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josephquinnswhore · 6 months ago
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I have decided for my own menty health that I am going to finish all of my one shot fics before I start continue my multi-part series.
Here are the series going on hold until further notice;
-eternal destiny: Oberyn Martell x female reader
-thirteen days: Dave York x female reader
-dead men don’t kiss: Arthur Morgan x female reader
-I see you: Joel Miller x female reader
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chinzhilla · 1 month ago
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No one can quit being who they really are. Not even a prince(ss).
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asxgard · 3 months ago
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Semper Fi | [1/8]
Dr. Jack Abbot x f!doctor!reader
| Next
Summary: You’re the ray of sunshine to Jack’s rain cloud. What do they say about opposites attracting?
[ Series Masterlist ]
Note: dipping my toes into writing for jack. i kinda love him and his dynamic with this reader, so that’s why there’s a question mark referencing the number of parts this will have. will likely be writing more for them.
(Semper Fi from the Latin “Semper Fidelis” meaning always faithful, which is the motto for the U.S. Marine Corps, but I also feel like it perfectly encapsulates his character)
starts roughly two years before The Pitt, making Ellis a PGY2 and Shen a PGY3 (also Langdon & Collins a PGY2, Mohan a PGY1/intern, and McKay & Mel would still be in med school, MS4). I also refer to the year by R#, meaning Resident Year#.
Word Count: 1.6k
Most of my works are 18+ due to adult language and content
Warnings: age gap (it feeds me/reader is late 20s, Jack is late 40s), foul language, people being bad at dealing with their feelings (…Jack), trauma, hospital setting, medical inaccuracies, sunshine/grumpy dynamic, angst, mild gore relating to patients, death mentions, mild suicide ideation/jokes
not beta read
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You rolled in from out of town like a spring day, warm and sweet. Jack Abbot really had no idea what to think of you at the start, assessing you silently — it had to be youthful optimism. It had to be. You were likely closer to half his age and only had a few years as an attending under your belt, with a persona that oozed family medicine or pediatrics.
How the hell did you end up in emergency medicine? He knew that whatever hospital you had come from, the Pitt would beat the cheery right out of you.
Just one shift and all your sweet smiles and doe eyes would sour.
It rattled him that you did not. Not even after your first week. Not even when your gloves and gown were soaked in the blood of a car crash victim, or when the trauma room was loud with a little girl screaming, or when you told the parents of a ten year-old-boy that he was dying. You walked out of Trauma-1 with a long sigh and then continued on about your day — like exiting back into the main area had reset something inside you.
Give it a few years, he thought bitterly.
Hearing your laugh echo through the halls of the ED sent alarm bells ringing throughout his system — how the hell were you laughing? What were you even laughing at?
Aside from the handful of conversations you had had together regarding patient care, you had not said much to him. Perhaps one of the nurses had advised you to steer clear of him, worried his no-nonsense, rigid exterior would rub off on you. It was clear as day to see most of the staff enjoyed having you on nights with them.
You moved with purpose throughout the ED, checking on several of your patients before moving to the charge desk to do charting, or scribble notes. He had to hand it to you, you were efficient, despite your soft edges.
The charge nurse on nights, Bridget, was talking to you quietly when he walked by, glancing up at the board. The lull was rare, like the quiet before the storm, and he found it interesting that you took time to enjoy it. He was brutal efficiency, checking crash carts and restocking, never letting himself grow idle.
He looked back at you, “Gonna chit-chat all day?”
Your eyes found his and you only blinked, unfazed by his tone. “Everything alright, Dr. Abbot?”
He frowned before gesturing to the board, crossing his arms over his chest.
“Don’t mind him, he’s always like that.” Said Bridget, with a simple shrug.
You only smiled at him before turning your attention back to Bridget. You picked up a tablet, focused more on that than on Bridget, but you nodded along as she told you about her son’s most recent football game, still clearly engaged.
He minded his tone when he directed you to the ambulance bay to help with a GSW victim being wheeled in. You assessed the man quickly, moving alongside the gurney into Trauma 1. You made quick work of it, paging surgery and ordering a handful of tests, before putting your hands to work.
Jack nearly sighed in relief, knowing he would not have to hand hold — the last thing he needed was an attending who he needed to keep an eye on. He knew he would do it anyway — perhaps it was the military in him, constantly taking in input of his surroundings, never allowing himself to miss anything.
How you guided Dr. Shen with an echocardiogram to show pericardial effusion and allowed him to drain the fluid. Or how you handed tough cases to Dr. Ellis to help her learn while you stood ever vigilant by her side. Or when you sat with the intern, Sullivan, through losing his first patient. He didn’t hear the advice you offered, but he noticed that Sullivan got back to work shortly thereafter, looking less miserable.
He realized that he still didn’t fully believe that you were a perfect fit for the ED, but you were a sound teacher.
Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center, or the Pitt as you had come to learn, was a welcomed change in your life. You had completed your residency and two years as an attending at New York-Presbyterian. You hadn’t fully intended to leave New York entirely, you just needed to get out of there — there was hardly any thought as to where you would end up.
Administration had needed you mostly on nights, which had not been your preference, but you didn’t argue. You took in your new workplace quickly, engaging with your new co-workers and trying to put your best foot forward whenever you clocked in.
While the Pitt was no less chaotic than the ED in New York, there was a particular restlessness you had begun to notice as the weeks ticked on. A never ending stream of patients, short-staffing and bad coffee seemed to weigh heavily on the ED, like it could never quite catch its breath.
The chief attending on your shifts, Dr. Abbot, took some adjusting to. He was nothing like the asshole at your last ED, but he usually had an stony, unreadable look on his face. You had never seen him crack a smile, and his gaze was more intimidating than you had expected. He had a habit of staring — not inappropriately, just assessing, just watching. Constantly observing the ED, patients, the board, you. It was not unkind, per se, but his eyes frequently held a heaviness that most backed away from — but instead of intimidating you, something instead took root in your gut.
You never took his demeanor to heart — he had been in the ED a long time, and with his calculated and calm practiced ease in which he operated, you suspected military training. The way he held himself, the way he moved, the way he demanded attention as soon as he stepped into a room did little to deter that thought.
The annoying little flutter made itself known every time you met his gaze in the weeks that followed, or when his hand met yours over a patient. It was frankly elementary, a stupid work crush — he was so much older, and he was your chief attending. Hardly appropriate. You still barely knew him, so it was easy enough to shove the feeling aside and work.
After one of the longer shifts where you had stayed an extra hour due to a hard to stabilize trauma, you wandered up to the roof. You had just intended to catch some air before returning to your apartment.
Just have a moment of solace to clear your clouded mind.
You were surprised to find you were not alone, looking across the roof to see Dr. Abbot. He was beyond the safety railing, overlooking the city, and a worry invaded your insides. Like in most things, he was just quietly looking over the city with a detached look in his eyes — not quite serious, but not entirely healthy.
You supposed this was how he dealt with a particularly gruesome shift. The topic of your own mortality was never a light one, but you could see how one might find comfort in the reminder of it. You liked to look at the sky, be reminded that life continues on, the world keeps spinning.
“So, you come here often?” You asked, startling him.
He turned to look at you, his eyes hard, “Do you?”
You shrugged with a smile, “I like to watch the sunrise.”
Abbot’s narrowed eyes held on you for several moments, before he turned back to the city, “Just spent the last hour and a half coding that kid…”
“I was there,” you said, stepping closer to the bars while still giving him ample space. “We did everything we could.”
His eyes were on you again. Sharp. Intimidating. “How do you do that?”
You raised an eyebrow at him, “What?”
He sighed, putting his hands back into his pockets like he was removing as much of himself as he could. “I don’t even know why I do this anymore. This job.”
“Because it matters.” You told him, looking over to the sun rising on the horizon. “Because we’re good at it. Because they need us. Because we need it.” You shrugged lightly even though he wasn’t looking at you. “The little things keep me going, mostly.”
Silence encased you. Most of your mentors had called that nativity.
“You know, a little girl tried to give me her stuffed bear today.” You said, glancing at him. “Her mother was coding and she wanted to give the bear to me, for luck.”
A simple smile came over your features. The mother and daughter in question had been hit by a drunk driver earlier in your shift — the mother had come in critical, while the daughter had come out of it with only a few minor scrapes and bruises.
“And those little moments? They’re enough.”
You breathed in all the horrors you had seen before exhaling them, giving them to the wind. Your mind would always be haunted by the things you saw, but you did always try to focus on the good, on the things you could control.
You both stood there together for several minutes. His outlook was not likely to change, not over some pretty words when he had spent his entire career pushing it down, and you weren’t looking to change it. But the quiet now resting between you? It was warm. It was something that was seen, like a shred of light trickling through the darkness.
He came back from the edge and moved under the railing. You moved off the roof together, a quiet understanding finally settling between you.
[ Next ]
Solely inspired by this post/picture that I saw last week
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I have a similar idea planned for Robby as well whoops
(still figuring jack out so please forgive this && this will not be as frequent/consistent as some of my other stuff while i learn to write for him lol)
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wanderlust-in-my-soul · 6 months ago
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Come a little closer...
The Love Doesn't Have Long Beans
The Sign
Cosmetic Playlover
Wandee Goodday
Kidnap
The Trainee
Moonlight Chicken
Be Loved In House: I Do
Our Youth
At 25:00 In Akasaka
My favorite pull-scenes (Part 2/?) as part of my favorite bl-tropes-collection in no particular order.
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bettystonewell · 4 months ago
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TO YOU I BELONG SERIES MASTERLIST
Main Masterlist || On AO3 || On Wattpad
Pairing: Alpha!Dean x Omega!Reader
Summary: Dean isn’t looking for a mate. Not only does he think he doesn’t deserve one, but the last place he expects to meet his soulmate is while on a case. Fate ain’t real. He still has free will, and saving you from monsters is just another part of the job.
The demons in your life, though? They’re closer than he realises, more personal, and his inner alpha won’t let him leave you behind with them. But can Dean embrace everything that comes with claiming someone? 18+ only MDNI
Tags: omegaverse, soulmate AU, pregnancy, strangers to lovers, hurt/comfort, SMUT, breeding, claiming, knotting, nesting, angst, fluff, endgame is Dad!Dean (and the parenting skills we all know he has), Protective!Dean, (dual POV), somewhat of a fix-it
WARNING: This story implies/references some potentially triggering topics including domestic abuse, sexual assault, a past miscarriage (chemical pregnancy), and follows the journey of how the characters deal with it. Please consider these carefully before reading. I can’t stress this enough!
A/N: This all started out as a one shot idea of Dean playing with kids and nerf guns. That one shot hasn’t been written yet because my brain wanted to know where the kids came from, but Dean will get his hands on a nerf gun in this fic.
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uploading weekly on Fridays 🇦🇺🕕
Chapter 1 - Yearning
Chapter 2 - Harbouring
Chapter 3 - Confronting
Chapter 4 - Familiarising
Chapter 5 - Languishing
Chapter 6 - Domesticating
Chapter 7 - Honeydaying
Chapter 8 - Disconcerting
Chapter 9 - Ruminating
Chapter 10 - Saddling
Chapter 11 - Containment
Chapter 12 - Sentiment
Chapter 13 - Derisionment
Chapter 14 - Announcement
Chapter 15 - Disappointment
Chapter 16 - Ligament
Chapter 17 - Retirement (working title)
Chapter 18 -
Chapter 19 -
Chapter 20 -
TIMESTAMPS TBA
EXTRAS/RELATED
Writing Game Snippet
100 Followers Celebration Sneak Peak
WIP WEDNESDAY (20/02) Chapter 16
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Please Remember folks, abuse isn’t always physical. It’s also not easy to admit when you’re going through it, or sometimes even realise. Look after yourselves, and keep an eye out for signs from those you love. ❤️
If you'd like to be tagged in this series or any of my other works, please let me know, or you can add yourself HERE
I’ll be tagging all the lovely people signed up for my DEAN TAGLIST too, of course 🥰
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wisteriasymphony · 2 months ago
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You thought he would make you a star and look what's happened to you. You're seeing things that aren't there. You can barely move. You're past your prime and your husband is trying to get rid of you, Emilie. Is a death on stage worth the applause?
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meanstepdad · 5 months ago
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soooo it sounds like they might be re-releasing the sims 1 & 2 soon, which negates a particular chunk of my sims zine regarding how neither game is supported by the publisher anymore and how you can still access them....... but either way i'm excited to finally share this big 60-page labor of love with everyone ❤️
i just sent the final version off to a badass local printer for a quote on getting some physical copies printed & bound, and the digital version of the zine will be available for free/pwyw as a token of gratitude to all the amazing sims modders and custom content creators that have been putting out their hard work for free for the past two decades.
i've been working on this zine in some shape or form since at least 2016 and i can't wait to finally share it. it's a love letter to a video game series that has been a big part of my life for almost as long as i've been alive and i hope you'll enjoy it ❤️
edit: the zine is finally here!
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dailyats · 3 days ago
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Cordelia Chase 😁😁😁 Angel [1999 - 2004]
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lololololchips · 9 months ago
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In Your Hands || Kim Mingyu
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In which Mingyu makes a bet with YN, his bestfriend and longtime crush, resulting in him getting a chance to go through and keep YN’s phone for a week. What happens when Mingyu goes through the phone and finds out things that can change his friendship with YN?
genre: smau, fake texts, short story au, friends to lovers, fluff, angst, non!idol, uni students!au
warnings: cursing, nsfw jokes, mingyu is toxic, talks about virginity, fem pronouns, jealousy, trust issues, mentions of alcohol and drugs
STATUS: COMPLETED
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1. | control your puppy
2. | code names
3. | ghosted
4. | the night of june 16th
5. | silence
6. | too late?
7. | LONDON I KNOW HOW YOU FEEL
8. | okay cinderella
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heretherebedork · 12 days ago
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Two different ways to teach your boyfriend to be how to eat food.
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alive-gh0st · 1 month ago
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❝Hearts Don’t Miss❞
Omni!Mark Grayson x Cupid!Reader➶
•♡🤍♡🤍♡🤍♡˚₊‧ ꒰ა 💗 ໒꒱ ‧₊˚♡🤍♡🤍♡🤍♡•
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
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❤︎ summary: after defying a divine directive and choosing mercy over order, you—a cupid built not to feel—fall from the realm and crash into a world you don’t belong to. wingless and exiled, you land on a planet bruised by war, grief, and something worse: apathy. but one figure watches your descent. he’s not a hero. not a god. just a man turned monster, carrying the weight of a planet he helped destroy. you were made to spark love. he was made to conquer. so why can’t he walk away?
❤︎ contains: sfw. celestial mythology. lonely immortals. slow-burn dynamics. post-war emotional fallout. deconstruction of love as a weapon/tool. and a wingless cupid with a cracked heart and a crooked smile.
❤︎ warnings: emotional manipulation (brief). themes of exile and identity loss. canon-typical violence references (omni-mark’s past). light blood/injury mentions. quiet existential grief. soft heartbreak. and the inconvenient ache of wanting to be wanted.
‪❤︎ wc: 4455
prologue, part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌a/n: i wanted to write something aching. something soft and sharp and too pink in all the wrong places. this is my love letter to the ones who were built to help others but never expected to be helped. to the hopeless romantics. to the heartsworn. if you’ve ever looked for your own thread and found nothing but empty space—i see you. let’s fall together.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
Before time had a name, there was love.
And before love had rules, there were those who enforced them.
You were one of them.
Cupids were never born in the way humans or any other beings are.
There was no crying, no clutching warmth, no heartbeat against heartbeat. You weren’t given to anyone—because in your world, nothing is ever truly given. It’s assigned.
And you were assigned to love.
Long before your first breath—or what could even be counted as a breath—your existence was stitched together with rose-gold thread and spun into something soft.
Something radiant. Something shaped to serve.
The Realm of Threads didn’t believe in accidents. It believed in connection.
Harmony. Devotion.
These were your first lessons—woven not from stories, but from structure. From a place built not to feel love, but to uphold it.
Cupids, as humans might call them, are not gods. They are not angels. They are not the chubby, winged caricatures drawn on glossy cards each February.
They are constructs.
Beings built from emotion itself, shaped by the pulse of the universe and tasked with one divine, inescapable truth—make them fall in love.
All of them.
Every soul in every world is marked by a thread—red, golden, soft, or shining. Invisible to most. Tangible only to your kind. And where those threads exist, your kind follows.
Weaving. Binding. Mending.
You never asked why. You were taught never to ask why.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
In your realm, the sky is made of lace.
Not literal lace—but that’s what it looks like, with its rippling tapestry of lights and longing.
You drifted through it as a child, surrounded by other Cupids—silent, graceful, unwavering. They didn’t speak unless they had to. Words wasted time. Emotion was observed, not expressed.
You were the odd one out almost immediately.
You giggled when you shouldn’t have. You sang with no rhythm. You watched humans too closely, too curiously. You wondered what it felt like to be kissed—not as a target, not as a mission—but as something wanted.
The Supervisors said your strings were too tight.
They meant your emotions.
You cared too much. Thought too hard. Dreamed in colors that didn’t belong to you.
But you were a prodigy, so they didn’t clip your wings. Not then. They praised your precision, your instincts. You’d never missed a target. Not once.
But love, you would learn, is only beautiful when it behaves.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
You were trained before you ever knew what training meant.
In the Realm of Threads, there is no childhood. Not in the way humans define it. There are no lullabies, no scraped knees, no tumbling laughter in the grass. There is structure. There is schooling.
There is silence.
You were given a pod—not a room, not a bed. A pod. Sterile and softly lit, humming faintly with emotional frequency.
It pulsed with the echoes of distant connections: engagements, kisses, heartbreak, soulmates colliding on foreign soil.
It was meant to teach you. Not to feel—but to understand what feeling looks like.
Your first lessons weren’t in numbers or words. They were in observation.
Screens stretched across your wall like windows into other realms. Every second of every day, you watched humans love each other. Fumble and flourish. Make mistakes. Fix them. You learned the cadence of confession, the stillness before a first kiss, the ache of waiting by a phone that wouldn’t ring.
You took notes.
You practiced on simulations. Shadow versions of real people, constructed for training. They were emotion puppets—coded to respond, to mimic the human condition, but never feel it.
You pulled their strings like a composer, conducting the perfect crescendo of a meet-cute or a second chance.
And you were so good at it.
Even the elder Cupids, old as planetary rotations, took notice.
They called you “Silken.”
They called you “True-Handed.”
They said your instincts were woven with clarity few possessed.
But even then—you knew something was wrong.
Because love wasn’t clean. It wasn’t predictable. It wasn’t math.
You saw it in the gaps between the simulations—in the real footage, in the stolen glances and unsent letters.
Love was messy.
And you weren’t allowed to say that.
So instead, you smiled. You bowed your head. You aced your assignments. And when it was finally time to receive your bow—the instrument that would mark you as a field Cupid, ready to enter the human realm—you let them place it in your hands like a crown.
Ceremonial. Divine. Cold.
Your wings fluttered for the first time that day. Not from pride. From something else.
Restlessness.
Because you weren’t sure you wanted to be part of this system.
But you’d been shaped for it. And in the Realm of Threads, shape is everything.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
They say Cupids don’t feel the way humans do. But if that were true—why did it ache?
You never had a red string.
That was the first thing you noticed.
You saw them everywhere—thread-thin, glowing like veins of fire across the fabric of reality. Around wrists, through hearts, tied in impossible loops from continent to continent, galaxy to galaxy.
Red. Gold. Silver.
Some pulsed softly. Some burned bright. Some frayed at the ends—doomed to break.
But you?
You had none.
You looked. Every year. Every cycle. Every mirror.
And there was never one waiting for you.
The instructors said it was proof of your purpose.
You were meant to love, not to be loved.
Cupids didn’t need soulmates. You were the threads—not what they tied together.
But still, when you were alone in your pod—your crown-glass screen humming with soft simulations—you sometimes wrapped a ribbon around your own finger and pretended.
Just for a moment. Just to feel what it might be like to belong to someone.
To be chosen.
To be someone’s reason.
You told no one.
Cupids weren’t supposed to pretend.
Not about that.
You always grinned too brightly. Talked too much. Got too close to the humans you helped.
You asked too many questions.
Why this couple? Why that connection? Why did heartbreak sometimes look so much like love?
You weren’t supposed to wonder. You were supposed to execute. Deliver arrows. Create outcomes. Adjust the threads.
But you liked watching after the mission was done.
You stayed longer than you should have. Saw the way people clung to one another. Fought. Forgave. Grieved. Moved on. Sometimes, even when the threads said they wouldn’t.
And worse—you started to feel happy for them.
Genuinely.
Not in the approved, detached sense of “mission accomplished,” but like… something warm bloomed in your chest just watching two people choose each other.
One day you told another Cupid—casually, as if it was no big thing—that it must feel nice to be loved like that.
She looked at you like you were malfunctioning.
Reported you. Quietly.
You were summoned for evaluation.
They used soft words. Nothing cruel—just… firm.
“Attachment undermines your clarity.”
“You’ve been too immersed in lower realms.”
“Emotional mimicry is a known side effect. You’ll adjust.”
You didn’t adjust.
You just learned how to lie better.
You laughed louder. You perfected your posture. You earned the nickname Heartsworn, and everyone said it with admiration.
But you felt empty most days.
Like a thread that had never been tied.
And it gnawed at you, that emptiness—because you were built to help others find connection.
So why did it feel like you’d never have your own?
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
It happened on a world not so different from Earth.
Small. Blue. Quiet in the way only dying stars can make a planet feel.
The threads there were thin. Brittle. Nearly broken.
It needed love desperately. That’s why they sent you.
Because you never missed. Because your aim was perfect. Because you were the shining example—the “Heartsworn,” the favorite, the infallible.
And at first, it was routine.
Two beings. Two threads. One frayed at the end, knotted tight around grief. The other hesitant, flickering. Their paths crossed in a way that felt almost poetic—a shared umbrella. An open bookstore. A laugh like recognition.
You hovered above them, bow pulsing in your palm. A clean shot. Two arrows. One for each.
But then something shifted.
The woman—your target—she looked up at the man, eyes tired but tender. And the way he looked back… like he was remembering how to breathe.
And you saw it.
She had already loved him.
It hadn’t been forced. It hadn’t been orchestrated. No divine architecture. No thread pulling them forward.
Just… choice.
Human, messy, miraculous choice.
You hesitated.
And that’s all it took.
Your bow trembled in your hands. Not from error—but from resistance.
Because for the first time—you didn’t want to interfere. You didn’t want to force it.
You wanted to let them be.
You lowered your weapon.
And then—because you were soft, and reckless, and maybe stupid in the eyes of the Supervisors—you spoke to her.
She didn’t see you. Not clearly. Just a shimmer in the corner of her eye. But you whispered anyway.
“You don’t need help. You already chose him.”
The words weren’t authorized. Your presence was meant to be undetectable. You were not allowed to alter the script.
But you did.
And for a moment—nothing happened.
Then the red thread between them sparked.
Bright. Violent. Uncontrolled.
It burned itself into existence. Without your arrow. Without divine sanction.
And they kissed.
Not because you told them to.
Because they wanted to.
Your lips curled into a soft smile.
You didn’t regret it.
But the moment you returned to the Realm of Threads, you knew something was wrong.
The lights were dimmed. The supervisors were waiting. No lectures. No trials.
Just one sentence.
“You interfered.”
You opened your mouth to defend yourself—but the guards were already reaching for your wings.
You’d heard what it sounded like.
The sound of ripping. The way it cuts deeper than bone.
But you’d never imagined it would hurt like this.
Your knees hit the lace-floor. Your mouth stayed silent.
You didn’t scream.
Not because it didn’t hurt—but because they wanted you to.
And maybe, just maybe, you wanted to take that from them.
Dignity, you told yourself.
Dignity is all I have left.
You were told you would not be recycled. You were too “contaminated.” Too unstable. A bad example.
So instead—they exiled you.
You didn’t get to ask where.
Just a flash of cold light—
And then the sound of wind.
Falling.
Alone.
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
You hit the ground hard.
Not like a leaf drifting. Not with grace. Not with poise. Not like the Cupids in the stories.
Like a comet.
A streak of light through an unfamiliar sky, dragging heat and ache in your wake.
You didn’t black out right away—but you almost wished you had.
Because the first thing you felt wasn’t the crash. Wasn’t the way your ribs seized or the way your shoulder twisted beneath your fall.
It was the space between your wings.
The hollow.
The absence.
You gasped.
Air—not laced with threadlight, not humming with frequency, just air—rushed into your lungs like punishment.
You curled onto your side, dirt grinding into the soft parts of you. Wet grass clung to your skin. The sky above was wrong—blue, yes, but so still. No shimmering frequencies. No glowing red filaments. Just clouds, soft and slow.
You were somewhere real.
Somewhere unmarked.
Somewhere alone.
It wasn’t the pain that made you want to cry.
It was the quiet.
Because back home—even when you were alone in your pod, even when no one looked at you—there was always something.
The buzz of love blooming. The echo of longing. The soft, constant pull of other people’s threads, humming just outside your senses.
But now?
Nothing.
It was gone.
You sat up slowly.
And then immediately flopped back down with a tiny, theatrical groan.
“Ouchie,” you mumbled to no one, voice breathy and soft and definitely not pained—because no, you were totally fine. Just a bit… stunned. And mildly bleeding. And definitely wingless.
But you were smiling. Kind of. Maybe.
Okay, so it trembled a little at the edges.
“I’ve had worse landings,” you said aloud—which was a lie. You’d never landed before. You’d always floated.
You tried again, slowly, every nerve screaming. Your knees trembled. Your arms buckled. You caught yourself on the soft slope of a hill, hands sinking into wildflowers and moss.
You blinked down at them.
Yellow, pink, violet. Stubbornly bright.
They looked like something out of a simulation.
They weren’t.
They were real.
Your mouth twisted.
Of course you landed in a field of flowers. Of course.
You laughed.
It came out cracked and hoarse. Almost a sob.
Because everything hurt, and everything was still spinning, and you had no idea where you were, and no one was coming for you, and—
No.
No, you weren’t going to cry. You weren’t.
Cupids didn’t cry.
Even clipped ones.
Even broken ones.
Even ones bleeding into someone else’s sky.
Still, you tried to push yourself up, wobbling on legs that hadn’t had to support you since your designation. It felt wrong. Heavy. Like gravity had teeth and it didn’t trust you. You teetered. Fell to your knees again.
And giggled.
Which also trembled a little.
“I meant to do that.”
You dusted imaginary dirt from your imaginary uniform and gave an exaggerated little curtsy to the empty air.
No one clapped. Rude.
You dragged yourself to your feet.
Shaky. Awkward. Wobbly in a way you hadn’t felt in cycles. The Realm of Threads taught you to float everywhere. Gliding was cleaner. More efficient. Less emotional.
You hadn’t really walked since childhood simulations.
The ground felt weird under your feet. Solid. Gritty.
Your bow was still intact. Miraculously. You hugged it close like a stuffed toy, curling in on yourself for a moment, letting the quiet press into your bones.
You could still feel it.
That place between your shoulders—where your wings had been. Like a ghost limb. Like something sacred had been carved out of you and left a silence behind.
You hated it.
But you kept moving.
Maybe—if you helped someone on this world—they would come back for you. Maybe if you just kept doing your job, proved you were still useful, still good, they’d rewind the exile.
Reattach what they’d taken.
Please.
You stumbled once. Then again. Then face-planted into a patch of daisies with a grunt so undignified you groaned into the soil.
“Get it together,” you mumbled into the grass.
You pushed yourself back up. Sat on your knees for a second. Took a breath.
You didn’t know how long you wandered after that.
Minutes? Hours? You lost time in the way only the heartbroken can.
It got dark fast.
The sky burned gold, then violet, then black. Stars blinked overhead—foreign constellations, wrong patterns.
You were still limping through the field when the noise came.
A whoosh.
Sharp. Cutting. Like something splitting the air in half.
You froze.
Turned slowly.
And then—saw him.
Not a blur. A shape. Coming toward you like a storm with legs.
You only had a second to register what was coming at you: tall, fast, red and white—a storm in the shape of a man. And a scowl, carved from thunderclouds.
Flying.
He was flying.
You squinted.
Not a Cupid. Definitely not a Cupid.
A human?
No.
No, he felt… too much.
You didn’t have your thread-sight anymore, but you could still feel.
Emotions. Echoes.
He felt like gravity.
Like something that had no business coming closer—and was doing it anyway.
He landed hard. Just a few feet away.
Harder than you had. The ground splintered beneath his feet, shockwaves rippling out in a perfect ring. Dust and wildflowers burst upward like a gasp. He stood there for a beat—motionless.
And you… just stared.
Red suit. White accents. Red cape. Black goggles like midnight slicing across his face. He didn’t glow. He didn’t shine. He loomed.
His presence felt like gravity doubled—like the world bowed to his weight and dared not rise again.
You blinked at him slowly. Then offered a tiny wave.
“Hi.”
Silence.
He didn’t move.
You glanced behind you like maybe he was staring at someone else, but no—those mirrored goggles were fixed on you.
“Hiii,” you tried again, voice cheerier. “Okay, so I know this looks weird. But I promise I’m not here to hurt anyone! Unless, um. You count your planet’s gravitational field. Which did kinda kick my butt—ow.”
No reaction. His posture didn’t shift. You had a sudden, vivid mental image of being vaporized.
“I’m just passing through!” you rushed, hands up. “A… a tourist! On a very involuntary vacation!”
Still nothing.
Well, maybe not nothing—he was breathing.
Barley.
His voice, when it came, was sharp enough to slice open a planet.
“You’re not human.”
Your grin faltered for a second before rebounding, like a rubber band that’s been snapped too many times.
“Nope. Not even a little bit! But I’m very human adjacent in a lot of ways! I’ve watched a lot of rom-coms and I know how to do a proper hug—although full disclosure, I might fall over during it because of the whole… clipped wings situation.”
His jaw tightened. His eyes—hidden though they were—felt like twin drills boring into the softest parts of you.
“Why are you here?”
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Then plastered on a sheepish smile.
“That’s kind of a long story,” you admitted, voice dipping softer now. “The short version is… I got kicked out of my hom—my realm. For caring too much.”
Something flickered across his face. Brief. Gone before you could catch it.
“And now,” you continued, tone brightening again as you gestured to the wildflower field like a very proud but slightly concussed game show host, “I’m here! In… wherever here is. Honestly, it’s pretty. Good flowers. Ten out of ten. Bit of a rough welcome, but I’ve had worse.”
“You’re bleeding.”
Your hand drifted unconsciously to your back, fingertips brushing the jagged place where wings used to rise.
You shrugged. “It’s mostly cosmetic.”
He said nothing. Just stared.
You took a step forward—then immediately lost your balance and fell face-first into a patch of daisies.
There was a beat of silence. Then two. Then three.
And then—so faint you thought you imagined it—you heard the faintest exhale of breath from the man in red and white.
Not a laugh.
But maybe the ghost of one.
You rolled onto your back and grinned up at the stars.
“See?” you said, voice light. “I’m great at making first impressions.”
。゚•┈୨♡୧┈• 。゚
The second he saw you, he didn’t trust you.
Not because you looked dangerous. No—you didn’t. You were crumpled in a bed of wildflowers, wobbling like a broken marionette and smiling like someone had painted joy over grief and hoped no one would notice the cracks.
But that was exactly why he didn’t trust you.
People didn’t fall from the sky and grin. Not here. Not anywhere. Not anymore.
So he hovered, silent, watching you crawl upright like you didn’t know how to use your own legs. Like the planet was something foreign. Like gravity was something new.
That wasn’t normal.
Mark had seen a lot of things in a lot of universes—false gods, black holes, men split into fractions of themselves—but this? A girl with stardust on her skin and nothing in her hands but a bow? That was new.
He landed hard. On purpose. Let the ground feel him.
You flinched. Not at the sound—at the silence that followed it.
And then you looked up.
Big eyes. Bare feet. Mouth bleeding at the corner, but curved like you hadn’t noticed. Or didn’t care.
And then—
“Hi.”
Like you hadn’t just fallen from orbit.
He didn’t speak.
“Hiii,” you tried again, softer. “Okay, so I know this looks weird. But I promise I’m not here to hurt anyone! Unless, um. You count your planet’s gravitational field. Which did kinda kick my butt—ow.”
Still he said nothing.
He didn’t move.
Mark watched.
Measured.
Assessed.
You were glowing at the edges—not visibly—but in some low, stubborn frequency. Like the kind of candle you couldn’t blow out even after you’d shattered the holder.
It irritated him.
He spoke without meaning to.
“You’re not human.”
You beamed, wounded and bright. “Nope! Not even a little bit!”
You kept talking. Rambling. Fumbling your way through some patchwork lie about tourism and rom-coms and wings—clipped, apparently.
He didn’t interrupt.
Didn’t need to.
He was looking for something. A tell. A crack.
“Why are you here?”
That stopped you.
Just a second. Barely.
But it was enough.
Your grin shrank. Eyes dipped. Voice turned soft.
“That’s kind of a long story. The short version is… I got kicked out of my hom—my realm. For caring too much.”
That flickered something inside him.
He crushed it before it could breathe.
Mark didn’t do soft. He didn’t do “caring.” That was the problem with the others. They hesitated. Thought. He didn’t. That’s why he survived.
So why was he still here?
Why wasn’t he flying away?
Why hadn’t he broken you in half the moment you lied?
You stepped forward. Tripped. Fell face-first into a clump of flowers like a deer learning how to walk for the first time.
He didn’t flinch, but he exhaled—just once. Quiet. Almost amused.
You rolled onto your back and smiled at the stars.
“See? I’m great at making first impressions.”
He hated how you said it.
Like it mattered.
Like someone out here was still capable of being good.
He walked toward you.
You didn’t run. You didn’t crawl away. You sat there, hands splayed out behind you, watching him like you weren’t sure if he was going to help you up or crush your skull.
Smart.
He stopped in front of you.
Tilted his head.
“I should kill you.”
Your eyes widened, but you didn’t move. “You could. You really could. But I’d prefer we didn’t start there?”
“Then give me one reason not to.”
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Looked up at him like you were weighing the clouds.
“I don’t have one.”
Mark stared.
You continued.
“I mean—I don’t know if I’m important. I don’t have a secret code or an army or even a sandwich right now. But…”
You reached up, touching your back—where the blood had dried, sticky and shimmering.
“But I used to be someone. I used to help people fall in love. And maybe that doesn’t matter to you—but it mattered to them.”
There was a silence.
He wasn’t sure what he expected you to say.
But it wasn’t that.
He should leave.
He should fly away and chalk you up to another anomaly.
Instead, he said:
“Can you still do it?”
You blinked. “Do what?”
“Make people love.”
Your lips curled up. Slowly. Sadly. “I don’t know.”
Another pause.
You were watching him too closely now. Like you were trying to read a string that wasn’t there.
“You’re not really from here either,” you said softly. “Are you?”
He didn’t answer.
Didn’t have to.
You already knew.
“Are you gonna hurt me?” you asked.
He looked at you, at the way your voice didn’t tremble, even though your body did.
And for once—he told the truth.
“I don’t know.”
You nodded.
“Fair.”
Then you reached up and offered your hand.
Not in fear. Not in desperation.
Just… like someone who was used to offering something and not getting it taken.
Mark didn’t take it.
But he didn’t crush it either.
He looked past you—at the dark hills, the useless stars, the broken silence.
After conquering this place and killing his father—he didn’t know what this planet was anymore.
Didn’t care.
But he had nowhere else to be. Not anymore.
He turned.
Walked.
And when he didn’t tell you to stay—
You followed.
Not too close.
Just… close enough.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
˗ˏˋ 𝓴𝓲𝓼𝓼 𝓶𝒆 ˎˊ˗
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Once, you were small. Once, you believed everything they told you.
Your first robe was the color of a peach blossom.
It shimmered when you turned, sleeves brushing the floor, too big for your arms and still perfect in every way. You’d never worn something so soft.
You twirled three times in front of the mirror, arms out like wings, giggling because everything felt light.
“You look very neat,” said one of the elder Cupids, gliding past with a clipboard. “Remember to keep your posture upright when you’re selected for observation.”
“I will!” you promised, standing taller.
The robe swished when you walked. You liked that. It made you feel important. Like you were finally what they said you would be—purposeful.
Part of something big.
You didn’t understand everything yet, but that didn’t matter.
You were going to be a Cupid.
And Cupids were good.
“Today,” said another instructor, voice warm and practiced, “you’ll learn about threads.”
You beamed. Sat up straighter. Listened with all your heart.
“Every being has a thread,” they explained, conjuring a floating hologram that flickered softly through the training chamber. “They wrap around us, tie us to our people. See?”
The threads shimmered—red, gold, silver, glowing like starlight.
You gasped. It was so pretty. It made your chest feel warm.
“You’ll help people find each other,” the instructor went on. “You’ll guide their steps. Fix what’s frayed. Strengthen what’s fragile.”
“I can do that!” you blurted.
A few other young Cupids turned to look at you, but you didn’t care. Your legs were swinging off the floating bench and your hands were already up.
“I wanna do the red ones,” you said proudly. “Those are the soulmate ones, right?”
The instructor smiled. So gently. Like they were talking to someone a little slow, but very sweet.
“Oh, darling,” they said. “You don’t get one.”
You blinked.
“Huh?”
“You won’t have a red thread,” they said again, same caring voice, same soft smile. “Cupids don’t get them.”
You frowned. “But… we’re people too?”
“No,” they said kindly. “You’re not.”
Another Cupid, older, came to kneel beside you. Their hair was smooth. Their smile too perfect.
“You’re something better,” they told you. “You were made for love. You don’t need to be in it.”
“But—” you started.
“We give it,” the first instructor interrupted gently. “That’s your gift.”
You hesitated.
“But doesn’t anyone ever want us back?” you asked in a small voice.
The instructor’s smile didn’t change.
“No one has ever asked that before.”
You blinked. Sat very still.
They stood again.
“Alright, little hearts,” the elder said, clapping once. “Time for simulation prep. Let’s learn how to listen when a thread hums.”
Everyone got up.
You did too.
You smiled. Because they smiled. Because everyone around you looked so sure, so peaceful, so right.
You didn’t want to be the wrong one.
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌
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ᯓ❤︎ requested by: @lycheee-jelly
taglist sign up: 𓊆ྀིhere𓊇ྀི
﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌﹌With Love, @alive-gh0st
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chinzhilla · 4 months ago
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Take the QL Style Quiz for personalized QL recommendations! | insp ♡♡
Happy Valentine's Day beloveds! I wish you all lots of love 🩷💜
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on-the-clear-blue · 1 month ago
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Dan had many feelings. Sure most of them were negative and hate was a very big one of his many emotions.
But another one was pure and simple ecstatic euphoria.
Because...he was himself again. Gone was a big and bulky form, back was his...normal self. He had forgotten what it had felt like to look in the mirror and see himself, not the twerp or the clone, not some demented memory screaming in horror at what he had done.
No. It was his face, thr soft curves that he got from his mother, the dark hair and blue eyes from his father, the eyebrows that matched Jazz's, not a single lick of Vlad was in him, not the scars from his global dominance, no deformed fangs that bit into his flesh, no flaming hair that he couldn't shape.
It was just Him.
And he couldn't help but feel great about that.
---
Danny watched as Dante (they all couldn't be named Danny) stare at himself in the mirror. He himself didn't have the personal need to preen as much as the teen was doing, so perhaps it was just the quirk of his other self.
Stopping behind him, Danny couldn't help but smile a bit, the teen looked happy, sure he wasn't smiling but Danny knew his teenage face well enough to know that Dante was majorly pleased.
Blue met blue through the mirror, and Danny nodded to the teen, Dante had been given an old clone body after a long rehabilitation, so it was set in Danny's teenage years, even though the man had aged a decade.
Smirking as he ruffled Dantes hair (which earned him a snap of teeth and a jab to the kidneys) Danny nodded to the door, "Come on, your going to be late for school, it's your first day so you can't miss it."
Dante gave a glare and a huff, but the glare softened as he looked at himself in the mirror, and Danny was struck at just how young the teen looked at the moment.
Apprehension and tension was clear on the boys face, but behind that was worry, panic even Danny knew the face well, having had it many times before.
"Do I really have to fucking go? Doesn't being a war criminal exclude me from such things?" Dante snarked, turning to actually properly look at Danny, who could only chuckle.
"We both know you actually want to, cant be an astronaut without a PhD and cant get that withour a high-school diploma...You quit before graduating...last time." Danny said with a stiffness.
The teens eyes hardened "Well excuse fucking me, seeing everyone I loved and cared about die in an explosion made me not really feel up to going to god damn fucking school."
Shoving past Danny, Dante stormed past him, a trail of steam and the sent of smoke following him out of the house and onto the streets of the new city.
Some ecto filled, low life having, bat infested city...called Gotham.
---
Damian tugged at his tie, fixing it into place after touching up his hair once more, frowning as he fiddled with it, making a mental note to trim it soon.
Grabbing an sponge, the teen dabbed it into a small tub of tan makeup, before softly applying it to his face, his touch light as he goes over the back eye he was trying to hide.
Yes the Robin mask did offer some protection, but not nearly enough to fully stop a Venom junkie that just got a new dose.
And while he was thankful to get the new lead on Banes operation selling Venom, a deep nagging part of him hated that his face had payed the price for it.
Damian hated that he cared about his appearance, and hated that he associated it with his mother.
Learning how to do disguise make up had been one of the only times during his training he had spent extended periods of time with his mother, skills that he was still using to this day.
Putting down the sponge, Damian got a fresh one and dabbed it onto his face, blending the colors until the purples and blues of the black eye disappeared completely.
"Master Damian, the car is pulled up to the front, though i shall be taking you Master Richard has offered to pick you up. I must tend to your idiotic father, as he seems to be trying to stand again on both his broken legs. Perhaps this time I shall leave him in a straight jacket before hiding the keys, that should keep him down for longer..." the old butler muttered to himself at the end, but Damian could only sigh as he stepped away from the mirror.
"Just invite Miss Kyle or Eamm Clark to keep him down." Damian said, toeing on his shoes as he steps out from his room, taking the offered backpack from Alfred as he walks by him.
"Ahh...that might solve the issue of him staying in his room...but both of them have a possibility of causing more harm to him.." the elder butler said, walking close behind his youngest charge as he made his way to the front of the house.
Damian pulled a face, "Disgusting Pennyworth, please do not discuss my fathers...promiscuous relationships with those two, I do not want to dig out my ear drums just to burn them but I shall if you continue."
The old man gave a not-smirk, the kind thst was more frown but held a jolly feeling. "Oh of course Master Damian..."
Rolling his eyes, the teen got to the front steps, even half way through them in blissful silence before Alfred spoke once more. "Ah. I was set it inform you yesterday day but as you had an injury I had forgotten, you will be receiving a new classmate today, your father had done a screening of course, and they stood out because of their parents, who happen to be inventors that like making things go...to steal a phrase from Master Jason, Boom."
Damian just nodded, "I shall research them. I will know everything about them by the time I will come home."
"And that is all I can ask you Master Damian" Alfred said, opening the car door, "I do hope thst the day is not wasted, it is not every day that one starts highschool."
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wanderlust-in-my-soul · 1 year ago
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Light as a feather
Kiseki: Dear To Me
Love In The Air
Wedding Plan
Love In Translation
Bake Me Please
Last Twilight
Hidden Agenda
I Feel You Linger In The Air
Playboyy
Kiseki: Dear To Me
My favorite lift-ups (Part 1/?) as part of my favorite bl-tropes collection, in no particular order.
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negrowhat · 4 months ago
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QUICK! Choose Your Fave From My Fave: Bathtub Scenes
HEY FRIENDS! I'm back with another BL Poll! Y'all say you like them so I'll keep doing them until y'all tell me to stop. Plus I love choosing random themes and having y'all pick a fave from them! This is strictly tubs but I could do a shower poll if you all want.
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