you want me to grab something for you for after the game? You know, because you’ll need nutrients and electrolytes and all that.”
“I will?” he says, his lips turned up in a smirk. “No shit?”
“Okay, I’m just being nice,” you laugh. “Don’t you get tired of being so sarcastic all the time?”
“Not really,” he replies.
Isaac, who always sits beside him on these drives, hears Rafe mumbling. He leans over and gazes at the screen.
You see the corner of Isaac’s face, then grin and wave.
“Hey, I have a really quick question,” Isaac says.
“What’s up?” you ask.
“She said to leave her alone,” Rafe murmurs.
“I did not,” you laugh, realizing only Rafe can hear you through his earbuds.
“Lies,” Isaac says. “I have this essay that’s killing me. You’re good at that stuff, right? Could you look at it for me? Please? It’s a huge chunk of my grade.”
“Sure,” you say with a nod. “Send it to me. You can get my email from Rafe.”
“She said no,” Rafe says.
“I saw her nod,” Isaac retorts.
“I’ll give you her email, alright?” Rafe says impatiently. “You done now? I’m trying to talk to my girl.”
Isaac feigns offense and leans away after giving you a thankful smile.
“You don’t need to get me anything,” he tells you.
“Suit yourself,” you say. “How are you?”
“Good,” he says simply, because he can’t be honest that he’s nervous about this game, nervous that he’ll mess up his shoulder again, nervous that he’s falling so hard for you that you could shatter him without even knowing it.
His mind is blank, words refusing to form.
“Okay,” you say, unhappy he’s being so short with you.
You don’t know what you did wrong, why he gets so irritated with you all the time. You’d called him impulsively, only ten minutes into your drive with Lyla when you stopped to buy a drink, but you assumed you were in a good enough place to call whenever you felt like it.
It’s all too familiar, this sinking feeling of questioning what a guy thinks of you, just like you always did with Beck. You know things between you and Rafe are platonic, but you thought he’d like to hear from you, because you like to hear from him.
Still, you can’t pretend that the sound of him calling you his girl didn’t make your heart lift with an unwelcome warmth. You remind yourself it’s a lie. Beck’s surely sitting close by, overhearing Rafe’s words.
“I’ll see you after the game,” you say low-spiritedly.
Rafe grimaces, guilt sinking into his bones. You’d once told him he makes you feel annoying and you were joking, but he hates to think that he’s really making you feel like that.
“How ‘bout you?” he asks hurriedly. “How’s your drive been?”
“Aside from Lyla’s road rage?” you joke.
“I do not have road rage,” Lyla defends herself with a playful gasp from the other side of the aisle.
Rafe watches as you look off-screen, the corners of your eyes crinkled as you laugh.
“Be careful,” he says, worry icing his chest. “Tell her to drive safe.”
“Oh, my God, I do!” Lyla half-shouts with a laugh. “Is he always that protective?”
“It’s why I like him so much,” you answer.
This is the point where Rafe would just be direct. He doesn’t play games. Never has. He’d ask you, straight up, the next time you're alone, if you meant that or if you were just faking affection in front of your best friend.
But he can’t do that when he already knows the answer. You told him yourself last weekend. I like you. Just not like that. Imagining something more with you just makes him a masochist.
“I’m offended that your boyfriend doesn’t trust me,” Lyla says.
“He doesn’t trust anyone,” you counter playfully. You look back at the screen. “I’ll let you go. Let me know if you change your mind.”
“Look what I found,” Lyla sing-songs. She holds up a bottle of the drink you’ve been looking for.
“I love you,” you tell her.
Hearing you say those words and knowing they’ll never be directed to him is its own brand of agony. And it’s so soft, so insane that he’s already thinking about love, but you’ve thrown him for such a loop that he can’t control it.
He catches his reflection in the corner of the screen. It’s almost unbelievable how good he is at it, looking so careless, numb, when his heart is cracking down the middle.
“Good luck today,” you say to him. “You don’t need it, though.”
“Thanks,” Rafe replies. “See you.”
You hang up.
“For a second, I thought you were telling Rafe you love him,” Lyla says.
“Oh,” you laugh, turning to look at the items on the shelves again. “No.”
“Do you?” she asks. “Or do you see it getting to that point?”
“Maybe,” you reply.
“You’re giving me crumbs,” she whines.
You meet your best friend’s eyes, having already heard her complaints about how little you share about your relationship. You’re tight-lipped about Rafe because you’d rather not have to stomach the shame of feeding Lyla lies.
“What do you want to know?” you ask.
“Everything. Start with the juicy stuff. Have you guys kissed?”
Imagining what it’d be like to kiss Rafe makes your stomach flutter. You wonder if his kisses would be like him; rushed, hard, impatient, or if he’d be soft and gentle and slow.
Your cheeks burn as you think about it, once again trying to pull yourself back into reality.
“Lots of times,” you say with a shrug.
“Have you guys…?” She raises her brows.
You laugh nervously. Her brother saw you leaving Rafe’s room. You doubt they’d ever gossip about you like that, but it’s better to keep the lies consistent.
You nod in response.
“And?”
“Let’s not do this here,” you chuckle, playing it off. “I don’t want strangers overhearing.”
Less than a minute after you hang up, Isaac gets Rafe’s attention with a nudge. He takes out an earbud.
“Don’t take this the wrong way,” Isaac says, “but how’d you get her to like you?”
“How the hell do I take that the right way?” he replies.
“No offense. She’s just so… nice,” Isaac tells him. “It’s a good thing. I can tell you’re happy. Way happier than you were with what’s-her-name.”
Rafe suggested this ploy so it’d seem that way. But with time, with getting to know you, with seeing what it’s like to be someone you care about, it’s become the truth.
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The game is hardly a nailbiter. Within the first period, you can tell the opponents aren’t strong contenders. It ends in an easy win.
You catch Rafe’s gaze a few times throughout the game, but you don’t get a chance to talk to him. On your way back to campus, he texts you that the team is celebrating their win in one of the common rooms in the athletes’ dorm building.
Lyla parks and before you can let her know you’ll call Rafe to come downstairs, she pulls out her phone.
“Hey,” she says after a pause. “Can you come down and let us in?”
You unbuckle your seatbelt, stomach turning. You know she’s talking to her brother.
“I could’ve called Rafe,” you say nervously when you step out of the car, walking side-by-side to the building.
“It’s no problem,” she says. You can tell that she thinks she did you a favor by taking care of it, but these days, being around Beck brings you an unwelcome, awkward tension.
Beck lets you in, holding the front door open as you exchange casual greetings. You pace through the lobby and the elevator door slides shut behind you.
Beck stands by the buttons, Lyla leans against the corner between you, and you cross your arms and look up at the numbers changing.
“When’s the last time just the three of us hung out?” Lyla says lightheartedly. “And this doesn’t count.”
Your eyes flit up to Beck, whose stare is already on you. Lyla has no idea what’s gone on between you, that an unspoken heaviness has settled between you since that day in front of his exam room last semester.
Does he regret it? Does he want to take it back? Does he wish he’d never spent years leading you on and just pursued you from the beginning? Does he want to tell you what he’s really thinking? Will he ever?
The questions swirl through your head, a pattern that, at this point, you could do in your sleep.
And you realize that the answers don’t matter. Not really. Because if it takes a lie, a delusion that you’re with another man for Beck to see your worth, he never deserved you in the first place.
It gives you hope that you’re finally taking back your heart, piece by piece.
You need to allow yourself to see who you are without this hold he has on you. To love yourself instead of waiting for somebody else to. To give yourself space to be you, unencumbered by what anyone else thinks.
“It has been a long time,” you say. “I think we’ve all just been swamped.”
“Swamped?” Beck asks you. “You doing okay?”
His eyes drift over your face, shadowed with a hint of sadness.
The elevator reaches its stop. The doors open with the ding of a bell. And you nod.
“Yeah,” you answer. “My head has never been clearer, actually.”
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Rafe was hoping you’d still be wearing his jersey, rubbing it in Beck’s face that you’re wearing his name, no matter if it is just a ploy.
His throat tightens when his eyes land on you as you step into the common room, taking you in as he leans against the armrest of a couch. You’re not in his jersey. And you’re with Lyla and Beck.
His heart sinks. Why didn’t you call him to come get you?
“Hey,” you say, beaming at Rafe as you approach him. “You were great tonight.”
You pull him into a hug, arms draped around his wide shoulders, inhaling the smell of his body wash.
Part of you is embracing him because it’s what a girlfriend would do. The other part is because it feels good to be held by someone who knows just how much pain you’ve been holding onto.
Rafe’s hands tighten at your waist, his nose in the crook of your neck, breathing you in.
“Pretty relaxed celebration,” you say, looking around when you part. Teammates and their friends and girlfriends are scattered around the room, grouped in different conversations.
You look at Rafe again and you swear that he’s somehow getting more handsome the longer you know him. Being inches away from him after daydreaming about kissing him makes the realization all the more overpowering.
The only thing you can feel is frustration because this is the last thing you need, to jump from liking one guy to another. Especially to one who has proven that he’d only hurt you.
You need your crush on Rafe to remain superficial. Any deeper and you’re just opening yourself up to more heartache.
“Yeah, this is really lowkey,” Lyla agrees with you. “You guys didn’t have it in you to party?”
“We’re pretty worn out,” Beck explains.
“Are you?” you ask Rafe, gazing up at him in that way that he’s grown to adore.
He is. He’s exhausted. And he’d fucking love it if you could go to his room just down the hall, lie in his bed together, doze off wrapped up in each other.
“Getting there,” he replies.
“I’ll let you guys talk,” Lyla says, then looks at you. “Or whatever it is you do.”
“Lyla,” you groan with a laugh. She slips away, prompting Beck to do the same. Nowadays, he seems to hate being around you when you’re with Rafe.
“What was that about?” Rafe murmurs to you quietly.
You lean on the armrest, settled next to him with your arm pressed against his, finding that you’ve grown to enjoy the conversations you’re always having outside of the crowds, the feeling of being tucked away into privacy together.
“She’s annoyed that I’ve been so secretive,” you reply just as quietly. “I don’t give her details about us, but can you blame me?”
“What does she want to know?”
“If we’ve kissed and… stuff,” you say, looking at the floor, feeling too awkward to tell him the truth. “I said yeah, but I couldn’t exactly come up with details about something that never happened.”
Rafe’s eyes lower to your lips, staring while your gaze stays on the floor.
“You tellin’ me you want to break your ‘no kissing’ rule?” he asks in a joking tone, as if his heart isn’t pounding in his ears right now.
“No,” you chuckle, looking back up at him. “I still want my first kiss to be real.”
It’s the first time he doesn’t like the sound of your laugh, because it’s apparently funny to you to consider having genuine feelings for him.
He swallows down the bitterness, determined not to punish you for his own pain. He’s done that before and he hated himself for it.
“If I played so great, why’d you take off my jersey?” he asks.
He didn’t his best tonight, feeling pricks of pain in his shoulder only a few minutes into the game. It made him afraid of getting into any hard collisions. He’s never been like that. It’s just as aggravating as it is depressing.
You lace your fingers together in your lap, fidgeting.
“I left it in the car,” you answer. You don’t offer him anything else, a faraway look in your eyes.
“Did something happen?”
You breathe out slowly, still in disbelief of how easily Rafe can read you. It’s a good thing you’re not really falling for him. He’d be able to tell.
“You’re too perceptive,” you murmur. He smirks. “It was just a weird elevator ride.”
“You could’ve called me to let you in.”
“Lyla called him before I could.” You clear your throat. “I’m finally seeing him act how I always wanted him to and… it doesn’t feel like I thought it would.”
Rafe studies you intently, hanging onto your words like they’re the only thing keeping him breathing.
“Everything that happened with him made me so insecure,” you confess. “And I think I shouldn’t date for real until I’m totally over him.”
At least Rafe won’t see you with another guy once you call this off, but now he’s wondering if he’ll see you at all, if you want to stay friends with someone like him, if he can manage being platonic with a girl who has so ruthlessly claimed his heart.
“And that’ll be long after we stage a mature, civil breakup where we mutually decide we’re better as friends,” you say. “And we are staying friends, got it?”
You offer him a smile. He returns it, relieved that you answered his unspoken concern, lucky that you want him around at all.
Rafe hopes you mean it, that you’re not just being nice. He can’t not have you in his life. He’ll just have to get used to quietly wanting you.
“Do we have to?” he teases, keeping his pain hidden.
You breathe a laugh, gently elbowing him, the contact making your heart feel a little less heavy.
It’s moments like these, when Rafe jokes with you and flashes his dimpled grin and shows glimmers of softness, that you worry your feelings will plunge into dangerous territory.
But you spent too long silently hoping someone would like you back. You can’t do it again.
next >
author’s note my bad… i love a man yearning too much to end it just yet… slowest slowburn i’ve ever written stg
if you want notifications on when i post my fics, follow @xorafe-library and turn on notifications 💘
#rafe cameron x reader#rafe cameron x y/n#rafe cameron x you#rafe cameron and you#rafe cameron and reader#rafe cameron and y/n#rafe fanfic#rafe cameron fic#rafe cameron fanfiction#rafe outer banks#rafe x y/n#rafe x reader#rafe x you
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my webnovel Tenesoir Memoirs has multiple epilogues, short stories that are set after the events of the main novel, each focused around a different character
I sort of figure that people will find themselves naturally adopting a few favorite characters and gravitating toward their epilogues first...but if you’re having trouble choosing, might I recommend reading the Cydia epilogue first? that, plus either the Eyron or the Lyla epilogue, ought to give the deepest cut into the lore
...I’m sort of giving a lot away just by saying “hey there’s a Lyla epilogue”, but it’s easily the most fun of the bunch, for many reasons ;)
#tenesoir memoirs#one of the reasons the lyla epilogue is fun is because it's got a little more interactivity#for one there's a choice that gets recorded and remembered - and subsequent text changes accordingly#here they're silly little cantrips but they're the sorts of tools you COULD use to create loops and logic gates and relationship values#eventually i'd love to do just that and make a much more nonlinear and reader-driven book#but for now [welcome to jurassic park voice] welcome to area 51
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Alright, here are my initial thoughts on Lyla:
Pros:
The series is very charming, more than any other PBS show currently airing. Some of the humor it holds gives PBS Kids GO! vibes. This is probably because of the slightly older demographic.
It does a good job at not rubbing the moral in your face, an issue with a lot of PBS shows nowadays.
Theme song is good.
Stu. Just Stu.
Cons:
The animation is mediocre at worst. Not PBS' best at all. Better than Alma's, but Wombats takes a clear edge above both.
Stu. As cute as he is, he serves no purpose other than being the allegory for a computer, and computational thinking that involves him isn't the subject of every episode.
I wasn't sure whether to put this one as a pro or a con because this one is subjective to whatever your opinion on the matter is, but the show uses a lot of slang and references. It doesn't interfere with the series, but it holds a possibility of becoming outdated as time goes on. All depends on what you think of it.
Overall, I'd give the series a sold 7.5/10. Of course, there's room for improvement but I'm sure the show will find its footing eventually.
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