#please stop using ai for everything
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fillory-and-furtherr · 14 days ago
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“I write fics with AI”
So you didn’t write it actually hope this helps
“I get help for my fics with ChatGPT ”
Okay well I spend four+ hours a night in a writing K-hole as a pure act of passion while I kick my feet and giggle about dialogue because I’m insane and that is always going to be better than whatever the fuck AI generates.
Using AI to create “art” isn’t just unethical but it’s cowardly- it takes the joy out of living and out of humanity.
To be human is to create to have passion to do things solely because we enjoy them stop letting AI take away the joy in being human- please.
Make bad art make any art at all but make it yourself- partake in the human act of creation. (Also it’s killing the environment)
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sophiebaybey · 20 days ago
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Not to preach to the choir but I wonder if people generally realize that AI models like ChatGPT aren't, like, sifting through documented information when you ask it particular questions. If you ask it a question, it's not sifting through relevant documentation to find your answer, it is using an intensely inefficient method of guesswork that has just gone through so many repeated cycles that it usually, sometimes, can say the right thing when prompted. It is effectively a program that simulates monkeys on a typewriter at a mass scale until it finds sets of words that the user says "yes, that's right" to enough times. I feel like if it was explained in this less flattering way to investors it wouldn't be nearly as funded as it is lmao. It is objectively an extremely impressive technology given what it has managed to accomplish with such a roundabout and brain-dead method of getting there, but it's also a roundabout, brain-dead method of getting there. It is inefficient, pure and simple.
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beastking-golion · 6 months ago
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I need y’all to focus on the reason the shooting happened over making memes about everything for once in your lives.
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calkale · 7 months ago
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i cannot wait to get out of school so i never have to be around kids using ai for their work again 😐
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kawacake · 29 days ago
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PLEASE CAN WE STOP WITH THE AI FICS BRO 💔 IM SCROLLING HAVING A GOOD ASS TIME READING FICS THEN I COME ACROSS THIS SPECIFIC GOJO ONE AND BY THE FIRST PARAGRAPH YOU COULD TELL TS IS A FUCKING I ITS SO IRRITATING LIKE IF YOU CANT WRITE BUT WANT TO LEARN HOW TO DO SO ASK AN ACTUAL WRITER & ITS PLENTY OF VIDEOS THAT CAN HELP YOU!!! YOU DONT HAVE TO USE AI GNG🥀🥲
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graceofagodswrath · 11 months ago
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Conversing with AI generators is like conversing with the fae. Like yes, odd little program whose existence I barely comprehend, I need this specific paragraph with this specific information with this specific structure. Oh no, I forgot to specify that I don't want bullet points? No, please don't reload the whole article, just this one paragraph, oh god oh no its regenerating everything and its all wrong and now I must give up my first born to the infinite creature of code god help me please
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fbfh · 1 month ago
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stark tower - basement lvl 1
Floor B1: shipping/receiving, loading docks, and inventory
primary shipping and receiving area, loading docks for larger cargo, general inventory
also contains freight and cargo elevators and loading docks for deliveries
additionally also has secure elevators for employees, as well as a secure stairwell
probably has employee bathrooms (I feel like there's at least one or two per floor this is a bigass building)
also I know some people don't like ai images (which I totally get the internet is v oversaturated with it right now) I've added a cut. below are visuals/concept images for this floor of stark tower, enjoy!!
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DISCLAIMER: the above images were generated using ai (chatgpt and gentube) as concept/inspiration images
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w04hxo · 10 months ago
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d3adgayw1zzyr3ad3r · 4 months ago
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PLEASE. I DON'T WANT TO READ WHAT CHAT GPT CALLS ART, GIVE ME THE MOST UNTAME SHIT YOUR MIND CAN CONJURE, CHAT GPT WOULD NEVER THINK OF
"The hulk likes his hair braided" like okay RUN WITH IT
"Harry potter never actually did work in his classes and his teachers just passed him out of pity cause haha orphan" Okay now WRITE IT, WHY didn't he work?
ASK YOURSELF QUESTIONS. GIVE YOURSELF ANSWERS, OR GET A SECOND OPINION. CREATE SOMETHING NEW. YOU ARE CAPABLE.
ORIGINAL. SHIT.
These are two things I just made up! No AI, no crying to chat GPT, just some unhinged shit that someone could totally write some oneshots out of.
GET. AI. OUT. OF. FANDOM. Stop making headcanons with it, stop making fanfic with it, stop making fanart with it. If I see one more "asking chatgpt *blank* about *character/characters in a fandom* I'm going to lose my goddamn mind. Use your own fucking brain, stop asking AI to do everything. You could even ask other real people what they think. Just. Stop. Using. AI. In. Creative. Spaces.
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leveragehunters · 8 months ago
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CoPilot in MS Word
I opened Word yesterday to discover that it now contains CoPilot. It follows you as you type and if you have a personal Microsoft 365 account, you can't turn it off. You will be given 60 AI credits per month and you can't opt out of it.
The only way to banish it is to revert to an earlier version of Office. There is lot of conflicting information and overly complex guides out there, so I thought I'd share the simplest way I found.
How to revert back to an old version of Office that does not have CoPilot
This is fairly simple, thankfully, presuming everything is in the default locations. If not you'll need to adjust the below for where you have things saved.
Click the Windows Button and S to bring up the search box, then type cmd. It will bring up the command prompt as an option. Run it as an administrator.
Paste this into the box at the cursor: cd "\Program Files\Common Files\microsoft shared\ClickToRun"
Hit Enter
Then paste this into the box at the cursor: officec2rclient.exe /update user updatetoversion=16.0.17726.20160
Hit enter and wait while it downloads and installs.
VERY IMPORTANT. Once it's done, open Word, go to File, Account (bottom left), and you'll see a box on the right that says Microsoft 365 updates. Click the box and change the drop down to Disable Updates.
This will roll you back to build 17726.20160, from July 2024, which does not have CoPilot, and prevent it from being installed.
If you want a different build, you can see them all listed here. You will need to change the 17726.20160 at step 4 to whatever build number you want.
This is not a perfect fix, because while it removes CoPilot, it also stops you receiving security updates and bug fixes.
Switching from Office to LibreOffice
At this point, I'm giving up on Microsoft Office/Word. After trying a few different options, I've switched to LibreOffice.
You can download it here for free: https://www.libreoffice.org/
If you like the look of Word, these tutorials show you how to get that look:
www.howtogeek.com/788591/how-to-make-libreoffice-look-like-microsoft-office/
www.debugpoint.com/libreoffice-like-microsoft-office/
If you've been using Word for awhile, chances are you have a significant custom dictionary. You can add it to LibreOffice following these steps.
First, get your dictionary from Microsoft
Go to Manage your Microsoft 365 account: account.microsoft.com.
One you're logged in, scroll down to Privacy, click it and go to the Privacy dashboard.
Scroll down to Spelling and Text. Click into it and scroll past all the words to download your custom dictionary. It will save it as a CSV file.
Open the file you just downloaded and copy the words.
Open Notepad and paste in the words. Save it as a text file and give it a meaningful name (I went with FromWord).
Next, add it to LibreOffice
Open LibreOffice.
Go to Tools in the menu bar, then Options. It will open a new window.
Find Languages and Locales in the left menu, click it, then click on Writing aids.
You'll see User-defined dictionaries. Click New to the right of the box and give it a meaningful name (mine is FromWord).
Hit Apply, then Okay, then exit LibreOffice.
Open Windows Explorer and go to C:\Users\[YourUserName]\AppData\Roaming\LibreOffice\4\user\wordbook and you will see the new dictionary you created. (If you can't see the AppData folder, you will need to show hidden files by ticking the box in the View menu.)
Open it in Notepad by right clicking and choosing 'open with', then pick Notepad from the options.
Open the text file you created at step 5 in 'get your dictionary from Microsoft', copy the words and paste them into your new custom dictionary UNDER the dotted line.
Save and close.
Reopen LibreOffice. Go to Tools, Options, Languages and Locales, Writing aids and make sure the box next to the new dictionary is ticked.
If you use LIbreOffice on multiple machines, you'll need to do this for each machine.
Please note: this worked for me. If it doesn't work for you, check you've followed each step correctly, and try restarting your computer. If it still doesn't work, I can't provide tech support (sorry).
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renthony · 1 year ago
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I am begging people to use LibreOffice and personal storage devices like hard drives or USB sticks instead of relying 100% on Google Docs. LibreOffice is free and open-source, it saves files to your own computer, and it lets you save as many different file types. You can write in it, format ebooks in it, and do everything you might possibly need to do as a writer.
"Oh, but I'll lose my USB stick--" Fine, back things up in whatever cloud you use as a form of extra protection, but you should also try your absolute damnedest to also put them on some form of storage that isn't a cloud.
I know it's not accessible to everyone, but if you at all have the ability, don't rely on shit that lives on other people's computers. Especially with everything going on with AI theft and aggressive censorship of adult media. If you don't store your files on your own personal computer that you have control over, your files aren't fully yours, and they're at the whims of whoever owns the cloud.
Learn where your files are stored and how to access them. Get into the habit of backing up your files to your own personal storage. Even if you're not up for intense tech research and you don't care about how the computer actually works, please stop letting your art live in corporate clouds.
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yuumei-art · 11 months ago
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I've been told that there are rumors about me using AI for my paintings. Please use some common sense, I've been posting on DeviantART since 2003 and sharing full video recordings on Patreon since 2018. If I'm a fake, wouldn't my Patrons have noticed by now? Since AI has been turning artists against each other, accusing each other of using AI, I have no choice but to share of some the Patreon rewards as proof. Here is the 10 full video recordings of me painting A Thousand Skies from scratch
I built the 3D model base for this painting in Sketchup, which you can see here
When AI was at it's infancy, I was very excited to have a new tool to help me make comics. Long time followers will know I struggled with repetitive strain injury that forced my comic making to a crawl. A decade before AI, I was experimenting with 3D backgrounds for comics.
I still remember the hate I got for using 3D models in my comic backgrounds, even though today nobody blinks at other artists doing the same. 3D is now accepted as a tool to help artists create. I even remember hate for being digital instead of traditional.
I tested out painting over AI generated backgrounds a few times in the very early stages of AI. There are a lot of screenshots taken out of context from my Discord where I share how I paint everything with complete transparency.
The only other time I've used AI in my art is for a gag scene in my comic, the full context is my character, Vance, who is a weeb and tech nerd, was objectifying women by seeing them as anime cat girls pasted over AI flower backgrounds.
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If I had downloaded a flower stamp brush from ClipStudio and made a similar flower background, nobody would care. But somehow this is not okay even though it fits the theme and joke of the comic?
It's 2AM where I am now so I won't say much else other than I wish people would stop taking my posts out of context. With everything going on in the world, artists should support each other, not make up reasons to hurt each other.
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onlyyourhallucination · 6 days ago
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Clinging onto Phainon like a koala.
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"Oh hey— what's wrong?" No response? He'll get worried.
"...Is, everything okay?" He asked in much more gentler tone, and still no response?
"Is your, clinginess a good thing or a bad thing—? Please say or do something to confirm—" He literally have to plead a little to make sure everything's okay, if you simply cling onto him because you miss him, he'll let you cling onto him. He doesn't care if you're heavy. He'll even go as far as hoist you up further, fixing your position as he held you closer and tighter to make sure you didn't fell off him—
But if you cling onto him because of something bad, he'll literally go somewhere private, sitting down and move you to his lap. His bright blue hues staring back at you as his gentle hand brush your cheek, no words need to be said as he gave you a comforting silence. And adding a little— "I'll be right here if you need me, close your eyes and take a deep breath.
Everything will be okay, I'm here."
©onlyyourhallucination — 2025 || Do not Copy/Translate/Use for AI
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A/n : Phainon, please, stop— HAUNTING ME DOWN—!! OKAY I'LL TRY TO GET YOU HOME ALRIGHT— if you didn't come home you only have yourself to blame. /lhj
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gakukitty · 28 days ago
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first, and only — ★
featuring . . . caleb !!
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from the start, caleb knew that he wanted you to be his forever. he made sure to seal the deal with a cheap toy back when the two of you were younger, loudly proclaiming with that cute high pitched tone that he’ll be yours and you will be his— but things have changed since then. his teeth have grown back after all that rough play, and you have stopped coming home covered in mud after a day outside. you’re both quite different, you’re grown; but to caleb, one thing will always stay the same. you are his, you belong to him— and him alone.
so he’s absolutely dumbfounded when you shyly speak about some parasite you apparently have a crush on. a crush? no way— there is no way that you could have a crush on anyone other than caleb. he thought he made sure of that, but unfortunately he was too careless. now, he’s left with one option; to make sure you will stay his forever.
“hey, y’know.. we should practice kissing on each other, pipsqueak.” caleb would offer one night, lifting a hand which had previously been resting on the back of the couch to ruffle your hair. he leaned in, his gaze focused on yours.
“practice kissing?” you had mumbled, your tone soft— unsure. but with caleb’s reassuring smile and comforting touch, you couldn’t help but agree. and that’s how he took your first kiss, claiming you as his own— at least in caleb’s mind, that’s what it meant.
and soon after that, your little crush began coming to school less and less. you were pretty upset about it, but at least you had caleb there to pat your head and rub your shoulders when you’d tell him that you think that stupid, stupid little creature doesn’t like you anymore. then, when you finally got that message from him explaining that he didn’t like you— caleb was the first to know. of course he was. he made sure he’ll be your first everything.
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© gakukitty please don’t copy my work , repost it and claim as your own , translate , or use it to train ai ♡
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aleksatia · 3 months ago
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🍎 Blind date with your ex-husband. You never expected it to be… Caleb.
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Inspiration hit me going 100mph down the highway, and I took an unscheduled gas station stop just to write this down. My husband almost divorced me again thinking I’d lost my mind — so in a way, this series is dedicated to him. And to second chances. I know they exist. I’ve lived one. 🥀
An unplanned new series. Five ex-husbands. Same setup, different reactions.
❄️ Zayne | 🎨 Rafayel | ✨Xavier | 🏍 Sylus
Cut Scene (NSFW): 🍎 Caleb – The Tea, the Rice, and Everything Between
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CW/TW: emotional trauma, post-divorce grief, unresolved intimacy, mutual guilt and blame, AI-simulated memory confrontation, violent emotional release, destructive conflict, references to emotional manipulation and psychological burnout, gameified use of weapons, simulated car crash, coarse language, heavy emotional dialogue, themes of self-sabotage, intimacy tangled with pain, and lingering affection that hurts to hold. Please read with care.
Pairing: Caleb x ex-wife!you Genre: Emotional combat dressed as therapy. Post-divorce catharsis through orchestrated destruction. Rage as ritual, memory as minefield. Estranged soulmates, bruised devotion, unsaid things turned weapon. Slow-burn devastation with soft hands and steel teeth. Summary: You didn’t sign up for closure. You signed up to break things. But when your blind date turns out to be Caleb — your ex-husband, your gravity, your sharpest regret — the rooms stop being symbolic. Each one strips you down, forces you closer, until rage gives way to honesty, control to collapse. And underneath it all, he’s still the man who would never let you fall… but might be the reason you broke in the first place. Word Count: 7.1K AN: For some reason, the one I write last always ends up being twice as long as the one I write first — which is why I constantly rotate the order. Out of five men, five parts, this one came last… and, predictably, got out of hand. I'll be honest — this turned out painful. At least for me. And cruel, in places. But it felt honest. Maybe a little OOC at times, but let’s be real — divorce changes people. And now I need to recover from this one. Probably for longer than I want to admit.
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Almost a year after the divorce, something inside you had been fermenting. 
Not relief, not the lightness of a woman unshackled, but something bitter and unholy. The kind of pain that doesn’t dissolve, but calcifies. It grew claws. Grew teeth. Turned your bloodstream into gasoline. You tried everything: the silence of mountains, the thrill of anonymous sex, the rhythm of violence in a boxing ring. None of it was enough. The hunts were no longer satisfying. The catharsis, too fleeting. You needed something that could bleed when you hit it.
So when the ad appeared — BLIND DATE: DESTRUCTION EDITION. To escape, you must destroy — you signed up without thinking twice. Rage has never been your enemy. Indecision is.
You dressed for war. Tight leather pants that clung like a second skin. Laced boots with soles heavy enough to leave imprints. A button-down shirt under a corset not meant to seduce, but to shield. Your hair pulled into a high, severe ponytail. Drama layered like armor.
This wasn’t a date. It was a reckoning.
You arrived five minutes early. You always do. The place was a former warehouse, rebranded into a rage room with curated destruction experiences — urban apocalypse meets sad girl therapy. The hostess gave you a waiver and a smirk. “He’s already here,” she said. “In Room B.” 
You didn’t ask questions. You didn’t want to know. You wanted to feel your heartbeat in your teeth.
You walked in, pulling on the thick gloves, then sliding the protective goggles into place. The world dimmed slightly through the tinted lenses, sharpening at the edges. Everything suddenly looked a little more dangerous. A little more true.
The door hissed shut behind you, and the lock clicked with a finality that was almost erotic. One way in. No way out but through — through brick, through rage, through whatever poor bastard was foolish enough to stand in your way.
Your hand found the sledgehammer without looking, fingers curling around its weight like it was made for you. Heavy. Grounding. Righteous. You gave it a test swing, then another, calibrating impact, imagining bone. You didn’t even glance at him. 
Whoever he was, he’d get the same treatment as the wall.
Until he spoke.
“Well,” the voice cut through the air like a cracked knuckle, dry and dark, “you still choose the biggest weapon in the room. Some things never change, pip-squeak.”
You turned. Fast. The hammer arced through the space between you, too close. He ducked. The wall behind him caught the edge, chipped hard enough to spray red dust into the air.
“Say that again,” you warned, low and flat, “and I swear I’ll aim for the nose next time.”
He straightened slowly, expression unreadable except for the barely-contained fire in his eyes. 
“Touchy,” he muttered. “All righty. Retiring that one. Let’s see... viperette? Still small. Still mean. But I respect the venom upgrade.”
Caleb.
Of course it was Caleb.
The universe had a sense of humor. A cruel one.
He looked like war in a t-shirt. Leaner, somehow, like rage had eaten away the softness around his edges. His jaw was tight, eyes dark and alert, like he’d been living off caffeine and unfinished sentences. He held a crowbar like it was an extension of his spine — ready to break, to pry, to rip something apart.
You didn’t say his name. You didn’t give the moment that kind of power.
“Jesus,” he muttered, eyeing the setup. “A brick wall. Real subtle. What, are we supposed to talk about our feelings while we chip away at the trauma?”
You didn’t dignify that with a reply—at least not right away. Then, dryly: “I think we’re supposed to break shit. Bonus points if we don’t murder each other.”
He barked a short, mirthless laugh. “Blind date with a bat and unresolved issues. Sounds like your kind of night.”
“You’re projecting. I didn’t come here to reminisce, Caleb. I came here to destroy.”
“Great. Start with the wall.”
You planted your feet, drew back, and slammed the hammer into the bricks. The jolt surged through you like an exorcism. Caleb followed suit, striking beside your dent with a calculated precision that annoyed you more than it should’ve.
You worked without speaking. The cracks formed slowly, reluctantly, like even the damn wall didn’t believe you two could work together. You hated how easily your rhythms aligned. Always had. Even when you fought, you were fluent in each other’s movement.
He paused, wiped his forehead with the back of his hand. “So. Tell me, did you know it was gonna be me?”
“If I had, I’d have brought a bigger hammer.”
“And here I thought you might’ve missed me.”
You turned your head, just enough to let him see your smile — sharp, unapologetic. “I did. Like you miss a bullet you didn’t dodge.”
That shut him up.
For now.
The wall finally began to give.
Cracks widened, deepened, split like veins across the surface. Your breath came hard, sharp in your throat. You were sweating, but the hammer felt lighter now, almost like it wanted more.
Another hit. Another. Then —
Caleb dropped his crowbar with a clatter, stepped in close, too close. You tightened your grip, not sure if he was about to yell, shove, or kiss you.
He didn’t do any of those things.
Instead, he reached out and gripped your upper arm — not rough, but firm, like a man redirecting fate — and pulled you a half step back. The wall loomed beside you like a dying animal. You opened your mouth to protest, but stopped when you saw his face.
He was looking at you like he was memorizing the end of the world. That same gaze he used to have when he thought you were asleep and he was letting himself be weak for ten seconds. It cut deeper now.
You didn’t blink. Neither did he.
Then, without a word, he turned, drew back, and drove the full weight of his body into one final strike.
The hammer met the weak spot with a sound that rang like a gunshot. Dust exploded into the air. He kicked the base of the wall hard — his boot landing with perfect force, perfect timing — and the whole thing collapsed in the opposite direction, away from you, bricks falling like dominos, like judgment, like the years between you had meant nothing and everything at once.
Silence.
Then you exhaled.
And said, flatly, “You always did know how to make a point. Real subtle, Colonel.”
His jaw twitched. That was all. No quip this time, no grin. Just the tight strain in his neck and a flicker behind his eyes like something was about to unhinge. But it didn’t. Of course it didn’t. That was the whole game with you two — feeling everything and showing nothing until the room caught fire.
You stepped through the rubble.
The next chamber was colder. Darker. The hum of old OLED screens filled the air like flies buzzing near a carcass. Dozens of them, mounted along the curved walls in perfect symmetry. Some flickering, some bright, all showing the same kind of sickening reel. Success. Smiles. Promotions. Affection posed for the camera, curated happiness. Couples at sunset, at brunch, in bed. Running on a beach, golden and effortless.
Then the altar.
A bride. A groom. A goddamn soft-focus lens.
You stopped cold.
The hammer slipped from your hand. You bent slowly, picked up a chunk of broken brick from the ruins behind you — rough, warm, red with the breath of your anger — and flung it.
The screen shattered on impact. A flicker. Sparks. A frozen image of a kiss, fractured into spider veins of glass.
Caleb didn’t move. Not really. Just stood there, staring at the wall of curated lies. His eyes darted from screen to screen, like he was trying to catch something in the movement. Like he was afraid he’d see something too real.
You hurled another brick.
The screen cracked with a dull, satisfying sound, collapsing inward like it had flinched.
“Would’ve been more poetic if they used our photos,” he said, dryly, like his throat was sand.
You scoffed. “Should’ve offered the organizers access to our digital album, I guess. Too bad I wiped every trace of you from the cloud last October.”
That got him.
His lip curled upward — half a smirk, half a snarl. “Of course you did. Practical. Cold. Classic you.”
You turned slowly, blood surging behind your ears. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
He didn’t step back. Caleb never did. “I didn’t delete anything,” he said, voice low. “Renamed the album. Filed it under ‘Bitch I Used to Love’ Thought it was honest.”
You could’ve scratched the skin off his face with how fast your hands moved if not for the gloves and the goggles between you. You were on him in a second, eyes locked, breath ragged, but neither of you made contact. Not yet. The air between you hissed with the threat of combustion.
“You’re such a fu—”
The voice cut in. Not his. Not yours.
From the screen behind you, a woman's face smiled, unbearably bright, like a toothpaste ad with delusions of sincerity. “You can always count on me,” she said.
Your breath stopped.
That phrase. His phrase.
Before you could move, Caleb did.
He crossed the room in two strides and brought the bat down like wrath. The screen split open with a flash of white light and a guttural sound that wasn’t quite human. A scream, maybe. Or something deeper.
He didn’t say anything after that. And neither did you.
Not in words.
But your body answered. Loudly.
You tore through the room like it had insulted you personally. Which, in a way, it had. Those grinning avatars of happiness, the sterile intimacy of picture-perfect couples — people who hadn’t known the feeling of being swallowed alive by someone they trusted. Smug joy laminated in pixels. They deserved everything you gave them.
You brought the bat down on one screen, then another. Glass shattered in bursts. Sparks flew like ash from a controlled burn. Across the room, Caleb mirrored you, attacking from the opposite side — controlled, brutal, rhythmic. Again, you were in sync. Not lovers. Not enemies. Just two wild animals with matching scars, dismantling a cathedral of lies.
And then you met in the middle.
The largest screen loomed between you, mounted above a faux-marble pedestal like some grotesque altar. You swung. Hard. The bat ricocheted off the screen like it had hit bone. 
It didn’t crack. It laughed. A sharp recoil shot up your arm.
You let out a guttural sound — somewhere between a curse and a grow l— and dropped the bat.
Then picked up a brick.
It was still warm from the earlier wall, one edge sharp enough to draw blood if it wanted to. You didn’t give it the chance. You took it to the screen, again and again, raw and breathless, something primal and unrepentant bleeding out through your hands. Each strike carved into the polished surface like you were trying to murder memory itself.
Caleb didn’t stop you. He just stood to the side, watching the destruction like it was sacred.
When the screen finally gave in, it did so all at once. Glass caved with a scream of surrender, wires snapped, the frame buckled and collapsed in on itself. Behind it: a door. Dark, narrow, humming softly.
You stood still, shoulders heaving. Your fingers clenched tighter around the brick, so tight the rough edges pressed through the gloves and left grooves in your skin beneath. You swallowed hard, once, choking back something feral and ho t— not quite tears, but close enough to shame you.
Then, without looking, you turned and hurled the brick in the opposite direction. Just to hear it hit. Just to remind yourself you still could.
Caleb took a step toward you. Careful. Something in his face had changed — softened, almost. His mouth twitched like he was about to ask the one question no one in their right mind should ask.
Are you okay?
No. You were not okay. You were on fire inside a collapsing structure and the only thing holding you together was inertia.
“Touch me,” you warned, voice like cut wire, “and I swear I’ll hit harder than I did that screen.”
And with that, you walked forward. Toward whatever hell came next.
The room ahead was cleaner. Cold lighting. Metallic walls with thin veins of circuitry pulsing like capillaries beneath glass. At the center stood a sleek black pedestal, and on it: two shotguns. Game-style, not military, but still heavy, still real enough in your hands to feel the familiar pull of power in the barrel. Your palms flexed on instinct.
You grabbed one without hesitation. Caleb followed suit.
Above, a voice crackled — genderless, modulated. Artificial.
“Welcome to Trigger Point. Please attach neural sensors to your temples. Each player must input ten phrases associated with emotional distress. The AI will cross-reference the data, generate projected constructs, and render them in combat form. Destroy on sight. Objective: release. Completion time: variable.”
You stared at the interactive screen blinking in front of you. A small keyboard. Ten empty fields. The implication clear: name your demons. Feed them in. And then shoot them down.
Caleb started typing immediately. No hesitation. His fingers flew. He was always better at anger. At naming what hurt. You wondered if he’d been waiting for a moment like this.
You stared at your own screen, unmoving. The cursor blinked at you. Accusatory. You hated this part. Not the shooting. The naming.
Because naming made it real.
But you typed.
Reluctantly, clumsily, then faster.
Because you knew exactly which phrases had lived rent-free in your spine for too long.
Done.
You caught him glancing sideways. His screen dimmed just as yours did, locking your inputs.
You didn’t want to know what he’d written. But the room did.
A low mechanical hum vibrated through the air, and the wall across from you came alive. Light surged and split into fragmented holograms — each word sharp as a knife, floating midair, stuttering into full clarity. One at a time.
“Cognitive synchronization complete. Each phrase will be visualized using memory-sourced projection. Targets derived from active recall. Accuracy required. Proceed.”
You felt the data pull like a hook behind your eyes — memory sucked forward, scanned, sorted, shaped.
The first phrase came like a punch to the teeth. 
You were the safest place I knew. Until you put a ring on me and turned the lights off.
It hovered for a second, just long enough to register, and then dissolved. The smoke twisted and thickened. From it emerged a figure that stole your breath.
It was you.
Not the way you feel in mirrors, not the version eroded by grief or fury. This one was too poised, too precise. Her face was colder than you remembered yours ever being. Her beauty surgical. Her anger had been refined into stillness, and in that stillness — something worse than screaming.
She looked at Caleb like he’d failed a test she never let him study for.
You hesitated.
Your fingers twitched around the shotgun’s grip. You lifted it slightly, almost reflexively — but something inside you screamed don’t. You didn’t remember saying it like that. Not with that finality. Maybe in anger, maybe meaning something else entirely. But this version of you didn’t look like she regretted a thing.
She raised her own weapon.
You flinched.
But Caleb fired first.
The shot was sharp, efficient. Her body shattered into a scatter of static and fractured light.
You turned to him, stunned. His fingers were still trembling on the trigger. Yours were, too.
Not just by the sound of the shot, or the way your projected self shattered — but by the fact that he had pulled the trigger.
On you.
Even if it wasn’t you-you. Even if it was just light and memory, coded and cruel. He had done it. Without hesitation.
It felt final somehow. Like something sacred had cracked open and spilled out. Like you’d crossed a threshold you didn’t know existed.
Because you used to believe — no, know — that even at your ugliest, your worst, your most furious, he would never hurt you. Not like that. You had believed, with a terrifying kind of faith, that he’d sooner put a bullet through his own head than raise a weapon to yours.
And maybe that was still true. But maybe it wasn’t.
Maybe too much had decayed between you. Maybe the divorce had rewritten you both in ways neither of you were ready to see.
You didn’t want to ask. You didn’t want to know the answer.
Neither of you spoke. You could see in his face that the phrase had lived in him longer than you’d ever meant it to. Long enough to calcify. Long enough to echo. Long enough to ruin.
You froze, body coiled in silent expectation.
You knew what was coming. You could feel it before the text even appeared, like a static current pulling through your chest. The phrase you typed. The one you swore you wouldn’t look at when it came.
But it came anyway.
The words unfolded in slow motion, thick with memory, with everything unsaid between you. A sentence shaped like him.
I was too blinded by loving you. You only let me touch you when you wanted something. You pull my heart like a puppet on strings.
It didn’t feel like watching something. It felt like being flayed.
Your breath caught.
You fired — too soon. You missed. Glass behind the projection cracked, but the thing itself remained.
You hadn’t wanted to see it. You hadn’t wanted to hear it again. You regretted typing it. You regretted remembering it. You regretted ever giving those words a place to live inside you.
You could feel Caleb tense beside you. Not from the content — he already knew the line — but from the timing. From your reaction. From how fast you'd tried to erase it.
You gritted your teeth. Lifted the gun again. A bead of sweat rolled down your temple, cool and traitorous.
You aimed. And fired.
The figure burst apart — no scream, no sound — just a silent, violent fireworks display of red-gold pixels. Gone.
You stood there, breathing hard, hand tight on the grip, pulse roaring in your throat.
And only then did you understand.
Why he’d shot your projection first. Why it hadn’t felt like betrayal, not really.
Because these versions of you — of him — these pale ghosts, weaponized by memory and algorithm, weren’t real anymore. They were remnants. Monsters made of moments that no longer had the right to exist. Not even here, in a world built of nothing but ones and zeroes.
You hadn’t destroyed him. You’d destroyed the version of him that hurt you.
And maybe, just maybe, that’s what he’d done too.
More phrases came. Some his. Some yours.
Why do you always disappear?
Shot. Flash. A twist in the gut. You don’t stop moving.
I felt safer when you weren’t there.
Shot. Flash. His shoulders jerk. You catch it, pretend you didn’t.
You made me into someone I hated.
Shot. Flash. You almost drop the gun. Almost.
You wanted control more than connection.
Shot. Flash. You taste metal in your mouth. Don’t know if it’s from the memory or your own tongue.
It all becomes a blur — fragments of truth, shredded light, the weight of your weapon like a heartbeat in your hand.
Then —
One more.
It doesn’t come fast. It lands.
Like a final breath drawn sharp before the plunge.
His.
I loved you so much it destroyed me.
No shape yet. Just the words, hanging. Clean. Unfiltered. Unhidden.
Like he never got the chance to say them out loud. Like some part of him still hadn’t stopped saying them, even now.
Everything in the room goes still. Even the flicker of light quiets. And you feel it — that if you move now, everything will break.
You don’t know when the tears started. They weren’t dramatic. They didn’t sting. They just existed — like breath, like gravity. Sliding down your cheeks with the same quiet inevitability as everything else that’s ever gone wrong.
You were back there. In that moment. Before the signature. Before the sound of the pen on paper. When he looked at you across the room, and said it  — not to win you back, not to argue, not to accuse. Just to say it.
Because it was true.
And now here he was again — only not really. A pixelated Caleb. A slowed, AI-crafted echo of that same version. Stepping forward from the projection field like it remembered how he moved.
The voice that left his mouth was mechanical, but still it hit like flesh: “I loved you so much it destroyed me.”
Exactly the way he had said it then. The rhythm, the weight. The slight lift at the end that had felt like a question, a prayer, a hope too stupid to say out loud.
This ghost carried it too. You didn’t raise your gun. You couldn’t.
You couldn’t shoot that. Not the hope. Not the part that believed.
And so —
Caleb did.
No hesitation.
A clean, brutal shot that tore the projection apart mid-step. The ghost shattered like it had never mattered. Never happened. Never existed.
And then there was silence. When you turned to him, his face gave you nothing.
A mask. Still. Cold. The kind of stillness that doesn’t come from control, but from emptiness. Like your love hadn’t just hurt him.
It had hollowed him.
And maybe he was right. Maybe there really was nothing left.
“Nothing left to break,” he said quietly. “Nothing left to ruin.”
You looked at him. Eyes wide. Wet. Fragile in a way that made your skin crawl.
“Do you think I wanted this?” you asked, voice raw, like something torn.
He stared at the air where the projection had been, then turned his head slightly — just enough to catch your gaze. But his face didn’t change. He was somewhere else.
“No one wanted this,” he said. “And now we’re literally shooting pieces of ourselves. Burning through our own memories. Like wanderers. Like something foreign. Something we don’t belong to anymore.”
He looked around the room — at the shards of your past, still flickering. Smoke curling around dying light. A graveyard of ghosts you built together.
“It’s ugly,” he added. “But it’s beautiful, too. In its ruin.”
For the first time since the experiment began, you genuinely wanted to leave. Not rage-walk. Not storm out. Just… go.
Slip out the side door of your own psyche and vanish into air that didn’t taste like grief.
But there was no exit. Only forward.
Caleb moved ahead without a word. His body, usually so precise, so full of intention, now moved with the flatness of routine, of resignation. Like he, too, would rather be anywhere else — any room, any war zone, any alternate timeline — as long as it was far from this one. Far from you.
Still, you followed.
Your jaw clenched. Your breath caught sharp behind your teeth. You could feel the exhaustion sliding down your spine, thick and slow, but you didn’t let it stop you. You were going to finish this room. This experiment. This punishment. Whatever it was.
You were going to finish it with your head up. Even if, by the end, the only thing left to break was you.
And him.
Because he wasn’t stopping either.
And if the only thing you could do now was survive each other — then so be it.
The next room was vast. Empty in that curated kind of way that made chaos feel designed.
A sprawl of objects covered the floor — furniture, glass, cheap electronics, ceramic towers, crushed memories disguised as junk. It looked random, but you knew better. Nothing in this place was random.
And then there were the cars. Or what passed for cars.
Two stripped-down, reinforced vehicles — half desert racer, half post-apocalyptic scrap tank. No doors. No bodies. Just exposed frames padded with thick rubber guards. For safety. For impact.
In each one, a helmet.
You reached for the driver’s seat, fingers brushing the wheel, ignoring the helmet like it was a suggestion, not a rule — until Caleb’s voice cut in, low and sharp.
“Don’t even think about it.”
You froze. Spun on him.
“Oh, you’re giving orders now? That’s rich.”
You held the helmet by the chin strap, weighing it like you might throw it at his head.
“What about you?” you snapped. “Think I didn’t notice you weren’t planning to wear yours either?”
He didn’t answer. Just walked up to you and, with a startling lack of hesitation, jammed the helmet down onto your head. It caught on your ears. You cursed. He tightened the strap under your chin like he’d done it a hundred times. Maybe he had.
“I’ll wear mine,” he said, finally. “I know what this is. I know I’m your target.”
“That’s not the point of the exercise,” you muttered, flushed — not just from rage, but from the unbearable closeness of his fingers near your pulse.
You hated how your body still reacted. How it didn’t get the memo.
“Then let’s go,” he said, gesturing toward a tall ceramic vase as if that made anything simpler. “Hit something that won’t hit back.”
You threw yourself behind the wheel.
The engine roared awake — guttural, loud, too loud. It made your bones vibrate. Made your blood move. You wanted to scream. Instead, you pressed the gas.
At first, you aimed where you were supposed to — toward the objects. Toward the walls of cheap plaster, mannequins dressed in tattered remnants of other lives, cardboard boxes that exploded with satisfying finality under your tires. Something crunched. Something hissed. The world responded to your force. You smirked.
It felt good. But not enough.
Not with him still grinning across the room like this was just another simulation. Another exercise. Another moment where he got to stay composed while you unraveled.
And so —
You jerked the wheel. Toward him.
You slammed your foot down and the car jolted forward, rattling like a live thing. You didn’t know what you were doing. Only that you wanted impact. Needed it.
Caleb veered sharply to the right. You followed. He hit a cluster of mannequins, their limbs flying like blown petals. You turned tighter, skidding across a field of splintered boxes, your tires spitting cardboard shrapnel.
"Thought you said this wasn’t about targeting me!" he shouted over the roar of the engines.
"It’s not," you yelled back, swerving hard to chase him. "It’s about physics. You just happen to be in the way!"
He laughed. Loud. Honest. Then, dodging left, "God, you were a menace on a tricycle."
"And you were a sanctimonious little hall monitor!"
"You stole my lunch for a month!"
"You deserved it. You put raisins in everything."
“You loved raisin muffins.”
“Muffins, Caleb. Not pasta. Not rice.”
Another near-miss. You clipped the back of his car with a glorious metallic screech. He swerved, recovered, accelerated. You pushed harder.
You were hunting him now. You wanted to see him sweat. Not because you hated him, but because you couldn’t stand how much you still didn’t.
“Who gave the toddler a license?” he barked.
“Probably the same genius who made you a colonel!”
And then you caught him.
Your front bumper slammed into the side of his car with a satisfying, ugly crunch. Both vehicles jolted. Metal howled. You felt your own body snap forward, then whip back.
Then — his car spun, but yours skidded too far. You tried to correct, but it was too late.
You hit the wall.
Plywood gave way with a groan, but not enough. Your car embedded half its frame into the splintering surface, the engine sputtering, then smoking — thick, chemical breath rising like something had finally given up.
You didn’t scream. You didn’t panic. You just… stopped.
The world narrowed.
Then he was there.
You didn’t see him jump out. Didn’t see him run. But suddenly he was there, ripping open the harness, yanking the helmet off your head with shaking hands.
“Are you out of your fucking mind?” he snapped, eyes scanning you, touching your shoulders, your arms, your ribs like memory. “Are you hurt? Are you —? Look at me. Pips! Look at me.”
You looked. And then — smirked.
A small, crooked thing, like the aftermath of chaos.
Then you laughed.
At first, it was just breath. A puff of absurdity.  But it built. And it broke.
You laughed harder. The kind of laughter that comes too close to tears, that spills out sideways and jagged. Your whole body shook. You couldn't stop. Couldn't breathe.
And then — he did too.
His forehead pressed against yours. His chest stuttered with laughter. It wasn’t funny. It was never funny. And that’s what made it so goddamn necessary.
You clung to each other like gravity had forgotten how to work.
Your fists balled in the front of his shirt. His arms circled around your back, then up, then closed like steel around your head. He pulled you to his chest and held you there, hard, tight, like the world could crack open any second and he wasn’t going to risk letting go.
Your laughter broke first.
It caved.
And then came the sob.
One. Then another.
Your shoulders buckled. Your breath hitched. And then you were sobbing against him — ugly, heaving, violent tears that had waited far too long. Everything you hadn’t said, hadn’t allowed, hadn’t felt came pouring out in great gasping waves.
He held you like it was all he knew how to do.
He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to.
“Why does it hurt so much, Caleb?” you whispered through the sobs, your nails digging into his back. “Why did every day with you start feeling like a survival quest?”
His lips brushed your temple, featherlight. His fingers moved through your hair — slow, grounding, almost clinical in their tenderness. A rhythm. A scan. Every few strokes, the pressure shifted just slightly, as if mapping out where you carried the worst of it.
And still, you couldn’t ignore the truth: you knew exactly what he was capable of. With those same hands, he could crack your skull like a walnut. Break you clean in two.
But he didn’t. And that restraint ached just as much as anything else.
“I don’t have an answer,” he murmured. “I only know one thing. That being without you hurt worse. But the idea that you were suffering with me... That I — my own fear, my own fucking hands — destroyed the most sacred thing I ever touched...”
You shook your head and pressed your hand to his mouth. You didn’t want to hear the end of that sentence. You wouldn’t survive it.
“We both did it,” you said. “You don’t get to take all the blame. It’s always two people. Always. Equal weight.”
He kissed your fingers. Gently. And you pulled your hand back like it had caught fire.
The flicker in his eyes was instant.
Pain. And something else — like memory, or the echo of wanting.
“There was a time,” he said, “when we were the closest people in the world. Cliché or not, we were a single thing. Now look at us. Look at you. I’m not even sure you want me this close.”
“No,” you snapped, gripping his shoulders. “No, don’t say that. I’m terrified of how much I need you close. I’m scared of what I might do if you keep looking at me like that. If you touch me again. I’ve been fighting since the moment we walked into this place. Fighting not to —”
“Not to what?” he growled, closer now, voice frayed.
“Not to try again,” you breathed. “Not to want again.”
His hands locked around your waist. His face was right there. Breath on breath. Your bodies a magnet of wrong time, wrong place, right everything.
But he didn’t kiss you.
He held you at the edge, suspended, with something like agony in his eyes.
“Saying that out loud,” he said through clenched teeth, “is reckless. It’s dangerous.”
“Meaning it is worse,” you said, barely audible.
You could feel his heart against your ribs — fast, raw, so human it hurt to listen. And then he said, lower now:
“Are you really this cruel? You want the last working piece of me to break, don’t you?”
“No,” you whispered, stepping back, breath shivering. “No, Caleb. If I could, I’d give everything — everything — just to take your pain away. But how can I, when I’m still living in rubble? When I don’t know how to plan for tomorrow, or next week. When I can’t even picture where I’m going. I just keep moving. Blind.”
He looked at you for a long time.
And in that look — something bottomless. Not pity. Not anger. Something like recognition. You felt it in your ribs, your spine, your breath. Like he’d looked through your skin and seen the exact same void you saw in him.
He stepped back gently. Then rose to his feet.
Wordlessly, he extended a hand to help you up. You took it. Let him lift you.
He glanced around the room, then toward the wreckage, the wall, the place where your car had finally given up.
A low huff of a laugh escaped him.
“Of course,” he muttered. “The exit’s right where you crashed.”
You followed his gaze.
He was right.
Just one thing left to break.
The wall gave way with almost no resistance. It split open like it had been waiting for the final blow. You stepped through, side by side, not speaking. And suddenly, the world shifted.
No floor. No weight. No direction. You were in a massive, sterile cylinder, suspended in air — except there was no air current, no movement, no sensation of falling. Just drift. Your feet detached from the surface, and that was it. You were floating. Weightless. Unanchored.
The space felt unreal. Too smooth. Too quiet. A hum beneath the silence, like some great system breathing in sleep. High above, three exit hatches blinked with dull blue light — two narrow, one wide. The single exits were clearly labeled. The larger one read: DUO. Beneath it, a platform hovered, inert. A voice filtered in through the chamber, calm and cold.
“Three exits. One for each individual. One for those who remain. Shared exit requires cooperative locomotion and continuous dual contact. Time limit: irrelevant. Success requires choice.”
You drifted. He drifted. You turned your head and saw him across the space, his body slow-spinning, expression tight. This was supposed to be his realm. Gravity. That was his Evol, his identity, his anchor. But here, it was nothing. Disabled. Cut off. You could see the glitch in him, the way he processed the loss of control. And still, he didn’t panic. He just… adjusted.
You floated near one of the solo exits. It would be so easy. A small push. An end. A beginning. Alone. And then it passed behind you.
You saw him again, a little closer this time. You reached out, almost without thinking, and caught his hand. No rush. No symbolism. Just fingers brushing fingers in a place without weight.
Your hands gripped. Held. And you pulled yourself in, gently, until your faces were close enough for words. Your breath felt warm between you, even in the cold of engineered air.
“I’m not ready to leave here without you,” you said. “I don’t know what that means, or what it’ll cost. But I’m not ready.”
He didn’t speak immediately. His hand tightened on yours. Then, suddenly focused, he said, “Wrap your legs around my waist.”
You blinked. “What —”
“Trust me. I can’t bend the field in here, but I can feel the currents — like micro-resistance. If we stay connected, I think I can guide us through it.” His voice shifted into command mode — confident, steady, and irritatingly hot. “Angle your hips left. No, a little more. Perfect. Now shift your weight forward.”
You moved with him. It felt awkward at first, like trying to learn to breathe underwater. But then something clicked — your center of gravity merged, found alignment, caught onto an invisible pulse. Like tuning into a frequency only his body knew how to hear.
“There,” he said. “We’re in it.”
You glided, slowly at first, then more directly. He adjusted, compensated, kept you level. He took you through the space like a conductor feeling the music in muscle and bone.
The platform under the shared exit blinked to life as you approached.
“Now,” he said, and reached out. Together, you hit the button.
Gravity returned in a single, devastating second. You dropped like a stone — feet on solid ground, air in your lungs, heat in your skin. You didn’t let go of each other. Not right away.
Not yet.
What came next stunned you. 
Where pain and rage had once lived like permanent tenants, there was only silence. You no longer felt the urge to scream, to break something, to tear through walls or claw through your own skin. Something had been rewritten in you. Recoded. As if the metaphysical cancer had been excised. Removed without anesthesia, yes — but removed all the same.
You took one step. Then another. And your body felt different. Not like it did in zero-gravity, not quite. But something remained of that lightness. That sense of floating just above your own sorrow.
You didn’t speak. Neither did he. Words would have broken the seal on something sacred.
You emerged into the final hallway together. Unspoken choreography. At the return counter, you shed the gear — gloves, goggles, names. One of the staff blinked, visibly surprised, and said, almost to himself, “No one’s ever mastered the gravity room that fast.” Then louder, “Would you like photos?”
You looked at the screen, flipping quickly past the chaos, the fracture, the violence. You stopped on the frame where the two of you floated — just suspended, hands clasped, nowhere to go but together. You tapped it. Took the printout without a word.
Caleb printed something for himself, too. You didn’t see what.
You walked outside. It was already dark, the wind sharp against your cheeks. The kind of cold that wakes you up, reminds you that you’re still alive.
Without meaning to, your bodies shifted toward familiar geography — toward your place. Once his, too.
And then, like nothing had changed and everything had, he slipped off his jacket and draped it over your shoulders. No words. No offer. Just instinct.
You didn’t argue. The fabric was warm. And it smelled like him. Like worn-in leather and something sharp underneath. You let it settle.
“What do you regret most?” you asked, quietly, almost to yourself. Maybe you shouldn’t have. But you knew, with sudden clarity, that whatever came now — wouldn’t hurt.
Maybe it would be sad. But it wouldn’t be cruel.
“That I gave up too soon,” he said, after a moment.
You laughed softly. “Too soon? You followed me for three months. After work. To the grocery store. You left flowers in my bike basket. Random books on my doorstep.”
He gave a crooked shrug, not quite defensive. “It sounds stupid now. Hollow. But I didn’t know what else to do. How else to tell you I was trying. That I was willing to change. That I just needed you to hear me.”
“To me it felt like a trap,” you said. “Like you were setting bait. Like you wanted to pin me down and hold me there. In the state I was in... if you’d just disappeared for a week, I probably would’ve come running. In tears. Begging you not to leave again.”
He sighed. “So I got it wrong. Again.”
“Not wrong, exactly.” You looked at him, then ahead. The street was quiet. Your block already in sight. “That’s the problem, I think. For both of us. We keep thinking we know better. Like I assume I know what you need, when really, it’s just what I need.”
You glanced at him. “Like you dreaming your whole life of this expensive model starship. Then giving it to me. Thinking it would make me happy. Because it would make you happy.”
His smile came slow, bittersweet. “And all you ever wanted was someone to just sit on the porch and look at the moon.”
You nodded. “Exactly.”
By then, you were already at the gate. Home.
You stopped. Both of you.
You didn’t reach for your keys. He didn’t move forward. Just standing there, jacket on your shoulders, silence resting comfortably between your bodies.
“Caleb…” you said softly, already knowing you didn’t need to finish.
He sighed. The kind of sigh that had learned to carry meaning. “I don’t have an answer,” he said. “I want to try again. And I don’t. I dream about holding you every night, and then I wake up. And it’s… cruel.”
“I have the same thoughts,” you admitted. “But I can’t just erase you. Not now. Not ever. And I’ll never be the one to suggest we stay friends.”
He smiled gently, brushing a strand of hair behind your ear. “Technically, you just did.”
“I said I’d never say it,” you shot back, lifting your chin. “Not that I said it.”
There was a beat, then you added, “What if we let chance decide?”
“A coin toss?” he raised an eyebrow.
“No. The photos. The ones we printed. If they match — if they’re even close — I’ll invite you in. For tea.”
He tilted his head, amused. “Tea. Very non-committal of you.”
“If they don’t match,” you continued, “then maybe… it’s not the time. Maybe we see each other again. Maybe we don’t.”
“You always did like risk,” he said dryly. “Alright. No promises.”
“No promises,” you echoed.
“On three?”
You both pulled out your photos at the same time. Held them up.
The silence stretched.
“Well then,” you said.
“Yeah,” he murmured, the edge of a smile in his voice.
“I have only one question,” you said, turning toward the door, your voice lighter now, teasing. “Black or green?”
He gave a soft huff and curled his arm gently around your waist, guiding you toward the entrance. “Like you don’t already know.”
“I do,” you said, slipping the photo back into your bag. 
The exact same photo. Identical in angle, in light, in pause. The moment where you floated together. Still not touching. But already not letting go.
The... END?
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So… you survived the end. But is it really the end?
Let’s be honest — I wrote a scene. A very explicit one. The kind I haven’t posted before. Spicy, slow, and entirely too much in the best/worst way. But after everything that happened in this story, slapping it on the end felt… wrong. Like putting a silk ribbon on a smoking crater. So I cut it.
But. If this hits 100 reblogs in 24h, I’ll post the continuation I cut — the scene that didn’t fit the concept, because it was too much: too raw, too intimate, too honest. But also... very, very smutty. And maybe the only kind of peace these two could’ve found. You know what I’m talking about. You’ve earned it. Let’s see if they do.
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la-patrona-magdalena · 28 days ago
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Synopsis:
You always wanted your family to look at you, even just once. At least with a bit of the affection they gave to the portraits of your mother. Too bad that when they finally did, you were looking at the pages of a comic that showed the cruel future.
Inspired by the manhwa: no place for the Fake Princess
Warnings: English is not my first language, so I used a translator. Yandere content, neglect, abandonment, angst (?), allusions to death, original character (not the reader), allusions to torture. I try to keep the gender neutral,but in part there are mostly feminine pronouns. If any warnings are missing here, please let me know.
Disclaimer: This fanfic is for personal reading only. The use of this text for AI model training, data mining, commercial purposes, or any automated reproduction is strictly prohibited without the explicit consent of the author. Translation or reposting to other platforms is also strictly prohibited without the author's permission
Thank you.
You can read the fanfic in its original language (Spanish) on my AO3
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Chapter two - See them Truly
This was going to be hard. In moments like this, you wished you had inherited some of your siblings' intelligence— well, Bruce's kids', really. It would also be hard to stop thinking about them as family.
You realized that while trying to fall asleep. You don't know anything about the outside world, or how to manage money nothing. You're only 12! You just wanted to worry about getting a good grade so Alfred would give you ice cream, not about getting tortured by some clown-painted lunatic. The upside is, that won't happen for a few years, so you have plenty of time to hide from the Joker's eye and think about what you're going to do with your life once Serelith shows up… unless you end up bringing her into this yourself just to get out of this strange family as soon as possible. The downside is that you want to figure something out now, and it's really hard to think when Tim's trying to brush your hair in front of the mirror in his room, where he dragged you earlier this morning.
—If you’re doing this so I won’t say anything about— He cuts you off before you can finish. —I'm doing this because I want to. I trust you enough to know you won't tell anyone… That includes Bruce and the others, okay?—he asks as he keeps trying to make your hair look somewhat decent.
After reading the comics, you learned a lot about everyone else's skills. Sure, you already knew Tim was smart—you'd asked him for help with your homework more than once just as an excuse to spend quality time together. But you didn't know he was on Batman's level, or that he figured everything out when he was nine. Yeah, you're way out of his league. If you were him, you wouldn't bother teaching some kid basic algebra either, not when you've got complex cases to deal with. …Although, he’d probably teach Serelith if she asked him…
The point is, once you woke up with a clear head and your emotions under control, you'd decided not to tell anyone about the comics. Which means you'll have to be really careful around someone like Tim.
—I won't tell Bruce or anyone else. I promise.— You give him a half-smile, one he definitely notices… When did you stop calling Bruce “dad”? Wasn't it just you and Damian who used to call him that?
Maybe Damian had something to do with your anxiety attack—now that Tim thinks about it, Damian’s so-called “company” probably just means fights and arguments. It was really stupid of him to think Damian treated you differently just because of some fight from years ago. Besides, you don’t know anything about Damian’s past! To you, he probably just seemed like a troubled kid. Tim should’ve paid more attention to you. He shouldn’t have kept his distance just because of his own issues with Damian. He shouldn’t have looked away just because everyone else did.
He won’t take his eyes off you, not until he’s sure you’re not close to another breakdown like last night’s. Not until he knows nothing’s going to hurt you again.
—Ow!— You wince as he tugs too hard on your hair with the brush. He mutters a string of repeated apologies, mixed with complaints about how hard it is to deal with your hair, though really, it’s just lack of experience.
After some struggle and a few tips from you on how to do it right, he managed to do a decent job brushing your hair and even put in a slightly crooked flower clip.
—Thanks,—you mutter, somewhat indifferent. Tim wasn’t exactly close to you not that anyone in this family really was, unless you counted Damian’s short conversations with his arrogant attitude. So Tim’s strange behavior today is a surprise. A part of you wanted to hug him and tell him about your day, ask about his likes, and knit him something out of wool with a design he might like, now that his eyes were on you. But the other part of you, the bigger part, wanted to throw in his face how, in the comics, he was so desperate to find Serelith, sleepless nights without rest, with such a tired and loving look aimed only at her, never noticing your absence. Why was he looking at you now? Was it because of what happened last night? He was surely making sure you wouldn’t cause any trouble. Once he was certain you wouldn’t make another “drama,” he’d go away. You shouldn’t get your hopes up about him; you can’t look at him with love because he won’t look at you that way. That belongs to his real sister, not you. You have to try to act normal about his sudden concern; you’ll only make things worse if you tell him what you saw.
Tim swallowed hard at your tone, yet he kept his eyes fixed on his task. He would make sure to learn properly later.
—I’ll walk you out,—he gave you a half smile, though it looked more like a grimace trying to escape the awkwardness. You just nodded, letting him accompany you to your bedroom door. —I homeschool,—you replied, returning the same awkward smile, which in your case looked more like a dry smile— —I just have to go to the study room. —Ah…— His uncomfortable smile faltered a bit. Why don’t you go to school? Did you even go once? Now that he looked at you properly, he should have known—you’re not wearing any uniform. —I’ll walk you there then.
You nodded, and Tim led the way to your door, then stood there still. Which was your study room inside the mansion? Maybe you studied in the library? Apparently, you noticed his confusion and walked past him, now leading the way yourself. In a few minutes, you showed him how to get to your study room. It was near the library, and he didn’t waste time analyzing the place as much as he could with a quick glance. It was a slightly small room compared to the usual rooms in the mansion, with several of your study things near a small worn-out stool, scratched in bright colors with different little animals. Inside was an older man, unknown to him, accompanied by Alfred, who gave a somewhat surprised look upon noticing him.
—Master Drake?—Alfred asked, while the man, who Tim assumed was your teacher of some unknown subject, looked at him with curiosity. —Oh… hello, Alfred. I didn’t mean to interrupt.— He looked at the stranger in front of him suspiciously while nodding in greeting. Could this man be the reason for your near breakdown? —Good afternoon. I didn’t mean to impose.
you entered the room, walking right past him, , and sat on your little stool in silence. Had you always been this quiet? Or were you only acting this way because the teacher was present? Did he intimidate you?
—Can you leave so I can focus?—you asked. You didn’t mean to sound harsh, but your tone wasn’t exactly gentle either. You just wanted space and to study without his strange behavior weighing on you. If he stayed, you felt like at any moment you might break down in front of him—run to hug him without caring about Alfred or your teacher being there. You didn’t want that. You couldn’t do that. You didn’t have the right.
Tim blinked once. The request caught him a little off guard. First you kicked him out of your room, and now your class? You? Didn't you know that he could teach you the same class you were taking without any problem? He lowered his gaze a bit, didn’t say anything right away, wondering if maybe he was overthinking it all. —Of course,—he finally replied, with that same smile that, after seeing it so much, gave you a strange chill. —I don't want to bother. He took a step back. Then another. Carefully, trying not to make unnecessary noise, like he was afraid of being a distraction even as he left. —Good luck with your studying,—he murmured before turning fully and disappearing down the hallway, his footsteps nearly silent.
He was already thinking about quickly finishing the case at hand to start investigating you, and all your teachers. Maybe he could even convince Bruce to let him take you to his apartment and homeschool you himself. That way he could be absolutely sure no teacher was hurting you. He didn’t trust any of them. Even if he investigated every teacher in Gotham, you’d still be safer if he was the one doing the teaching.
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Alfred followed him with his eyes for a moment, then turned his gaze back to you, one brow slightly raised. Your behavior lately had been… unusual. You hadn’t come down for dinner last night or for breakfast this morning. He’d also noticed how young Master Drake had rushed through his breakfast and ran straight back upstairs. At first he thought it was because of the case he was working on—until he saw you with him.
Normally, he would’ve been glad to see the two of you spending time together. That finally, after all these years, someone in the family was looking at you the way you’d always wanted… But your behavior, the way you spoke to him, and that empty, pained look you gave him…
Alfred could only politely bid farewell to your teacher and to you, leaving you to study alone while he headed out to take young Master Damian to school. Who, by the way, was in a foul mood today—more than usual. Ever since he noticed your absence at dinner last night, and all the way until he got into the car this morning.
Grumbling in the back seat, the green-eyed boy sat with his arms crossed, not even bothering to hide his annoyance from Alfred, who glanced at him now and then through the rearview mirror.
Where the hell were you?
Damian hadn’t seen you since you returned from your shopping trip with Pennyworth, jumping around excitedly after buying some ridiculous comics. He had hoped, really hoped, to at least see you at breakfast, hear you talk about what you’d read while he pretended to be annoyed. But you weren’t there. If Pennyworth hadn’t told him you were fine, he would’ve gone to look for you himself. And if it weren’t for his father, he would’ve stayed home to study with you.
Not that he needed to. Obviously. He already knew everything they taught. But at least he would’ve listened to you, would’ve looked at you when you asked about something you didn’t understand, and then he could’ve mocked you and explained it himself afterward.
But Richard says “you need to make friends,” and his father agrees. He can’t argue against both of them, so if he has to socialize, why aren’t you coming along too? You, who don’t even have a double life as a vigilante, should be the one socializing more, getting friends in your civilian life, not isolating yourself in a room.
Though… part of him was glad you didn’t have anyone else. And he suspects that’s exactly what his father wanted when he decided you’d be homeschooled.
With a grunt, Damian got out of the car when Pennyworth parked in front of Gotham Academy.
—She’s acting like an idiot,—he muttered with a rough, irritated tone.—It’s not normal.— He glared at the butler for a few seconds, his annoyance clearly showing—though beneath it, so did his concern.
Alfred watched him for a moment before answering, his face composed as always, though carrying that same faint concern.
—I’ll take care of her. Master Damian should focus on school for today.
Damian turned his gaze away, jaw tense as he realized Pennyworth was trying to calm him down about his half—no, his sister.
—I’m not a child. I don’t need to be calmed.
—Yet you throw tantrums like one,—Alfred replied with his usual sarcasm. Damian only scoffed in response and started walking away, pausing only briefly to mutter something under his breath.
—She shouldn’t lock herself up like that. It’s pathetic.
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When Damian first arrived at the mansion and met you, he thought you were pathetic.
Everyone else was a vigilante, everyone went out to fight at night—even Gordon found a way to stay useful after losing the ability to walk.
You weren't. You were just someone he shared half blood with. Nothing more, nothing less. He didn't pay attention to you for a while, just insulting you and telling you what a nuisance you were whenever you came near. It only took two interactions for you to realize you didn't want to be around him. It bothered him a little for a while, more than the others' attitude toward him.
He didn’t know why you, specifically, annoyed him—until eventually, he realized you were just like him in this family.
Clearly, compared to him, your combat training was nonexistent, your intelligence was average, and your hands were clean. He was the son of a devil, and you were just the daughter of a pretty model. He was a child whose father never knew existed, and you were a child who was always planned.
And yet somehow, the family treated you both the same. Except for Pennyworth, he seemed more familiar with you.
You were two kids who didn’t fit. Two kids the family didn’t quite know what to do with.
You both reacted differently to being treated that way. He fought back when necessary, every time someone dared to mess with him. You, on the other hand, smiled… and then ran off to cry. It was pathetic—but he hated it. He hated how you cried from the way others treated you. He understood, to a degree, that he came from a very different world than this one. But you? You were born here. You were supposed to be more loved, because you were cleaner, because you were wished for.
But somehow, the opposite happened. Eventually, he adapted. And somehow, they adapted to him. he made a place for himself. And somehow, they ended up loving him.
And though he’d never admit it, and he’d rather cut out his tongue than say it out loud, he loves them too.
And he knows, somehow, he knows, this family loves you. And he hates how, even so, you still don’t have a place here. They never adapted to you, not even when you keep trying to adapt to them.
Eventually, he chose of his own willto be around you. He found a way to make you interact with him again. It was difficult and strange at first, but he made it work
You weren’t close. You never have been. And he won’t allow it… not yet. Not when his mother put a price on his head and was capable of killing him. Not when that man is capable of putting Gordon in a wheelchair, capable of killing and torturing Todd, and capable of nearly doing the same to Thomas.
He wasn’t going to risk you. He’s already risking too much with the Joker knowing everyone’s identities. He’s already risking too much just by sharing a last name with you. Getting closer would only put you in more danger.
You have to stay in your place—clean, untouched.
Reluctantly, and only after Richard explained things to him, he came to understand that somehow, the situation you were in was the safest way to keep you alive.
So for now, he only comes close enough so you don’t cry because you feel lonely. He’ll send Titus to play with you, let you pet Alfred the cat, and listen to you rant about your latest wool creation or how tough a particular class was. He’ll come near and keep his eyes on you during breakfast, lunch, and dinner—even if his father doesn’t come down to eat with you. He’ll be there, talking with his usual attitude and way of being. He doesn’t act differently around you; he treats you the same as the others. And that probably doesn’t bother you… does it?
He’ll keep up that same routine until one day, he’s completely sure you’ll be safe. That you won't suffer for the life this family you were born into chose. When that day comes, he’ll allow himself to get close to you the way he’s always wanted.
If his grandfather saw him now, he’d tell him how pathetic he is for getting attached to you. And to some extent, he is. It’s pathetic how he gets angry when you don’t attend classes with him, even though he knows it’s a thousand times safer for you, according to his father.
It’s pathetic how he sneaks into your room at night just to steal a wool keychain you made and didn’t have the courage to give him. It’s pathetic how he keeps it in his pocket and carries it everywhere, wishing you’d make more wool creations for him, like you did with the oven mitts or Pennyworth’s scarf.
It’s pathetic how much he hates Drake after finding out he stayed the night in your own bed. Doesn’t he see that puts you in danger? And why did you even let him into your room in the first place?
And it's even more pathetic that he keeps thinking about all this. I'm sure by the end of the day you'll get over that attitude of yours, and at dinner you'll finally talk about the comics you brought yesterday.
He just hopes you don't look at him and think he's pathetic, how pathetic he is just because of his beloved sister.
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Okay, two weeks as I promised… plus a two-day delay, dear god. The worst part is that this chapter was already written since the synopsis...
Ahem, even though I still plan to keep the two-week schedule for each chapter (now every Saturday), for now it'll be every three weeks, mainly because I’m planning the direction of the story better and figuring out how I want to develop it. I also prefer publishing chapters with a good chunk already done, not just writing as I go. And unfortunately, under my hyper-fixation on the Bat-Family, which makes it very difficult for me…In fact, I wasn't even sure I'd put Damian's thoughts on Reader so quickly, but I think they'll be important for the rest of the story. So yeah, thanks for your understanding.
On another note, I’m really grateful for all the support! I wasn’t expecting so much love and such sweet messages. I love you all, internet strangers. I tried to tag things as best I could, but one or two might have ended up mislabeled. Well… love you lots!
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