#rvb darryl
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joltning · 1 year ago
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pri demon th
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junky4rdd4wg · 4 months ago
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MY CHARON 3 DESIGNS!!!!!! Okay so. Same thing as I did with the triplets, some little facts and rambling about them !
[I accidentally wrote Darryl and Terrill’s names next to the wrong guy and didn’t notice until the second I’m about to post this don’t look at me😭😭😭😭]
Sherry - Usually has her hair slicked back or braided due to wearing her helmet most of the time, but her natural hair is 3C and styled like I have here !! Necklace is a gift from her mother :-), beauty marks, very clear skin. Natural born leader, has been since the beginning
Darryl - Has glasses but won’t wear them, long hair usually back in a bun or ponytail to get it out of the way for work reasons. Scruffy facial hair, thick eyebrows, dark eyebags from lack of sleep. He’s a cardigan guy I feel it in my bones. Very observant and on high alert most of the time, which is pretty great for the team actually
Terrill - Slightly more dishevelled look than the other two, shorter and less curly hair than the other two. Overall just kinda more scraggly looking because he could not give a gaf about his appearance. Very laid back most of the time, but very helpful!
I don’t really have much else to say about them because I’m still developing their personalities in my books, but!!! Enjoy nonetheless :-)
(so so sorry this was so late coming💔💔 I’m not AS into RVB as I was when I posted the triplets one, but I still love it!! Will be posting more art later of other fandoms I’m into at the moment so stay tuned……..)
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rubykgrant · 1 year ago
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Question for my RVB Friends-
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rvb-relationship-royale · 1 year ago
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RVB Relationship Royale, Tournament 2- Friendship Fray
I'm alive, folks! I've finally finished rounding up all the ships, filling out the extra spaces in the bracket, and randomly generating the first round of matchups. As we have a total of 64 matches in round one, I plan to make it easy on myself and post 8 polls each Saturday and Sunday, starting this weekend.
With all that said, the matchups are listed below the cut!
Delta & Theta vs. Andersmith & Caboose
Doc & Wash vs Lopez & O'Malley
Wash & Simmons vs. Red Team
Donut & Wash vs. Carolina & Simmons
Tucker & Wash vs. 479er & Wash
Tex & York & North vs. Grif & Simmons & Donut
Tex & York vs. York & Illinois
Tucker & Junior vs. Grif & Bitters
Caboose & Loco vs. North & Carolina
Doc & O'Malley vs. Wash & Dr. Grey
Wyoming & Florida vs. Simmons & Caboose
Grif & Sarge vs. Doc & Donut & O'Malley
Doc & Lopez vs. Freckles & Caboose
Doyle & Dr. Grey vs. Carolina & Locus
Kai & Tucker vs. Gamma & Wyoming
Doc & Meta vs. Bitters & Matthews
Jax & Sarge vs. Epsilon & Carolina
Florida & V.I.C. vs. Locus & Siris
Church & Donut vs. York & Delta
Grif & Carolina vs. Donut & Tucker
Alpha & Wash vs. Kimball & Tucker
Andy & Crunchbite vs. Carolina & 479er
Grif & Locus vs. Kimball & Felix
Carolina & Donut vs. Delta & Alpha
Doc & Grif vs. Sarge & Lopez
Simmons & Lopez vs. Maine & Carolina
North & South vs. Church & Simmons
C.T. & Wash vs. V.I.C. & Red Zealot
Sarge & Wash vs. South & C.T.
Church & Tucker vs. Donut & Lopez
Simmons & Donut vs. Sarge & Caboose
Wyoming & Maine vs. Kai & Tex
Caboose & Andy vs. Kai & Doc
Caboose & Donut vs. Tex & Sheila
Locus & Sirius & Felix vs. Wash & Caboose & Tucker
FILSS & Carolina vs. Donut & Sarge
Tex & Donut vs. Grif & Tucker
York & Wash vs. Sarge & Surge
Murphy & Jenkins vs. Church & Sheila
Locus & Felix vs. Kai & Simmons
The Lieutenants vs. Lopez & Lopez 2.0
North & York vs. Church & Caboose
Church & Jimmy vs. Doc & Simmons
Caboose & Wash vs. Alpha & the Fragment AI
Wash & York & North vs. Blue Team
Grif & Church (Alpha) vs. Doc & Donut
Kai & Carolina vs. Tex & North
Jax & Dylan vs. Dr. Grey & Kimball
Tex & Caboose vs. Lopez & Sheila
Kai & Caboose vs. Temple & Doc
Kai & Donut vs. Doc & Junior
Carolina & Kimball vs. Caboose & Sheila
Carolina & Wash & Tucker vs. Lopez & Locus
Caboose & Lopez vs. Carolina & Wash
C.T. & Wash & Ohio & Idaho & Iowa vs. Sherry & Derryl & Terrill
Wash & South vs. Donut & Cronut
Rogers & Cunningham vs. Red Team & Blue Team & Doc
Sarge & Dr. Grey vs. Ohio & Idaho & Iowa
Lopez & Grif vs. Caboose & Delta
Sarge & Carolina vs. Maine & Wash
Grif & Kai vs. Tex & Sarge
Kimball & Doyle vs. Grif & Huggins
Gamma & O'Malley vs. North & Theta
Tex & Tucker vs. Tucker & Caboose
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nevada-got-screwed-over · 6 years ago
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Sherry, Darryl, and Terrill welcoming the Triplets in s14
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thezanyarthropleura · 3 years ago
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Nothing, just painting the canon RVB lesbians and their entourage. First time using brush paints on these figures, I’m pretty happy with the results.
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funsizedcrow · 4 years ago
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rvb fake season memes because i really want 479er and the triplets back.
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SOS (2/2)
Three months later than planned, here is the end to “SOS”.
Read Chapter 1 here.
Rating: T
Characters: Ohio, Idaho, Iowa, Sherry, Terrill, Darryl
Relationships: Ohio/Sherry
Warnings: Major character death, canonical character death/injury, canon-typical language/violence
Summary: Maine's distress beacon is the first to set off the Triplets' comms system. But his isn't the last.
Chapter 2 below the cut or on Ao3.
EPILOGUE
Vera doesn’t believe what she’s seeing.
It’s a dream, a hallucination, a result of too many glasses of Sherry, Terrill and Darryl’s moonshine. Or, it’s a nightmare, because only in nightmares would her mind tease her with the possibility the flashing light and incessant chirping are real.
But then Ezra’s shouting into the comms, and soon Mike is too.
They see it. They hear it. So, either it’s real, or it’s a group hallucination, and Vera doesn’t know enough about that kind of stuff to make a decision.
Right now, Vera is tentatively siding with this being real.
Carolina’s alive.
After years of radio silence, years of mourning and healing and starting to sort of forget—but not totally, Vera would never ever forget her friends or Freelancer—after years of nothing, here’s something.
“Oh. My. God!” Vera screams into comms, only adding to the mess of ecstatic voices. “Oh, my god.”
“She’s still out there!” Ezra yells over comms. There’s an explosion, followed by a grunt. “Should we—ow!—should we call off the stealth mission?”
This mission hasn’t been stealth since it started, but Vera will never admit that.
“I would like to go home so we can call Carolina, please,” Mike pitches in. He yells as the sound of bullets hitting metal flood the comms.
“Yeah, yeah, call it off!” Vera says. Instead of running back to base, she lowers herself into a crouching position.
Vera’s a little fucking dizzy, but like, the good kind of dizzy. Sure, it’s a distress signal. Meaning Agent Carolina is probably in distress.
Logically, you gotta be alive to be in distress.
At least this is what Vera believes as she pushes herself to her feet and switches to the channel only she and Sherry share. She’s grinning so hard, she’s surprised she can even speak.
“Hey, where are you going, sweet cheeks?” Sherry chides.
“She isn’t dead!” Vera crows. One of the best sentences she’s ever uttered, in her opinion. Sherry’s silent for a moment before responding.
“Who isn’t dead?” she asks.
“Agent Carolina!” Vera says.
“What?!”
“She’s alive!” Vera yells as she reaches their base.
Ezra and Mike are already inside as she bursts inside, reaching up to yank her helmet—still shrieking glorious tidings of Carolina’s distress. Before she pulls it off, she says,
“Get your ass over here, we have some phone calls to make!”
“Phone ca—” Sherry’s voice is cut off as Vera removes her helmet.
“You know, we can’t actually, uh, call Agent Carolina,” Ezra points out as they make their way down the hall towards the computer.
After much debate, Ezra and Sherry rigged up a new computer, one with a comms system that worked about 60% of the time. They think. They aren’t really sure, what with no one to reach out too. And when they shot random messages into the void, no one ever answered. It is what it is, and even with wonky means of communication, there’s at least a sliver of hope for rescue.
“No shit, Ezra, it’s just a figure of speech.” Vera rolls her eyes.
The three of them cram themselves into the computer room, Vera at the desk, Ezra and Mike hanging on the back of her chair.
“Can you reach her?” Ezra asks.
“I’m gonna fucking try,” Vera retorts.
By the time everything is ready to go, Sherry, Terrill and Darryl are there, watching with baited breath as Vera reaches over to press the Button. The Button that will, in theory, open up communication between them and Agent Carolina—more specifically, her helmet.
“Agent Carolina?” Vera squawks. She coughs. Shakes her head. Repeats. “Agent Carolina! This is Agent Ohio of Project Freelancer. I have Agents Idaho and Iowa with me, as well as—” Vera pauses, unsure if she should disclose Sherry and the others are technically Innies. Nah. “As well as three other allies. You, uh, wouldn’t know them. At all. Agent Carolina, if you hear me, please respond!”
There are thirty-two agonizing seconds of radio silence.
Then.
“Ohio?”
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earako · 3 years ago
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*heavy sigh*
Once again the foster-close boys have seized my brain so idea!
reason why we don't see Glenn and Jodie is because they're fighting off the doodler slowly trying to make it's way into hell
But them being protective they hide it from Nicky
Nicky somehow doesn't find out
By the time Nicky has Taylor but before his arm Glenn and Jodie are leaving constantly under the guise of dealing with political issues in hell
Jodie left first because Glenn didn't want Nicky to feel as if he was leaving him again
But after a while Jodie sends some kind of message needing help so Glenn goes
Wait I lie I'm adding the other dads to this
Henry's body is at the church thing being used as sort of an anchor but also a power source for the doodler
Ron and Darryl are being used as additonal power sources via having their sanity broken again and again-think of church and the fragments from rvb
So the teens and season 2 dads slowly realize season 1 dads are still alive and trapped/fighting the doodler
And they need to save season 1 dads
Maybe Henry or Ron bring Erin back to their side again idk-
Also all the season 1 dads have to prevent Jodie and Glenn from killing season 2 dads
Henry has to trap them in vines while Ron somehow manages to talk them down
And now for once theres more than 1 generation trying to take down the doodler
Basically dndads but Jojos eyes over heaven
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sharkface-daydreams · 4 years ago
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@donut-entendre u are a blessing 🙏 are u sure tho there's a lot lol and I like all of them
things lurking in my half-assed rvb wips repository:
post-s13 locus alien baby au with side order of grief-induced hallucinations (2 versions- with and without magic alien temple fuckery for revivals because I love to suffer, this one might actually make it to one-shot status idk)
noPFL Charon sharkprice meet-cute coffee date
locnut Iowa farm family rivalry au, Sam's got two dads, Sarge and Butch, and Donuts got his two moms. rivalry started bc donuts ma stole Butch's usual blue ribbon for pies at the county fair one year and escalated in the usual passive aggressive Midwestern way ever since
shark vs Tex bar brawl, grief processing and drinking buddies. they don't have to hold back fighting bc they're both at least 50% metal
past PriceChurch pfl where price grows a conscience and steals alpha before they can start torturing him and turns Leonard in to the authorities but Alpha ends up in the hands of Charon anyway and it's Worse tm
metadocnut meet-horny ELNOD au with plural meta and do℅malley. they raise bees and donut starts a scented candle business at the farmers market (I've got a lot written for this actually but also bc plural stuff it's a bit personal too)
triplets x trio survival shenanigans with sharkprice frame, when Sharky mentions something about his ex Darryl getting sent to some ice shit hole planet and never hearing from him again, Aiden realizes they never extracted the triplets from the distraction mission bc pfl imploded so they set about trying to rescue the Charon agents and Freelancers
saving private loco verse with blues n reds prison hijinks tryna bust Lorenzo out of storage bc he's a teammate, not an object
SharKey au (same as the crappily drawn comic I made lol) where the sword gives shark the edge over the freelancers he needs and Chorus Loses bc they can activate the purge (might get around to writing this actually I've got some more ideas)
yet another Shark and Felix live au where Sharky gets his grappling hook back and yoinks Felix out of the sky before he can splat but Locus already made his decision so Felix is suicidally reckless and suspicious of everyone especially sharkface who is licherally just trying to help their side survive. I made a diagram for this one but I'll admit I know nothing about physics
I like them.... I like to think about them.....
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joltning · 2 years ago
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fcs for them. cause my old ones aren’t so great
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astro-b-o-y-d · 8 years ago
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I love the Triplets
I love Sherry, Darryl and Terrill
I love Siris
I love Felix
I love Locus
I LOVE CABOOSE
I LOVE CHURCH
I LOVE GRIF
I LOVE DONUT
I LOVE KIMBALL
I LOVE DOYLE
I LOVE DR. GREY
I LOVE (and hate) THE DIRECTOR
I LOVE RVB
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joltning · 2 years ago
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joltning · 2 years ago
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shit I’m stupid I’ve been avoiding the obvious. rvb au where the triplets don’t get booted off but instead fight low level lackeys and that’s how they meet STD. or rvb au where std is also freelancers and they’re climbing up the ranks with the triplets with the goofiest rivalry ever. or rvb au where the triplets get booted off pfl and charon takes them in and that’s how they meet. god. Damnit
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Reunited and it Feels So Awkward
It’s been too long since I’ve written some OhSherry, so here you go! Ao3
Word Count: 3041
Pairings: Ohio/Sherry
Warnings: Canon-typical swearing, alcohol, terrible singing
Summary: It’s been a few years since their rescue from that frozen planet, and Sherry and Vera have a lot of catching up to do. Or, Sherry and Vera sing karaoke and hurl snow at each other.
It’s quiet, for a Saturday. There’s usually twenty or more people crowded around the bar, and more often than not, the room is so packed strangers end up sharing tables.
Tonight, though, there’s no one.
The bar is empty and surprisingly well-lit, and Sherry can see the floor for the first time. She thinks maybe Roy, the bartender, should dim the lights again so she can forget she ever saw it.
At first, Sherry’s suspicious—and the fact that Roy looks completely unperturbed doesn’t help, because he always looks like that. But aside from the floor, it looks like he put an effort into cleaning the bar, which he never does himself. And there’s no music. None.
Then she turns to Darryl, who casts his gaze around the establishment, satisfied smile on his face.
“You rented the bar out, didn’t you,” Sherry asks.
“Well, I thought some peace and quiet might be nice,” Darryl says. He crosses his arms and looks over his shoulder at Terrill, who’s busy hanging their coats.
Sherry shivers. Not that the bar’s cold—in fact, it could stand to be a few degrees cooler. No, it’s the fact that when they’re done here, they’ll have to go back out into the freezing November air. It’s nowhere near as intense as That Planet, but that doesn’t mean Sherry likes it.
“Darryl, you and I both know you rented out the bar because a) you wanted to prove you could and b) you’re afraid that one guy will follow through on his threat to kick your ass,” Sherry says.
She makes her way to the bar, weaving around the tables smooshed together at haphazard angles.
“All I did was spill my drink on him!” Darryl whines, sulks over to the jukebox (Sherry’s been meaning to ask where Roy dug up one of those dinosaurs), and begins flipping through the song choices.
“You threw it at his face because he told you White Russians sucked,” Sherry says.
“And I seem to recall you saying something along the lines of, ‘your mom sucks’,” Terrill adds, joining Darryl at the jukebox. “What a waste of—”
“Oh, look, it’s Ezra!” Darryl shouts, dashing away from the jukebox—and Terrill.
Sherry shoots Terrill a look. He grins, pushes a button on the jukebox, and goes over to greet their friend. Music starts to fill the bar—some jazz number Sherry doesn’t recognize.  
Ezra nods at her over Darryl and Terrill’s heads. He looks pretty much the same as last time, hair maybe a little grayer but that’s it. Sherry nods back. She’s not great at the sappy reunion stuff, and by the deer-in-headlights look Ezra has on his face as Terrill leans in for a hug, he isn’t either.
Laughing, she turns to face the bar.
“I’ll have—”
The bathroom door to Sherry’s right bursts open and out struts Vera.
“Two shots of whiskey, and two margaritas to chase them down—one peach, one lime,” she says. Sherry stares as her old frenemy makes finger guns at Roy, who sighs and starts making their drinks.
Vera slides onto the stool to Sherry’s left—or, she tries to slide onto the stool. She ends up miscalculating and scoots right off the other side, crashing onto the floor, taking the barstool down with her.
Sherry gapes at Vera, who’s massaging her elbow, and Roy peers over the edge of the bar.
“Ow, my butt,” Vera grumbles.
Sherry opens her mouth to ask if Vera’s okay, but what comes out is a high-pitched giggle, followed by the obnoxious, snorting kind of laughter that makes her double over.
Reaching up to wipe the tears from her eyes, Sherry hops off her stool.
“Do—do you—?” Sherry chokes on her question and dissolves into another fit of laughter while Vera gives her a look that would make most people’s hearts freeze over. Catching her breath, she tries again.
“Do you need a hand?”
She reaches down, trembling slightly as she tries to compose herself.
By this time Ezra has made his way to the bar, half-concerned-half-amused look on his face.
Vera bats Sherry’s hand away and brings herself to a kneel.
“I got this you guys!” she snaps. Sherry and Ezra hold their hands up and back away.
Vera stands. Reaches down and grabs the toppled stool. Sets the stool up. And slowly climbs onto it.
Shaking his head, Roy plunks two shots of whiskey and two margaritas in front of Sherry and, noticing Terrill and Darryl approaching the bar, sets to making some White Russians.
“So? Let’s do this,” Vera says, snatching up the whiskey.
Sherry follows suit, doing her best not to smile at how red Vera’s face is or at how Vera is pretending not to notice how very, very red her face is.
Their glasses clink together and Sherry downs the shot, relishing the burn as the liquid travels to her stomach.
It’s the good shit, much better than the crap they dug up on That Planet. Everything is much better now that they’re off That Planet.
For a few moments, they sit in silence. No one is quite sure what to say, and Sherry, who used to pride herself at her conversation skills, can only think of weather-related comments. And she’s not about to gossip about the goddamned weather. So, she keeps her mouth shut. The jukebox continues to wheeze out that old jazz song.
“Is it just me, or is it, like, super weird how quiet it is in here?” Ezra asks. “I was expecting… I dunno, rowdy drunks? Overplayed radio hits? Crowded bathrooms?”
“There’s a perfectly good explanation for that,” Terrill says, taking a sip of his drink.
Darryl, who’s sitting next to Terrill, leans back and glares at his him.
“An explanation that most certainly isn’t worth his time,” he growls.
“Darryl rented out the entire bar,” Sherry says before taking a long drink of her margarita. Lime. It’s delicious, and Sherry’s almost annoyed. Vera read her well—that’s supposed to be her party trick!
Darryl opens his mouth to retort but the door to the bar opens with a BANG!
Roy drops the glass he’s cleaning and reaches for the shotgun hidden under the counter. Sherry whirls around, hand dropping to her hip. When her fingers brush the fabric of her jeans she remembers where—and when—she is. Back in the war, a loud noise usually meant an explosion, or that someone was shooting at you, and that meant grab your gun, get to cover, and shoot back.
She’s so busy reaching for a gun that’s isn’t there it takes her a few seconds to figure out the source of the noise.
It’s Mike.
Dumb grin on his face, jacket unzipped, and hat pulled way too far down on his head, Mike waves and almost knocks over the coat rack in the process.
“Hey, everyone!” he calls. “There was a spider on the door, but don’t worry, I got it!”
There’s a collective sigh of relief as everyone but Roy relaxes and goes back to their drinks.
Sherry chuckles.
“Don’t worry, Roy, Mike’s a friend,” she reassures him. Turning to Vera, she whispers, “I’m glad he didn’t actually have a gun, he probably would’ve shot the door.”
Roy narrows his eyes at Mike when he hears this. Then, with a shrug, he begins sweeping up the shattered glass. Good old No-Fucks-Given Roy.
There’s a sharp pain in Sherry’s side as Vera elbows her in the ribs.
“Ow—Hey!”
“Sorry,” Vera says in a voice that sounds a lot like she really isn’t that sorry.
Vera takes a drink and glances over at Sherry.
“How’re you liking Maine?” she asks. The way she spits out Maine makes it sound like a dirty word, and Sherry’s heart plummets.
“It’s, well, you know. It’s nice,” Sherry answers. “Nothing exciting really happens and believe me, I’m good with that.”
“But why Maine?” Vera asks shaking her head.
“What do you mean?” Sherry tries to keep her voice even.
“I don’t know! It’s just—well, it’s just—cold,” Vera says. “Anywhere in the world—heck, anywhere in the galaxy, and you chose… Maine. If you were looking for boring and quiet, there are, like, much better—and warmer—places.”
Vera’s not wrong about the cold. Winters here can be brutal. But there are colder places to be. Much colder.
As for why she picked Maine?
“I dunno,” Sherry replies with a shrug. Staring down her drink, she adds, “My parents are from here, and Terrill and Darryl got a place here, it just seemed like the place to be.”
Vera doesn’t say anything.
“What about you? Why’d you choose Hawaii?”
“Simple!” Vera says. “I got abandoned and forgotten on a literal ice cube for years by Project Freelancer! So, I decided screw—screw the cold, screw snow, I’m moving to Hawaii.”
“What about the sharks?” Sherry asks.
“Oh, psh come on, shark attacks, like, never happen,” Vera scoffs. “Though I could live without the, uh, volcanic fog-stuff.”
“Five things you couldn’t live without!” Ezra breaks in. Vera lets out an exasperated sigh.
“Oxygen,” Terrill chirps.
“Well, obviously,” Darryl says, rolling his eyes. “He means personally, as in you personally, not everyone else.”
“I, personally,” Terrill says, “could not live without oxygen.”
“Potato chips,” Mike calls from the jukebox. He’s busy flipping through songs, moving past them so fast Sherry doubts he’s actually reading the titles.
“Okay, that’s two,” Ezra says.
“Wait, so oxygen counts?”
“Internet,” Vera adds.
“That’s three!”
“Tips,” comes a voice right next to Sherry’s ear. She jumps and swivels on her stool to face the bar where Roy stands, wiping down the counter.
Sherry makes a mental note to leave him a larger tip than usual.
For a few moments, everyone’s quiet as they think about what they couldn’t live without. Sherry smiles, remembering the times they used to call a truce, gather together and share their resources—hot chocolate, alcohol, MREs, warmth. And they always ended up playing five things.
Sherry remembers the one—or three or four—times the game ended with a kiss. Sometimes Sherry would kiss Vera, or Vera would kiss Sherry. They tried to chalk it up to the booze, or the cold, or to tripping and falling… onto each other’s faces.
And she remembers when the rescue ship finally came. Vera knew some of them, and spent hours asking question after question. Sherry remembers being jealous that Vera’s attention wasn’t being spent on plotting her and Terrill and Darryl’s demise.
Then Sherry remembers the night they went their separate ways, how she wanted to punch herself in the face for not going to fucking Hawaii.
“Five,” Sherry says. “My memories. Couldn’t live without ’em.”
No one says anything for a few seconds, and then Ezra whistles.
“Whoa, dropping that deep shit on us already, huh?” he says. “I don’t know if I’m drunk enough for that.”
“But let’s think about this,” Terrill says. He sets his empty glass on the table, and he gets this look on his face that makes Sherry groan. He’s preparing for a Philosophical Discussion.
“Oh, God,” Vera mutters. She spins her stool around so she can rest her elbows on the counter and finish off her margarita.
“Let’s say you did lose your memories. How would you know you had them to begin with? Can you miss something that you’ve forgotten?” Terrill asks.
“Depends—six more shots, please!” Ezra calls over to Roy, holding up six fingers. “Do you know your memories were taken, or do you not remember that either?”
“Oohh, great point…”
Mike skips away from the jukebox to join the conversation. The song he chose begins to drift through the bar.
Yesterday,
all my troubles seemed so far away
Sherry did not pin Mike as a Beatles fan. With a shrug, she knocks back the shot Roy places in front of her. Vera does the same, and, out of nowhere, springs up from the stool and grab’s Ezra’s beer bottle.
Using the bottle as a makeshift microphone, Vera begins to belt out the chorus.
“Why she had to go! I don’t know, she wouldn’t say!”
Vera chugs the rest of Ezra’s beer then finishes the song.
And it’s.
Amazing.
When Vera comes back to sit at the bar, Sherry greets her with applause. Roy just shakes his head and hands Ezra another beer.
“I didn’t know you sang,” Sherry says as Vera plops down beside her.
“She doesn’t!” Ezra calls.
“Fuck off, Ezra!” Vera retorts. Her eyes light up and she turns to look at Sherry.
Sherry’s stomach twists for two different reasons. One: Vera is looking her right in the eyes and Sherry isn’t sure how to handle that—especially after that song. Sherry isn’t even sure if that qualifies as passive-aggressive or just flat out aggressive at this point.
Two: she knows exactly what Vera is about to say next and would honestly rather be stranded on that frozen planet for five more years.
“Your turn,” Vera says.
“Nooooo.” Sherry waves her arms in protest. “Nope.”
“Oh, come on, it’ll be fun!”
“I’m not nearly drunk enough for—”
“More shots!”
“No, I’m—”
“Don’t sell yourself short, Sherry, you’re a wonderful singer.”
“Shut up, Terrill!”
“Shots.”
“Thanks, Roy!”
“Tip your bartender.”
“You underestimate my ability to hold my liquor, sweet cheeks.”
“Shots, shots, shots shots shots—”
“Shut up, Darryl! Don’t encourage—”
“One, two, three, go!”
**
Sherry decides Vera’s idea might be the best idea in the history of ideas. And Terrill is right, Sherry’s a great singer. Her stuffed animals would agree.
Using Ezra, Terrill, Darryl, and Mike’s table as a stage, Sherry grabs a nearby bottle (“Goddammit not again!”) and points at Vera, who presses play on the jukebox.
               Ma ma ma maaaa
Darryl and Ezra let out a cheer as Lady Gaga starts blasting through the bar’s speakers.
Sherry isn’t sure what all the words are, so she just fakes it—while staying in perfect pitch—until she reaches—
“Pa-Pa-Pa-Poker face pa-pa-poker faaace!”
Mike has started dancing. Or maybe he’s trying to squash a spider.
Sherry makes eye-contact with Roy, who looks dead inside. She gives him a wink, but he doesn’t even blink.
As the song reaches it’s close Vera leaps up onto the table and starts dancing alongside Sherry, who is very. Very. Aware. Just how close she is. Like. Shoulder-touching, arm-bumping, hands-brushing close.
And suddenly the song is over and Vera’s clambering down from the table. She holds out her hand, and Sherry, wobbling on the shitty, unbalanced table, takes it. So she doesn’t fall. Obviously.
“My turn!” Darryl declares.
Sherry and Vera collapse into a couple nearby chairs, and it isn’t until Roy tells them it’s fifteen minutes to close that Sherry realizes she’s still holding Vera’s hand.
**
Frozen air smacks them in the face, taking their breath away for a few seconds as they walk out of the bar and into the night.
Vera’s right. Maine. Maybe not the best choice.
“My place is a few blocks away, if you all want to head over there,” Sherry suggests.
No one says anything, but no one protests either, so Sherry shrugs and takes off down the sidewalk to her place.
Snow drifts down from the sky, light and lazy in the breeze. Sherry loves how the light from the streetlamp catches on the snowflakes, making them sparkle. She loves how every breath makes its own little cloud, how the snow crunches beneath her shoes, how the growing anticipation of reaching the warmth of her apartment makes appreciate home that much more.
Okay, maybe she doesn’t hate Maine.
But… she wouldn’t hate Hawaii either.
Sherry is momentarily blinded by something cold and white smacking her in the face. She sputters and wipes the snow from her eyes as Vera snickers a few feet away.
“So that’s how it is?”
Reaching down and grabbing a fistful of snow—it’s not quite warm enough to form into a ball—Sherry springs up and flings it at Vera, who dances away.
Mike realizes what’s going on first and charges right into Terrill, knocking him off his feet and into the snow.
“Heyyyy! I’m not wearing snowpants!” Terrill protests.
Ezra and Darryl watch the events before them unfold. Ezra glances at Darryl, who glances back at him. They shrug, and Darryl kicks up a cloud of snow into Ezra’s face.
“Eat ice, ass hole!” Ezra shouts, tackling Darryl in the legs. They both go down in a tangle of limbs as Terrill struggles to get away from Mike, who’s somehow gotten a hold of Terrill’s boot.
Sherry narrows her eyes, grin tugging at the corners of her mouth, and glares at Vera.
“You never could catch me,” Vera taunts.
“I totally let you win,” Sherry says. “You were too easy to catch, and I had to have something fun to do on that frozen wasteland.”
“Oh yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“Well then,” Vera says. “Prove it. If you can get me before I reach your apartment, I’ll move to Maine.”
Sherry is 99% sure her heart has stopped working.
“Deal,” she says.
“One more thing!” Vera holds up her hand. “If I get there first, you have to move to Hawaii.”
“It is so on!” Sherry says. She crouches down, heart racing.
“Oh, uh, wait!” Vera takes a step back. “What’s your address?”
Duh.
“782 North Lake Avenue, it’s straight that way,” Sherry says.
“Okay, thanks!” And with that, Vera sprints away. Looking over her shoulder she shouts, “Catch me if you can!”
Sherry takes off after her.
Later, she’ll blame it on the ice, on her shoes not being good for running in snow, for the cold air burning in her lungs. It’s winter, after all, and they don’t have power armor anymore.
Vera makes it to the apartment a solid thirty seconds before her.
And after Vera’s makes fun of her for an hour, after Darryl and Ezra come staggering home, followed by Mike, who’s carrying Terrill, after they all collapse into bed, Sherry tiptoes to her dresser and pulls out an envelope.
From the envelope, she pulls out the plane ticket she bought weeks ago, and smiles.
“Totally let you win,” she whispers.
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Text
Confessions of a Freelancer Reject
For the RvB Fluff Week! ( @rvbficwars)
Original Prompt from @whatevertotesyourgoat:” Fluff Week Prompto: Ohsherry ~ The first "I love you", whether it was accidental or purposefully said is up to you. :3 Have fun fam~”
Hope you like it! Ao3
Warnings: Canon-typical violence/language, Swearing, Alcohol
Word Count: 1566
Pairings: Ohio/Sherry
Summary: It’s the little things in life that keep Sherry going. The little things, and a little alcohol. 
Or-Sherry and Ohio get drunk and play Five Things.
It’s the little things that keep Sherry going.
Hot chocolate on those nights where it’s colder than usual—which means, fucking cold. Movie night with Terrill and Darryl. Narrowly dodging a grenade as she high-tails it through the snow, getting shot just a little to the left so the bullet only grazes her arm, having a Warthog careen into her hangar.
There isn’t much else Sherry needs in life, except maybe a ride off this goddamn wasteland.
And more alcohol.
“Darryl, Terrill, you’re needed in the breakroom,” Sherry calls over the base’s intercom.
‘Breakroom’ is generous. It’s more like a closet.
Twelve feet by twelve feet. Table barely larger than a chess board, crates for chairs, ratty yellow couch that was probably white at some point, faded propaganda posters that someone—definitely not Sherry—has plastered with googly eyes. The microwave takes ages to cook anything, and their counter consists of another crate that doubled as MRE storage.
It’s Sherry’s favorite spot on the entire planet.
“What’s going on?” Darryl asks as he trots into the room. Terrill is right behind him, doing nothing to hide his disappointed frown.
“I don’t mean to be a drag, but it’s almost midnight,” Terrill complains.
“Were you asleep?” Sherry asks.
“Yes,” Terrill says at the same time Darryl says “No.”
“Guys, I don’t have time for you to get your story straight,” Sherry says, rolling her eyes. “We’ve got bigger problems.”
Terrill and Darryl glance at each other and then back at Sherry.
“Liiiike?” Terrill crosses his arms.
“Like, we’re out of booze,” Sherry says. “All we have left are maraschino cherries.”
Terrill goes pale and Darryl sinks to his knees.
“But—” Terrill starts but Darryl cuts him off.
“Nooo!!”
Knowing she’s already won, Sherry bites back a grin while she waits for Darryl to finish his tantrum. Terrill pats him on the shoulder, haunted look in his eyes. These two and their goddamn white Russians. She’s more of a whiskey gal, really.
“You know who isn’t out of alcohol?” Sherry asks, once Darryl’s calmed down a bit.
Terrill and Darryl’s heads shoot up.
“We—” Sherry doesn’t even have to pitch her proposal because Terrill has already rushed out of the breakroom, shouting something about his grenade stash.
“What the heck are you waiting for?” Darryl asks, jumping to his feet. “Let’s suit up!”
**
Breaking into Ohio’s base is child’s play.
The guard on duty is Iowa and, well. The guard on duty is Iowa.
They slip past him and duck inside a supply closet when he starts firing at a random snowflake. This must be a common occurrence because no one comes to investigate.
“Okay, Sherry, lead the way,” Terrill hisses into the radio.
One by one they move out of the supply closet and into the hallway. Sherry takes the lead, making sure to wave at all the security cameras they pass.
“Are you trying to get caught?” Darryl says.
“We’re going to get caught, Darryl,” Sherry says. “Why not have fun with it?”
“Well maybe we wouldn’t get caught if someone hadn’t left the blueprints with the camera locations back at base,” Terrill mumbles.
“I didn’t think we needed it!” Darryl protests. “It’s not like we haven’t been here before.”
Before the arrival Ohio and Company, Sherry and her boys had plenty of time to explore the bases. They knew the area like the back of their hands—not much else to do when you’re stranded on a frozen planet with no contact with the outside world.
That’s how Sherry knows there’s alcohol here: she stashed it for a rainy—or, perhaps more appropriately, a snowy—day.
There’s a loose panel in the ceiling of the showers, and when she stands on Darryl’s shoulders, she’s able to reach up and produce two bottles of vodka, half a bottle of kalua, and some moonshine.
“Excelsior!” Terrill shouts, grabbing the kalua and hoisting it above his head like an offering.
“What was that about not getting caught?” Sherry teases.
“Like you said,” Terrill says, hugging the alcohol to his chest, “We’re going to get caught. So, I’m going to savor this moment, Sherry.”
They don’t get much of a chance to bask in the glory of their reclaimed goods, because at that exact moment Ohio, Iowa, and Idaho burst into the shower room.
Sherry freezes, moonshine clutched in her hand, and waits for the firefight to begin. Hopes a stray bullet doesn’t break open the bottle she’s holding, spilling its priceless contents all over the floor.
Ohio looks down at the bottles of alcohol, then back at Sherry.
Then she reaches into the pouch attached to her hip and produces a stainless-steel shot glass.
“Truce?”
**
Sherry can’t believe this is happening.
She’s waiting for Ohio to whip out her gun, shriek “Psych!”, and start shooting.
That would be normal.
Right now, sitting in the showers surrounded by the enemy, a very drunk Terrill, and a passed-out Darryl, things are decidedly abnormal.
Iowa, Idaho, and Terrill are in the middle of a game of Five Things while Sherry and Ohio share a bottle of vodka.
Ohio pours herself another shot—it isn’t top shelf, but it gets the job done—and, after knocking it back with a cough, smiles and closes her eyes.
“This’s nice,” she says.
“Beats getting shot ‘n the foot any day,” Sherry agrees, pouring a shot of her own.
“Hey, you know what?” Ohio leans in like she’s about to tell Sherry a secret. “You know what? You’re th’one… the one who let her guard down.”
“Excuse you.” Sherry gives Ohio a tiny shove. “Excuse you, I was jus’ trying to be nice.”
Ohio tilts her head back and laughs. She looks so happy, like truly happy—Sherry should know, she’s great at reading body language.
This is the first time Sherry’s seen the ex-Freelancer out of her armor, and Sherry thinks, not for the first time, Ohio—Vera—might be the most wonderful woman she’s ever met. She might blame it on the alcohol if she hadn’t already concluded this the day the woman shot her in the foot.
“I was jus’… I was just trying to find my purpose,” Vera says once she’s caught her breath.
“And?” Sherry scoots a little closer to Vera. “Did you?”
“Mm.” Vera closes her eyes. “I think so.”
Terrill stumbles over then, followed by Idaho. Sherry looks over and grins—Iowa and Darryl are now huddled together, passed out and snoring.
“Five things you love about being trapped on a frozen planet,” Idaho says, plopping to the ground. Terrill follows suit, almost dropping his white Russian in the process.
“What the fuck could I possibly love about being stranded in the middle of—of nowhere, Ezra?” Vera snorts.
I can think of a few things, Sherry thinks.
“White Russians,” Terrill declares.
“Predictable,” Sherry laughs.
“That’s one,” Idaho says.
“I’m able to get more beauty sleep,” Terrill says.
“No, you just refuse to get up,” Sherry retorts.
“That’s two!” Idaho says.
Vera takes another shot of Vodka.
“Snowball fights,” Sherry adds.
“Three!”
“White Russians?”
“You already said that, Terrill,” Idaho says.
“Oh, I did, didn’t I?” Terrill taps a finger on his chin then says, “Sherry and Darryl.”
“Sap,” Sherry says, nudging her teammate. He’s so drunk it almost tips him over. She considers adding that he and Darryl make this wasteland bearable too when Vera slams her shot glass down onto the floor.
How many is that, five? Sherry thinks. Time to catch up.
She starts to pull the bottle towards her but Vera catches her by the wrist.
Sherry thinks she’s going to have to cut Vera off, and opens her mouth to say so—
—but she’s interrupted as Vera leans forward and fucking kisses her.
It lasts maybe three seconds, but it’s the best three seconds of Sherry’s life. And when Vera pulls away, she looks Sherry dead in the face and says,
“You.”
Sherry doesn’t know what to say because at the moment, she doesn’t even know what to think. Her mind is a whirlwind of happiness and anxiety and shock and—and, holy shit Vera kissed her. She thinks she hears Idaho let out a whoop (“THAT’S FIVE!”) and Terrill shouting at Darryl, but she can’t be sure because the blood is rushing in her ears, and she’s pretty sure her heart is about to climb out her throat.
She’s been waiting for this for so long, preparing her speech, cheesy as it may be, and now that it’s finally hear all she can muster is
“Wuh?”
Wuh?! Sherry wants to die.
Eyes widening, Vera backs away and jumps to her feet. This isn’t the best idea—she’s clumsy when she’s sober—and she almost topples backwards.
Once she regains her balance, Vera puts her hands on her hips.
“Booze! I said ‘booze’!” She cries. Then she produces a smoke bomb from—where did she get that from—and raises it above her head.
An enormous grin splits Vera’s face. She winks.
Sherry smirks. Grabs the bottle of vodka, twists on the cap, and reaches for her helmet.
What a woman, she thinks as she yanks on her helmet just in time.
And just like that, everything goes back to normal.
Well.
As normal as drunkenly chasing after the love of your life as they hurl smoke bombs at you can be.
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