me, still SoMa trash after all these years? its more likely than you’d think.
It’s not until she’s down on her hands and knees in the kitchen with a toothbrush and a spray bottle of bleach that she realizes how easily blood gets on fucking everything. Which, yeah, you’d think she’d know this by now, and she does, it’s just that it never sinks in until she does a deep-cleaning like this.
Honestly, she’s not sure if she’s comforted by the fact that at least most of it is either Soul’s or her own.
Maka’s digging the poor, abused bristles into the grout line leading beneath the fridge when she hears a series of swears flow from the living room. She pops her head up, peeking over the dinner table, to find Soul’s ass up in the air as he peers into the air duct half-hidden by their entertainment center.
“What’s wrong?”
Soul pulls off one of his gaudy rubber yellow gloves with a snap, transforms his pointer finger, pries off the grate and sets it aside. The flashlight on his phone blazes to life a second later, and he fakes a gag after shining it down into the gaping hole. “You don’t wanna know.”
“Oh, c’mon. It can’t be that bad.”
He shoots her a glare from under his arm. “Y’know that scene from The Shining, where the doors open and all that blood comes out?” She nods. “Yeah, well, this is what I’d imagine that hallway to look like if they let it sit for a month.”
“Oh, ew.”
“Yeah.”
Tag: fanfiction
alone
Based on a twitter discussion of Clarke maybe having hallucinated Bellamy before he really came back, making her doubt whether or not the Bellamy of 503 was real. Mildly spoilery for 504.
Clarke hadn’t realized it was possible to still get sick when there was only one other person on the planet. She should have, of course— germs were literally some of the first organisms to evolve— but she hadn’t really given it much thought. Besides, for the first three years after Praimfaya, neither she nor Madi had gotten sick from anything that wasn’t poorly cooked food.So when Madi caught the flu, she really should have seen it coming. But she was so caught up in worry about Madi, in her fear over her fever and chills and how limp she became in Clarke’s arms, that she didn’t even think about what might happen next.
But two days after Madi was back up on her feet, demanding to be in charge of checking the snares, Clarke felt a tickle in the back of her throat. By nightfall she was unaccountably chilled, considering it was only early fall, and she told Madi to leave her food at the door to the church and not come any closer until she said it was okay. Madi should be immune, theoretically, but Clarke wasn’t sure what sort of supergerms could survive Praimfaya and she didn’t want to risk it. So she barricaded herself in the church and hoped the worst would pass quickly.
But even as she drifted into a restless, trembling sleep, she knew it would be bad.
The next morning she woke drenched in sweat but somehow shivering, and she stumbled twice on her way to the door. Madi had put blueberries in her porridge but even those tasted like chalk on on her tongue. Clarke choked it down as best she could and refilled her canteen blearily. She staggered back to her bed and tossed a few more logs on the fire, despite the fact that part of her brain was telling her it was already stifling inside.
She buried herself under three blankets and a panther skin and watched the fire until her eyes blurred and she once more tipped over into sleep. Her dreams were unsettled and indistinct, vague terrors rising and evaporating before she could make heads or tails of them, and when she woke the church was pitch black.
It took her far too long to realize the fire had gone out, and even longer to realize her legs were so fatigued and shaky she couldn’t stand long enough to rekindle it. She plucked blindly at the blankets that were now tangled around her legs, trying to bring them back up to her chin, and noticed movement out of the corner of her eye.
“Madi?” she croaked, squinting. “Is that you?”
The figure didn’t respond and she struggled to sit up, a sudden spike of fear pulsing through her. “It’s just me,” a low, familiar voice said.
“Bellamy?”
“Looks like you managed to get yourself sick,” he replied, emerging from the shadows. He looked just like he did on the day they left her behind, vac suit unzipped to his waist. That familiar henley stretched across his chest and he sat down on the edge of her bed, eyes soft and comforting.
“When did you— how did— it’s not long enough,” she murmured. Her brain was like a puzzle with the pieces missing, and she kept trying to jam the ones she had together even though they didn’t quite fit. “You have to wait five years, the radiation—”
“The radiation wouldn’t keep me from you, you know that,” he chided. He had that half-smile on his face like he always did when things weren’t really funny but he was trying to make her smile anyway. He helped her wrangle the blankets back up over her shoulders, their weight settling across her body like an embrace.
“How did you get in here?” Her throat felt like gravel and she fumbled for her canteen, sipping slowly.
“Don’t you worry about that yet,” Bellamy said gently. “You get some sleep and let me take care of you for awhile.”
Tears sprang into her eyes. It had been years since anyone fussed over her, since anyone had been there to help her shoulder the burden. “Madi—”
“I’ve got her. You get some sleep and we can deal with it in the morning.”
The tears were hot on her cheeks despite her fever, and she shivered. “Together?”
“That’s the deal, isn’t it? You and me. Together,” he agreed. He brushed her hair back, featherlight, and she let herself fall back asleep.
Because she wasn’t alone anymore.
The next morning dawned grey and chilly. Clarke woke to Madi piling wood into the firepit in the center of the church. “Madi? I told you to stay out of here,” she said, looking around. There was no sign of Bellamy, and a warning bell went off in her dulled, muddled mind.
Madi didn’t turn around, too busy with the flint. “And I would have, but you let the fire go out,” Madi said. “It’s cold, and you said that’s bad when you’re sick.”
Let Bellamy do it. The words were on the tip of her tongue, but then the world slid back into focus.
If Bellamy really had come back, he would have already lit the fire. He never would have sent in Madi, and Madi would be bubbling with questions.
If Bellamy really had come back, he’d stay where she could see him. He wouldn’t leave her side. Not now, not after so long.
And besides, there were still two more years to go before he could step foot on the earth without burning up from the inside out.
Reality hit her like a boulder crashing down a mountain. Together was a distant memory, that’s all. Her brain was trying to comfort her when she was ill, and the fever had made it seem real.
Bellamy was in space— or dead— and Clarke was alone with only a determined nine year old for company. Madi got the fire going and Clarke blinked back her tears, because she wasn’t alone— not really. She had Madi, and Madi was everything.
But as she fell back to her pillows she closed her eyes and tried to remember how his fingers felt threading through her hair.
And a tear slipped down her cheek.
The bench was cold.
No, cool, or maybe she’d warmed it up some since they dumped her here. It was soothing against her heated skin, at least. There was a faint hiss of recycled air and the hum of an engine, foreign in her ears after all this time. Clarke blinked, the yellow-orange glare of the lights stinging her eyes, and decided to just keep them closed.
Footsteps came and went outside of her cell and every few minutes her muscles would jerk involuntarily. When they brought her in she thought her leg muscles would never stop jumping, that her hands would never uncurl, but now it had faded to the occasional twitch of a limb and a burning sensation in her throat.
At least it was better than the collar, which was pain like she’d never felt before. It shattered the world into jagged shards and turned her muscles to stone, and when she collapsed to the ground it made her dig her face into the dirt and wish she’d been buried under it six years ago. They laughed at her and the world splintered further, until there was nothing but pain and fear and screams that might have been hers.
It had happened so fast. One minute she was burning, her nerves screaming in agony, and then the next he was walking into a bright circle of light to demand her freedom. Diyoza had ordered her dragged out of the circle of her tormentors so quickly she could barely get a glimpse of him.
Bellamy.
Alive.
Bellamy had come for her.
Or maybe he hadn’t. Maybe the shocks had done to her what that fever did— unlocked the part of her brain that wanted to ease her suffering. She could keep it at bay usually, but maybe now, weakened from her torture and the suffocating fear of what would happen if they found Madi, it was trying to give her peace.
Maybe she was dying, and her mind had given her the one thing she didn’t dare to hope for.
Footsteps paused outside her cell and the door swung open. It took everything in her to twist her neck but she had to be sure, wanted to face whoever was coming for her if it was the last thing she did.
He was hidden by shadows but his shape was achingly familiar. He stepped into the light, brow furrowed in concern, and then he was jogging across the cell to her bench. She struggled to sit up but his arms were there, wrapping around her and lifting her up so lightly she still thought it might be a dream.
His eyes found hers, cloudy with fear and disbelief and something else she couldn’t quite read, and she surrendered herself to the hallucination. She melted into him. It was solace, sweet relief and peace and closure at what had to be the end. His chest was solid, warm; his arms clutching her against him strong and steady. She breathed him in, metal and pine and the tang of smoke, and felt his lips come to rest on the curve of her neck.
But her hallucination hadn’t had weight when he sat down, had only touched her so lightly it could have been the breeze. He didn’t hold her tightly; he didn’t have a smell that unlocked something deep in her belly. He’d looked the way she remembered, not like this— older and a little weathered, with a beard that scratched softly at her skin as he rocked her back and forth in his embrace.
Clarke let her eyes flutter closed. “You’re really here,” she murmured, and felt his chest rumble against hers in recognition. That, more than anything, made her certain.
Bellamy had come for her.
And another tear slipped down her cheek.
soma?
warnings: blood, injury
word count: 700–
“You’re an idiot,” Soul tells her, a lump in his throat; his fingers skirt light across the length of her shin, minding the large, bloody slice that’s been cut out of her leg. She’d been deceptively fine on the walk home, if quiet, too quiet, but now — he swallows, leaning back on his heels.
“There was no avoiding it,” Maka retorts, leaning back against their cabinets. She looks like a queen from her place on their dirty kitchen counter, surrounded by unwashed mugs and the coffee grinds he’d spilled by accident this morning. There’s that same air to her as always: perfect, untouchable, unclaimable. She can’t be his. She couldn’t be.
Sweet Surrender
Author: Mod K
Rating: NC-17/NSFW (warnings: Sub!Ken, restraints, anal play, bdsm, overstimulation, orgasm denial, sub/dom, the works).
Word Count: 4,662 words.
Notes: I wrote this for @thiccthighshaise‘s birthday a few weeks back. I finally decided to post it, so hopefully you enjoy it? I don’t think I’m ever going to write sub!Ken again, but here you go for those of you who are into that. As always, let me know what you think and leave a comment and reblog if you enjoy! Dom!Ken for lyfe though. :p
Summary: Ken and Touka try something new.
–
“Are you sure about this?”
Touka’s question catches Ken off guard for a moment. He looks at her, startled, as she sets her hand on his shoulder. She’s frowning, looking at him in that way that was so utterly disarming that it makes him feel as though he wants to hide. She could look at him and see past his mask – she knew when he was pushing himself, and she knew when he was pretending. “You’re so tense,” she says, running her hand over his shoulders. It was true – even now, he could feel the tension in his back, the rigidness of his spine as he stares down at his bound hands. They had decided to use thin, red rope – as handcuffs reminded him far too much of that other time that he was bound.
“Should I tie your hands behind your back?”
“…No.”
“Alright, I understand.”
His hands would need to be in front of him – and he needed to know that he could get out of this if he really needed to. Touka’s expression is unreadable when he nods. “Don’t lie – or we’re not doing this,” she says, voice firm. It makes him tense, especially when she cups his cheek, and makes him look her in the eye. He sees only softness, then – and the look within her eyes are enough to make him relax, slightly. “I’m not,” he says softly. “I want to do this with you. You’re the one person that I trust enough to do this, with.”
Just To Be Quiet (Chapter 10)
Pairing: Ronan Lynch / Adam Parrish (pynch)
Rating: M
Word Count of Chapter: 9,531
Word Count Accumulative: 100,806if you feel so inclined, consider supporting me on ko-fi! ❤
First I LOVE your work! It brightens my day☀️ Can you do a prompt where Astrid ALMOST dies of childbirth? Don’t hate me but don’t you imagine what would Hiccup be feeling? Or how big the feels would be?
(Information used dyannehs’ babies and vikings post.
“It’s a boy!”
Valka’s announcement did little to enhance the joy of the room; the lively, healthy infant was enough to bring face-splitting grins and soaring hearts to the intimate gathering.
Astrid still squatted over the old, bundled cloths, eyes closed and leaning heavily on Hiccup. Hiccup kissed her salty brow, gripping her smaller hand, and grinned at the screaming child in his mother’s arms, splotchy arms swinging at her face.
“You’re amazing,” he murmured into his wife’s stringy tresses.
Astrid hummed her agreement.
Movement flit around them—water sloshed over the edge of a basin as cloths were wetted, Bursa’s two young assistants knocked shoulders getting to the witch hazel—but Hiccup only had eyes for his son, and could only feel his wife pressed against his body. The child was quickly wiped down and swaddled, still screaming against the new elements. Astrid was taken from Hiccup by her mother and Bursa and eased onto the bed, where she was swiftly tended to in washings and comforts.
Hiccup used the opportunity to free an aching hand and see his son for himself. His knees protested as he stood.
“He’s beautiful,” Valka whispered as she handed her grandchild to a wide-eyed chief.
Hiccup thought many times of how he would handle holding his child for the first time. He worried over the unfamiliar weight in his arms and appropriate postures: would he bend the child too much? Hurt him with unintended brutality? Cause discomfort? Drop him?
None of these worries registered—not remotely—as he took the infant into his hands. Everything felt right, but more so, everything looked right. Large head and a robust chest. All limbs in tact, all parts present. The long, kicking body was possibly the length of his forearm, with a healthy set of lungs—small, gummy mouth managing to produce a ringing, unrepentant holler. Hiccup felt his cheeks ache and his chest lighten, like a tension he hadn’t registered before had suddenly unbound.
Astrid ignored the washing going on around her hips and legs and reached towards Hiccup.
“Let me—” she demanded, pushing her exhausted body forward. Bursa used the opportunity to stuff two pillows behind Astrid to better prop her.
Hiccup wasn’t nearly ready to relinquish his child, but he hurried to fulfill the new mother’s request. Behind him, he heard someone creak open the front door and say “it’s a boy” to whomever stood on the other side.
The entire village would be up to date before the child nursed.
Astrid only relaxed against her padded throne once the baby was in her arms, tight against her breast. She gazed at the screwed, pink face, with her own ruddy across the cheeks and brow, still shining from her efforts. Hiccup watched them both; an unusual glimmer of possessiveness mingled with the pride and joy. His family. His.
“He’s perfect,” Astrid sighed, like a breath. The baby quieted, almost at the exact moment his mother’s voice reached his ears, as though familiar combination of sound and touch was exactly what he needed to alleviate the fear of a sudden, new environment.
Hiccup knelt by the bed and placed a hand on the tiny, warm head where fine, dark-red hair plastered to a purpled scalp. He bit his lip. His father would have been… so proud.
“Astrid?”
Glüm said her daughter’s name with the sort of alarm that had no place in the happy moment, and that’s when Hiccup realized Astrid’s eyes were half-closed, and her hold on their son had loosened.
It seemed so odd. She had spoke just a second before.
“Astrid?” he said softly, giving his wife a gentle nudge.
Astrid said nothing. Her breathing slowed.
“She’s still bleeding,” Bursa announced from the other end of the bed.
Hiccup was pushed back. Confusion set in. He saw his son taken from Astrid before his immediate view was blocked.
“Get those rags, over there—”
“Astrid? Astrid, dear, I need you to stay awake.”
“What can I do?” Hiccup managed to utter through a closing throat.
“Hold him,” Glüm said grimly, and she deposited the newborn back into his arms as gently as the situation would allow. Though the baby had quieted since his birth, he continued to fuss and grunt, as though sensing something was amiss in the room.
So Hiccup held their child—his and Astrid’s—with his back against the wall and stared at the rushing bodies with unseeing eyes. His wife’s bare knees, propped. Blood. Paling cheeks.
He wanted to do something other than stand in paralyzed distress, to help more—fix her—but he didn’t want to impeded Astrid’s care. He wasn’t a healer, he was a flier and bumbling chief.
“Is she breathing? Check her—!”
Hiccup felt the floor fall away beneath his feet. The boards behind him softened. He gripped the swaddling cloth as though it were some kind of grounds to sanity and a very distant part of his mind wondered if he held the child too tightly.
He wished for… for someone. Someone to brace him, other than the wall and the knowledge that in his hands was a very alive piece of Astrid. He needed someone to explain to him what was happening because he couldn’t accept it.
Gobber, a stray thought screamed at him. Gobber would know what to do.
Gobber was holding down the Dragon Academy. Had been for the week. Eret was off speaking to northern tribes. Snotlout to the Meathead clan with Ruffnut. Fishlegs and Tuffnut were investigating rumors of western trades (which Hiccup would have much preferred to supervise himself). All gone. All taking care of businesses Hiccup found necessary during the final month of his wife’s pregnancy. He needed one of them—any of them—here. He felt more than helpless. He felt weak.
For the first time, his baby felt heavy in his arms—too heavy; the sort of heavy he worried about long before the birth—and Hiccup realized he couldn’t do this. He couldn’t do this without her.
He wasn’t as strong as his father—single parent and chief, the love of his life ripped away—He never had been.
The room had gone silent. Valka and Glüm and Bursa murmured to each other, begged the woman on the bed to “hold on”. Liquids and rags were aflutter—sloshing and creaking, rustling and moaning—but Astrid was soundless, and she was the only sound that mattered.
“She’s not responding—”
“Astrid? Come on, girl—”
“No…” Hiccup groaned. “No no…”
Gods, this didn’t make sense.
She was fine moments ago. She went into labor with a clear head. They were prepared, with people and supplies and health. She made a joke about the baby being Snotlout’s and their sinister plot to usurp Berk from him. Always with her ill-timed humor.
She was smiling then. Holding her baby and smiling. Now she was silent and pale as the pillow she lie on, eyes no longer fluttering but closed. Lips parted and dry. Hiccup had his hand against her forehead. He didn’t know when he came closer again or how he came to touch her, their child cradled in one arm, but no one pushed him back this time.
Still warm. He thought, desperate, all his concentration thrown to the palm of his hand. Still alive.
He glanced down, boldly taking his eyes from his fading wife to find a new pair watching him. Dark, dark blue.
Hiccup felt like he’d been kicked in the chest, both with the reality that this child was alive and that he would need him (with or without Astrid). The newfound strength left him rattled.
“You have the strongest mother in the world,” he told their son, senseless to everything but the sweat-slicked skin against his palm and the heat of the baby. “The strongest,” he repeated in an inaudible croak.
He pushed his fingers into Astrid’s hair, fisting the dank strands, and kissed her brow, even as her body jostled with the work of the women below.
“Come on,” he whispered, kissing down her temple. “Come on, baby.”
He wouldn’t forget the taste of her, or the smell of her, or the sound of her breathless ‘perfect’ mere heartbeats before. But he needed more. He would need more. He couldn’t imagine a life without more.
He bowed his head and whispered a myriad of profanities and prayers. He cursed his fate and pleaded with the gods, even when knowing how they hated him. Knowing he was blessed both cursed—defying death and bringing peace at the very tips of his fingers, and having it come at price he couldn’t emotionally bear.
Because Hiccup couldn’t have everything. He couldn’t have a mother and a father. He couldn’t have a wife and a child. It had to be one or the other. Always.
Minutes later, his mother touched his shoulder and gently pulled Hiccup from where he had buried his nose against Astrid’s cheek. His knees ached. He hadn’t once relinquished the newborn, who lay silent and bleary-eyed in his arms.
It wasn’t until Valka held Hiccup’s face and brushed her thumbs across his cheeks that he realized they were wet.
“What—,” he started thickly. Disoriented and crushed.
“She’ll live,” Bersa said. “Still could go south, but…”
Bersa might have trailed off, or Hiccup might have shut her out on his own.
She’ll live.
He sagged into the chair that had been pushed beneath his legs. Or perhaps he had been led backwards. The room left focus as unimaginable relief tore through his body. The baby slept. Those blue, blue eyes were closed.
The baby sleeping was a good sign, Hiccup thought, dazed. The baby knew. It could sense that things would be alright. Alright. Things would be alright…
One of the handmaids said something. Blinking, Hiccup asked her to repeat it.
“A name, chief?”
The first word that passed through his mind was Stoick. For a large, healthy child with a smattering of red hair that came screaming into Midgard like any proper viking.
“I want her awake,” Hiccup said instead. The child still needed to nurse. Vatni Ausinn would wait. Everything would wait, until he had his wife back again. Truly back.
His mother’s fingers ran the length of his neck as though she were calming a dragon. Bloodied rags were rolled and removed. Astrid’s chest rose and fell as she slept. Glüm held her daughter’s hand, looking ragged. Older.
Bersa gripped Glüm’s shoulder, eyes on the slumbering infant, and said, “We can wait.”
In the subject of giving Astrid anime “doomed mother” hair, this is as close as I’d get to killing her via motherhood
the way our horizons meet
Pairing: Bellamy Blake / Clarke Griffin
Summary: She tried every day to make contact. Storms raged. Nothing grew. Her days stretched listlessly into one another. Still, Clarke radioed.She was still breathing, so she still had hope. { a post-s4 time jump bellarke au || wc: 6.3k }
a/n: It may have taken me almost a year @royalblakes, but I did indeed write your fic prize for my giveaway! This was such a fun rollercoaster to write, and thanks for the great prompt of a s4/5 au based on this gifset. I hope you enjoy ❤
Clarke looked up at billowing clouds that swirled across the sepia sky, and she breathed deeply. It was a miracle to her, just breathing. It was a miracle that she was here, outside, inhaling and exhaling, without choking on blood.
It had taken four months, but the radiation levels were finally low enough for her to leave Becca’s lab. She couldn’t stay out for long, and she needed time in between trips to recover, but she wasn’t a prisoner anymore.
Thunder rumbled menacingly in the distance. Despite her newfound freedom, the ground was as dangerous as ever. She glanced at the flashes of light on the horizon. The storm would move in soon. She didn’t have much time.
Turning the radio’s microphone over in her hand, she swallowed. Now or never.
“Come in, Ark Station.”
She released the button, then pressed down again immediately.
“This is—this is Clarke. I’m alive. I’m on the ground.”
Release.
She breathed.
Press.
“Ark Station, come in.”
“This is Clarke Griffin. I survived Praimfaya. Come in, Ark Station.”
Release.
She waited until four sets of thunderclaps had echoed off the surrounding mountains.
Press.
“Answer me, Bellamy,” she whispered. “Please.”
Release.
Clarke stood there, waiting and waiting, until her skin began to prickle. Blinking, she glanced up. The clouds were now a dull gray-brown and dropping rain. Quickly, she shoved the radio into her pack and ran for cover.
* * *
She tried every day to make contact. Storms raged. Nothing grew. Her days stretched listlessly into one another. Still, Clarke radioed.
She was still breathing, so she still had hope.
the way our horizons meet
Pairing: Bellamy Blake / Clarke Griffin
Summary: She tried every day to make contact. Storms raged. Nothing grew. Her days stretched listlessly into one another. Still, Clarke radioed.She was still breathing, so she still had hope. { a post-s4 time jump bellarke au || wc: 6.3k }
a/n: It may have taken me almost a year @royalblakes, but I did indeed write your fic prize for my giveaway! This was such a fun rollercoaster to write, and thanks for the great prompt of a s4/5 au based on this gifset. I hope you enjoy ❤
Clarke looked up at billowing clouds that swirled across the sepia sky, and she breathed deeply. It was a miracle to her, just breathing. It was a miracle that she was here, outside, inhaling and exhaling, without choking on blood.
It had taken four months, but the radiation levels were finally low enough for her to leave Becca’s lab. She couldn’t stay out for long, and she needed time in between trips to recover, but she wasn’t a prisoner anymore.
Thunder rumbled menacingly in the distance. Despite her newfound freedom, the ground was as dangerous as ever. She glanced at the flashes of light on the horizon. The storm would move in soon. She didn’t have much time.
Turning the radio’s microphone over in her hand, she swallowed. Now or never.
“Come in, Ark Station.”
She released the button, then pressed down again immediately.
“This is—this is Clarke. I’m alive. I’m on the ground.”
Release.
She breathed.
Press.
“Ark Station, come in.”
“This is Clarke Griffin. I survived Praimfaya. Come in, Ark Station.”
Release.
She waited until four sets of thunderclaps had echoed off the surrounding mountains.
Press.
“Answer me, Bellamy,” she whispered. “Please.”
Release.
Clarke stood there, waiting and waiting, until her skin began to prickle. Blinking, she glanced up. The clouds were now a dull gray-brown and dropping rain. Quickly, she shoved the radio into her pack and ran for cover.
* * *
She tried every day to make contact. Storms raged. Nothing grew. Her days stretched listlessly into one another. Still, Clarke radioed.
She was still breathing, so she still had hope.