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#sportsball on main
cognitiveleague · 6 months
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Oh my god
It’s happened
After more years than I’ve been alive, Colonel Sanders’ wrath has been appeased!!
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The curse is lifted!!! Miracles do happen!!!!! After the trauma of the first goddamn series of the MLB playoffs this year, I believe in love and baseball again!!!!!!
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transparent--gay · 5 months
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jeremy knox halloween costume that’s it that’s the tweet
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muirneach · 14 days
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i was like now that i have cable access i should start watching hockey. wait when does the season end tho cause its pretty late in the year rn. googles it. ah in literally three days
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nerdyqueerr · 3 months
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Crying in the club btw (said bye to my rugby coaches and teammates at the end of season party)
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fixaidea · 9 months
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The 'Everyman Protagonist is thrown into extraordinary circumstances' is a tried and true story format, but also extremely hit-and miss for me, especially what with the likeability of said protagonist. Some I love, some bore me to tears even if the plot and the overall story are enjoyable. Here's a few things I learned about my taste in characters:
They must have some flavour. Even the Everyman is good at something, even if that something is running away. The character worked in retail? Excellent conflict resolution skills and stress tolerance. Made it through university even if they don't work in the field they studied? Good research skills, high stress tolerance. There's no such thing as a completely bland person and attempting to write one for relatability points... well, it prolly works for a lots of readers since characters like this can get very popular, but not for me.
(And even if the character starts out a bit bland, taking them on a nice development arc can do wonders. Take Luke Skywalker: not gonna lie, he did start out a bit boring, but mannn, did he get a juicy character arc! He had a well-defined personality where his biggest flaws were also his biggest strengths... at least in the OT. Anyway, moving on:)
Also, since this kind of character is there to discover a new world (be it a literal different world or a culture/subculture previously unknown to the MC) it helps a lot if they are, y'know. Intellectually curious and take an active part in actually discovering said new word, instead of having a friend infodump at them when needed.*
*...can you tell I still have a beef with a certain Super Special Chosen One wizard? Like, my guy, you wanna grow up to be a detective but you gotta realise that as a working adult you won't have your book-smart friend around to sit down and do a research for you...
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mixingpumpkins · 7 months
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Lol, Ohio State. You got fucking lucky and your coach is still trash 😂 That was the most classless post-game interview I've seen in YEARS.
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lupismaris · 1 year
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LETS GO PHILLY LETS FUCKIN GOOOO 🍾🍾🍾
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triviareads · 28 days
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talking with @jeanvanjer and we realized if some of these Harlequin authors (especially those who write for the Presents imprint imo) published longer billionaire romances outside the Harlequin umbrella and marketed them to the current gen's standards, they could make a killing.
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hellceo · 10 months
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Icons: Sarah Playing Messenger.
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>be me, new to actually playing tf2
>have picked up on its lore from friends who are more into it than me, have read a few fanfics
>am canadian (this will be relevant later)
>decide it sounds like fun
>consistently main healer in other games, decide tf2 is no exception and play medic
>spend what feels like eternity in community servers just absolutely being shit at it for no apparent reason
>finally manage to contribute to a match in a meaningful way by pocketing a soldier who was about to die to an enemy scout
>he thanks me and rocket jumps away
>youdeserveamedal.wav ringing in my ears
>brain chemistry immediately alters somehow
>start looking at fanfics again after the match is over
>nosedive hard into soldier/medic shit, start looking for any fan content i can find with soldier in it once i cant find any more
>go through all the comics and official renders in what feels like just a few minutes
>compile a passworded folder on my computer dedicated just to cute pictures of soldier just named “jane images”
>fucking hate how happy i get looking at pictures of my Special Guy
>most of my irls (also all canadian) know about this and call me a “freeaboo” (like a weeb but for america)
>admin of my irls discord server gives me the role “basically american” and they @ the role whenever the usa wins a sportsball thing
I DONT WANT TO BE AMERICAN I DONT WANT TO BE GAY FOR FUNNY HELMET MAN PLEASE I JUST WANTED TO PLAY THE SILLY HAT GAME NO NO NO HELP HEP HELP
ASSIGNED AMERICAN BY HAT GAME BOYFRIEND
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transparent--gay · 1 month
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i’m gonna need nora to drop tsc on april 1st im so serious
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muirneach · 4 days
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normie tennis fans are so fascinating. saw a guy say felix was overrated. girl he is flopping so fucking hard rn nobody is saying much nice about him. saw a lot of people complaining that darwin blanch shouldnt be in a masters 1000 which like tbf he probably shouldnt be at his level but hes 16 leave him ALONE its not his fault. all this and more in the comments section of atp posts
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ridiasfangirlings · 30 days
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i have class of 09 brianrot rn, and it got me thinking what would lsw sarumi have turned out had they been teenagers in the usa... like, saru is already pretty fucked up as it is, yata is a little more "normal" but i think 2000's american kids would definetely bully him lol
Yata I feel like it would depend on the kind of school he’s in, like while I can see him getting bullied I think it would be more likely if he’s at some kind of fancy private school versus Regular American Public School. A lot of his issues at school that we see in LSW seem to stem from him being in a much more rigid school than where he was at before his mom got married and I think it would be similar if he was an American kid, like at a ‘normal’ school that’s not in a particularly high income area I think he would get along fine as a typical loud boisterous kid. The main difference I could see is that he’d probably be pushed more actively towards sports, I feel like the general atmosphere would be more conducive to his parents wanting him to work out some energy by playing soccer or football or something. It doesn’t seem like he had any afterschool clubs or actual league play in canon, I feel like the kind of kid he is would be the sort that gets pushed to sports early in the US so he’d probably be at least friendly with all the jocks. 
Then his mom remarries and they move to a higher income area and Yata gets to go to a private school and there he struggles, because he’s annoying and loud and his family isn’t that good yet here he is with all these rich kids surrounding him. If he’s still into sports he might be able to avoid the bullying just by being good with the sportsball but I could see it being like a thing where Yata thinks they’re all friends but everyone talks about him behind his back and tries to get him to take the fall when they skip class. Fushimi meanwhile probably gets less bullied since his family is so rich and powerful but everyone tries to network with him instead and he hates everybody. I think he would be the subject of a lot of whispers about how he’s gonna snap one day or calling him a druggie and stuff like that, but most people avoid saying anything to his face. There would I think be a lot less emphasis for both characters as far as academics go, since high school entrance exams aren’t really a thing in US schools, but I think Yata would still get bullied for being an idiot while no one has any idea about how smart Fushimi is because his scores are never posted and he doesn’t even look at his report card.
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waywardrose-archive · 10 months
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THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY | 15
stranger things
eddie munson x reader
rated e
7k
spotify playlist
for @punk-in-docs​​​
fem/witchy/goth!reader, magic, slow burn (for me), friends to lovers, no y/n only pet names, series-typical horror, period-typical sexism and homophobia, historical inaccuracies and anachronisms, drug dealing and use, smoking, alcohol use, masturbation, mutual masturbation, fantasizing, one-bed trope, making out, fingering, dirty talk, consensual pursuit and capture, oral sex, handjobs, condoms, piv sex, reader’s father is a dirtbag, mild spanking, magical violation, mental torture, body horror, aftercare, nightmares, strict parenting, panic attack, past child abuse and abandonment, semi-public sex, break-ups, angst with a happy ending, tags will be updated as needed
Eddie would have to wait until his lunch break to see this new, hot, weird chick. He wondered which flavor of weird she was. Art weird? Theater weird? Band weird?
Weird weird?
He shrugged. He liked weird.
In other words, you’re the new girl in town, and Eddie is intrigued.
note: More angst, but it’ll be worth it, I promise.
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During the last Study Hall of the semester, Sheryl had revealed the secret New Year’s Eve party happening at this abandoned burger joint, Benny’s, on the outskirts of town. Everyone was going to be there. She’d been invited by Chance Lang, #23 on the basketball team. His parents were away on some couples-only cruise.
If everyone was going to be there, you’d joked, it wasn’t much of a secret. She, Heather, and Christy laughed. You’d smiled with a shrug. Heather had then teased Sheryl about her crush on Chance, saying the party was Sheryl’s opportunity to ride her way to prom queen. Sheryl had fluttered her hands as she stated the whole senior class knew who was going to be prom queen — and it wouldn’t be her.
You’d looked between the three of them and asked who they meant. Heather leaned in, Christy and Sheryl copying her. You leaned in as well. Sotto voce, Heather said Chrissy Cunningham was a sure bet for prom queen. After all, Chrissy Cunningham was the queen of Hawkins High.
Chrissy Cunningham sat diagonally from you in Western Lit. She was one of the least exasperating cheerleaders you’d ever encountered. At first, you’d avoided anyone who’d be featured in the athletics section of a yearbook. However, she was kind and humble. She’d even complimented your nail polish one time, which you thanked her for and told her the color.
She now sat on the second-hand sofa with her All-American boyfriend, Jason Carver. Chrissy sipped from a red cup that was most likely filled with Diet Coke. She didn’t seem the beer-chugging type. In contrast, Jason held a Pabst can high as he pontificated. The jocks lounging around them cheered when he said something particularly rousing.
Jason was a preacher without a pulpit, desperate for each hosanna to feed his bloated ego.
Keeping your annoyance to yourself, you filled your cup from the bucket of jungle juice at the old pick-up counter. Nearby, a game of beer-pong went into overtime. Heather and Christy were in the group of spectators. You joined them, bumping your elbow with Christy’s.
She brightened as she greeted you, her eyes glittering under the multiple strands of Christmas lights.
Heather curved around her to say, “Hey.”
“Hey,” you said, though the shouting spectators drowned you out. Christy got your attention and moved closer to speak in your ear. You smelled the whiskey-and-Coke on her.
“Look who’s talking to Chance Lang.”
You followed her gaze across the main room. Sheryl and Chance were talking. Beside them, a few guys played Horse at the indoor basketball hoop. Sheryl nodded at something Chance said. He pantomimed some sportsball maneuver that had her laughing and touching his forearm. Chance grinned, pleased with himself, and cocked a hip.
You shared a look with Christy before giggling with her.
The crowd roared as the beer-pong game ended. A fellow spectator knocked into Heather, who knocked into Christy, who then knocked into you. The three of you staggered together and laughed.
“God, I need another drink,” said Heather, with a nod towards the kitchen.
“Yeah, let’s go,” you said before leading the way around the crowd.
Christy latched onto your sleeve like a duckling.
In the kitchen, a couple made out by the defunct walk-in while a few people blew rails on the metal counters. Bottles of beer and wine coolers sprouted from the melting ripples of ice filling the industrial-sized sinks. Heather pulled a beer from the ice, placed the underside of the cap on the counter, and knocked the cap off. The beer foamed and dripped onto the already-sticky tiled floor.
You tapped your cup against her bottle as a toast and chugged your drink. No amount of fruit punch could disguise the burn of alcohol. You shook your head, nose scrunching, as you swallowed the last of the jungle juice. That must’ve been two or three shots at once.
You groaned, “Fuck.”
Christy shimmied behind you to fix herself another whiskey-and-Coke as Heather offered you a wildberry wine cooler. It wasn’t good to mix different drinks, but who the hell knew what was in that batch of jungle juice.
You tossed your cup into the rolling trashcan in the corner, making a clean shot. A random guy encouraged you to join the next round of beer-pong. You brushed off the encouragement with a laugh, because you weren’t pouring beer on top of jungle juice. Despite the adage of ‘liquor before beer, you’re in the clear,’ you’d never been that lucky.
Wine coolers, though? Those were fine.
You turned to the counter to try Heather’s technique for uncapping a bottle. After a few thumps, the cap remained firmly attached. Heather snickered when you made a face at her and asked for help. She angled the bottle and showed you how to hit it with the heel of your hand.
As you nodded, the backdoor opened. A gust of cold along with a familiar, deep voice had a shudder going down your spine.
“Close the goddamn door!” screeched a nose duster.
You squared your shoulders and struck the cap. It popped off and sailed to the floor. Heather and Christy cheered as your wine cooler fizzled. You faked a laugh before the three of you toasted and drank.
Eddie said he could attend — and sell — if Corroded Coffin didn’t have plans. You guessed they didn’t. He most likely hadn’t expected you to show. True, a party hosted by jocks with shitty music taste wasn’t really your scene. However, you didn’t want to stay at home to have a glass of champagne with your parents, then find the right moment to leave before your father began reviewing his upcoming plans for the year — or coax you into praising your Christmas gifts again.
This year they’d given you cash, a few movies on your list, a new stereo for your car, and your own phone line.
Mom planned to call the phone company on Friday to schedule a tech visit. You’d wanted to tell her there was no point. The person you’d been tying up the main phone line with wouldn’t be calling until April. Or maybe ever.
“Oh!” said Christy as the backdoor clunked shut. “I think Munson’s dealing out there. You want to split the cost of a few joints?”
You pulled a five-dollar bill from your pocket and gave it to her.
“Sure, you two go ahead. I gotta pee.”
Which wasn’t completely untrue, but you weren’t ready to see him yet.
“Sweet!” Christy said and boogied to the backdoor.
Heather paused to ask, “You’ll be okay?”
You nodded and pasted on a smile.
“Yeah, I’ll be fine! I’ll meet you out front.”
She clinked her bottle with yours, her expression reassuring.
“If you’re not out there in ten, I’m coming to get you.”
With a smile, you said, “Hey, it all depends on the line.”
She smirked as you backed away.
On the way to the bathroom, you gave a thumbs-up to Sheryl, who’d joined Chance at the basketball hoop. She gave you an excited smile that was all teeth and twinkling eyes.
The line for the bathroom was short. While no one had puked over the toilet, the bathroom stank of old urine and boy-funk. As you washed your hands, you checked your hair and makeup in the graffitied mirror. You looked as good as you had when you’d left the house. You dried your hands on the sides of your jeans, collected your half-full wine cooler, and left the bathroom.
The main room was growing stuffy, smelling of beer and weed and those solid air fresheners. Smoke hung in the air and enhanced the cones of light from random lamps. You wove through the throngs of people until reaching the fogged front door.
Outside was brisk and sobering. A couple argued under the lone sodium light illuminating the parking lot. You breathed deep the crisp air to brace yourself for facing Eddie. You’d have to see him eventually, since you two shared a class. Better to get it over with now when you had the barrier of people and alcohol.
You rounded the concrete planter bed at the side of the building. Eddie leaned on a support post for the backdoor roof, back to the parking lot. Which was a relief. The tail of his flannel shirt hung beneath his jacket and vest to hide his ass. His black jeans were faded to the point of being gray. He conversed with Heather and Christy, though it was impossible to tell if they’d finished the deal or not.
Loose rocks crunched under your boots. You cringed at the noise and sidestepped to solid blacktop. Perhaps you could get away with not facing Eddie at all. However, Christy peeked around Eddie’s side, noticed you with a squeal, and skipped to you.
Eddie swung around the post to watch.
So much for not facing him.
You smiled at Christy’s excitement as she told you Eddie had given them a discount.
“How generous,” you said with a glance at him.
Heather sauntered around Eddie, the flawlessly rolled joints in her hand. He snuck a quick look at her back, i.e., he checked out her ass. You wanted to reprimand him with a look, but stopped yourself. Your relationship was paused, which meant he could check out anyone’s ass he wanted.
You could too, though you weren’t inclined.
Heather suggested the three of you claim one of the picnic tables on the other side of the building. Christy complained it was too cold for that.
“If we go back inside, some mooch will want in on these,” Heather said, holding the joints between her fingers.
“Ladies, if I may be so bold,” Eddie said as he approached. “You could avail yourselves of my van.”
With a glare, Heather said, “We’re not fucking you, Munson.”
“Let’s just go to my car,” you said at the same time he said, “It wasn’t a metaphor.”
“What?” Christy asked.
Eddie took his keys from his front pocket. A front pocket with a shiny wallet chain swagged under it. Your mouth went dry.
He offered his keys and said, “I’m not done here, so go smoke and bring them back when you’re done.”
Christy asked, “You trust us?”
He met your eyes briefly.
“Of course.”
You turned to the side and took a drink from your wine cooler.
“Fine,” Heather said and snatched the keys from his hand. “Thanks.”
“Thanks, Eddie,” said Christy.
“I’m parked farther up on Randolph.”
You nodded, murmuring a ‘thanks.’
The three of you turned from Eddie. You took two steps before he called your name. You sighed. Heather frowned when you stopped.
“I got a class with him. It’s probably something dumb,” you said to explain. “I’ll catch up in a minute.”
Christy pulled Heather away, heading across the parking lot.
You faced him — as you dreaded you’d have to — and crossed your arms.
“What?”
“Can I talk to you after the party?” he asked.
“I have to be home by one.”
“I’ll make it quick.”
“I thought you wanted space?”
“I do, but... Throw me a bone here. I want to explain.”
“Okay, fine, bone thrown.”
The corner of his mouth quirked.
“That rhymes.”
“Yeah, I’m the poet laureate of Hawkins, Indiana.” You spun on the ball of your foot. “See you later.”
You caught up with Heather and Christy already walking on the side of the road. Despite the long line of parked cars, it was easy to spot Eddie’s van. Heather unlocked the back doors and threw them open.
“God, it already smells like weed in here,” she said, though she shuffled in while balancing her beer in one hand.
Christy followed her with a giggle. “And we’re gonna make it worse!”
You’d never gotten a good look at the cavernous back of his van. Band equipment had scuffed the carpet. He’d bound cheap, stained blankets to the interior walls with bungee cords. A legless bench-seat sat propped against the driver’s side wall.
“I hope one of you has a lighter,” you said as you cracked a window.
Christy said, “Got us covered, babe.”
You closed the doors after you. Fortunately, a street-light was close enough to shine through the windshield. After you settled next to Heather on the bench-seat, she distributed joints and lit hers. You took the lighter last and twisted the joint as you put flame to rolling paper.
Your muscles loosened with each drag. Heather griped about her younger brother and his crusty socks. With only older sisters, Christy didn’t understand what Heather’s brother did to his socks. She asked if he just didn’t clean his feet. You laughed as Heather explained. Christy’s look of absolute disgust made you laugh harder.
“And your mom washes his gross stuff with everyone else’s!?”
“Well—” Heather coughed through an exhale. “Yeah? It all gets washed in hot water, so...” She shrugged. “Yeah.”
“Ew!”
A moment later, Christy mentioned she’d begun working on a college application essay. Your parents had begun bugging you about writing one, but you didn’t know where you wanted to go. Heather said she was applying to Notre Dame and Indiana University. Maybe Purdue. She said she had the GPA for any of them.
You hadn’t dwelled on college since meeting Eddie. You made decent grades. You could write an essay. The registration deadline for the SAT was in February. If you showed interest, Mom would be thrilled to pay any fee or purchase any study guide.
You could work on an essay too, just in case. There was an expanding-your-horizons angle you could use. You’d moved to a small town, joined the community, learned new things, met different types of people. Yeah, all that had fueled your curiosity to discover more. And whichever colleges you applied to could support you in that, like, pursuit.
That was some decent, ass-kissing bullshit.
You smiled to yourself while Heather and Christy chatted.
But what would you major in? How could you hide your magic from a roommate? If you went, would you ever see Eddie again?
All those questions were hassles you didn’t need. No, you didn’t need to think about that now. You didn’t need to worry. What mattered was enjoying the last night of 1985 and relaxing with people who were becoming more than acquaintances.
You exhaled smoke towards the back window and stretched your legs.
With a side-glance at Heather, you thought it was cool — okay, well, maybe not cool, but it was fine — that Eddie checked out her ass. She was hot. She had a cute ass. More people should appreciate it. When she went to college in a bigger city, people would.
Maybe if you went to college in a bigger city, people would appreciate you. In New York, you’d done pretty well at clubs. You’d heard plenty of pick-up lines. From ‘nice boots, wanna fuck?’ to ‘you’re the girl of my nightmares.’
You finished your joint, nearly burning your fingertips, and threw the tiny roach in your empty wine-cooler bottle.
Yeah, you thought and closed your eyes, you deserved to be appreciated. Not set aside by some dumb, muppet-haired guitarist... who was talented and funny and smart and usually really sweet. A small voice pointed out he’d let you use his van. He’d given you jewelry, which you wore nonstop under your clothes.
Those weren’t the actions of someone setting you aside, were they?
Heather nudged your arm. You hummed and turned your head to her, opening your eyes.
“You ready to head back?” she asked. “It’s a little after eleven.”
“Yup.”
You rolled onto your knees and crawled to the back doors. Someone wolf-whistled. You laughed as you shook your ass in reply.
The air outside tasted fresh and cool, like sparkling frost. You breathed through your mouth to chill your baked throat. The tranquil woods on either side of the road were full of mystery. If you crested the hill to your right, you expected to see a wizard’s castle or an ancient fortress. There was something akin to magic here. It fluttered over your skin, familiar yet arcane.
A slight breeze drifted from the woods, chilling your face, nipping under your jacket. And with it came a sonorous voice, deep with thunder, calling your name. It took the mellow of your high. Your skin crawled as your heart beat rabbit-fast.
Not again.
You hadn’t heard that voice in weeks. At least, you thought you’d heard it a moment ago. It shouldn’t be able to find you, though. Maybe you were really, really high. Also, the magic you’d manifested was different, weaker, so mundane. You didn’t feel really, really high. You had nothing it would want now. It had stolen everything.
Hands shook your shoulders. You flinched from the touch.
“Whoa, hey, oh my god,” said a feminine voice.
It was Christy. You blinked at her and put a hand over one of hers. Christy was safe. It was okay. You were awake. He didn’t have you.
You were just really, really high.
“Sorry,” you said.
“Where’d you go?”
“I...” You swallowed drily. “No-nowhere. Sorry. I just got in my head a little, I think.”
The van’s doors clunked shut. You flinched again, then internally berated yourself. It was only Heather, who was safe too.
Christy released your shoulders, a crease of concern between her brows.
“You know what?” Shaking your head to clear it, you said, “I’m gonna go home. Sleep this off.”
Heather asked, “You sure? I can drive you.”
“No, no, I’m cool to drive.” You nodded to the van. “We’ll leave the keys on the front floor for Eddie to find.”
“It’s okay. We’ll give them to him,” said Christy.
You almost laughed at your absentmindedness. They were returning to the party — where Eddie was.
“Of course, yeah, sure.”
You ambled down Randolph with them, grateful for the company. They asked where you’d parked your car. You replied on Cornwallis, where the woods bordered a sedate neighborhood. Christy commented her sister had gone to a party at King Steve’s — who lived on Cornwallis — before everything went down with that missing kid and the girl who died from some freaky chemical leak.
Your eyes widened at the gossip.
Heather waved that away with an insouciant hand, though, to joke at how close Christy had come to being family with Hawkins royalty. Christy cringed, asking not to be reminded, as she bumped into you. She giggled and looped her arm around yours.
Having noticed your previous expression, Heather told you King Steve was a douche-y jock and former king of the school. You were familiar with the type. Heather continued, saying he’d graduated last year, but still lived with his parents. He’d explained it as wanting to take a year off.
She gave you a loaded, if blurry, look.
You bobbed your head despite not being entirely sure what the look meant.
This was small-town life. There was loads of gossip and labels for everyone. As you looked at the barren trees lining the road, you figured you had a label as well. Probably something dumb, like ‘goth chick’ or ‘weird girl’ — or whatever.
The party was still going hard when the three of you stopped at the restaurant’s turnoff. Van Halen wailed through the half-opened front door. Some dude puked onto the wilted grass by the road. Eddie stood at the building’s backdoor, talking to a guy you recognized from Trig class.
Damn, Hawkins High was a small place.
Heather checked in with you to make sure you were good to drive. Even though you nodded with an assurance you were fine, Christy tried to lure you inside with the promise of snacks. There were chips and pretzels and someone had made a platter of Rice Krispy Treats, but who knew what had happened to those since you’d been gone.
Like, that dude could be spewing chunks of tainted snacks. That was a thing that happened, you were sure. Your reason had nothing to do with the guy selling drugs.
You glanced at said guy. He hadn’t noticed you.
You shook your head, declining Christy’s invitation. She hugged you, regardless. You wished her and Heather a happy new year. They returned the well wishes before you continued down Randolph.
You wrapped your jacket tight around your middle. Maybe you should’ve told Eddie you were back, but you didn’t want to stick around. Not after hearing your attacker. Or hallucinating you had. Your mind was fuzzy, mouth cottony. You hoped your less-than-sober state deterred them — if you’d heard them at all.
And anyway, it wasn’t like Eddie had specified how much later after the party when he’d asked to talk to you. ‘After the party’ could be the same day or a week from then.
Yes, you were being an asshole.
No, you didn’t care. He’d started it.
The road darkened as the distance between streetlights lengthened. You were alone on an ill-lit stretch of road. You placed a hand over the charms Eddie had given you. This wasn’t the same as that night, you reminded yourself. You weren’t the same. Darkness wasn’t the enemy, either — and neither was the woods. It was peaceful.
A male voice interrupted that peace by calling your name. It was Eddie.
Of course.
You turned to see him jogging to you. His hair bounced with each step. His lunchbox swung from his hand. You opened your mouth to ask how he’d worked out you’d left the party. Then it dawned:
Heather had returned his keys.
When you weren’t there with her, he’d put two and two together.
“Leaving without me?” he asked as he stopped a few feet away.
“I was going to do that anyway.”
“Ouch.”
You shrugged since it was true.
He scuffed the heel of his sneaker on the blacktop. You raised your eyebrows at him, though you doubted he could see it. He remained quiet. You could just discern when he bit his lip. Light glinted off the lunchbox. It became obvious he wasn’t going to speak first.
Like ripping off a bandage, you prompted, “You wanted to explain?”
He drew nearer with a deep breath. Your first instinct was to back away, but you held your ground.
“I know I hurt you, but that wasn’t my intention. I thought you’d get it.”
“So, this is on me?”
“No, of course not... You left, though. Before I could explain.”
“So, it’s still on me.”
“No, dammit. Everything came out wrong.”
“Then make it come out right.”
“I’m trying, alright?”
You wanted to tell him to try harder, but that was something your father would say. You weren’t your father. You’d never be like your father.
With a sigh, you put your hands on your hips.
“Just...” You shrugged. “Say what you need to say, and we’ll decipher it.”
“I didn’t— I don’t want to push you away.”
“Then why do you need space?”
“Because I need to focus on making this band the best it can be.”
“And I can’t be there for that?”
“You are there!” He moved closer. “You’re in my head. All the time. You inspire me and distract me. And I don’t know how to balance it out. Distance is the only solution I got until I’m better.”
You dropped your hands to your sides.
“I don’t understand. I mean, I do. Kinda. But I thought we were getting to something good.”
You thought you two were something good.
“Sweetheart,” he said. “We are. We will.”
You shook your head. The sting of a week’s silence had turned into an ache.
“It doesn’t feel that way.”
He put his free hand on top of his head.
“I’m gonna be honest with you here. I think about you every day.”
Your eyes grew hot before tears blurred your vision.
His hand fell from his head as he said, “I’ve picked up the phone to call you so many times, but...”
You blinked the tears away as your chin jutted.
“But you don’t call.”
“Neither do you.”
“You pushed me away! I’m not crawling back to beg for your fucking scraps!”
“My fucking scraps? I’d give you fucking everything. I’m trying to give you fucking everything!”
“What the hell are you talking about?”
“I’m talking about being good enough, goddammit!”
“What?”
“You’ve thrown my life... out of whack. The band is unhappy. I haven’t been able to concentrate for shit this past week. I don’t have a new module for Hellfire lined up.” He took a step closer, lunchbox rattling in his hand. “I didn’t ask for this, but I can’t...” He shook his head. “I can’t, ‘cause all I want to do is write songs about you. Talk through ideas with you. Show you some stupid thing I found or read some stupid article to you.”
“Then call me. I don’t have to come over.”
He drew his bottom lip between his teeth. With him this close, it was easy to see when his lip came back wet and full.
“I can’t. I don’t have that kind of willpower.”
“Then why are you telling me this? Just let me go.”
“It’s the difference between torture and agony.”
“Wha—? I don’t—”
“Torture ends, agony doesn’t.”
“And this is fucking torture, Eddie!”
“Yes, and it’ll end, I promise!”
“I’m so sick of this shit!” You threw your arms out. “I didn’t ask for this, either!” You poked his chest with a finger. “I just wanted you.”
He grabbed your hand in both of his as his lunchbox clattered to the ground. You tensed, unsure what to expect. His calluses rasped over your skin. He uncurled your fingers to press your palm to his warm chest.
Softly, he said, “It’s not forever.”
“I’m not putting my life on hold.”
“Good.”
“I’m writing a college application essay and taking the SAT.”
He nodded.
“You’ll do great.”
Before your brain caught up, your mouth said, “My parents got me my own phone line for Christmas.”
“Can I have the number?”
“Only if you promise to call.”
“I promise,” he said as he walked you backwards.
Your rear met the cold steel of a parked car. You leaned against its solid support. The only thing separating your front from his was your arm sandwiched between your chests.
“We shouldn’t do this.”
“Probably not.”
He drew your hand up his chest, under the collar of his flannel, to the side of his neck. His skin was silky and hot. He was giving you the choice: pull him in or restrain him.
He whispered, “Let me touch you.”
“We are touching.”
“Then let me kiss you.”
You glanced at his lips.
“How can we do that if you want space?”
“Forget space for the night.”
“What about tomorrow, huh?”
“It’s not tomorrow.”
You focused on the ringer t-shirt under his flannel. It would be so easy to run your fingers under the collar and tug him against you. And you wanted to. You could see yourself doing it — again and again. You could also see him pushing you away, going silent, then calling when he can’t stand jerking off alone anymore.
“You can’t yank me around like this,” you said.
“I’m not.”
“Yes, you are. You give me this wonderful Christmas present, then say you don’t want to see me until April. It’s barely been a week, and you want to talk to me. You let me and my friends use your van, then you say I’ve messed up your life. Now you want to kiss me?” You shook your head. “You are yanking me around.”
“I know this is a shit situation, okay? But you gotta see it from my point of view. If the band doesn’t win this battle, we’re toast. We won’t have a clean demo or the money to get out of here...” His eyes turned glassy in the half-light. “I can’t do it, baby, I can’t.”
Your chest tightened in sympathy, but you had to advocate for yourself.
“Well, I can’t have my heart broken every time you need some stress relief.”
“You think it’s a relief to know it’ll hurt you?”
“Then why are you doing this?”
“Because it’s the only way to get the hell out of here with you.”
This circular argument was exhausting. You weren’t the type to make a musician choose between the band and the partner. That wasn’t fair. Eddie had to decide on his own. If you’d moved on, well, that was a risk.
You trailed your hand down his chest, then away.
“You know what? How about you figure out what you want and then come find me?”
You slid from between him and the car, banging your hip on the side-mirror. That must’ve looked super graceful. You rubbed at the sore spot as you trudged to your car.
Eddie called after you, but you couldn’t turn around. It would be too much.
He seized your upper arm to pull you back. In a move you’d only seen in an action movie, you spun around and propelled him to the next parked car. His hold disappeared as his backside plowed into the rear side panel, wallet chain clanking.
He looked as surprised as you felt. You’d done nothing like that before. Hell, you didn’t know you could do something like that.
Then you remembered he dared to keep you from leaving. Like you were some uncooperative puppy. You weren’t his to control.
You fisted his shirt and shoved.
“I’m sorry,” he said, raising his hands. “I’m sorry.”
“You can’t just grab me.”
You pressed your knuckles to his sternum. Your pulse thudded in your ears.
He nodded.
“I know, I’m sorry.”
“Fuck, Eddie, don’t grab me like that.”
You loosened your hold, but didn’t release his shirt.
“What was the plan, huh?” you asked. “Keep me here to listen to more of your shitty excuses?”
“I know what I want, alright?” He looked deep into your eyes. “I want you.”
“But not enough.”
“No, enough to work for it.”
He lay his hand on top of yours. You were shaking — and so was he. His other hand went to your hip and guided you between his spread knees. You wrapped an arm behind his back to rest against him. Though it hadn’t been long since you’d hugged him, it felt like ages. He smelled like you remembered: apple shampoo and cigarettes with the underlying scent of cheap aftershave.
Tension uncoiled from your chest as he wrapped his arms around you and settled his cheek on your head.
Into his shirt, you said, “I’m still mad at you.”
“Understandable.”
“You know, I’d never curse you or the band.”
“I know. It was a stupid thing to say.”
You looked at his face in the dim. The streetlight painted him in shades of orange. He looked back, eyes dark and sincere.
“Can I kiss you now?” he asked.
“Kiss me where?”
A corner of his mouth quirked.
“Anywhere you’d like.”
You should say no, should push away — or at least argue. Then you realized the argument had no end. It would continue until April. Maybe beyond. You didn’t want his absence for four months. You didn’t want to be without his touch, his thoughts, his laughter for that time. A week had created an ache. Four months would see you crumble to dust. You didn’t want that for him, either.
Yes, it was a weakness to give in, but you were weak.
You whispered, “How about we start with lips?”
“We can do that.”
You braced a hand on the cold trunk and hooked fingers under his collar to draw him in. He widened his stance to bring you near and tilted your face to his. As he moved in, you kept your eyes open to the last second.
His plump lips meeting yours knocked the air from your lungs. You angled for more, to kiss harder. A groan from deep in his chest egged you on. He pulled you in tight by the waist. Your breasts pressed against his front.
His tongue teased the seam of your lips. You grasped his ass to pull him impossibly closer. His lips parted with a gasp. His back arched, thighs spreading. You felt wicked as you sucked at his bottom lip. He tasted of beer and salt. You followed that predictable combination with your tongue.
He rolled his hips and cradled your jaw as his tongue slid over yours. A hint of stubble prickled at your skin. Whether from his absence or your high, everything was better than you’d hoped. His scent reminded you of basking naked in bed with him. It made you want to rub yourself all over him like a cat.
Distantly, you wondered why you’d avoided him earlier.
He broke the kiss, panting against your lips.
“Can I finger you? You know I’ll make it good, sweetheart. Let me touch you, yeah?”
The thought of those talented, dexterous hands between your legs once more had your cunt pulsing. You wet your bottom lip, tasting his spit. He looked at you like he knew how your body had reacted.
You nodded.
Perhaps it was a mistake, but you’d deal with the fallout later.
He closed his eyes and breathed out a ‘thank you.’ His hand went from your jaw to your chest as he nuzzled your neck. He cupped one of your breasts, squeezing and fondling. Your breath caught, nipples hardening. His familiar touch burned through your top and bra.
He whispered your name between kisses to your skin. You sagged against him, letting your head crane back. In reply, his hand snuck lower to unbutton your jeans. The heavy bulge of his erection dragged across your belly as he made room to unzip them. Memory flashed like lightning: you palming him through his boxers on Halloween, stroking his covered cock, the rocking of his hips.
You wanted that as well and trailed a hand up his inseam. He paused, legs tensing. You leaned back to meet his gaze. Shadows hid much of his expression, but you knew he was uncertain.
An internal petty streak liked his uncertainty, because he deserved it. He’d made you question your relationship. He’d been contradictory and confusing.
You wedged a hand between his legs. Through his jeans, you pressed the heel of your palm into the warm base of his cock while you cupped his sac with your fingers. He let out a little sound as you massaged the firm ovoids of his balls.
“No one’s ever heard you make that sound, have they?” you asked lowly.
He shook his head, and you mirrored him.
“Anyone touch you like this?”
“No.”
“That’s right. No one’s taken their time with you, right?”
He gasped, “No,” with big, bambi eyes and parted lips.
And you wanted to savor him. You wanted him in your bed again, wild hair fanning across your pillow. You wanted to touch and be touched.
“No,” you said in agreement. “Just me.”
His thighs parted a little more as his breathing quickened. He rocked into your palm. The faltering hand at your stomach moved away to make room.
“Don’t stop,” he said.
You hummed and watched yourself caress the length of his denim-covered erection.
“Why start?” you asked.
“What?”
“After we get each other off, it all goes back to silence.” You dragged your nails up his cock, which throbbed. “Fuck, what are we doing?”
He put cool hands on either side of your face to force you to meet his eyes.
“We’re doing what’s necessary.”
He kissed you. He devoured you. The universe revolved around his plush lips against yours. Instead of a bright center, it was dark. He slanted his head, lips smearing across yours — an asteroid made of diamond. His tongue invaded your mouth, like he was desperate for your particular flavor — a black hole to draw you in.
You held onto his hips and rested your front on his. He spun you to lean on the car instead — twin stars orbiting each other. One hand went to the fly of your jeans to unzip them. His fingers splayed at the waistband of your underwear, pinkie sneaking underneath.
That touch, though gentle, seared your belly. You angled your hips.
“Your skin’s so soft,” he said against your lips.
It was your turn to say, “Don’t stop.”
Eddie hid his face in your neck and inhaled deep. He hummed as you clutched his shoulders. His hand snaked under your underwear until two nimble fingers slid between your wet folds.
You gasped, eyes going wide. That single touch made you quiver.
“This’s what I need,” he said as he found your clit.
You breathed a laugh. “Yeah? Creamed your jeans over this?”
“You got no idea.”
“Show me then.”
In silent acceptance of the challenge, he circled your clit how he knew you liked. It was the right pressure, fast and firm enough.
“So wet.” He dragged his teeth over your neck. “Wanna bend you over this car.”
You squirmed on his fingers.
“Maybe later.”
“Yeah, later,” he said before sliding a finger inside you.
His palm cupped your mound, finger massaging your slick cunt. He stroked your walls and teased your g-spot. You maneuvered him by the hair to kiss him. His mouth was lush and demanding and perfect. With one taste, you couldn’t get enough.
He rocked his hand, keeping the pressure on your mound and inching his finger in and out. You groaned into the kiss as you writhed. It wasn’t enough — and he had to know it.
“C’mon, gimme what I need.”
“Yes, milady.”
He eased his finger out and returned to circling your clit. You nodded while biting your lip and stilling your hips. He began slow, using two fingers to keep the stimulation going. Your legs wobbled. You jerked against him. An arm slithered between your back and the car.
“I got you.”
You clung to him and swayed with the motion of his fingers. You continued moving until he was working your clit too fast. Letting your forehead rest on his shoulder, band pins cool on your skin, you panted as pleasure grew. It licked like fire up your spine.
There was only heat and escalating tension. He held you tight through it. Grateful, you wanted to kiss him again, but you couldn’t move. You couldn’t break the spell, lose the thread. But you thought of his talented, ripe mouth — fuck, his tongue — thought of him bending you over and eating you out. He could do it right here, in the open, with the chilly air flitting over your exposed ass. Your cries would echo through the woods.
“Oh, shit...”
“That’s it, baby.” He kissed your temple. “Come all over my hand.”
You groaned as thoughts fractured like glass. You were going to come just like he wanted you to. It was right there. You teetered on that event horizon. The licking fire became stronger, hotter, until it blazed — a supernova. You muffled your moans in the soft denim of his vest as you came. Your cunt throbbed — a pulsar. It kept going and going as you burned and clawed and strained in Eddie’s arms.
His fingers came to a standstill, pressing on your clit. You shivered as your cunt pulsed one last time.
You grabbed his nape and pulled him in for a kiss. He kissed you deep and hard, nipping at your lips, tongue invading and teasing. His soaked fingers spread a honey-like trail over your skin as he gripped your hip.
“Take me home,” he said. “Sneak me inside. I’ll fuck you all night. Do anything you want.”
You blinked away the daze of orgasm as you caught your breath. Home meant getting his perfect cock in you. His hands would hold your hips, fingers digging hard enough to leave bruises. You could ride him on the window seat as the sun rose. Your parents would be sleeping off hangovers until at least noon—
A pop of a firework interrupted. Cheers and whoops rang from the old restaurant.
It was tomorrow — and now 1986.
“Can’t. We can’t,” you said.
He opened his mouth to protest, but you placed fingers on his kiss-swollen lips.
“Really. We can’t.”
You traced the edge of his lips as he stared at you with dark, gleaming eyes.
“This sucks.”
To assuage his suffering, and yours, you kissed him once more. His grip on your hip tightened. He sucked on your bottom lip and rolled his hips against yours. It nearly had you forgetting yourself, your surroundings, your self-respect.
You pulled his hair to break the kiss. He groaned. His erection pulsed where it pressed into the side of your belly. You shushed him, running fingers over his hair.
You asked, “Want me to drive you to your van?”
“Nah, I need to cool off.”
You hummed. “Not possible.”
He snorted. “It’s going to be a long four months.”
With a nod, you smoothed a thumb over his cheekbone.
“Happy New Year, honey.”
You released him and stepped back. His hands left warm stripes on your hip and back. You fastened your jeans, the wetness in your underwear uncomfortable.
You finally looked at him. His bottom lip quivered, as though he was just hanging onto his composure. You wanted to offer comfort, to give in, to take him home, to forget the past week. Instead, you took another step back.
Your throat was taut as you said, “See you in O’Donnell’s.”
He nodded and looked at his feet.
Your heart wrenched, making it hard to breathe. Your eyes flooded, making it hard to see. You didn’t know what else to say, so you remained quiet. You weren’t sure you could speak, anyway.
When he didn’t raise his head, you tiptoed around him. You made it a yard or two when he said your name. You turned to find him watching.
“Happy New Year.”
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scp-10000 · 8 months
Note
can we please get headcanons,facts or any thoughts you have on badtimes and cardinalhater531? im honestly dying of curiosity over those two afther reading your vex headcanons masterpost
Oh I have some stuff for them boys.
I already know you read the doc, so you probably know I hc them as Allays(and probably have an idea all the nonsense Allays had to deal with in the past). You probably also remember the bit about a Vex named Merlin creating Convex which led to Cub and Scar. For every Vex there is an Allay, and this fact of life led to an Allay named Morgan making Conallay(New Allays if we're going by the same naming convention I made with Convex), which then resulted in Badtimes and Cardinal.
It's just unfortunately they were both formed in Hels, and since Hels is a hellhole for anything that isn't Zedaph, they basically ran away and found their Vex counterparts and lived with them for a while while still trying to bust out as many allays as possible pretending they're vexes.
If I remember right, there are currently 4 Fs for dealing with trauma, and out of all four of them, Bad is Fight, Cardinal is Flight, Scar is Fawn, and Cub is Freeze.
How is Badtimes fight if he's not really much stronger than the others in terms of physical strength? He has a knife made of osmium, and for some odd reason, if a Vex or Allay can manage to focus their magic into something made of osmium, it becomes as dense as the metal without adding extra weight, so Bad is actually running around with an extremely dense one handed long sword that has some serious walloping power that he can swing around as easily as most people can swing around toy store swords.
He's also Scar's main cameraman even for timelapses. Dude will just hold the camera and stare intensely through it for hours neglecting all other needs. They may roast each other, but this alone gives Scar ammo any time they lovingly yell at each other to do self care in order to make it a fair fight.
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This is my pokemon card binder. It's almost flat and full to capacity. Cardinal has a similar binder full of copies of fake ids he made for all the allays he snuck out of Hels. Even after the whole species was freed, Card kept the binder as a reminder.
Card also works as Cub's camera man, but they don't roast each other nearly as hard.
Irl Cubfan chose that name because he's a fan of the Chicago Cubs. Using that, I named Card after The St. Louis Cardinals, one of the rivals of the Cubs. There's just one quirk. Card hates the Cardinals. Any other team, he's just holding a sign that says "I hope both teams have fun." However if the Cardinals are playing, he's becoming a temporary super fan of said team and cheering them on with all his heart. May 8th through 10th of 2023 was the first time anyone's seen both Cub and Card go absolutely feral about any game of sportsball. People feared for their lives near the end of July.
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frogmanfae · 8 months
Text
Newsies as things that have happened in school (first day edition)
Medda: Yeah when I was in high school orchestra we had very competitive seating so like if you were a fifth chair and you wanted to be a third chair you would have to challenge whoever was in the third chair and you would have a playoff- it was very intense. And then if you won the chair challenge you got the chair closer to the conductor, it was a real thing
Crutchie: What in the high school musical-
Denton: It falls around Thanksgiving-
Mike: *very quietly* gobble gobble...
Denton: ... What was that?
Medda: The sophomores are in a meeting right now so they aren't with us today-
Race: *a sophomore, currently sitting in Medda's class* ...The sophomores are what
Albert: I'm an 11th grader in a freshman class they're gonna know I'm dumb!
Finch: Lie about your grade
Race: Put on a fake accent and say you're from Russia
Albert: Guten tag!
Finch: ...That's the wrong language
Race: This is why you're in a freshman class as a junior
Race: Smell me
Spot: I'll pass
Race: No I smell good
Albert: He smells like cookies
Spot: I... I am not going to smell you
Davey: *walks into a class that's only for juniors to see a bunch of underclassmen but also other juniors (Jack, Mike, Ike, and Oscar)* uhhhh... Is this the right-
Jack: Yeah somethin's fucked up
Davey, Jack, Mike, Ike, and Oscar: *currently supposed to be in a class meeting in another room*
Race: My social Security number is 735. 814-
Davey: STOP YOU'RE GOING TO GET IMPERSONATED IF YOU KEEP DOING THAT!!!
Elmer: I still can't drive
Buttons: his mom lost his social Security card
Crutchie: She what-
Wiesel: Come on, hurry up
Hotshot: We're goin!
Spot: Oh my god you guys are strolling! Aren't you on the football team? You gonna take us to states?? Do you move this slow on the field??
Race: You know they do
Denton: Welcome good morning I know you're all excited to be back- don't answer that
An inspirational video they were forced to watch: "He taught his whole team how to say I love you in sign language!"
Race: *slowly leans forward and makes the I love you sign at Albert*
Albert: *flips him off*
Race: :(
Davey: Oh god the sophomore hallway REEKS of Axe Body Spray
Jack: *joking* I know this is your doing, Elmer
Elmer: :(
Denton: Welcome to creative writing your teacher is crying it's a great first day
Race: damnit I have a scrimmage after school
Denton: What sportsball do you play?
Race: Soccer
Denton: And who are you sportsballing against?
Race: Brooklyn
Denton: Crush em
Romeo: OH MY GOD I JUST SENT THIS GUY STREAKS AND LOOK AT WHAT HE SENT BACK
The message: "I want to choke you with my cock"
Myron: WHAT THE FUCK
*in creative writing class with the gay teacher*
Davey: uh, hi. My name is David, he/him. My favorite book is Salt to the Sea and my favorite author is Ruta Sepetys, who wrote it. My main genres I like to write are realistic fiction and sci fi or fantasy. I write because I have a lot of ideas and if I don't put them somewhere I won't be able to function.
Romeo: wassup, I'm Romeo, he/they but I don't mind the occasional she/her. My favorite book is the Hunger Games and my favorite author is Rick Riordan. My primary genre I like to write is fanfiction and I write because media consumes me and if I like something it's all I can think about for weeks at a time.
Davey, in his head: shit man I mean me too but I'd never have the guts to say that out loud in front of a class-
Jack: Dress code! Dress code violation! Dress code!
Sarah: What does my turtleneck show too much?
Buttons: *GASP* I WANT THE CHAIR WITH THE WHEELS!!! IS THIS FOR THE TEACHER CUZ IT'S FOR ME NOW-
Race: I didn't have my protein shake this morning I am lacking!
Crutchie: Didn't you drink your first one a couple weeks ago- if even??
Race: Actually, Jack's mom gave me like $100 worth of coupons-
Davey: *about Spot* He sings both baritone and tenor.
Jack: He's bivocal
Race: I hate it when he calls me white man because then I can't say anything back or I'll sound unintentionally racist!!!
Jack: Fuckin white man
Race: Stoppp!
Wiesel: We're programmed as human beings to respond with care to things in need. Which is a good thing because otherwise we would probably drown all of our babies-
Crutchie: HUH???
Wiesel: You've programmed your brain to think like that about your phones- *continues like normal*
Crutchie: *20 minutes later* did he not say something about drowning babies???
Race: Fuck I have to take my makeup off before soccer but I don't have any makeup wipes!!
Spot: *jokingly* If you didn't wear makeup to school we wouldn't be having this issue
Albert: Did you just call him an ugly whore??
Spot: Yeah, actually
Romeo: *with nobody paying attention to them* Y'all ready? Y'all ready? *moves backwards and promptly trips over Specs's feet*
Specs: *literally in the middle of a conversation with Finch* ... You good?
Romeo: You tripped me! I was moon walkin!
TW Under the cut jokes about sewerslide and the f slur by someone who can claim it
Race: *jokingly at Smalls* Ewwwww! Freshman!
Smalls: KILL YOURSELF YOU STUPID FAGGOT!!!!
Jack: :0
Race: :0
Jack: did she just-
Race: THERE WAS NO HESITATION???
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