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#tw chased
whump-about-it · 18 days
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Last Hope
@whumpril Day 10: Adrenaline
CW: Probable misuse of medication (not for plot purposes, but because I'm not a medical professional and am basically making this up), criminal Whumpee, blood loss, fear of death.
Nothing had gone as planned. Whumpee was supposed to get into the compound, download the virus, and get back out. It wasn't supposed to take more than an hour. They weren't supposed to run into anyone. Least of all Whumper. Now Whumpee was bleeding uncontrollably from a knife wound in their chest, and running blindly through the labyrinthian facility trying to escape Whumper and find some kind of exit.
Thank God Caretaker had insisted on coming along. Whumpee had argued that this was a one man job, and they could drive their own getaway car. But Caretaker was a worrier, and apparently a vindicated one now. Whumpee could only hope they would get back to them to hear Caretaker tell them that themselves.
Struggling to stay focused as they ran through the building, trying to remember where they had gotten in from, Whumpee turned down a dark hallway lined with doors. Whumpee hadn't remembered being in this area of the building before, but with Whumper at their heels they could barely complain about the ample hiding places it provided and stumbled forward, one hand staunching their bleeding as best they could and the other grabbing at doorknobs, hoping against hope that one of them would swing open. Finally, at the end of the hall, one of them did with such a loud screech it made Whumpee's blood run cold even as the slipped in and locked the door behind them.
The dark room beyond seemed to be some sort of chemical lab. The walls were lined with counter spaces topped with severely sterile looking machines and locked cabinets. A part of Whumpee's mind drifted towards the idea that there was probably something valuable to steal in the room, before a sudden thunder clap of pain radiated from their chest through the rest of their body so intense that their knees gave out underneath them and they fell to the floor muffling a cry.
It had vaguely occurred to Whumpee before that the only reason they had gotten as far as they had as of yet was because of the adrenaline pumping through their body and numbing the pain and panic coursing through them. It seemed to have been starting to ware off now though and the room swam in front of Whumpee as they rolled onto their back and grasped the bloody hole in their chest with both hands. The contact elicited a disgusting squelching noise and another thunder bolt of pain that made Whumpee's eye site go grey momentarily.
Concentrate! They ordered themselves, their eyes sweeping around the room dizzyingly. There was a window at the far end of the lab. Whumpee couldn't tell if it opened or not, but they could at least be able us it their barings as to where Caretaker might have stationed themselves if they could get to it. That would be no use though if they bleed to death before they got out of the compound, which was a dangerously real possibility right now, so Whumpee continued to scan the room until their eyes finally landed a large metal box screwed to an adjacent wall with FIRST AID written across it in large red letters.
Whumpee pulled themselves into a sitting position and the world wavered in front of them. They could feel the little blood they had left in their body rushing away from their head and heart and towards the open would between their upper ribs. A nauseating feeling washed over them and Whumpee had to fight the urge to pass out. They knew they wouldn't wake up again if they did. This also served to confirm that there was no way Whumpee was going to be able to stand in their current condition. So once they'd gotten their senses back Whumpee resolved to start scooting across the floor on their butt, holding their gushing wound with both hands and fighting for consciousness the whole time.
When Whumpee was halfway to the first aid kit however, they suddenly became aware of the sound of heavy footsteps rapidly becoming louder. They froze and pressed themselves up against the nearest cabinet, holding their breathe as they listened to Whumper's familiar footsteps run down the hall past the room they were in, then back a few seconds later, disappearing back the way they'd come and back into the depths of the compound. Whumpee gasped for air as they heard Whumper's footsteps disapear. There was was a sudden rush in their heartrate that didn't seem so dizzying, and a shock of renewed adrenaline ran through them that they used to leverage themselves to their knees to quickly crawl the rest of the way to the first aid kit.
The adrenaline had run out by the time they got there, and Whumpee teetered on the edge of consciousness as they pulled the first aid kit from it's box on the wall and flung it open. Breathing was getting so painful that Whumpee was beginning to wonder if the knife had punctured their lung after all.
Hang in there, they told themselves. You just need to stuff the wound. Whumpee collapsed against another set of cabinets. Most of their energy spent, and ran a bloody hand over the supplies in the kit, feeling rather than seeing for the packets of gauze. Instead their hands ran over something plastic and cylindrical. Hovering over it out of exhaustion more than curiosity, Whumpee quickly realized what they were feeling. It was an EpiPen.
It took Whumpee several seconds to figure out why their slowing heart leapt with joy at the feeling of the medical device under their finger tips. They didn't have any allergies, and though they'd been trained in how to use an EpiPen, they'd never had need to before.
Epinephrine. Adrenaline. Their mind sluggishly eked out the thought, followed by a half forgotten memory of Caretaker explaining to them how adrenaline worked by constricting blood vessels.
It was a terrible idea. Part of Whumpee knew that. But they were desperate, and probably not thinking straight. And they knew that if they didn't stop the bleeding somehow they were going to be dead soon anyway.
Slowly Whumpee's fingers closed around the EpiPen and they dragged it out of the first aid kit and towards their body. It took them several tries before they managed to get the safety cap off, but once they did they held it up with a shaking hand and hovered over a space just above their wound. They knew that when being used for it's intended purpose, you where supposed to stab the patient in a larger muscle. But when used for bleeding Whumpee considered that they wanted it as close to the veins they were trying to target as possible. Whumpee sucked in what they hoped wouldn't be their final breathe and bit the inside of their cheeks to gag their own scream then drove the pen into their muscle with all their remaining strength, pressing the button at the opposite end before the pain could paralyze them.
Please let this work. Whumpee prayed to any God that might be listening. This is my last hope. Please let this work.
Authors Note: I just want to reiterate that I am not a medical professional and am nearly 100% certain that Epipens can not actually be used to stop bleeding. Please don't try to use them for anything other than their intended purpose.
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little-peril-stories · 4 months
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The Queen of Lies: The Drop, Part II
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Story Intro | Content Warnings | Mood Board | Vibey Song Lyrics | Ao3
Contents: lady whump, guy whump, being threatened, being chased, injury, blood, self-blame/victim-blaming
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Word count: 5500 || Approx reading time: 22 mins
The Drop, Part II
Teaser: He wasn’t alone, at least not yet. Because against all odds, Bree hadn’t bailed on him, nor had she turned him in, and perhaps most surprising of all, her crazy husband hadn’t found her and taken her away.
Silence had never been his favourite thing. Quiet, sure, peace and calm and all that—good for when his mind filled up with too many thoughts that needed somewhere to explode out of in a mess but had nowhere to go, and the soft strum of midnight in the city or the song of wind and bird calls in the trees helped to soothe the storm.
Silence, though.
Silence filled up empty spaces in a bad way. And when his mind was reeling, silence crowded up against those thoughts—shoved them around and twisted them into something worse. Like a crack in the ice on a frozen pond, silence shattered beneath your feet and pulled you into darkness, screeching into your bones and spearing right through your heart and soul until all you could think of was how heavy the world actually was, no matter how damn hard you were trying to forget.
The townhouse was silent.
He’d known it would be, and yet the confirmation crunched and snapped inside him, anyway.
Must have been at least a week since they fucked off—no, longer. Dust coated the table in a way Spider would’ve never allowed; there were no boots by the door; there wasn’t a hint of heat in the fireplace. Just ice-cold ashes and a few charred chunks of wood.
Fox gripped tightly to the edge of the table, watching his hands paint streaks in the layer of dust. He’d known it would be cold and empty and silent.
It still hurt.
He stood, drowning, long enough that he forgot entirely how long he’d been standing there at all.
Dropping the message had been easy. Perfect. Smooth. Quick. And he should have gone back to the inn. That would have been the smart thing to do.
Temptation had won out, and here he was. Temptation had led him straight to heartache. Temptation had proved to him that, for the first time ever, really, he was alone.
Except that wasn’t truly true, was it?
He released his grip on the table and stared down at his dusty fingertips and smudged palms. Ignored the way his shoulder complained at how he’d stood with his muscles so tightly wound, rigidly enough to hurt, reminding him that it wasn’t fully healed yet. His hands twitched in memory of being held by smaller, daintier ones—hands that had not shied away from his when, inarguably, they should have stayed far, far away.
He wasn’t alone, at least not yet. Because against all odds, Bree hadn’t bailed on him, nor had she turned him in, and perhaps most surprising of all, her crazy husband hadn’t found her and taken her away.
His stomach turned. She’d been so eager to help him, to drop a message for the others, all for his sake. But she was alone out there. They’d argued about it—whether to stay together or split up. Logic had won out.
Logic was a huge bitch. He was the one who’d pushed for splitting up, and that goddamn logic felt like nothing more than a savage scam now.
Heaving a sigh, Fox looked around the empty room one last time. Nothing had changed. Still cold. Still silent.
Perhaps it was time for goodbye, then. If Wolf and Spider and Hare were really gone.
In the dust on the table, he began to scrawl. Just in case. Because maybe, just maybe, there was a sliver of hope.
I’m alive.
Underneath, a series of letters.
W.
J.
C.
G.
He paused before the last one, but some compulsion drew his fingers through the dust again.
B.
***
The evening had turned unpleasantly cold—the kind of autumn night that smelled a bit like snow but didn’t have the decency to even spill any. Fox kicked at stones on the road as he walked, unable to shake a feeling of unease. Maybe he shouldn’t have gone to the townhouse. It was probably a terrible move. And leaving that message? The damn initials? Stupid. Spider would fucking kill him if she saw it.
Or she’d be glad to find out he was alive.
He shook a few hairs out of his eyes, pissed off at how they tickled uncomfortably against his eyelashes. Damn hat, shoving his hair forward so it fell in the most annoying place.
God, what had he been thinking, going back there?
What if someone had seen him? What if constables were tearing the damn place apart right now?
He came to a stop and forced himself to take a breath. The thoughts were getting out of control.
“Sounds like we got a problem here, don’t it?”
Fox frowned at the rough voice sneering somewhere around a corner. It sounded vaguely familiar. Unpleasantly familiar.
It sounded like a guy he was pretty sure he didn’t like.
“You gotta know whose turf this is,” the voice drawled. Fox’s arms prickled beneath his coat. “And I never seen no pansy little shitheads like you around here before. ’Specially not a mouthy little bastard in a fancy-ass coat like that. So, where the hell’d you come from, fella?”
Oh, he did fucking know that voice. It belonged to a guy he’d once punched in the face (and who’d punched him back, but that was beside the point). A guy who needed another knock on the head, apparently, because what was that bullshit he was spewing aboutwhose turf this was?
It certainly wasn’t his.
This was IA territory, and no matter what his brother said about not starting shit with the other crews working the suckers in town who left their pockets unguarded, Fox was not about to let this asshole go around claiming that some other gang had somehow overtaken it.
As a high-pitched voice protested whatever that fucker was doing, Fox started forward, then paused.
His shoulder. It still ached. It probably wouldn’t take much to fuck it up again.
“Empty them nice pockets of yours, kid, and maybe we’ll let you pass through with a warning. Maybe.”
Keep walking. That was all he had to do.
“What are you doing?” their victim squeaked. “Just leave me—”
One of the nasty voices burst into a laugh, while the other said, “Fuck, what’s wrong with this guy?”
A cry that was more of a shriek.
And then—
“What the fuck?”
The cry rang in his ears, too loud and too familiar.
“Shit…” Even before the guy went on, Fox knew what he was about to say. “Shit. It’s a girl.”
He was around the corner before he’d even quite realized that he had started to move.
“Hey.”
There she was, flat against the wall where those two motherfuckers from—what were they called? Something stupid—something with an S. Stealthy…sneaky…sorry. Sorry Sixes. That’s who they ran for.
Two bastards from the Sorry Sixes had cornered her.
Those big brown eyes went straight to him, and he almost died, because she looked so scared.
But.
She also looked royally pissed.
It wasn’t like when she’d yelled at him to smarten up and stop being a vulgar, disrespectful prick while he was still in jail, or her frantic, furious tirade to Mrs. Bristow when she convinced her to let them go. It wasn’t like her trembly, worried sort of frustration from when they’d fought about splitting up to cover more ground. It wasn’t like the endless, exhausted annoyance that crossed her face every time she had to destroy another goddamn poster.
This was something new, like something had split inside her, like she had decided she was fucking sick of being pushed around.
“This little cross-dressing freak your woman?” asked the one with his knife at Bree’s throat. Blond haired, blue eyed, mean-looking as a feral dog. “Been acting all shady-like, sneaking around on Sorry Six streets. You oughta keep her a bit more under control.”
“Yeah, about that,” Fox said through gritted teeth, unable to identify which part of that little speech infuriated him the most.
“About what?” the other one asked, shaking greasy red curls away from his narrowed eyes. “Who the fuck are you, anyway?”
“This ain’t your territory,” Fox said tightly, stepping a little closer. Bree’s eyes widened.
In a tiny, subtle movement, her gaze flicking to his bad shoulder, she shook her head. As if, somehow, after only knowing him for a few weeks, she knew exactly what he was about to get himself into. And what a terrible idea it was.
The Sixes snorted. “Says who?”
“Says me.”
“Well, guess I gotta ask again,” the short one said. “Who the fuck are you?”
As Fox stepped into the gas light, the blond guy’s head tilted to the side. “Wait a minute. I know this ugly face.” He shoved Bree back against the wall—whether for dramatic effect or because she’d been trying to slip away, it was hard to tell. But she winced, and at his side, Fox’s hands clenched.
“Think I kicked your ass one time,” he said. “Doesn’t seem like it did much good. Need another go?”
“Fox,” Bree hissed.
“Oh, that’s it. Fox,” the big one mimicked. “IA, ain’t you? How’d you get outta jail? Heard you got busted like an idiot.” He grinned. “Your mug’s been all over this city. You better watch your step, or we gonna be reading a big, splashy headline ’bout you in a day or so.”
With a gruesome, taunting grimace, the ginger mimed getting hanged, tilting his head as if his neck had been snapped.
“Didn’t know you could read,” Fox said, as his blood ran hot. Bree closed her eyes.
The redhead guffawed. “Ha, ha. Hilarious, Dog Boy.”
“Dog Boy. Good one. You come up with that yourself?” He stepped a little closer; neither of them moved. “Get your fucking hands off her.”
“And if I don’t? What you gonna do about it? Your wimpy freak of a leader gonna come and wag his finger at me?” The fucker with the knife laughed. “Last I heard, IA’s dead. And…” His voice trailed off for a moment as he dragged that stare back over Bree’s face. “And they’re looking for both of you.”
Fox heard the words—heard the taunt, the refusal to leave Bree alone, and the pointed jab at his brother. They burst at him like sparks, dropping in painful pinpricks he could not ignore.
He was about to leap, bum shoulder be damned, when Bree kicked the guy holding her right in the goddamn jewels.
“Fucking shit!” Fox yelped as she tore away from the wall, gasping. “You gone crazy?”
“Maybe,” she said, grabbing his arm. “Don’t fight. Let’s g—”
Rich of her, to tell him not to fight when she was the one who had just slammed her leg right into her attacker’s nuts.
And pretty optimistic, seeing as the short one was barrelling straight toward the both of them.
“Bree, get out of here.” Fox didn’t know if she would listen—had a bad feeling, after the assault she’d just launched on the asshole with the knife, that she would not—but the command tore out of him anyway, because neither of these fuckers was going to touch her again, not if he had anything to do with it. How had she even run into them, anyway? Her drop point was blocks away.
A story he could get out of her later, because right now there was an ass that needed kicking.
“You’re going to get h—” She squealed into silence as the blond guy recovered from his howls of pain, repositioned his knife, and shot forward.
“Ah, fuck!” The short one’s fist slammed into Fox’s shoulder just as Bree somehow did what he could not—sidestep her attacker. She still cried out, her voice mingling with his cursing as pain tore through his shoulder. “Bree, for fuck’s sake, just run! I can handle—”
Granted, he would handle it better if he weren’t so busy yelling at her to get lost. The ginger caught him with a knock on his jaw. No big deal. Nothing he couldn’t get back up from.
And he had to get back up from it, because the tall motherfucker with the knife was moving again.
“This ain’t IA territory no more,” the little one hissed. “Not since you landed your sorry ass in jail and the rest of your crew fucked off.”
Fox forgot that his shoulder and his jaw hurt, and he forgot he was being stupid. He sprang forward and knocked the goddamn asshole and his hideous, taunting mouth to the ground.
He shouldn’t have looked away from Bree, though.
The big guy caught hold of her hair, and she shrieked when he yanked her toward him and snarled, “Didn’t know IA had their hands on such cute little gals. ’Specially one who also got her face plastered on every damn wall in this town.”
She gasped and tilted her head back as he kept pulling on her hair. “What are you doing? Let me go, you disgusting, wicked, horrid—”
God, it would almost be sweet, watching her trying to throw out insults like that, if it weren’t so fucking horrifying.
The knife. Back at her throat.
No no no no no no no—
“Pretty little reward for the constable’s pretty little wife,” the blond one said, and as Fox struggled to figure out exactly how he was going to get both of them out of this mess, the other Six swept his feet from under him.
“And a reward for this asshole, too.” Black spots danced before Fox’s eyes as his bad arm was pressed into his back, followed by the other. “You just nothing but talk, eh? Dog Boy’s all bark and no bite.”
Fuck. Fuck.
In the distance, a whistle blasted through the air. Deep-throated shouts. Clicking, scraping footsteps.
“Would you look at that,” said the tall one smugly. “Coppers are nearby. Won’t they be surprised to see what we found?”
“You fucking idiots,” Fox snarled. “They could just arrest you both, too.”
With a growl, the red-haired one twisted his bad arm a little tighter. Fox gasped.
“C’mon, Mrs. Constable,” the big guy said, taking the knife from Bree’s neck for just long enough to pull her arms behind her, too, and shove her to her knees. “Ain’t you lucky? Gonna see your loony of a husband again.” He grinned at his friend. “And we’re gonna get an extra payday, huh?”
His friend cackled, and Fox found Bree’s gaze as they began to call into the night for the police to come running.
The freezing cobblestone underneath him should have been what chilled him to the bone. But what he saw in Bree’s eyes stabbed right into him like ice.
“I’m not going back,” she whispered. So quiet, he was almost only reading her lips. “I’m not. I’m not. I’m—”
“What’re you saying, missus?” The blond peered into her face. “I don’t like your husband much, neither, but I’ll sure take his money.”
“I said…” Bree glared up at him. “I said I’m not going back.”
Wetness gleamed beneath her eyes now, eerie and flashing in the yellow light.
“Let g-go of m-my hands,” she said suddenly. Whimpering. Trembling. “I’ll…I’ll give you whatever I have. That’s what y-you want, right?”
The big guy twirled his knife in his free hand, laughing. “Gonna get a lot more for taking you in, Mrs. Constable. But thanks anyway.”
“Please,” she said, sobbing. “You’re hurting me.”
Her downcast eyes flicked up momentarily and met Fox’s.
“I’ll give you whatever you want,” she whimpered, the instant of silent communication gone, and she craned her neck to look up at the shithead holding onto her. “Please. I’ve got m-money—”
What? Whatever she had in her pockets, it wasn’t much.
Fucking fuck, she was running a scam.
The tall Six growled but let go, pulling her up again to brandish the knife in front of her face.
Mewling quietly to herself, Bree picked at her pockets with shaking hands, and shot Fox a look.
“On three,” she mouthed, as if he were somehow wise to whatever plan she had concocted. Down by her pocket, her fingers counted: one—two—three—
Whatever clumsy but earnest assault she launched into with a shriek, Fox missed, because he gritted his teeth and threw his body upwards, which destroyed his aching muscles and fucked-up shoulder exactly as much as he’d expected it to, but he didn’t really have much choice or much time to come up with something better, and honestly, it worked just fine, with the ginger caught off guard. Fox forced him to roll, and with his arm pretty much out of commission, landed the most forceful kick he could muster right in his potato-shaped nose.
“Come on!” He latched onto Bree’s hand the moment he was on his feet. She hadn’t done much to incapacitate the big guy, but it looked like she had managed to kick him in the shins or something, which was going to have to be good enough to give them time to run. Because as much as he wanted to pummel both of these jerks into the ground, his arm said absolutely not, and if the constables really were on their way, they needed to get gone.
“What the fuck happened back there?” he gasped when they’d made it far enough from the frustrated yowling of the Sixes and the cops that only ordinary evening-in-the-city sounds swelled around them. “How’d you even run into those pricks?”
“I got lost,” she said. “It’s a long—”
“You could’ve been hurt!”
As if she somehow hadn’t expected him to be mad, she blanched. The flicker of hurt, though, was quickly replaced by her own anger. “Me?” she retorted. “You jumped right in, knowing your shoulder is still healing! What were you thinking?”
“You kicked that guy in the nuts! What if he’d been just a little nastier, huh? You know what he could’ve done to you?”
His breath was fighting against him—struggling to get in, screeching and scratching on the way out. Fuck, he’d been in fights, and yeah, he’d been clobbered before, not that he much liked admitting it, but this feeling in his chest was new, clawing at him from the inside, tight and only growing.
“Bree, you could have died!”
What had he been thinking, for god’s sake, letting her drop a message? Letting her get involved? How stupid was he? Everyone else knew it. They’d told him time and time again. Idiot. Reckless. Foolhardy. Impulsive. Thoughtless. Stupid. Stupid, stupid, stupid—
“Fox, you’re hurting me,” Bree whispered, and he looked down toward the hand squeezing hers.
Shit.
“Fuck. I’m sorry.” He let go, staring at the fingers that had been about to crush hers. Stupid and ill-fucking-tempered, after all that bullshit of Bree, I’m not him and trying to be better than the soul-sucking demon she’d married and here he was, yelling at her and scaring the shit out of her and hurting her, damn it all. “I’m sorry. I didn’t—”
The words died.
His fingers were slick with blood.
And he was pretty goddamn sure it wasn’t his.
“Bree…”
Her eyes went from his face to his bloody hand, and she gasped softly. “Oh. What did you—”
“It’s not mine,” he said, reaching for the hand he’d been clasping, and the sight of it nearly had him hurling his guts into the street, not because he had a problem with blood, for fuck’s sake, but because of whose blood it was. And how it dripped from her fingers, flowing freely. And fast.
“Oh, my—” Her face went a little green as she realized she was the one leaving a blood trail. “I don’t even know when—”
“Shit,” he hissed, watching dark red splatter onto the stone beneath them. “That looks bad.”
“I’m…I’m sure it’s…” For a moment, he could just see it: her eyelids fluttering closed, her limp body falling to the stone, him having to carry her in his arms while hoping she wouldn’t bleed out then and there…
And then she fumbled for a handkerchief, pressing it against the jagged slice that bastard had left on her forearm, right up to her wrist.
“It’s going to be fine,” she said firmly, even though she was pale.
He watched the starched cotton blossom with wet, seeping darkness, then pulled off his scarf. “Use this.” His hands shook as he pressed the wool to her arm, wrapping it with clumsy fingers.
How long till they got to the inn? Too long. Maybe the scarf would help staunch the blood. But it needed a real bandage. And she probably needed to not be running through the streets in a panic.
“I’m sorry,” he said hoarsely. “I wasn’t trying to scare you.”
She didn’t move her hands from where they held the makeshift bandage to her arm. But her gaze tilted upwards. “You don’t scare me.”
He swallowed.
“Tell me if you start to feel real bad, okay?” He itched to take her hand in his, so strongly it was almost making him twitch. But she needed to keep pressure on that goddamn cut. “We gotta keep moving. But we’re almost there.”
“Are you sure?” she asked, looking around nervously, a shiver wracking her body. “I don’t know where we are.” 
“We’re not going back to the inn. Not with your arm looking like that.” Her eyes widened, but after a moment, she seemed to realize that he was, for once in his life, following a sensible impulse and not a harebrained one.
“Okay,” she said softly. “I trust you.”
Fox was struck by how fiercely he wanted to just scoop her into his arms and carry her all the way—how much she looked like she needed it. But she stayed on her own two feet, and even though she winced with each jarring step, as the night fell colder and deeper around them, she did not complain. He had to force himself to stay far, far away from the question of why she handled her pain so stoically.
“Just a minute,” he said when they got there, as he pried a loose board from the steps and fished around in the dark, trying to find the key. “Fuck! Where is it?” He’d just dropped it back there an hour ago at most. Where the hell could it have gone?
He heard her soft intake of breath, startled and nervous, and he ordered himself to calm the fuck down.
“Sorry,” he muttered, finally grasping the key and shoving the board back into place. “I’m sorry. I couldn’t find…”
“It’s all right.” Was he imagining it, or was her voice growing faint?
Getting the goddamn key into the lock was even more of an ordeal. He was on the verge of just breaking down the door and facing the consequences later when the lock clicked and the door swung open.
“Got bandages somewhere,” he said, helping her through the entryway—he knew every uneven floorboard, every sharp corner, but she didn’t. “I just—I mean—I—fuck—” Where was he supposed to start? “Water. Right? Wash it. Needs to be…”
“Fox…”
“It’s usually me with the stupid injuries,” he said as he guided her toward the kitchen, “the dumb, idiot, clumsy, dumb fuck who’s hurt, and everyone else is running around finding me bandages, not the other way around, so I don’t really—”
“Just—”
“But I think—I gotta boil water, right? So it’s clean? Or whatever? Does that sound right?”
Stupid, stupid, stupid. The word danced around his head, taunting him, unwilling to let him forget for even an instant how foolish it had been to let Bree get anywhere close to IA life.
So what had he done?
Brought her to its headquarters.
Its empty, abandoned headquarters—but IA’s former stronghold, nonetheless.
He tore through the cupboards. God, the others were so damn organized, far more than he was, so you’d think he be able to find a single fucking bandage somewhere.
“Got it,” he said, leaving the cupboard door wide open and turning back toward Bree
“Fox!”
The scarf hit the floor more heavily than it should have.
“You’re panicking,” she said. Her handkerchief stuck to her skin; even in the dim light, he could see how wrong it was. The wrong colour, pasted and slick against her arm.
“No, I’m not.” Fuck, her fingers were cold. They found his as he pressed the new bandage to her cut.
“Yes, you are.”
“I’m not—”
“I’m okay.” Weak light, moon and lamp glows mingled, drifted in, just enough to see that her cheeks were wet and her lip was trembling. “I’m okay.”
“Fuck that,” he said, forgetting who he was talking to for a moment. Until she flinched. “You’re crying.”
“Y-yes,” she said. “I think—I think it’s—it’s catching up with me now.” She drew a shuddering breath. “I was scared. I was scared. I was so scared.” She took a step closer. “When I saw you, when you came around the corner, I felt—I was—I was so—I felt safer, but then—when I thought they might hurt you, and then when they were going to turn us in, and the thought of you—” She gasped, and then she pressed against him, her head to his chest. “Of Baden hurting you again—”
That made him sputter. “Of him hurting me again?” She was shaking. From cold? Leftover terror? Blood loss? Wracking sobs? “You serious?”
“He almost killed you.”
“God, Bree, what d’you think he’d do to you?” His voice cracked. “For being the one to help me? You think I could—you think I could handle that? Him getting his hands on you? So he could…he could…”
Before he even quite realized what he was doing, he had wrapped his arms around her, embracing that fragile form as if his body could shield her from the horrors of her past.
“Those constables,” Bree whispered, leaning into him. “They were after me.”
“After you?”
“I ran into my friends,” she said. “They recognized me. Taking down the posters. I—Alice, I think she would have looked the other way, but—but Marguerite, she… She looked… She thought I had gone…” A choking gasp. “She yelled for the police, so I ran. That’s why I was lost. And how I ended up there.”
“It’s okay,” he said, holding tighter. “They didn’t catch you.”
“But if they’d caught you, it would have been all my fault.”
He pulled away then. “No. It wouldn’t have.”
“And that boy hurt your arm,” she said shakily. “Because I—I made them angry—I wasn’t trying to—”
“Not your fault either,” he said. “They’re both shitheads. Plain and simple.”
She laughed, weepy but genuine, and it was beautiful. It brought him back from that fuzzy, floating realm of rage that seemed to exist outside of time and space, that turned the world white and red and black and made his thoughts go hazy and made him just want to scream and lash out and make the pain and the people causing it go away. That laugh, even thick and choked with tears, grounded him. Reminded him of why he’d been so pissed off in the first place. Who he’d been so desperate to protect.
He pressed one hand to her cheek. She didn’t startle, didn’t flinch. When he slid it down to the tip of her chin, and with the gentlest, barest force he could muster, tilted it up so he could look into her eyes, she didn’t pull away.
“None of it was your fault,” he said. “I’m sorry I yelled at you. I’m sorry for making you think…” His mouth had gone dry. “I was scared, too.”
Scared of what, exactly?
Bree brushed away the tears that still glittered on her cheeks. “I’m worried I’m getting blood on your coat.”
Blood. “Shit!” He was supposed to be boiling water. Apologizing and explaining and cuddling were all great, but they weren’t going to do much to help her sliced-open arm. “Let me—god, I’m sorry, I’m really terrible at this whole thing—”
He bolted for the door. When you lived in an old-ass townhouse, you got the pleasure of using the old-ass well down the road instead of the fancy-ass running water the rich folk got. And if no one had been in the house for weeks, there sure as hell wasn’t any water inside. “Sit down, okay? I’m coming back. I’ll—I’m just going for water—I’ll be right there!”
He fled before she could comment on what a piss-poor medic he made, or on the fact that he still had to get a goddamn fire going before he could even think about boiling water.
Stupid, stupid, stupid. At least the inn would have had hot, clean water ready to use.
But it was farther away.
But it was safer.
But she’d have kept bleeding into the street.
Water in tow, he skidded back inside and went straight for the oven, flinging open the cast-iron door and throwing in the first flammable things he could find. He really had to concentrate, to focus his energy on lighting the kindling and making sure the logs took to flame, because his mind was racing again, too fast and too loud. If Bree said anything, he didn’t hear.
When he finally turned around, water heating and candles lit so they could actually see, her head lay on her good arm—her body slumped over the table.
“Shit! You okay?” He flew to her side. Landed on his knees.
Her eyes fluttered open immediately. “Yes. I’m just resting.” Slowly, she sat up. “You were here already.”
“Huh?”
She pointed to the message he’d written in dust earlier that day—such a short time ago, yet it felt like decades. “What does it mean?”
“What do you mean, what does it mean?” He stood up again, embarrassed that he’d panicked when she’d merely closed her eyes in exhaustion. An inspection of her arm showed that no new blood had soaked through the bandage she still held against it. “It says I’m alive.”
“Not that,” she said. He tried to catch any resentment in her voice. But she didn’t sound surprised that he’d been to the house already. “The other part. The letters.”
He looked again at the initials. It was so obvious to him—but of course, to her, it meant nothing.
“You really wanna know?”
His heart was still racing, but as he looked over the letters, his mind calmed once more, and his limbs moved without frenzy—one hand to stroke her cheek, an unconscious movement he couldn’t have resisted even if he wanted to, and the other to take her unbandaged arm.
“Of course.” Her eyes were on him. When he moved her hand, though, she looked to the table, to the letter B, and what he was writing there with the tip of her finger.
Bree.
She frowned, confused, until he did it again. Guided her finger to form the rest of the letters that were missing behind the W.
Silence draped over them, but it wasn’t the boggy, drowning, thought-twisting kind. It was the kind that made him forget why the house was so silent. It was the kind that dripped with sweetness and with promise, that inhabited the space between strangers and not, between fear and loyalty, between the past and the future.
“Will,” she breathed. “Your name is Will.”
No doubt. No mistrust. Not even a question; it was as if, by some magic, she had always known, and the revelation was no surprise. The sound of his name coming from those lips was the most beautiful sound he had ever heard, like birdsong after a storm or the crunch of boots on a fresh, white crust of snow.
“My name is Will,” he echoed.
Bree was silent again, gazing at him with wide, shining eyes. In unison, they drew closer, and Will’s entire body tingled with every possibility contained in the moments between them, in their shivering breaths that seemed to go in and out as one, and in the crackling air that seemed now to connect rather than separate.
And then she was the one with her arms around him, those bird’s wings enveloping him as if they might never let go, and her lips were pressed to his. Her kiss was warm, as soft as air, almost, and just as life-giving. It tasted the way he imagined starlight would: sweet and bright and colourful, like strawberries in summer, like apples in autumn, like cinnamon and sugar and just-brewed tea.
With his pounding heart rattling every inch of his body, Will Wardrew kissed Bree Scarlett back, and even though their world was in shambles and maybe always had been, there was a moment where everything—everything—was right.
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Taglist (please let me know if you’d like to be added/removed!)
@starlit-hopes-and-dreams
@clairelsonao3
@gala1981
@pleasestaywithmedarling
@kixngiggles
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deadpoets · 4 months
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PERCY JACKSON & ANNABETH CHASE 1.02 | I Become Supreme Lord of the Bathroom
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maines · 4 months
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PERCY JACKSON AND THE OLYMPIANS (2023—) ↳ ❅ for @singularities
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peskyduck · 1 year
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@cflight- Continuation from here, x
'No need to be so touchy.’ The ingrateful duck huffs, shaking his head as if Ekira is the one who is causing the problem. ‘Explain to me what the rope is for. Then perhaps I’ll be impressed.’ ... Perhaps.
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A click of his tongue. 'Can't expect me to be wowed so easily! Often these situations ends with some bloodshed. Usually mine or the others. But perhaps this time it'll be yours.' He folds his wings 'Honestly, I'll save my "wows" for when and if this little plan of yours gets us out of here in one piece.'
The sounds of something crashing through the door. Duck lets out a yelp. 'Looks like we've been found!'
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aficionadoenthusiast · 4 months
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*me, with tears of frustration in my eyes* rick didn't include annabeth's crush on luke or luke's pseudo-crush on annabeth for no reason! it is not something that needs to be cut because it's 'gross'! it serves thematic purpose! it adds to characterization! guys! please!
annabeth is twelve, and luke is the guy she's looked up to since she was seven. she not only has that bond, but she has the admiration from him getting his own quest. she has a lot of hero worship going for him, and it's really not unreasonable that she would like him or even that she would think of him as more than a sibling. beyond that, it's a great example of how a person who has never received real, unconditional love can become unhealthily attached to someone who is not good for them just because they've been shown a modicum of respect. if you want to look at it from a percabeth perspective, it could even tie into how her character has to learn the difference between love and kindness from a place of love and respect (i.e. percy) vs love and kindness from a place of obligation and manipulation (i.e. luke as kronos' vessel)
on luke's side, especially with him calling her his little sister now (in the show) and him literally turning into kronos later, it's symbolism for how he's being pulled farther and farther onto the dark side. as kronos takes over his body, he sees her less and less as a sister and more and more of something else, something that would be considered dark and unhealthy by anyone not on the dark side (for good reason), until eventually she has to remind him of their years on the run when he considered her a sister: "Family, Luke. You promised."
you're supposed to be grossed out by it! that means the theme is working!
you're supposed to see a traumatized 12 year old with a crush on her 19 year old mentor and think, "hey, that's weird! i wonder if her not getting any love or attention until she met him plays a role in their relationship?" and eventually see a 24 year old get a villain-induced crush on a 16 year old and think, "hey, that's really weird! i wonder if his turn to the dark side and how that turn happened twisted his view of her?" and ultimately think, "i wonder what that says about the type of trauma that develops in kids who grew up thinking they were unloved, especially since the author specifically wrote the book for his son with disabilities, the author who used to be a teacher, a profession that regularly encounters kids that are actively being abused and neglected?"
anyway thanks for coming to my ted talk
edit: this post is not speculation! i'm not trying to say i don't think they're going to include annabeth's crush! i am perfectly aware that we are only two episodes in! this post is in response the people i keep seeing say they're glad because they think Luke's little sister comment means they're not going to include the "gross stuff from the books" (other's wording, not mine), and I was trying to explain why including it would be a positive. sorry, i really thought i made that clear
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floatyflowers · 3 months
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Dark! Percy Jackson Reverse Harem x Reader|| Chapter One
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You look up at the sign that says camp half blood, exhaling and inhaling, trying to calm your nerves down.
Thoughts of doubt encircle your mind, but you finally decide to step into the camp.
However, the moment you step into the camp, you feel something engulf your body.
But, you don't pay any attention to it, thinking that it must be the camp's atmosphere.
You walk around the camp, trying to search for any adult around to introduce yourself.
After three minutes of searching around, you get tired and before you know it...
...you burst into tears.
After all, it's too much for your mentality to feel such pressure.
You are thirteen, got chased by a monster, your mother barely explained anything to you before she dropped you off at the camp.
She didn't even say goodbye as if she was ashamed that your demigod side started to show.
While crying, you don't notice the figure approaching you until you feel someone pat your head.
"You are new here, I guess?"
Looking up, you are met with the sight of a handsome boy with dark brown hair and eyes who looks to be a few years older then you.
"And also your godly parent laimed you it seems"
You look above your head to see a hologram of small pink cherubs flying above your head.
"My godly father is...Eros?" you inquire slowly, amazed by the hologram
Suddenly the hologram switches to a golden sun with 21 rays made of arrows.
"I think it's Apollo"
Luke is confused at what is happening as the hologram changes again and gets replaced with glowing caduceus.
"You are my sister?"
The hologram keeps changing which confused you and Luke more until it stopped at the cherubs.
Once Hermes' son is sure that the hologram is not going to change again before he confirms your parentage.
"You are certainly Eros' daughter"
Luke seems disappointed that you aren't his sister.
"Who are you?" you ask, wiping away your tears.
"I will tell you who I'm once you tell me why you were crying"
You smile at him when you see his warm expression.
He reminds you of your kind stepfather.
"I was crying because I was stressed"
Luke chuckles and guides you further into the camp until you reach the dining pavilion area.
"Don't worry, we are now your family, I'm Luke Castellan, Hermes' son"
Some demigods turn towards you as he pushes you gently to join them.
But someone caught your eyes.
And it seems like the blond demigod also notices you.
His gloomy expression turns into one of shock before smiling brightly.
"(Y/n)!"
He walks up to you and hugs you tightly before pulls away with the same lovesick look on his face.
"You are also like me, a demigod?"
"Yeah...hey, Percy"
Percy Jackson, your school stalker, who has a huge crush 'obsession' with you.
You always remember him staring at you.
And bumping into him by accident in many occasions.
"I'm glad you are here with me"
You chuckle nervously and nod your head slowly.
"Yes, me too"
"You two know each other?"
Luke asks, seeming jealous of Percy.
After all, he already considers you his younger sister.
Percy answers with a confident smile, wrapping an arm around your shoulders.
"She is my girlfriend"
Chapter Two >>>
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jeremyknoxs · 4 months
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PERCY JACKSON AND THE OLYMPIANS | 1x03
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kitconnor · 4 months
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#meet cute
PERCY JACKSON & THE OLYMPIANS 1.01 "I Become Supreme Lord Of The Bathroom"
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Mini comic largely based on a little fic I read that made my brain explode
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juergenklopp · 2 months
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JOE BURROW and JA’MARR CHASE attend the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Phoenix Suns (February 25, 2024)
— for @cementcornfield
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amesliu · 4 months
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GOODE HIGH - a percy jackson highschool au written by 11 year old me and adapted by 24 year old me
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little-peril-stories · 4 months
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The Queen of Lies: The Drop, Part I
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Story Intro | Content Warnings | Mood Board | Vibey Song Lyrics | Ao3
Contents: lady whump (I mean, sort of), being chased, being threatened, being robbed/mugged
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Word count: 4000 || Approx reading time: 16 mins
The Drop, Part I
Teaser: He snorted, putting his plate beside him. When he folded his arms and met her gaze, Bree watched his face for irritation. “Are you asking me why I’m still here?”
“Fox?”
How long they’d been cooped up in their room, Bree wasn’t quite certain. They sneaked out for fresh air only when they were feeling courageous, and when it was quiet enough outside that no one was around or busy enough that they wouldn’t stand out in a crowd—a risky request of his to which she had eventually capitulated when it became clear that being inside all the time was doing him no favours. It hurt her, she’d realized, to look at his pale skin and jittery limbs, as if his need to be outdoors was more than just a childish request, but a physical necessity.
“Yeah?”
Their eyes met over their plates of food—a pork roast and mashed potatoes drizzled with gravy, and a pile of green sprouts that her companion was pointedly avoiding—she’d retrieved from downstairs, doing her best to avoid the gazes of the other guests who surely burned with curiosity about why she never took her meals in the dining room.
Bree dreaded the answer to her question, and yet it had been goading her for days now. She didn’t think she could stand another minute of not knowing. “There’s something I want to ask you.”
“Okay,” he said, looking relieved to take a break from his vegetables. “Shoot.”
“You came with me,” she said. “And I know you were so hurt at first. But you’ve mostly recovered now, and I…I know you have people out there. They must be wondering. Waiting.” She pushed her potatoes around, her appetite fading quickly. “Why are you… Why didn’t you…”
He snorted, putting his plate beside him. When he folded his arms and met her gaze, Bree watched his face for irritation. “Are you asking me why I’m still here?”
“Well,” Bree said, her face heating, “I suppose I am.”
“Thought you liked having me around?”
“I do!” she said, her pulse quickening. “I didn’t—I didn’t mean it like that. Don’t start a fight. I just…”
“Just what?”
Oh, she didn’t. She didn’t want to say this. “I thought you’d go looking for them the first chance you got.”
He pointed toward the wanted posters staring at them from a stack on the desk; Bree had been tearing them down as she saw them whenever she went outside. “Aren’t you the one reminding me all the time my face is all over the place?”
“Honestly,” she said, “I really thought you’d just leave the moment you were well enough.”
A quietness took hold of him then, and as she’d known she would, she regretted asking. He tugged at his hair, thinking, and after some time, said, “I don’t know if they’re still here.”
That was not what she’d expected him to say. “What? Why not?” With horror, she watched his jaw grow tight. God, why did she always find the worst things to say? She never should have asked, never should have tried to pry, and now he was angry that she’d reminded him of his loneliness. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean—I didn’t want to—I wasn’t trying to—”
Frowning, he asked, “What are you apologizing for?”
“I wasn’t trying to upset you,” she said quickly. “Please don’t be upset. I’m sorry. I wasn’t. I shouldn’t have said anything—shouldn’t have brought it up. I’m sorry.”
He answered at first with silence, letting it drag on between them. His head tilted slightly to the side, and that hazel-eyed gaze roamed over her, calm but puzzled.
And sad.
“Bree,” he said. His voice was mournful, heavy with cruel imagination and with memory, as heavy as the metal that had once adorned his wrists. “I’m not him.”
The words hung between them, and Bree found she did not know how to answer, for he was right. It wasn’t Fox who grew so terribly furious with her at the slightest provocation, who was impatient and violent and cruel.
“I know,” she whispered.
“And I’m not mad.”
She nodded, suddenly finding she couldn’t think of a single word to say except, “Okay.”
His throat bobbed as he waited, it seemed, to see if she would say more. When she didn’t, he went on, “At first, I couldn’t. Even if I had wanted to. Leave, I mean. To go find them. But now…” His gaze pointed out the window. “I mean, how long’s it been? Weeks, for sure. They’d have expected me to…” She watched every muscle in his body tighten again. “Crack. Ages ago. So. There’s…there’s no way they’re at…” He paused. “Home.”
Home. Bree knew little about the world from which he’d careened into hers, but she had never imagined that a gang of thieves might have a place they called home. A hideout, maybe. What would Baden call it? A snake pit. A criminals’ lair. A—she almost smiled—fox den.
“Do you have a way to contact them?” Perhaps it was a hopeless, pointless question.
Fox looked away from the window, studying her now as he once had in a cold and filthy prison cell—curious and assessing.
“Yeah,” he said slowly. “There is.”
As if he weren’t quite aware that he was doing it, he traced the lines of his tattoo: the roots and the tree, the circle, the letters she had stared at so many times when he wasn’t looking—I.A.
As his fingers moved over the black-ink curves on his arm, his eyes went to hers. “You gotta promise,” he said. “If I tell you…” Bree’s heart pounded, and for a moment, she felt utterly giddy. “You gotta swear you won’t tell anyone. Ever.”
“I won’t,” she breathed. “No one. Ever.”
“Promise?” he asked, holding out his hand.
She extended hers. “I promise.”
***
Flip the coin.
“No, not like that,” he’d said, chuckling at her look of confusion. “Not in the air. As in, turn it over.”
Bree reached out and turned the wooden coin so the side with the letters I.A. were facing upwards and the tree with the ringed roots faced down.
Drop the message.
A short note, written in such atrocious hand, she hadn’t been able to read it.
“What does it say?” she’d asked, watching him blow on the ink and cut a piece of string so he could tie it around a stone to weigh it down.
He’d laughed when she’d confessed she couldn’t read his writing. “Well, I mean, it’s kind of on purpose. Don’t want just anyone reading it, right? But it says I’m alive. And out.” The smile he wore had faltered as he went on. “If they’re still around, they’ll know it’s me. Hopefully.”
“You signed it?”
“No,” he said, rolling his eyes. “J—” Suddenly, he’d stopped. “They know my shitty handwriting. They’ll…they’ll know.”
Bree dropped the messily tied note next to the coin. He’d said there were a few places around the city that Iustitia aecum used for sharing messages and dropping goods, but there were some he thought his friends would be more likely to check than others. After some thought, he’d narrowed it down to two—and after some arguing, they had agreed that he would drop a note in one and she in the other.
“You’re going to get caught,” she’d said, her heart in her throat.
“I’ll be careful,” he’d promised. “I didn’t get busted just walking around. I got ambushed meeting with someone.” His expression had soured. “It was a trap for my…”
She hadn’t been able to get more out of him on that, but he’d seemed to waver somewhat in his conviction to keep his IA secrets from her. It hadn’t escaped her notice, that bitten lip, that pause, that glance over her when he thought she wasn’t looking. She’d chosen not to mention it. 
Bree also hadn’t voiced the other concern that beat painfully against her ribcage: that Fox would never return for a different reason—that him being rearrested was not the only thing that might prevent her from ever seeing him again. Perhaps his friends, by chance, would find him dropping the message. Perhaps he would slip away and go to the home he said existed somewhere in the city, and there they would be, delighted to find him alive and whole, and they would welcome him with open arms, and Bree would never lay eyes on him again.
She pushed the thoughts from her mind. If he wanted to find his friends and rejoin them, wasn’t he free to do so? Hadn’t she been the one to ensure he had that freedom?
Get the hell away from there.
The last instruction in Fox’s list of three. Bree glanced around, praying no one had noticed her pause by the sill of a broken window in an abandoned storefront, and then headed back toward the inn. The wind whipped around her, and for the first time, she was grateful for the trousers—better if you don’t look like you, he’d said, and she’d agreed. She had to admit, as much as she missed and preferred her skirt and petticoat, it was nice to not have them tangling around her legs.
God, what if Fox really didn’t come back?
As she hurried through the streets with night falling gently around her, tears struck, so sudden and so sharp, they took her breath away and blurred her vision. Furiously, Bree wiped them from her eyes. What was she crying for? Why on earth should she weep at the thought of never seeing him again? What a fool she was.
Bree took a moment to catch her breath and regain her composure, to force back another slew of silly, girlish tears. She’d set him free. She’d made that choice. What he chose to do with that freedom was up to him.
She stood, watching the evening rush ebb and flow around her, and her eyes fell upon a now-familiar piece of paper fastened to a lamppost up ahead, and her stomach turned. Heavens, but she was so sick of tearing down the posters—his and hers. Terribly sick of the lies splashed across them, terribly sick of the needling feeling ushered in by the sight of them—that awful fear that Baden knew full well she had not been abducted, and that he nurtured his own reasons for telling the world she had.
Heaving a furious sigh, she darted forward and ripped the poster from the pole.
“What—hey—look!”
An affronted cry rang out behind her, but Bree didn’t bother to turn. Whatever had upset that woman, it surely wasn��t her business; she had other problems to worry about.
“That boy’s taking down Breanna’s poster!”
Oh.
Oh, no.
It bowled into her, much too late now, that it was not the voice of some unknown woman shouting at her—rather, shouting at the “boy” who was so wickedly disrupting the constabulary’s search for her missing friend.
It was Alice.
And Alice was at her side, grabbing her arm with the force of a furious adult disciplining a misbehaving child.
“What on earth are you doing?” she demanded. “How dare you? Don’t you realize we’re still looking for the girl on that poster?”
“He probably can’t read,” a passerby said. “Most street kids can’t, can they?”
“That’s no excuse!” Alice said. Her lovely eyes were wild and fuming, an expression Bree had never seen there. “Explain yourself!”
Alice, eyes glistening, forcefully pulled Bree toward her—and her face changed. Her grip loosened.
“Breanna?”
Bree’s chest grew tight, too tight, and the cold air turned to shards of ice deep within her lungs, so frigid and piercing that she could hardly bear to draw a single breath.
“Breanna? Is it…is that you?”
Without thinking, Bree tugged Alice to the side, away from the curious eyes that were collecting around them, terror lending to her grip a strength she’d never wielded before. “Shh! Don’t say my—”
Alice’s eyes came close to overflowing. “How—why? Where have you been?” Her voice shook. “You sent that note—all those passages you marked—your note—” She took hold of Bree’s hand, wrapping her fingers tightly as if she might never let go. “And your cousin! You never had a cousin named Lucy! Why would you—”
“Alice, please.” Breanna squeezed the gloved hands wrapped around hers. “You must understand.” Her voice broke. “I know you do.”
Alice stared at her, her face ghostly pale. Almost as grey as the sky above them. “Where have you been?” she repeated. “Are you hurt? Are you safe?”
“I’m safe,” Bree said. “And I’m—I’m gone. And I’m not going back.”
“What?”
“Never, Alice.” Bree’s fingers twitched tighter. “Please. You—you never saw me. Please.”
Alice remained still now, her eyes wide and frightened, and ever so confused. “Breanna, you’re scaring me. You’re talking—you’re talking—”
“I’m never going back to him!”
The vow erupted out of her, rending the air between them like thunder.
“I’m never going back.” Bree’s chest heaved, her breath spinning beyond control now rather than frozen in horror. “If you have ever thought of me as a friend, Alice Wright, you’ll let me walk away, and you’ll never tell another soul you saw me here.”
Breanna Hatchett, cowering somewhere in her subconscious, quailed at the force behind her words: she fell to her knees, in tears, and she begged for Alice’s forgiveness. After all, what kind of girl would speak to her friend that way?
The girl who had become Bree Scarlett, however, did not take her eyes from Alice’s, and she did not back down.
The tears Alice had been so obviously and valiantly trying to contain spilled free.
“Promise me,” she whispered. “Promise me you are safe.”
“I promise,” Bree said. “I’m safe. And I’m h—hap—”
The truth of that stuttered, unfinished word—happy, for she was, wasn’t she, against all odds?—struck with such violence that Bree was almost relieved when a familiar voice cried out, equal parts harsh, concerned, and irritated.
“Alice? What on earth are you doing? We’re going to be late!”
Breanna spun around, and the woman calling Alice gasped.
“Breanna? Breanna Hatchett? You’re here? Where have you been?” Marguerite’s mouth dropped open. The frustrated quality to her voice changed, its target shifting from Alice to Bree, and her pitch rose to piercing shrillness. “And what in heaven’s name are you doing dressed like that? Goodness gracious, what’s happened to you?”
The stares of the surrounding townsfolk were only growing.
“Why are you dressed up in boy’s clothes?” Marguerite asked. “And—why are you here? Half the city’s been looking for you. Your husband has been so—”
Bree observed rather dizzily how her friend kept her distance, as if she did not wish to get too close, as if coming near might sully her lovely dress or her spotless white gloves. As if she were worried that Bree might do something unseemly or rash.
As if she were afraid.
“Everyone says you were kidnapped,” Marguerite said nervously. “You don’t look hurt. You just look…”
Bree backed away. Something she did not trust, something she feared, glittered in Marguerite’s gaze.
To Alice, all she could think to say was, “Please, say—say nothing—”
“Alice?” Marguerite interrupted. “What is she talking about?”
And sweet, lovely, kind, and caring Alice glanced between Bree and Marguerite, stuttering out a few anxious, incomprehensible sounds. “Well—well—I—”
“Look at her. What is she doing?” Marguerite’s face drained of colour as Bree backed up even further. “I think—I think she’s gone quite mad. She’s going to hurt herself, or—or even someone else. Someone fetch the pol—”
Bree turned on her heel and ran.
Icy wind scraped at her skin as she fled, the rush of air in her ears drowning out the surprised shouts of strangers and the worried calls of Alice and Marguerite. Perhaps Alice believed her; perhaps she would have held her tongue—turned away and pretended they had never crossed paths.
But Marguerite?
She’s gone quite mad.
Whether or not that was true, Bree thought grimly, was rather beside the point. What was far more concerning: what Marguerite had been about to say.
Someone fetch the police.
No doubt, somewhere behind her, someone had called for the constables. What other choice did they have, believing there to be a madwoman roaming the streets, spurning the aid of her dear friends, pretending to be someone else, and tearing down her own “Missing” posters?
They didn’t understand; they could not. Marguerite had done as she thought was proper, and if there were police seeking her now, the search for poor, missing Breanna Hatchett urgently renewed, those officers also did what they believed to be right.
As did Bree.
She stopped running when the stitch in her side grew to be too much to bear, and the uneven stones beneath her feet threatened to trip her and send her smashing to the ground. She laid a shaking hand against a wall and allowed herself to rest.
Listen. Pay attention. Look for pursuers. All things Fox had told her would be imperative during, as he called it, the drop.
“Gotta stay…uh…” He’d paused, scratching his chin. “What’s the word? V—vi—”
“Vigilant,” she’d supplied, and he’d grinned, repeating the word after her with a wholly unembarrassed chuckle.
His voice faded from her mind, replaced by the sounds of the still-hidden high street. Perhaps someone had given chase, but she heard no furious shouts, at least none that seemed to be related to her flight from Alice and Marguerite.
Slowly, Bree let out a breath.
So she’d made it away without getting caught.
Now what?
The quivering Breanna Hatchett inside her wanted to spin around, terrified at how unfamiliar the area was, and to fall to the ground and weep, because even Bree Scarlett recognized that she was, in all likelihood, very lost.
She swallowed her tears and took another deep breath. She wasn’t lost; rather, she was just off the main street, and once she made her way back there, she’d be able to find her way. Ask for directions from someone who seemed kind. Someone who didn’t believe her to be a criminal or a madwoman or a helpless victim of Iustitia aecum.
Once the pain in her side had faded, Bree pushed herself forward, keeping one eye on the darkening sky. The wind churned up dust, dead leaves, and detritus as it rushed through the alley, threatening to loosen her tied-up hair and dislodge the woollen hat Fox had “found” and given to her to hide her face. It was dark and cold, yes—and getting darker and colder—and she was lost, yes, but that did not mean all was lost.
Find the high street.
Regain her bearings.
Make it back to the inn.
Reunite with Fox. He would be there.
He would be there.
Wouldn’t he?
***
Listen. Pay attention. Stay vigilant.
Somewhere behind her, she heard the muttering of two boys, and fear flared in her chest, but as she tried to catch their conversation, she realized that while they seemed to be talking about her, they kept saying “boy” and “lad.”
The disguise, at least, was working.
She made her way toward the main road, shoving her hands deep into the pocket of her coat in a desperate attempt to retain some warmth in her fingertips.
She’d make it back and find her way. She could. Breanna Hatchett would have already given up. Bree Scarlett was stronger than that.
She paused at a corner, uncertain of which way would point her toward the inn.
“Hey, you. Kid. You lost?“
When Bree glanced back, she saw that the young men were still about, one poised to walk away, the other with his eyes on her.
“No,” she said. Goodness, she must really have looked confused, if they’d noticed her pausing and looking around and wondering what to do next. This was unfortunate, for they looked rough, certainly not the sort of people she’d usually find herself speaking to.
Except recently, she supposed. Since her only companion of late was a wanted criminal, and despite what the poster said, so, in fact, was she.
“Where you headed?” the boy asked. “You need a hand?”
Bree shook her head. Some cautious emotion prickled at the back of her mind. Yes, she’d been looking for someone to ask for directions. These two didn’t quite seem like who she had in mind, not with their sly mouths and beady eyes.
“You sure?” The boy approached quickly, confidently. “’Cause you’re looking a little lost there, friend-o.”
“Well, I’m not.” Bree turned away, blood ticking a little faster through her veins. Why wouldn’t he take no for an answer and just leave her alone? “Good…” She let her voice trail off. Was goodbye too formal for this conversation? How did boys speak to one another on the street? “Go away.”
The boy’s blue eyes reflected back at her the light of the nearest lamp, shining yellow and lurid. “What was that, kid?”
“Kinda rude,” the other one said.
“That’s what I was thinking.”
“Just leave me alone,” Bree said. “I don’t need your help, all right?” She began to walk away, gaze trained on the gas lamps in the distance. It would be fully dark soon, with only the lamps to light her way, and she was wasting time.
“Uh, where do you think you’re going?”
Keep walking—that was all she had to do. She didn’t turn around. What would Fox say if he were here? “I told you to get lo—”
Addressing his friend, the boy interrupted her, his voice snide. “Did you hear that weedy little asshole tell me to go away?”
“Sure did.”
“And I was just offering to help him, wasn’t I?”
“Yeah, you was.”
“Kinda feels like he needs to be taught a lesson…don’t he?”
“Yep.”
None of this sounded good at all. Bree ducked her head, hastened her footsteps—and walked directly into a bulky form that seemed to materialize out of thin air.
“Sounds like,” the boy said, taking hold of the collar of her coat, “we got a problem here. Don’t it?”
A brick wall pressed against her back.
“You gotta know whose turf this is,” the boy said. “And I never seen no pansy little shitheads like you around here before. ’Specially not a mouthy little bastard in a fancy-ass coat like that. So, where the hell’d you come from, fella?”
“I certainly don’t know whose turf this is,” Bree said, pushing weakly against him and remembering too late that she wasn’t supposed to sound like herself. Her attempt to shove him away did little but dredge up memories that were neither comforting nor helpful. Baden had cornered her like this at times when he really wanted to shout in her face about something—never using such language as that, of course, but it felt familiar all the same. Her breath hitched. “Get off me, you—you—you brute—”
“A brute, huh?” The boy snorted, holding more tightly to her coat and thrusting her back into the wall. Even through her clothes, the rough brick stung on impact. “We’ll see. Empty them nice pockets of yours, kid, and maybe we’ll let you pass through with a warning. Maybe.”
A knife spun in between the fingers of his free hand, glinting bewitchingly in the lamplight that trickled in from the road. Bree watched the reflected glow swirl in the air and turn from green to blue to yellow, then disappear entirely as he caught it again.
“Do it,” the other one said, voice drenched in gleeful malice, and Bree could not tell if he was speaking to her or to his friend.
In agonizing, mocking slowness, the knife lowered and rested against her neck—and there it stayed, grazing the skin of her throat with teeth as cold and razorlike as ice.
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Taglist (please let me know if you’d like to be added/removed!)
@starlit-hopes-and-dreams
@clairelsonao3
@gala1981
@pleasestaywithmedarling
@kixngiggles
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klapollo · 11 months
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truly i think part of why fatphobia is so tempting to a lot of not fat people no matter how 'progressive' they are is simply because it gives one a way to feel better. when society tells you you're inherently more virtuous because you're slim, you perceive any social gains (with or without regards to body image/beauty/etc) made by the "ugly" people as a slight on you, an attack on your heightened position. it's (part of) why some skinny women get so completely bent out of shape seeing someone like lizzo be widely loved and praised. that's not allowed! she's fat! I'M supposed to be better! a lot of these people are utterly miserable and self hating and they hate having their one little trophy taken away so they hold it over their head and hit people with it
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dead-dove-yandere · 2 months
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Drunk chase around their darling just spilling every single truth or something
“CHASE WHAT THE ACTUAL FLYING FUCK DUDE I SWEAR I HOPE YOU ARE JOKING”
“Hic I admit it i hic Killed people f-for fun”
Yeah that seems like the kind of dumbass thing Chase would do lmao. He’s very blasé about everything
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TW: Stalking, Obsession, mention of murder and manipulation, implied violence/kidnapping
He pours himself another drink and you force a polite smile to hide your annoyance. When Chase barged into your dressing room with a bottle of bourbon, you’d hope you’d both have one drink and maybe then he’d leave you alone to actually get out of costume and unwind after a long day of filming, but it seemed that Chase had other plans. He didn’t offer to pour you a drink, instead just leaving it on the table. Your finger traced the rim of your empty cup, trying to find a way to hint that he’d overstayed his welcome, but he hadn’t picked up on any of the previous hints.
“And then she says, I thought you loved me! Can you believe it?” Chase laughs cruelly as he recounts how he broke some poor actress’s heart. You shift in your seat uncomfortably, and give a half hearted chuckle. Internally, you’re screaming with disgust at how proud he seems to be of how he’s treated his past partners and costars. This is about the third or fourth time he’s told you about how he’s played with some unfortunate man’s or woman’s heart just for the sake of it, and you’re getting sick of it.
“After all, there’s only one person I’ve ever really loved. Like actually, not just for sex.”
“Oh?” You say, disinterested, assuming he’s going to say some other celebrity’s name before going on about how he definitely loves them and won’t just use them up like everyone else he’s supposedly loved.
“It’s you, of course,” he says, so casually and effortlessly that it takes a moment for you to realise you hadn’t misheard. You tense, looking up at him with bewilderment. There it was - the very thing you’d hoped wouldn’t happen.
“Yeah. I mean, I actually did soooo much stuff for you,” he continues as he giggles and slurs his words. “Usually I just sweet talk someone until they’re obsessed with me, but I actually went out and did things for you. Like the role you have now? I put in a good word about your audition.”
You shrink into your seat as you listen to him. You only wanted to be an extra in this film as a bit of fun - just so you could say you were technically in a film. And you’d only auditioned for the major role after the original actor disappeared because they insisted on using the pool of extras to find a replacement. You didn’t want this role at all, even less so now you knew it was by way of nepotism.
“Of course, I had to get rid of the person that originally played your character too. So that’s two things I did for you, I guess,” he adds. Your eyes widen in alarm.
“What do you mean get rid?” You ask, your voice trembling.
“I killed them - I killed them for you,” Chase admitted, his eyes alight as he said it, not an ounce of shame in his demeanour. “‘Cause then I knew I could make sure you’d get the part instead. It’s easy, especially when you’ve had practice like I have.” Chase let out another cruel laugh, seemingly oblivious to the alarm that was wracking you. You hoped that it was a bad joke, yet something in your gut told you otherwise. You shot up from your chair and dashed to the door, hoping you could find someone to help, but Chase was quicker, and he grabbed a fist full of your hair and yanked you back, pinning you against the table. Suddenly, there was rage in his eyes as his face was mere inches from yours.
“And just where the hell do you think you’re going?”
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Dividers Credit: See Pinned Post
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georgies-ftts · 2 years
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gonna need a little more appreciation for the kids in cabins where powers are never mentioned
like c’mon. you’re telling me that hermes kids can RuN fAsT. i want a hermes kids that’s like Gwen from ben 10 and can put up glowing gold force fields
i want dionysus kids that can grow grape vines but can also mess with peoples sanity when they need too
athena is also the goddess of practical reason so athena kids should be really bloody persuasive kinda like charm speak with the aphrodite kids
hephaestus kids that can’t set themselves of fire but are just very heat resistant in general or can weld shit together with their bare hands, or can sharpen a blade edge just by running their fingers along it
hebe campers who can alter how old they appear to certain people
tyche kids who can quite literally determine anything, they can alter peoples chances at winning or losing, living or dying
these kids are the children of Gods and Goddess, no more of this
“the kids of the big three have these amazing strong powers, oh and the Apollo kids can glow, and some of the other main characters can do some cool shit” GIMME EVERYONE BEING ABLE TO DO COOL SHIT. GIMME PURE CHAOS.
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