THE NEW CHAPTER WAS AMAZING BUT IM A SAPPY IDIOT N I WANNA FORGIVE COOP N GIVE HIM A BIG OL KISS đ
I get you, Iâm so weak when it comes to my dick-ish fictional crushes. I just canât decide if I want to kiss him or slap him more. Maybe both.
Also, just in general, if me responding to anonâs sounds weird. I am still very much sick and very out of it.
Ooof that last chapter hit hard still feel like you have a twist left in store for us ahahah
No comment
đ€ - completed series
ÊÉ - smut
àȘâ⎠- personal favorite
⏠- series
đŻ - dark
Śâ°â†HOUSE OF WAX
àłââ· Bo Sinclair
bad day - part two đŻ
one more spring đŻ
àłââ· Vincent Sinclair
bad day - part two đŻ
Śâ°â†SCREAM
àłââ· Billy Loomis
wicked influence đŻ
àłââ· Stu Macher
wicked influence đŻ
the boy next door àȘââŽ
The fact that I was literally thinking of Marilyn when I wrote this, you get me
Anyways, I posted part two if you want some closure â„ïž (though thatâs a cliffhanger too lol)
How About a Nuke?
Part one
Cooper Howard x fem!reader A/N: This is really a prelude to the real story. Itâs who they were before the bombs dropped and not as fleshed out as it could be. Summary: Hollywood doesnât agree with you, as much as you wished it would. Until you meet Cooper Howard and he flips your world upside down. (Image below does not represent reader, I mean I donât even look like that)
âQuench your thirst and a little bit more,â you winked and held up the dripping bottle of Nuka-Cola. You shot your best smile at the camera in front of you, holding it until the director let out a loud âCut!â The smile dropped instantly and you dumped the bottle back in its cooler.Â
Tom walked behind the camera, a frown on his face as he replayed the clip. Youâd been here two hours already for a thirty second promo, thereâs no reason it should have been taking this long.
You shifted, the leather on your legs creaking uncomfortably. They had you in some odd little space suit, more sexy than functional. The backdrop behind you was of painted stars and an out of scale moon. You werenât sure how space and Nuka-Cola connected but a check was a check.Â
âIs that who I think it is?â
You turned around at the sound of gasping. Your eyes widened and your stomach dropped when you watched the Cooper Howard walk through the entrance of the studio. Your biggest celebrity crush and idol just walked through the door and you were dressed like a sexy astronaut. This is beyond embarrassing.Â
You had begged your agent to let you take some more serious roles, or at least a few fun ones. Youâd been stuck in the same role of sexy bombshell for too long. You couldnât even escape it doing a few advertisements. You wanted someone like Cooper to think you were classy or distinguished at least. Not some sellout with over lined red lips.Â
You whipped your head around, hoping he wouldnât notice you, and pretended to be fascinated by the cheap set you were on. âMr. Howard, a pleasure,â you briefly glanced over your shoulder to watch your director shakehis hand. Cooper looked up, his eyes briefly catching yours. You winced and turned back around.Â
âWhat are you doing here?â
âFilming a new advertisement for Nuka, would you like to see?â
âWhy, yes I would.â
Oh, this was wonderful. Just great. You reached up to pinch the bridge of your nose but your hands just jammed painfully against the plastic of your helmet. You listened to them replaying your clip, hating the sultry tone of your voice. You hated being typecast like this.Â
You didnât work so hard to earn your spot in Hollywood just to be forced into the role of a sex symbol. You could be more, you knew it. You just needed a chance. âYou did wonderful.â
You jumped in shock at the voice near your ear, your helmet hitting something hard. You heard a groan of pain and turned around mortified to see Cooper holding his nose. âOh, Mr. Howard, I am so, so sorry.â
He shook his head and held up a hand, smiling amicably at you. âMy fault, sweetheart, shouldnât have snuck up on ya.â
You let out an annoyed huff and finally pulled the damn thing off. âHonestly, I should pay more attention, this damn thingâs a safety hazard.â He chuckled and it made you smile without even realizing it. You could feel the heat already blooming under your skin, just barely resisting the urge to fan yourself. But you couldnât help but be flustered. It was Cooper Howard!
He finally let go of his nose and you sighed in relief when you saw that it wasnât too badly damaged. He seemed to understand your relief because he laughed again. You heard whispers behind the two of you and finally realized just how close you both were. A couple PAâs stood huddled together, pointing at you with accusing fingers and harsh glares.Â
Probably not smart to be a sex symbol and stand so close to a married man.Â
You dropped the smile and took a step back from him. As much as you disliked typecasting, you would hate losing jobs more. You didnât need any rumors to spread because you smiled too widely at Cooper. Lord knows your career barely survived the last round of gossip, that youâd been sleeping your way into roles. Which you hadnât. You donât need anything more like that bothering you now.Â
Cooper glanced over your shoulder and seemed to notice the same thing as you, but he didnât seem bothered by it like you were. Of course, he was a man and he was very happily married, he didnât have to worry about the same things as you. He was secure in both his relationship and place in the world. Youâd just barely gotten a foothold on everything.Â
âI thought you seemed just sweet as peaches in that clip.â
You gave him a brief smile, âThank you.â
âThough,â he frowned and glanced over at the director. You rolled your eyes when you saw Tom point over at you and then gesture to his stomach. If they sinched your waist one more damn time your ribs were going to crack. âI donât quite understand why you had to be seductive.â He seemed genuinely perplexed but it didnât take a genius to understand the underlying message of his words.Â
You shrugged, âJust seems to be the way my career is going right now.â
âIs that what you want?â
Your brows furrowed in confusion. You haven't been asked that before. Of course youâd spoken up about being unhappy with your roles, though you still took them. But no one had ever asked you what you wanted. An odd feeling bloomed in your chest and you took another precautionary step back. âUm,â you frowned and shook your head, âno. Itâs not what I want.â
He smiled, seemingly pleased by the answer. âLook, sweetheart, I didnât come here to drink cola or chat,â he held up his hands in apology, âas wonderful a conversationalist as you are. Iâm filming a movie right now. We're looking for a lady with a strong presence to be my companion in the film. Iâve seen your movies, youâre capable of a lot more than theyâre giving you to work with. I think youâd be perfect for the role.â
Your ears started to ring as you stared at him in shock. It was hard to keep your jaw closed the longer he spoke. Thereâs no way that everything youâve been wanting was just being offered to you on a silver platter. Stuff like that only happened inĂąâŹÂŠ
Well, it only happened in movies.Â
âThat is if you want the role? Youâre not looking particularly enthused,â he gave you a charming grin and you finally remembered you actually had to respond to him to get what you wanted.Â
âYes!â
You didnât care how loud you were or how dirty the looks you were getting from others were. There was nothing on your mind other than the man in front of you and what he was offering you.Â
Everything you wanted.Â
You stared up at the poster on Cooperâs wall. âI always thought I looked ridiculous in this one.â
âWell,â Barb came up behind you and handed you a martini. You took it from her with a grateful smile and took a sip. You tried to stop your face from screwing up but alcohol had never really sat well with you. âI think you look amazing.â She smiled at you and walked back towards the living room.Â
You stayed where you were at the end of the stairs, staring up at the too-large poster. You and Cooper were standing back-to-back, your gun raised to your lips and a smirk on your red lips as your hat laid tilted over your eyes. The bright red cursive title sat under your spurred boots, The Outlaw and The Sheriff.Â
Well, they certainly hadnât been creative with the name. You couldnât really bring yourself to care, though, it had been your first real role. You had played someone of substance, someone whose entire life didnât revolve around the man she wanted to have an affair with. Cooper had opened up more doors for you then he would ever understand.Â
You turned from the poster and back to the party. For once you werenât being surrounded by a group of groping producers or Hollywood execs. Being a part of Cooperâs family, someone he was mentoring, it carried a certain power within the den of vipers. You werenât untouchable, but you werenât someone to be so easily ruined.Â
You flashed kind smiles and coy waves at the people who called out your name and made your quick escape to the backyard.Â
Cooperâs new movie had been released and he was having a sort of celebration party. Though, you think itâs just Barb trying to integrate Vault-Tec into the movie industry. From the disgusted looks on some of your co-starâs faces you could tell it wasnât going very well.Â
You sighed in relief at the fresh air and slowly made your way over to the pool chairs. Your feet ached in your heels and you could already feel blisters starting to form. You undid the straps and slipped them off. You lowered yourself onto the edge of the pool and dipped your toes in, the relief instantaneous.
You werenât out very long before you heard steps approaching. You let out a deep sigh, mentally preparing yourself for your peace to be ruined by whoever wanted to bother you. âYouâre not skipping my party, are you?âÂ
You opened your eyes to find Cooper smiling down at you. You always wondered how his smiles could be so genuine when he spoke to you. You hadnât felt like youâd given anyone a real smile in a long time. This industry had taken a lot from you and lately youâd been wondering if it had stolen your happiness too.Â
You shrugged, âIt was getting a little boring.â
He grinned and slipped his shoes off. You watched him roll his pants up and groan as he dipped his legs in the pool with you. His smile slipped and his eyes widened when his legs landed in the water, âDamn, itâs fucking cold!â
You barked out a laugh, rough and very unladylike while he squirmed like a girl at a little cold water. âDidnât you fight in a war?â You teased.Â
He nudged his shoulder into yours, âWatch it,â you shook your head, dismissing his faux warning. You knew he didnât really mind when you bugged him. Itâs how you two had been acting around each other since day one. Tabloids labeled you two as close as kin, brother and sister.Â
As much as it bugged you every time you read a headline like that while standing in line at the grocery store, you supposed it was better than everyone thinking you were some two-timing slut. But it bothered you how much your relationship being labeled siblings in nature irritated you. He had a wife and child, you couldnât let some pathetic crush cloud your judgment like this.Â
It was real hard to remember that, though, when he looked at you the way he did. Sitting by his side, under the moonlight, his eyes warm and earnest as he sent you an easygoing smile. Youâll never figure out if itâs in your head, but you swear he doesnât smile at anyone the way he does at you.Â
You feel like the only woman in the world sitting there with him. Like there wasnât a party going on a few yards away in his house. And you hadnât just accepted a martini from his wife who had graciously invited you into their home. It was just you and him.Â
You didnât realize you were leaning in until your lips were brushing his. He should have pulled back. You shouldnât have leaned in. But his hand was on your waist and the other was buried in your hair, desperately pulling you closer.Â
It wasnât gentle or slow like youâd always imagined it. His mouth was moving hungrily over yours, practically devouring you in his desperation to get as close to you as possible. His hand tugged at the roots of your styled hair, a pained moan slipped through your lips. That wasnât enough to snap you out of your trance, but his tongue licking into your mouth was. He groaned, tasting and savoring you like you would be his last meal. Like he had wanted you just as much as you had wanted him and he wasnât going to let this chance slip away.Â
You jumped back but he didnât let you go far with his hands on you. His eyes slowly opened while the reality of the situation dawned on you both. You let out a horrified gasp at the sight of your lipstick smeared over his lips. âOh, god, Coop.â You whispered, voice strained as you stared at him, âWhat did we do?â
His eyes darted between yours, the realization coming slower to him. When it did, you could pinpoint the exact moment it hit him. His mouth drew up in disgust and he ripped his hands off you. He leapt up, water splashing your dress as he did, but you were too hurt to really care. He clamped a hand over his mouth, looking very much like he was about to throw up on you. âFuck,â he hissed, jaw clenched and eyes squeezing shut.Â
You grabbed your bag and shoes and rushed to your feet. You dug around in your purse, hands shaking so much you could barely undo its clasp. When you finally found your handkerchief you dipped it in the pool and held it out to him.Â
He glanced towards your outstretched hand and then to your ashamed face in confusion. âYou have my lipstick on your lips,â you whispered. He snatched it out of your hand and scrubbed at his face so hard you wouldnât even be able to make out the lipstick with how red his skin was.Â
Slowly, and without a word, you both made your way back into the house. The tension was thick, neither of you able to look at each other. You kept an unusual amount of space between you for two people who were always so close. If anyone looked out the door at you right now, well, even Bud Askins would be able to tell something was wrong.Â
You made it to the glass door and Barb intercepted you. Your heart leapt to your throat. Youâd never been more disgusted with yourself. Not only did you kiss this womanâs husband, you had fucking enjoyed it.Â
In fact, you wished you were out there still. As small a taste youâd gotten of him, you craved more. Your body was on fire with desire, core throbbing when you thought about the way heâd kissed you. You forced yourself to stop imagining what it would be like if he had kissed somewhere else. God, the thought made you burn.Â
She laughed and gave you an odd look, âYou look like you saw a ghost.â
Cooper chuckled and you whipped your head towards him in shock. Not only did he look completely unaffected, but he was smiling at you. You couldnât look at him long, afraid your face would further give you away. You were a good actress, but not nearly as good as him.Â
âThis one almost accidentally took a dip in our pool,â he and Barb both laughed and you forced yourself to join in.Â
âYeah, and I think that might have been enough excitement for me.â You smiled at Barb and leaned in to kiss her on the cheek, the taste of her husband still on your lips. âIâm gonna head home. Enjoy the rest of the party.â
Cooper stopped you before you could completely slip away, âIâll walk you out to your car, honey.â You nodded, not willing to argue in the middle of his crowded home. Still, you didnât make it easy for him to keep up with you. You were at the door before he could blink, practically flying out of the house.Â
You probably would have made it all the way to your car without another word if it werenât for him clasping a hand around your elbow. âWe need to talk.â
You shook your head and he let out a disappointed sigh. You already knew what he was going to say, and you agreed wholeheartedly. What had happened tonight was a mistake. Not only were you risking your career but you could ruin his whole life if you continued down this path. As much as you wanted him, as much as you had yearned for him, you couldnât be so selfish.Â
But you also couldnât handle hearing him say that to you. It would break your heart to have to listen to him explain all the reasons you could never be with the man you were so desperately in love with. âI know, Coop, I know.âÂ
His grip tightened on you when you tried to slip away. You set pleading eyes on him, praying he couldnât see the tears already starting to build. You knew he could, though, when his gaze softened and he eased his grip on you. After another whispered âpleaseâ he finally nodded and stepped back from you.Â
You slipped your arm from his hold and ran to your car. You leapt inside and peeled out of the driveway like the devil was on your tail. And maybe he was, maybe you deserved it. Because you still couldnât help yourself, glancing in the rear view mirror to see Cooper standing at the end of his driveway, watching you go with a distraught look on his face.Â
You wiped the tears off your face and turned back towards the road. You could never be with him. You could never love him the way you wanted. Youâd have to be satisfied for the rest of your life with the taste youâd gotten tonight. That would be all you would ever allow yourself.Â
âA fallen star, Cooper Howard has become a reject within Hollywood. Fellow actors and actresses have been refusing to work with him, making it difficult for the former celebrity to find work. Recent reports say heâs been seen at birthday parties more than on set.â
The female reporter shook her head, âSuch a shame. Weâve been hearing that this is all due to his former ties with Vault-Tec. Ties which were recently severed in a grisly divorce with ex-wife and Vault-Tec employee, Barb-â
You clicked the TV off, shutting the ridiculous news report up and ran a hand down your face. You hadnât seen Coop in a few months. After that night at his house, youâd dropped the movies youâd been doing with him and put as much distance between the two of you as you could.Â
That thought made you feel like the worst piece of shit. You couldnât have known that Hollywood was going to turn its back on him. You couldnât have known that nearly two weeks after you cut ties his entire life would go up in flames. You should have been there for him. How you feel about him shouldnât matter when your friend needs you.Â
Heâd given you everything he could and you couldnât even be there for him when he needed you. Of course, once youâd heard about the divorce, youâd called up Sebastian. But he had warned you not to try and reach out to Cooper. He seemed to think it would only make things worse. The more you heard, however, the more guilty you felt about not being there for him. Tabloids and gossip columns certaintly hadnât been kind when the news of his divorce had come out.Â
They pounced on the opportunity to further rip into his wounds and present them to the world. You glanced down at your couch cushion, the magazine youâd picked up in the store staring back at you. The front was a picture of him walking out of a house, donned in cowboy gear and clearly performing for a childrenâs party.Â
You sighed and decided you should finally push aside your pride. You snatched your keys from the hook and headed out the door.Â
Cooper didnât seem to believe it was you when he opened the door. His eyes, cloudy and red, narrowed before he frowned and took a step back. âThat really you?â
You offered a weak smile and a, âHi, Coop.â
He scoffed and you could tell he was getting angry. His accent always got a little rougher when he was pissed off. ââHi, Coopâ,â he mocked, a sneer on his face. âFour months without contact and thatâs all you have to say. Fuck off,â he went to close the door but you blocked him with your foot.Â
It stung, honestly, the cruel way in which he spoke to you. But you knew he could be a lot meaner if he wanted to and it wasnât as if you didnât deserve it. You had been a shitty, selfish friend. âIâm sorry, I was just nervous. I just,â you paused, struggling to find the right words to make this any better. He crossed his arms, still refusing to let you into his house. âI called the second I heard, but Sebastian had told me it would be better if I didnât come.â
His brows furrowed before he glared at you. âSo you donât even fucking call?â
âI was wrong and selfish. Cooper,â you reached out, laying a gentle hand on his arm. âIâm sorry, Iâm not asking for you to forgive me. I am genuinely so sorry I wasnât here for you. But Iâm here now, if youâll let me be.â
The next minute was unbearable. You felt too awkward to take your hand off his arm and he refused to speak. He didnât even blink, just glared at you, the longer the silence went on the more you could feel yourself losing your nerve. Maybe this had been a mistake.Â
Finally, he sighed and your heart leapt to your throat. âCome in,â he stepped to the side and opened his door up further. You kept your mouth shut and slipped into the house. It seemed to be the only thing heâd been able to hold onto since the divorce.Â
The door slammed shut behind you and he pushed past you to slip into the living room and throw himself down on the couch. You followed slowly behind him, taking oddly tentative steps, like if you made a noise he would kick you out.Â
He had his arm thrown over his face, his eyes clenched like he was in pain. You perched yourself on the edge of the chair you usually sat in, feeling oddly uncomfortable. You fidgeted restlessly on the cushion, crossing and uncrossing your legs, tapping your toes against the floor.Â
It had seemed like such an easy decision to come here half an hour ago. But you hadnât had a plan and that was really biting you in the ass now. Desperate for anything other than the sound of the fabric underneath you, you blurted out the question that had bothered you for months.Â
âWhat happened?â
He sighed, like heâd been expecting it. He sat up slowly, grabbing a glass of brown liquor off the coffee table and taking a swig. He leaned forward on his knees, glaring over at you. âWhat are you talking about? Youâre gonna have to be specific, sweetheart, everything in my life has fallen apart.â
You winced, hating the callous way youâd asked the question. Youâd meant to approach the subject more gently, but it wasnât easy to keep your curiosity contained. âEverything, I guess. Last time I saw you, you were on top of the world. What happened?â You tried to ask your questions as gently as possible, but there really was no use sugarcoating anything.Â
âFlew too close to the sun and I fell,â he shrugged and sent you a sarcastic smirk. âBut I see youâve been doing great, huh?â
âNot really, Iâve stepped back from taking on any contracts. I would have dropped Nuka-Cola too if their lawyers werenât so damn good.â
He shrugged, like he didnât really give a shit about your life or how it was going. This hurt, how he was acting, youâd never seen him like this. He was acting so mean and despondent. âFound out Barb was advocating for nuclear war and Vault-Tec was backing her. Finding out your wife is orchestrating war crimes really puts a wrench in your marriage.â
You wished you could be surprised, but Barbâs odd behavior since joining the company had been obvious to everyone but Cooper. He laughed when he saw the look on your face, âYou say âI told you soâ and Iâll throw something at you.â You shook your head and sank back in the chair. âAnyway, Vault-Tec dropped me and since everyone in Hollywood hates me that was the last paying job I had. Now, Iâm working kidâs parties.â He scoffed and smiled mirthfully, but the hatred in this look was directed at himself. âHow the mighty have fallen, right?â
He threw back the rest of his whiskey and slammed the glass back on the table.Â
âI really am sorry, Coop. I should have been here.â
He didnât look at you, just shook his head, âNo point. If you had been, I would have dragged you down with me. Probably the smartest thing you could have done.â You hated this, it made your heart hurt to see him so down on himself.Â
This wasnât the Cooper you knew. This was a man completely broken by what life had thrown at him. You hated this. You hated yourself for not helping him. Hated his wife for abandoning him. You hated the world for so easily turning their back on him like he was nothing to them.Â
You slipped from the chair and kneeled in front of him. You grabbed his hands in yours, holding on tight when he tried to slip away. âIâm sorry, Coop, truly. I wasnât here for you. But I am now, I swear. Let me help you, please.â
He glanced down at you and stared quietly, trying to decide whether he should be an asshole and tell you to fuck off or just accept the help. He had been lonely for a long while now. He needed someone to tell him he was doing okay. That he had done the right thing in getting Barb out of his life. So, he nodded and squeezed your hands back.Â
âPancakes?â
You laughed and sat up in bed, glancing over at Cooper while he got dressed. âIs that all you know how to make?â He smiled and crawled back onto bed to plant a hard kiss against your lips.Â
âYou want food or not, smartass?â
You laughed and pressed another quick kiss to his lips, âPlease.â He shook his head and walked out of his bedroom and towards the kitchen. You sank back against the pillows and stared blankly up at his ceiling.Â
You wished there was a title to describe what you were to each other, but you werenât completely sure yourself. A few weeks after youâd stopped by his house youâd slept together for the first time. And then again and again, and youâd taken to staying at his house more than your own apartment.Â
Youâd worried that you were letting yourself be a rebound after his divorce. Afraid that he was simply going to sleep with you and move on once heâd found something better. But he didnât treat you like you were something to throw away.Â
But that doesnât mean anything when heâs never explicitly stated that he wants something serious with you. You sit up when you hear him padding back down the hall, a tray in his hands. You smile at him and help him settle back in bed.Â
When youâre done eating you both lay back in bed and you figure you donât need something definitive for now. Youâll just enjoy what you have while you have him. The shrill ring of the phone jolts you both out of your comfortable state.Â
He sighs and reaches over to grab it from its place on the nightstand. The cord stretches over you while he leans back and talks to whoever is on the other line. âHello?â His brow furrows in confusion when the other person began to speak. You can make out their muffled voice but not what theyâre saying. You give him a questioning look but he just shrugs and hands you the phone. âItâs for you, sweetheart.â
âHello?âÂ
Cooper watches you with growing confusion as your face lights up and you shoot out of bed. He sighs, knowing his morning is probably over. He figures he should go ahead and get dressed while you finish up the call.Â
When he comes out of the bathroom youâre still talking. Your finger is coiled through the cord and youâre pacing a track into his rug. Youâve got a serious expression on your face, listening intently, before you light up once more and let out an eager, âOh, thank you so much!â You slam the phone back down on the dial and turn to him with an eager smile.Â
âThat was Tom, heâs got a role for me.â Cooper shoots you a happy smile but he canât help the twinge of jealously in his gut. A few weeks ago some pictures of you two together had been leaked. While your career and offered had considerably slowed, you hadnât been completely stonewalled by all of Hollywood like he had.Â
He couldnât help but resent that at moments, that you still got to live your dream while he was punished for doing what he thought had been right. He wouldnât let that ruin your mood right now, though. âThatâs great, what is it?â
You shrugged, going through the room and quickly changing into a long skirt and blouse. âHe couldnât give me many details over the phone. He wants me to head over to his house to pick up the script real quick.â You ran up to him, planted a quick kiss on his cheek and darted towards the hall. âIâll be back for lunch,â you called over your shoulder.Â
Cooper sighed, overwhelmed slightly by your whirlwind of energy. He called out a quick goodbye he wasnât sure you heard and tried to ignore the nauseating feeling settling in his stomach.Â
You stared up at Tomâs door, knocking quickly. You were the perfect picture of naĂŻvetĂ©, wide-eyed and eager as you waited for him to open the door. When Tom wasnât directing Nuka-Cola ads he directed only serious movies. The type that only critics liked.Â
Getting another serious role could really help in getting you back on track. Maybe you could even start helping Coop out, he was going to have to sell the house soon if he didnât make real money.Â
The smile on your lips was hard to dismiss as you impatiently waited for the door to open. It didnât take much longer, you could hear Tom approaching through it and then it was swinging open. He had a wide smile and seemed oddly breathless as he stared at you. âThere you are! Come on in, Iâll grab the script.â
Not thinking much of the odd invitation you took a step inside and glanced around. You heard voices in the next room and your smile dropped just a little. âCome on,â he waved you forward when he noticed you had stopped, âIâll get you something to drink.â
âOh,â you took a hesitant step forward. âIâm fine, really, I need to get back home pretty quick.â Tom stopped in his tracks and turned around. The look on his face had your hairs standing on end, both of your smiles completely gone now.Â
âI said come in.â You tried to back up but your back hit something soft. Jumping forward, you turned to find one of the tallest men youâd ever seen towering over you. He pushed forward and you stumbled back, starting to feel real panic settle in.Â
He kept pushing until you found yourself standing in the middle of a crowded living room. Execs you recognized from meetings with your agent and premieres circled around you like a pack of hyenas. Each of them tittering and laughing, pointing at you with a dangerous gleam in their eyes.Â
You felt tears pricking your eyes, your gaze darting up to Tom. But he refused to look at you, accepting a large wad of cash from one man and shaking his hand. He spared you one brief glance, a distant regret in his eyes as he walked out the room.Â
You spun in a quick circle, breaths coming short and fast when the men started to close in on you. One of them grabbed you and you threw your elbow back into his face, it didnât matter. They were all reaching for you now. Hands snagged on your blouse and the buttons popped open.Â
You opened your mouth, to scream or bite one of them, you donât know, it didnât matter. A large hand clamped around your mouth, forcing you to breathe in the cloth on their palm. You sucked in a sharp breath, something sweet tickling your nose before your eyes were rolling back in your head.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the game/show Fallout, but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
James âBuckyâ Barnes x fem!reader
a/n: Bucky is going to be very OOC for the first half of this. Just trust the author on this one, it will all make sense in time. (Toxic relationships, paranormal happenings - you have been warned)
Summary: Moving into this house was supposed to be the blessing your marriage needed. Instead you only seem to be twisted against each other. Something lurks within these walls, something angry, something lonely. Someone wants you gone, and heâll do whatever it takes to have his revenge on the woman who left him behind. (Part of my Halloween Palooza)
âOkay,â you say, balancing the camera in your palm, zooming in on Jamesâ back while he unpacks the kitchen boxes. âWanna smile for the camera?â
He gives you a glance over his shoulder before turning and waving to the camera. He chuckles a little, glancing down at the lens and then back at you. âWhat are you doing?â
You sigh, placing the camera on the counter and letting it record. âWell, you know how the lady said this place was haunted?â
He rolls his eyes and glares at you. âI told you not to listen to her, that chick was off her meds.â You swat at his arm but he bounces away from you playfully.Â
âShut up,â you mutter, holding back a small laugh. âI just thought that if there were any supernatural happenings,â you nod towards the camera, âweâll need proof if weâre going to make this a tourist trap.â
James smiles, leaning over to press a brief kiss to your forehead. âGood call, babe.â You smile after him as he heads back out to the truck to bring in more boxes. Your eyes briefly dart to the camera before you shake your head with a disbelieving chuckle.Â
Do you believe in the supernatural? Yes. The metaphysical? Depends on whoâs trying to sell you their tarot cards. But you do know that when that woman handed you the keys after you bought the place, youâd never seen such stark relief.Â
That poor old woman was terrified of living in this house alone. Of course, the old bitch didnât tell you about all the horrific things that happened here until after you signed the deed. If you had known this place was haunted, even if itâs not, you never would have bought it.Â
Sadly, all your money and savings are now tied into this home. James says not to worry, that thereâs nothing wrong with the place. But heâs always been a cynic and heâs never really believed in anything so miraculous as ghosts. Besides, heâs the type of guy to argue with you until heâs purple in the face that the sky is red when heâs in a mood.Â
Thereâs no talking him out of this. And you canât begin your newlywed life arguing with your husband about the place you just made your forever home. Anyways, itâs not like youâve noticed anything bad yet.Â
The camera is mainly a joke to mess with James and make yourself feel better about the whole thing. Youâll turn it off tonight, be done with it, and hopefully get over this irrational fear of yours.Â
12 AM
You spit the toothpaste into the sink and rinse your mouth with water. Youâve noticed a strange metallic taste with all the unfiltered sinks. You're worried you might have to call a plumber or someone to check it out. You donât want to get lead poisoning your first night here.Â
You freeze, still bent over the sink, and your jaw snaps shut. Eyes are boring into the back of your head, hateful and angry. Itâs not James, you would know if it was. This is something different, the hair on the back of your neck is standing up, goosebumps rolling up and down your arms. Thereâs a rush of cool air, like something running past you, and your head shoots up in surprise.Â
You scream when you see James in the mirrorâs reflection. He jumps back in shock, lowering the camera and giving you an exasperated look. A second ago youâd been completely alone and heâd been downstairs, where the fuck did he come from?
âWhat the hell, James?â You wipe your mouth off with the back of your hand and whirl around on him. He glares at you, eyes narrowed in dissatisfaction.Â
âTalk about an overreaction. What the hell is your problem?â He snaps, taking that tone with you that you know means you have to be careful. You donât feel like getting into another fight with him. Especially not tonight.Â
âYou scared me,â you trail off into an awkward laugh, hoping to ease up the mood a little. He slams the camera down on the counter. Your shoulders jump and you flinch back from him slightly. âWhatâre you doing with the camera?â You ask, glancing down at the lens and frowning. You spot the red blinking light and realize heâs still recording, your brows furrow in confusion.Â
âIt was your idea, wasnât it?â His tone is short and you huff in disappointment. You hadnât realized something as small as a little scare would piss him off. You used to be good at reading his moods. Since the wedding, though, he seems to have just gotten more and more unpredictable.Â
You take a seat on the edge of the bed, your feet dangling over the floor as you kick your legs. You hate how tall the damn bed frame is, you have a horrible paranoia that somethingâs going to grab you one day and yank you under. James, of course, had just laughed when you told him this and then bought it. He thought it was funny, that it would help you overcome your fears.Â
You still have goosebumps from earlier, the same breeze from before tickles the pads of your feet. You glance down with wide eyes, yanking your legs into your chest and scooting back from the edge. James flips the lights off in the bathroom and walks to the end of the bed. Heâs dragged out the tripod and has got it pointed at the bed.Â
You tilt your head with a coy smile, âPlanning on having some fun tonight?â
He glances between you and the camera, a confused furrow between his brows. You scoff out a laugh as the realization dawns over him. âIf youâre up for it, I wouldnât mind some after-dark fun.â You roll your eyes and tug the covers over your legs. He leaves the camera and crawls on the bed towards you. âBut thatâs not what it's for.â
âOh yeah?â You glance over his shoulder and then turn back to him with an odd look. âDonât tell me youâre buying into the supernatural junk?â You tuck your head into his chest, letting him pull you closer as he flips the lamp off. âYouâre supposed to keep me tethered to reality, remember?â You tease, looking up at him.Â
He glances down at you and shrugs. âThe lady did say the master bedroom is the worst, Iâm just curious if weâll catch anything.âÂ
You shoot the camera a concerned look and shake your head. âI hope not,â you mutter. You snuggle in closer to him, trying to dismiss the feeling of someone watching you. Youâre sure itâs just from the camera being on you. Besides, you always get too deep in your head about this stuff.
3 AM
You shoot up in bed, chest heaving as you stare down at your feet. James shifts behind you, grumbling as he flips over and steals the rest of the blankets.Â
Your heart is pounding loudly in your chest as you simply sit there, staring at the end of the bed. You pause, holding your breath like the room might tell you its secrets.Â
Youâre normally a heavy sleeper, not even a fire would get you up. But something just did, you were ripped violently from your slumber. You almost want to dismiss it as an incredibly vivid nightmare. Yet, you canât ignore the throbbing, almost freezing pain, thatâs shooting up and down your left calf.Â
The muscle is spasming sporadically and you can still feel the phantom touch of someone squeezing your leg. Your hip is sore from where youâd been dragged down. Youâve had pretty vivid dreams before. Youâve woken up with your feet sore like youâd been running, or your muscles cramped from twitching around so much. But this is a lot.Â
You take in a deep breath, slowly pulling your legs into your chest. You slump over your bent knees, hoping to catch your breath and settle your racing mind. Itâs impossible to ignore how cold your leg feels, you feel like youâre losing blood circulation. You canât just go back to sleep with it like this, youâre gonna have to go downstairs and get Jamesâ heat pack.Â
Youâre seriously starting to lose feeling in it now. Youâre wondering if something didnât drag you and maybe youâve got a blood clot screwing your circulation up somehow. Hundreds of different possibilities race through your mind, each more worrying than the last. You can't sit up all night scaring yourself, youâre just gonna have to suck it up.Â
You briefly consider waking James up so you donât have to go downstairs alone. You hate how those stairs look in the dark, you feel like something is standing at the end, waiting to reach through the banister and drag you down. A ghost, however, sounds more inviting than making James grumpy before he has to go in for work tomorrow morning.Â
With a heavy sigh, you force yourself off the bed and blindly grope through the dark for the wall. Your left leg is practically dead weight as you drag it behind you. Your hands skate along the dusty walls and you grimace, making a mental note to dust tomorrow.Â
Youâre trying to take it slow, to squint out as many shapes in the dark as you can. Itâs nearly impossible to tell when youâre going to hit the stairs. You can only pray that you donât go toppling headfirst down them.Â
Slowly, you inch your toes forward and curl them around the edge of the step. From there itâs a long, arduous process of just trying to get down the stairs. It feels as though with each step you take, the house only grows darker.Â
You wished you had taken the risk and turned the lights on. The feeling of eyes following you only gets worse as you finally reach the kitchen. The further you get from the bedroom, the worse your leg begins to throb. You can only be happy that you still feel it at all.Â
Your hand skates along the wall until you feel the cool plastic of the light switch. As harsh as it is against the linoleum, itâs a stark relief from being all alone in the dark. You dig around in the moving boxes until you find James' heating pad. You toss it in the microwave and pull yourself on the counter, drumming your fingers while you wait for it to warm up.Â
He hates you. He hates that you live in his house. He hates that sheâs gone. Bette, heâll miss her, the way the old womanâs face would screw up in terror always brought a sick satisfaction to him.Â
You press the warm pad to your leg and hiss through your teeth as feeling begins returning to your calf. He has to admit, he hadnât meant to grab you quite so hard. He just wanted one good scare, to either get you out of here or show you who's in charge. Your leg has turned an odd color in the shape of his handprint and it makes his lips curl up.Â
Thereâs a loud ringing from upstairs. It grates on his already frayed nerves and makes anger roll off of him in violent, tangible waves. Your nose twitches, your face screwing up as you look around. Thereâs a suspicious glint in your eye, one your little husband doesnât share with you.Â
He has to admit, youâre smart enough to realize the truth of your situation, at least. Your husband doesnât share the same characteristic. He seems alarmingly self-assured, not that he minds, those are his favorite types to break.Â
He can hear upstairs, better than you would ever hope to. He listens as your husband picks up the phone, quietly yelling at someone on the other end. A woman, if the timbre is anything to go by. They both sound incredibly angry. Heâs not interested in listening to something as trivial as this.Â
He turns away from you and moves towards the stairs. He pauses at the base of them, glancing over his shoulder and really taking you in. You look so small, curled up on the counter with the look of a frightened child.Â
You scream as the lightbulb above you explodes, plunging you into complete darkness. He smiles to himself, drifting up the stairs and lingering at the end of your bed. Your husbandâs head shoots up in alarm and he pulls the phone away from his ear.Â
The name Martha lingers on the small screen before he quickly flips it off and rushes out of bed. He blows right through the man at the end of his bed, flipping on the lights and racing down the stairs. He calls out your name, voice frantic and bordering on paranoia.Â
He hadnât thought you two would get scared quite so quickly. Heâd been hoping to enjoy this a bit more. Perhaps he should slow down, and savor the long fall into madness before he claims you both. He hovers at the top of the stairs, watching as your husband comforts you.Â
Heâs got his arms wrapped around you, trying to keep you quiet and get you to calm down. From a distance, he could almost be the perfect husband. But that look is all too familiar, heâs seen it a hundred times before. Itâs only now that he recognizes it for what it is. There is no love in your husbandâs gaze, only the fear that youâll find out his little secret.Â
He goes back into the bedroom, swipes the phone off the nightstand, and retreats into the shadows.Â
âDonât,â you slap Jamesâ hands away from you, glaring at him. He purses his lips, huffing out a sharp breath and taking a step back. Anger brews under your skin, warms you up, and makes your jaw ache from how hard youâre clenching down.Â
âHow can you say I made it up?â You shout, no longer caring how loud you are. Your voice cracks at the end as you take on a shrill pitch. You yank up the leg of your yoga pants, shoving your leg towards him.Â
Not only has the skin dipped in the perfect shape of a hand, but itâs also turned into an unnatural shade of green and purple. Itâs like no bruise or injury youâve ever had before. James looks down at the mark like itâs a bug to be squashed or a pile of dog shit he just stepped in.Â
He fixes you with a sneer and shoves it away from him. You let out a harsh breath and stumble slightly into the counter. âWould you quit fucking showing me that? Itâs freaking me out.â
You throw your hands up in the air, giving him an eat-shit look. âHow do you think I feel? It happened to me.â
He shakes his head and turns towards the coffee pot, pouring himself another mug. You canât believe how dismissive heâs being about this whole thing. You have indisputable proof burned into your flesh, and heâs completely ignoring your worries.Â
âWe need to get you to the doctor, okay?â He shakes his head, giving you the look of a disapproving parent, rather than the supportive husband heâs supposed to be. He hadnât even been worried for you last night, just mad that youâd woken him up for nothing.Â
âItâs probably a blood clot, not a damn poltergeist.â
âJames-â His phone ringing cuts you off, and your eyes narrow in disbelief as he reaches for it. Itâs closer to you on the counter so you snatch it up before he can grab it.Â
âWhat are you doing?â He demands, taking on a concerningly low tone.Â
âWeâre going to talk about this, youâre not getting out of this one, James!âÂ
He whispers your name in a voice you havenât heard before. His face is dark, brows set in determination as he slowly extends his hand. âGive me my phone.â
You glance at the Nokia and then back at him. The fear thatâs been ever-present since last night turns into something else. Anxiety and suspicion make a wicked and nauseating brew in your stomach. âWhy?â You whisper, eyes narrowing on him as he takes a step closer. You stumble a step back, holding the phone out of his reach.Â
You feel your hand tremble with its vibrations before it begins to ring again. You look towards it just as James lunges forward. His shoulder nearly barrels into you as he grabs your wrist. His grip is so tight you almost feel the bones creaking together. âJames!â You gasp, the phone tumbling from your palm and into his hand. He shoves you back, tucking it in his pocket and glaring at you.Â
âDonât touch my phone,â you open your mouth to argue and he takes a large step forward. His foot slams against the ground and you flinch back from him, eyes wide in surprise. âDo you understand me,â he demands, slowly and his voice low.Â
You nod, your jaw gaping as you stare at him. He runs a hand through his hair, refusing to meet your eye now. Dark strands fall onto his forehead and he looks more disheveled than youâve seen him in a long while.Â
He looks at his watch and clenches his eyes shut. He pauses, taking in a deep breath as he straightens his tie and rounds the kitchen island. âWhat are you doing?â You ask, your voice so quiet youâre surprised he even hears it.Â
âGoing to work,â he snaps. You canât look at him, you just keep your eyes glued to the floor as the door slams shut. You hold your breath until you hear the car going down the driveway. Ever so slowly, you peel yourself away from the counter.Â
Your hand drifts, without thinking, to the imprints on your wrist. âWhat the fuck,â you mutter, a stunned sort of silence taking over. You canât help but just stand there, completely dumbfounded by how quickly a simple argument escalated.Â
Heâs always had a shorter temper than most, but that was extreme. A door slams upstairs and you scream, leaping forward and whirling towards the noise. âWhat the fuck!â You shout again, stumbling towards the knife block behind you. You can hear footsteps running upstairs and swallow around a ball of fear sinking in your throat.Â
You almost call out âwhos there,â but thatâs a little too stupid for you. Youâre not planning on being the bimbo who dies first in every horror movie. As much as James likes to tease you for being a little simple sometimes, you are equipped with basic survival skills.Â
You look towards the coffee maker, the port where your home phone should be is empty. You rush towards the windows, glancing out the driveway and cursing when you find it empty. You were hoping that James might still be in his car, steaming before he comes back in to apologize. But, no, heâs really gone.Â
Another door slams and it feels a little petty. Despite the way your heart races and youâre struggling to catch your breath, you donât feel like youâre in any immediate danger. The looming presence that hung over you last night is gone. James had dismissed the lightbulb exploding as an old house and bad lighting.Â
You know better, despite the claims otherwise, and you sincerely doubt that thereâs an actual person upstairs. And whatever it is, was smart enough to steal your phone. You slink towards the end of the stairs, just barely craning your neck so you can see into your bedroom. Except the door isnât open like you left it.Â
Light comes through the crack of the closed door. You take a tentative step up, eyes squinting as you try and get a glimpse under the door. A shadow darts past, like rushing footsteps. You gasp, leaping back and covering your mouth with trembling hands.Â
The hair on the back of your neck stands, and the loose hairs from your braids blow across your cheeks, tickling your sensitive skin. Old vents, thatâs what James told you. His attempt to explain the inexplicable breeze that seems to be following you everywhere you go. Youâre bundled head to toe in fuzzy socks, warm pants, and a too-big sweatshirt. And still, you feel your fingers nearly go numb and you can barely feel your nose anymore.Â
Thatâs not a poor AC system. And those arenât feet under your door. Youâre so focused on simply watching the movements under the door that you completely forget anything else. Youâre blind and deaf as you watch whatever is moving about in your room. A loud clank breaks through the silence and you nearly scream.Â
Your bones almost jump out of your skin as the ice machine starts going and rattles up the old fridge. You clench your eyes shut, taking in a deep breath and glaring at the white machine. âFuck me,â you mutter, holding your chest and just barely calming yourself down.Â
Youâve only been here a night, you shouldnât be so fucking terrified. Youâre ready to just go out into the backyard and wait the rest of the day for James to come back. If you could drive off, you would. But youâve only got one working car right now and heâs taken it to work. You move to grab your laptop off the couch when something creaks behind you.Â
Old hinges cry out as theyâre slowly forced to work. The sound of steps going down the stairs occupies the space behind you. You canât find the bravery to turn around, too scared to see what might be there. Something ice cold passes through you. It nearly feels like a violation, as though something was rooting through your insides like it belonged there. It couldnât have lasted more than two seconds but it was more than enough to have you nearly vomiting up your scarce breakfast.Â
The moment itâs over you feel yourself calming down. As though an instinctual intuition has been activated, you know the dangerâs passed. Whatever it had been trying to accomplish with that little show, it did it.Â
You turn back to your room, the lights off and the door open, looking just as you left it. You glance over your shoulder, looking into the kitchen before starting up the stairs. You give a hesitant peek into the room like you expect it to be a wreck. But it looks spotless, the camera is in the same place James left it, still recording.Â
You file that away in the back of your mind. Maybe the camera picked up what happened last night, or maybe James is right. You really are just getting too far into your head. A shrill ringing goes off near James nightstand and you frown. Your phone buzzes on his side of the bed, MOM lighting up the square screen.Â
You let out a short huff, quickly snatching your phone and answering. Maybe she can talk some sense into you, or, more preferably, come over to keep you company. âHey mom,â you answer, smiling slightly to yourself. Itâs been a little while since youâve been able to talk to her. James had banned phones after the honeymoon and then youâd gotten caught up in house stuff, jobs, and the aftermath of the wedding âincident.â
An older voice than youâd been expecting answers on the other end, saying your name in a confused tone. Your brows furrow and you frown, âMrs. Barnes?â
âHoney,â she sounds strained, like she really hadnât been expecting you to answer. James must have taken your phone by accident. It makes sense, theyâre both the same model, but you put a little pink charm on your Nokia so youâd stop making this mistake. Yet, when you look to your left, you see your charm lying on your nightstand. When had you taken that off?
âWhereâs James?â
âUm,â youâre still a little thrown off by her voice and take a second to answer. âWork, I think he took the wrong phone,â you laugh a little, disconcerted that itâs not your motherâs comforting voice.Â
âMust have,â she answers, she sounds like sheâs a million miles away, her tone distant. âWell, um, just tell him to call me back.â
âAlright,â you hesitate, concerned by how off she sounds. âIs everything alright?â You know things have been tough for her since her husband passed on. Jamesâ sisters have been helping her adjust, but the wedding had taken him away from his family for a little while. He hasnât actually shown any signs of wanting to reach out and it makes you feel guilty, like youâre keeping him away from her.Â
Mrs. Barnes, a living saint you swear, has been nothing but kind as she welcomes you into her family. This is the first time sheâs ever been so distant to you. You act more like her family than James does nowadays.Â
âHas, uh,â she coughs, clearing her throat. You can almost hear what sounds like Francesca on the other end, hollering at her. The sound of Jamesâ older sisterâs voice makes you smile a little wider. âHas James said anything to you?â
Your brows furrow and you shake your head in confusion, even if she canât see you. âAbout what?â
âOh, crumbs,â she huffs and you have a feeling whatever she was about to say was important, but someone is snatching the phone away before you can hear the rest of it. Youâd been so focused on her voice that you hadnât even heard James come back in.Â
He glares down at the phone, face pale and eyes wide like heâs expecting something horrific. When he places it to his ear and hears his momâs voice, his shoulders slump in relief. You narrow your eyes at him, disoriented by the strange behavior.Â
âMom,â he interrupts her rudely, âIâll call you later. Okay?â He hangs up before she can answer. He tugs your phone out of his pocket and tosses it next to you on the bed. âAnswering my phone now? What are you, my secretary?â
You slip your phone into your back pocket, not looking at him as you get off the bed. âI thought it was mine. I think my charm broke off.â You put some distance between the two of you, glancing down at his phone and then back at him. âWhy are you being so weird about it?â
He flinches like youâve just accused him of something far worse than being overly protective of his phone. âI donât like you digging around in my phone. Thatâs a problem now?â You open your mouth to argue, but he just keeps going, cutting you off, âYouâre so goddamn paranoid. First the ghost, now this,â he gestures vaguely at you and you scoff, crossing your arms and glaring at him.Â
You two are devolving far quicker than he had anticipated. It must have been a fragile relationship, to begin with. James slams the door and you slump down on the bed, you almost look like you want to cry.Â
He goes down the stairs, watching through the window as your husband lingers on the front porch. He calls someone, his mom, and starts yelling at her as he gets to his car. Looking away from the window, he sighs.Â
Heâd been close, if James hadnât come home he probably could have pushed you over the edge immediately. He doesnât know if heâs disappointed or happy that his game gets to go on a little longer.
You come back down the stairs, eyes rimmed red and shoulders slumped in defeat. You brush through him, not even noticing the chill he leaves behind in you. You have the camera in your hand and a cord in the other. He grins, excited to finally have you see the truth of what happened last night.Â
You plug the camera into your laptop, scrubbing through the footage of last night. He leans over your shoulder and watches as goosebumps rise along your skin. You sigh, tugging a blanket over your shoulders, but he knows that wonât do anything to help you.Â
Nothing will unless you leave. But your husband has made it clear that youâre not getting out of here until he has actual proof anything supernatural lurks inside these haunted walls. Right here, in your lap, you have your proof. A phantom wind blows up the sheets of the bed, an unexplainable tug of your leg that drags you halfway down the bed. Itâs violent and he almost feels sorry, he really hadnât meant to hurt you, only scare you.Â
His fingers drift over your leg and you jump, whirling around, wide eyes looking right through him. He canât help but admire the way fear makes them shine. Youâre quite pretty when youâre terrified, he couldnât say the same for the hag that used to live here.Â
Youâre slow to turn back to the computer, but when you do, thereâs a slight curve to your lips that he appreciates. âI fucking knew it,â you whisper, slamming the screen closed and getting to your feet.Â
Youâre giddy, he can taste the satisfaction overpowering the fear. You round the couch, taking in a deep breath and shaking out your arms. Your face sets in determination and you start working on clearing out the moving boxes.Â
He doesnât feel the urge to mess with you any further. He leaves you in peace, lounging in your armchair and watching you work. Heâs got a nice surprise worked up for you tonight, no need to take todayâs playtime any further.Â
Youâre efficient, only occasionally getting distracted as you smile at pictures of your wedding day. You put those up on the mantle, beside some family photos. Itâs clear how much you value your familial bonds, even your husbands. You put it front and center in the home, reminding him of how it once looked.Â
Thereâs a stark sense of deja vu as he watches you work, a nauseating feeling of what could have been. He can practically taste the newlywed bliss youâre going through. Even with your husband being a piece of work, you still value him, love him. Heâd once known that love, hell, heâd reveled in it.Â
But the curtain always has to come down. The magicâs never real. Heâs doing you a favor by showing you the truth of it all. His gaze drifts away from you cooking dinner and he looks towards the pictures on the mantle.Â
Jamesâ mother reminds him of his own. He always wondered what happened to her, what her life was like after he was gone. Neither of them ever got what they wanted. She died wondering what happened to her only son, and he died without getting to say goodbye.Â
He thinks of Bette, and feels that familiar white-hot rush of anger, your scream comes a moment later. He glances towards you, confused, before he follows your eyes and sees that heâs accidentally shattered the frames of the pictures.Â
You gasp, sucking in shallow breaths as you stumble into the counter, brows furrowed in terror. He clenches his eyes shut, sucking in a deep breath, and tamps down on the anger overwhelming him.Â
The door opens and your socked feet go rushing towards it, you nearly slip on the hardwoods, arms spinning wildly as you right yourself. James flinches away from your frantic hands as you grab his jacket and drag him inside. âThe fucking pictures,â you stutter out your words and point frantically towards the mantle.Â
James grimaces, tugging at your hands and looking towards him. He doesnât see him, of course he doesnât. But he does see his little accident. James scoffs, face screwing up in anger, he turns towards you. His face is set like a disappointed parent. âYou broke them? Our wedding pictures, seriously. All because of a stupid fight?â
He jerks away from you, storming towards the glass and kicking at it. âYou didnât even clean it up,â he says your name, tone increasing in anger. You stare at him, disbelieving and open-mouthed.Â
He sits back on the armchair, thoroughly amused. He hadnât even had to do anything to turn him against you. Your sweet James has just been waiting for a reason to get mad. âThis is fucking petty, even for you.â
âWhat, James,â you stumble over your words, taking a hesitant step towards him. He thinks youâre pretty when youâre scared, but not like this. He doesnât appreciate the way you approach your husband like heâs a rabid dog. You shouldnât be scared of him, not yet at least. He hasnât even had his fun with him yet.Â
âIt wasnât me, I swear-â
âNot this ghost shit again, seriously-â
âI have proof!â You shout, your voice is desperate as you try and make yourself louder than him. You run towards your laptop, and ignore the burning smell coming from the oven. He gets up, drifting towards it and turning it off before either of you can notice. No point in having the house burn down. Where would that leave him?
You plug the camera in, turning the screen towards him. James doesnât make a move yet, simply glaring at you like youâre a bug to be swatted. âPlease,â you beg, pathetic and needy. He huffs, rolling his eyes as he watches you both. Itâs all so familiar to him, he feels like heâs watching his unfortunate disaster of a marriage play out through you.Â
You scrub through the times, cussing as you pass over the clip of you getting dragged. Thereâs a frantic look in your eye as you hit play. It almost makes him feel bad for whatâs about to happen.Â
âWhat am I supposed to be looking at?â James snaps.Â
Your face falls and you move the mouse forward and back, looking like a madwoman as you try to find the right moment. You wonât, he made sure of that. Nothing but static plays when you get to the parts that would prove your innocence.Â
James tugs at his tie, shaking his head in disappointment. âNot only did you fuck up all our pictures, you didnât even have dinner ready.â He shoves past you, heading up the stairs and muttering to himself. He pulls out his phone, lingering on a contact he shouldnât before pressing call.Â
You stay still in the living room, looking at the shattered glass and then the oven. âI made your favorite,â you whisper. You suck in a shaky breath, swallowing hard as you kneel down to try and pick up the remnants of your wedding photos.Â
3 AM
He sits on the bed, glancing towards the blinking red light of the camera. Thereâs a clear wall between you and your husband, even if neither of you wants to acknowledge it. You lay curled up in yourself, like a child afraid to seek comfort. He pities you, truly.Â
He remembers the happiness of youth, the rush of being married to the person you believe is the love of your life. He will never forget the pain of realizing the person youâve given everything to turning into someone you donât recognize.Â
His hand drifts over the swell of your cheek. Your lashes flutter, nose wrinkling at the cold brush of his touch. But you donât flinch away from him, instead leaning into him and looking almost happy by his touch.Â
He looks to your husband, eyes narrowing on his relaxed form. He sees the phone lying near him and his face sets in determination. Heâs not going to let you fall into the same trap he did. And he certainly isnât about to let another soul cramp the already stuffy walls of his home.Â
Itâs been quiet around the house. Less strange events and more strained dinners between you and your husband. Youâve taken to bringing the camera everywhere with you. But anytime a light bulb explodes or a frame topples over, the video goes static.Â
You should have given up the hunt for evidence but you canât give it up. You just need James to see, you need him to believe you. Or, at the very least, you need some assurance that youâre not going crazy. Youâve begun to consider the possibility.Â
The bruise on your leg is gone, the constant chills that rack you are still very much present, but thereâs nothing else. Everything that happens can be explained by the age of the house. Youâve only briefly discussed it with Jamesâ sisters. Elizabeth gave you the number of a medium she knows.Â
James had gotten angry when he found the business card after her visit. He didnât like her filling your head with more nonsense and indulging you. You didnât like how dismissive he was. Itâs been a few days since the fight and you still have no desire to reconcile with him.Â
Itâs becoming easier to simply ignore his presence around the house. You know itâs not healthy. Youâve only just begun the marriage, you donât need to have communication issues tainting it before itâs even on its legs.Â
Still, itâs as though somethingâs keeping you from him. Every attempt at speaking with him is interrupted, thoughts of apologizing just to placate him are struck from your head quicker than they come.Â
You stand up from the kitchen table, placing your pictures to the side. Youâve finally gotten new frames for them all, you only need to put them back up. You have no problems putting up the family pictures. Yet, the moment you make to grab the wedding picture of you and James, you grow inexplicably tired.Â
Your eyelids flutter shut and you sway on your feet. Your bones grow heavy like youâve been working all day. But youâve only been up a few hours, and you had so much more to do today. You try and fight forward, leaning on the table and reaching for the portrait again. You almost feel like youâre nudged back, moved towards the couch.Â
A short nap, you promise yourself. Just long enough to get your energy back.Â
He followed him to work. Thatâs never happened before. Heâs never been able to follow someone out of the house. He tried, with Steve, he tried to make every aspect of his life hell. But he couldnât.Â
Yet, with this one, he has no problem following him. Maybe itâs the odd resemblance they have. A haircut and a shave, they could be identical twins. But then again, he hasnât seen his face in a long while, perhaps heâs misremembering it.Â
Itâs difficult to maintain this control. Half of him lingers in the house, with you, the other half is here. Heâs being drawn closer to James and further from you. He doesnât know if thatâs conducive or an interruption to his plans.Â
He only vaguely sees you, in his mindâs eye. He leads you to the couch, lays you down, and keeps you away from the reminders of James. Heâs gotten good at keeping you both separated. It was easy to begin with, all heâs doing is showing you the truth of the man you married. If only he could really show you.Â
James phone rings and he focuses on him once more. Itâs Martha again. He hasnât figured out the truth of their relationship, heâs sure he already knows it. Heâs lived this life once, knows the truth of why a husband would act like this. The late-night calls, the constant misdirection of anger.Â
Heâs paranoid, terrified youâll find out the truth. He wants to have his cake and eat it too. The perfect housewife at home, and the mistress who fulfills his every desire. At least, thatâs his theory. He still needs to be completely sure.Â
He ignores James, focusing once more on his connection to the house. He finds you right where he left you, deep in your sleep and completely oblivious to the world around you. He kneels before you, sweeping some hair off your cheeks and tilting his head as he takes in your restful face.Â
You look so peaceful when youâre like this, a slight curl to your lips as you wander through dreamland. He wished he could keep you like this, wished he could completely get rid of James. But without him, you wouldnât be able to keep the house. Youâd leave it, leave him. He canât have that. Heâs been lonely for so long, he needs you, craves you.Â
6 PM
âHow was work?â
âFine.â
Chewing fills the cavernous silence of your dining room. Forks scrape across porcelain, shallow breaths as you both dance around the tension that threatens to tie a noose around your marriage. You reach for your wine, hoping for another heady swallow. Just like before, youâre dissuaded from it.Â
You grow tired at the thought of drowning your sorrows in the alcohol for another night. You clench your eyes shut and take a deep breath, moving the glass away from you and turning back to the roast you made.Â
Jamesâ brows furrow as he watches you. âEverything alright?â
You hum, âTired.â He scoffs and your face falls flat. He shakes his head, muttering something under his breath as he cuts more aggressively into the meat. "Something wrong?â You demand, sucking on your teeth as you anticipate his answer. Youâre sure itâs going to be the same broken record heâs been playing since the honeymoon.Â
âNothing,â he shrugs, tone dismissive. He pauses, taking a deep breath before laughing sardonically. âItâs just funny.â You hate how he does this, drags out his answers, and forces you to take the bait.Â
Youâre not playing this game of his tonight. You wonât do it again. You canât keep going in circles with him, canât keep indulging him in these childish tantrums. He waits, eyebrows raised and pretty blue eyes boring into yours, demanding attention.Â
Those damn eyes. You wish he was just a little uglier, maybe then you wouldnât have been so blind to how fucking awful he really is. You almost resent his mother and sisters for this. They could have warned you off, told you the horror stories of his past before the wedding. Instead, theyâd warned you after it was too late and your entire life was entangled in his.Â
âI work all day, come home, want a peaceful meal. What do I get?â
He falls silent again and you let out a heavy sigh. âI donât know, James,â you drawl, bored of this already. Your patience for him is practically nonexistent nowadays. You used to be able to endure these conversations with him, or at the very least soothe him. But youâre tired of feeling like a babysitter and not the wife youâre supposed to be. âWhat do you get? A homecooked meal, a clean house, someone to come home to. Tell me,â you demand, slamming your hand on the table and surprising him. âWhat the fuck do you get?â
âA nagging fucking wife who does jack shit all day and complains about being tired! I work for us, so you can stay home and live out your little housewife fantasies!â
Your jaw drops and you suck in a sharp breath. You canât even form words, nearly laughing at the audacity and ridiculousness of what heâs saying. âOh my god,â you can only scoff, shaking your head and leaning back in your chair. You smile and roll your eyes. âYouâre kidding, right?â
âNo.â He stands, leaning on the table and trying to make himself bigger than he is. It only paints him in a more pathetic light.Â
You cut him off before he can say anything else, scooping up your plate and storming into the kitchen. âYouâre the one who insisted I quit my job. You,â you turn and gesture towards him, a disgusted sneer on your face, âwanted a fucking housewife. I was just the dumbass that listened to you. You have no right to throw that in my face. You wanted this, James!â
âYeah, well,â for a moment you think heâs speechless. His jaw opens and closes, nothing but air leaving his parted lips. You should know better by now, heâs always got some bullshit to spew. âI didnât think youâd be so incompetent at this.â
You drop the plate in the sink, leaning on it for support and closing your eyes. You take in deep breaths, trying to cool down the heat racing under your skin. Your bloodâs pumping so hard youâre surprised a vein hasnât burst yet.Â
âFuck this,â you push off the sink, shoving past him and moving towards the front door.Â
âWhat are you doing?â He demands, watching as you grab your coat and your keys.Â
âGoing for a walk,â you tell him shortly, slamming the door behind you. You just need some time away from him, away from the suffocating shadow that seems to linger behind him all the time now.Â
You pull the business card Elizabeth had given you and dial the number. You donât know if this anger is coming from whatever the hell lives in that house or if this was always coming. But youâre not going to just roll over and let this thing ruin your marriage.Â
7 PM
Youâre out for an hour. Heâs upset the entire time. He wants to drive Jamesâ head into the corner of the counter over and over again until thereâs nothing left but unidentifiable mush. Itâs the same fight he used to have. It always started over something so stupid, he could never say anything right.Â
No matter how many times he thought he finally figured Bette out. Every time he thought he had avoided some trigger for her, a new one formed. It didnât matter how perfect of a husband he was, he would never be enough because he wasn't him. He wasnât Steve, the man who could do no wrong in her eyes.Â
He stands in the corner and watches as James paces for a while before he finally leaves, taking his keys and his phone. He takes the car and leaves you stranded here at the house.Â
He knows that James could fix the car sitting idle in the garage. He could fix the car. Itâs just another way of keeping you under control. James gets to decide when and where you get to go out, you donât get a say.Â
You seem relieved, though, when you come back and see James gone. Youâre happier without your husband, itâs both good and bad. He needs you to resent James, needs you to hate him. But that could prove tricky for him in the future.Â
âThank you so much,â youâre on the phone, youâve got something lumpy in your jacket. One hand lays under the buttons of your coat, stroking idly. âYeah, Thursday sounds great. Thank you, again, for coming on such late notice.â
You hang up, placing your keys and phone in the bowl by the door. âAlright, sweetheart, letâs get you cleaned up.â You open your jacket, revealing a bundle of matted, dirty fur underneath. Somewhere in all that mess is the scrunched face of a pissed-off cat.Â
You coo to it, stroking its head and ignoring the fact it looks like it wants to rip your hand off. You bring it to the kitchen sink and he watches as you take the next few hours to wash its wounds and properly groom it.Â
He never cared much for cats, or any animals, really. He never had the time or the energy to try and take care of something other than Bette. She was practically a full-time job to cater to. But he enjoys how peaceful you look being able to take care of the cat. He enjoys how much sympathy you display, even as the little bastard rips and tears at your pretty skin.Â
He looms over your shoulder, stroking his phantom fingers over the cat's wet fur. Itâs enough to scare it into submission. Its claws release your skin and it shrinks back into your hold. He grins, backing away and leaving you to it.Â
You frown down at the cat, murmuring soothing words to it as you look around the kitchen. Sometimes he thinks you see him, thinks you can truly see through all the walls and witness whatâs left of the man he was. He knows it's foolish, a ridiculous hope.Â
Youâll never be able to see him. Even if you could, you would only think of him as a tormentor. He was a blight on your home and marriage, why would you ever care about him?
3 AM
You feel eyes on you. Not the unfamiliar eyes youâve been feeling, you know these. Intimately. You stir from your light sleep, squinting through the dark. Minimal light comes in through the blinds, but it's just enough for you to see the figure standing beside you.Â
You gasp, flinching away from James. He just stands over you, glaring down at where you slept. Eyes devoid of anything. âJames?â You whisper. Alpine, the cat you snagged from a neighborâs dumpster, leaps off the bed.Â
She hisses at James, skirting around him and running out of the room. Your brows furrow in confusion. You look back to James, muttering his name again. He gasps like he was dragged out of a coma.Â
He stumbles on his feet, tripping over them and nearly nosediving into the bed. You instinctively steady him, guiding him onto the bed beside you. âWhat are you doing?â You hiss at him, holding his face in your hands and looking him over for any explanation of what was just happening.Â
Youâve never even heard him talk in his sleep. Let alone, sleep with his eyes wide open and staring at you. It was beyond disturbing. Thereâs something unfamiliar in his eyes, theyâre soft as he looks at you. Soft in a way they havenât been for a long time.Â
His hand comes up to cup yours, the other almost hesitantly running across your cheek. âJames?â You ask again, caught off guard by the odd display of affection.
âIâm sorry,â he mutters. Youâre ninety percent sure youâre still dreaming, heâs never apologized first before. Itâs always been you to broker the peace. Youâll sacrifice being right if it means heâll stop giving you the cold shoulder, heâs never done the same.Â
You try to ask him what heâs talking about, but heâs surging forward before you can speak. His lips are chapped, dryer than youâre used to. He doesnât give you much time to process anything. His hands drift to your waist, dragging you into his lap as he tilts his head to deepen the kiss. Youâre taken aback by the taste of metal on his tongue. Itâs coppery and bitter, not at all like the mint toothpaste you both use.Â
Heâs not kissing you like youâre used to. Heâs not trying to devour you or suffocate you by shoving his tongue as far as it goes down your throat. This is gentle, sweet. It feels like youâre being savored, not claimed. You donât mind it, in fact, it would be nice if you werenât so disturbed.Â
Heâs not acting like himself, he barely looks like he should, and he tastes wrong. This isnât your husband kissing you. You want to pull away, you try to. But his fingers are digging into your waist and your lips are firmly locked. You can feel the chill of his hands through your pajamas. Theyâre like icicles, youâre sure thereâs going to be a mark from them in the morning.Â
âJames,â you manage to mutter, pulling away from him just enough to catch your breath. âWhatâs,â you trail off, tongue growing too heavy to speak. Your words slur together, become one nonsensical jumble stuck in your throat.Â
He shakes his head, biting his lip and slowly lowering you back onto the bed. âIâm sorry. I thought this would work.â You narrow your eyes, you have barely enough energy to shake your head in confusion. Your lips part to ask another question. He leans down, pressing one last gentle kiss to you before your eyes roll back and youâre asleep again.Â
âI told you I have it handled,â James practically pouts as he sits in your armchair. You used to use it to crochet, itâs got the best view of the backyard and you like to watch the bunnies that live under the porch. But more and more, he stays there. Every second heâs home, he seems to live in that chair.Â
Bette had given it to you with the house. You hadnât really thought anything of it, but with how heâs been acting lately, you canât help but wonder if itsâ connected to whatever secrets live in these walls. Most people would be haunted and their husbands would get worse, you seem to be experiencing the opposite.Â
Heâs kinder, heâs bringing you flowers and cooking you breakfast. Youâre woken up with praise and gentle kisses. Then heâs back to normal by lunchtime. Heâs miserable at dinner, only to wake you up in the middle of the night with saccharine apologies. Youâre so sick and tired of living in this whirlwind of love and misery. You just want some goddamn answers.Â
You need to know the truth of whatâs happening to you. Is this just how James is? Is this the house? Is there even anything wrong with the house?
Youâre hoping the medium will be able to answer that for you today. Mystic Wanda, the name doesnât give you much hope but Elizabeth told you sheâs one of the best.Â
Alpine runs against your legs and James glowers at her. âI told you I wanted her out of here.â
âTough,â you respond bluntly, eyes trained on the front door. Heâd thrown a hissy fit when he saw her the morning after your weird make-out session. You hadnât bent, though, and you know heâs still upset youâre no longer blindly giving into his whims.Â
The doorbell rings and you leap off the couch, rushing towards the door and throwing it open. Wandaâs eyes widen in amusement and she smiles at your eagerness. âPlease, come in, and thank you again for coming on such short notice.â
You usher her inside, offering to take her jacket. She passes it to you, eyeing the interior of your home and giving you an appeasing smile. âWell, Elizabeth is a good friend of mine, she told me you were having an emergency and I wanted to help.â
James scoffs from the armchair and she glances over at him with a bemused look. You glare at him over her shoulder. âJames, I presume?â
âOh,â his eyes widen in faux amazement, âdid you divine that?â
Her eyebrows raise and you know sheâs unimpressed. âI could tell from the attitude. Your sister warned me you were a cynic.â
He mutters a bitter, âWhatever,â under his breath and goes back to ignoring her.Â
âIâm sorry about him,â you take her by the elbow, guiding her into the kitchen and away from him. You peer over into the living room, ensuring he canât hear you. Wanda waits expectantly for you to begin speaking.Â
âHeâs why I wanted you to come.â You tell her, fiddling idly with your wedding band. âHeâs not himself lately.â
âMore volatile?â She guesses and you shake your head, laughing bitterly to yourself.
âLess, actually. But heâs unpredictable. I never know when heâs going to be this sweet stranger or the miserable man Iâve grown used to.â
Her brows twitch and a confused smile graces her lips. âMost people arenât upset when their husband gets better.â
âI know itâs odd,â you admit, sighing and looking down at the countertop. âBut, I just need to know Iâm not going crazy. Iâve been dragging this around everywhere,â you push your camera towards her. âEvery time something happens, the feed cuts out. Iâve been dragged down my bed, harassed, made to think Iâm losing my mind.â
You run a rough hand over your face, feeling the aches of this whole experience settle wearily along your bones. âI just need some clarity. Thatâs all.â
âWell,â she reaches for your hand, squeezing it in hers and giving you a comforting smile. âI can certainly help with that.â
Wanda sits in the armchair, having booted James out of it. He seems a little bit more cognizant as he sits beside you, a little more scared. You keep a wary eye on him while Wanda closes her eyes and âconnectsâ with the house, as she put it.Â
She breaks the silence abruptly and it makes you jump. âThis chair came with the house?â You nod silently but you have a feeling she already knew the answer. She hums, running her hand along the arm of it.Â
âIt was his before it was stolen by the man he called friend. He lives in it, watches you from it.â You feel your heart racing, panic steadily rising within you. Itâs like a physical caress, the fear trailing down your spine. âHe wants something, too many things,â she sighs and shakes her head, frustration playing along her fine features. âItâs hard to discern the truth of it all.â
âBut heâs real?â You cut in, imploring her to tell you what youâre desperate to hear.
She gives you a resigned smile, but thereâs no happiness in it. âIâm afraid so.â She shouldnât be so apologetic, this is all you wanted. To know you werenât crazy, to have James hear it too. But when you look to him for some satisfactory celebration, his face is slack.Â
âJames?âÂ
Wanda leaps up from the chair, taking a step towards him. Your husband is gone, any sign of awareness or thought is completely gone. He looks devoid of life, like heâs been a living corpse for weeks. âJames?â You call again, voice threatening to break.Â
His jaw snaps shut and you jump back, rushing off the couch and stumbling towards Wanda. She grabs you, tugging you behind her, and takes in a deep inhale. âItâs him,â she whispers, eyes wide with fear. âIâve never encountered one so strong before.â
You glance at her and then back at James. Thereâs fury playing on his features, and again, those eyes you donât recognize yet somehow feel familiar. âI think you should leave,â he demands, his voice low.Â
It isnât the normal way he commands you. This is a threat, a complete assurance of power. James stands up in one fluid motion, stalking toward Wanda. She goes stiff before you and you worry sheâs going to go slack the same way James did.Â
âNow,â he tells her, eyebrows raised with impatience.Â
âJames, she can help,â you try. His head whips toward yours and you flinch away from the intense look he gives you.Â
âWe donât need her help,â he whispers your name and it almost sounds like heâs pleading with you. Your eyebrows furrow in confusion, you glance between Wanda and James, unsure which to follow.Â
Wanda shakes her head as you take a step back from her. Jamesâ shoulders slump with relief. âDonât do this,â Wanda warns. âI wonât be able to come back here again. Heâs growing stronger, youâll be beyond anyoneâs help soon-â
She's cut off as the light bulb above you explodes. You scream, moving instinctively towards your husband. His arms eagerly wrap around you, drawing you into his gentle hold. He runs a hand over your back and you almost miss the quiet apology he mutters into your hair.Â
âLeave,â James doesnât have to tell her again. She practically runs to the door, nearly forgetting her coat as she rushes out. You slump against him, somehow feeling defeated even after getting what you wanted.Â
âDoll?â He peers down at you, pulling back slightly to get a better look. âAre you okay?â
You stare into eyes you know donât belong to your husband and force yourself to nod. You let this stranger hold you close and ignore the sinking weight of guilt. He feels so much better than James ever did and you hate yourself for thinking that.Â
Your husband is in there somewhere, being tormented by some malevolent spirit, and youâre letting him do what he wants to you. Playing house with him like everythingâs normal. âCome on, let's go outside.â
You canât do anything except listen to him. In the back of your mind, you think about how odd it is that heâs showing himself now. He usually waits until later in the day.Â
How sick is it, you have a schedule for when your husband will be possessed?
He leads you to the back porch, to the rocking chairs that were there when you moved in. but he doesnât let you sit in one. No, he guides you down onto his lap, keeping you close as you get yourself comfortable.Â
James isnât like this. He doesnât let you love him like this. Your touch practically repulses him nowadays. But he canât seem to get enough of you now. Holding onto you like he might not get to again.Â
âWanda said he was growing stronger,â you mutter absentmindly. He goes tense under you, but he doesnât yell at you or get mad. He just squeezes your hand in his, idly tracing shapes over your palm.Â
âI was thinking of planting some rosebushes,â he tells you, completely brushing over what you said.Â
âI thought you wanted to rip the garden out and build a pool,â you tell him bitterly. The neighborhood has its own pool. Youâve been begging James to keep the old ladyâs flowers in the back but he wonât have it.Â
Now, miraculously, heâs giving in to your whims. You donât know if you should be happy or disgusted. Youâre sitting on the lap of something that isnât your husband anymore. You donât feel like you can trust your mind anymore. You struggle to differentiate between your dreams and reality.Â
He laughs a little, brushing some hair out of your face and smiling at you. Itâs not the smile you fell in love with, or the eyes you fell in love with, but you can feel yourself falling. Or, maybe, youâre just desperate for someone to be kind to you. For someone to love you the way a husband should love his wife.Â
âI want you to be happy, Doll.â James doesnât call you Doll.
âMaybe some gardenias too,â you lean back into his chest, letting yourself get more comfortable.Â
You feel his smile against your skin, he turns his nose to nuzzle against your cheek, planting a kiss there. âIâll buy the seeds tomorrow.â You nod absentmindedly, trying to settle the way your stomach flips.Â
3 AM
âJames!â You scream his name, leaping onto his side of the bed and holding onto him as tight as you can. He shoots up, grabbing you and turning you to face him.Â
âWhat?â He demands, face pale with worry.Â
You frown, glaring at him, âYou didnât hear that?â The bedroom door slams closed and you scream again, curling into his hold.Â
âHoly shit!â He shouts, he tries to hold onto you but something grabs his leg. The same way youâd been dragged the first night, heâs pulled out of bed. You scream his name, the bedroom door flies open, and watch as heâs dragged into the hall.Â
You leap over the bed, feet tangled in the sheets as you lunge towards the door. Heâs screaming, primal sounds of nothing but pure terror ripping through the house. You pound on the locked door, tearing at the knob until you think you might rip it off.Â
âJames! Please!â You sob against the wood, slamming your shoulder into it until it cracks. Pain shoots down to your elbow and you flinch back, âFuck,â the screams go quiet on the other side of the door and your eyes widen.Â
âJames!â You screech, your fists pound against the door until you feel the skin crack and blood dribble down your arms. Something cool brushes against your neck, like a breath. âStop,â you plead, âstop it, give him back.â
The door swings outward, the wrong way, and you wonder how the hinges donât break. The only light on is the linen closet. The same closest that you know has a scuttlehole. You donât think, just run towards it. Your bare feet pound against the hardwood, shaking the whole house in your race for the door.Â
You burst through, nearly stumbling facefirst into the ladder. You clench your eyes shut, nails digging into your palms as you look up to see the scuttle hole already open and beckoning you forward.Â
Blood trails up the ladder and you could almost cry seeing it. You canât waste time, canât dawdle. You donât know what happened to James but you know itâs not good that heâs quiet. You force yourself up the rickety ladder, pulling yourself into the attic and looking around for any signs of life.Â
You didnât realize how much junk the old lady had left behind in the house. But the attic is chock full of her past. Dusty and browned filing boxes litter old antique tables. Wardrobes, trunks of clothes from the fifties. A mannequin with an unfinished dress. Thereâs an entire life up here, one she seemed to have just willingly left behind.Â
You frown down at something that really draws your eye, a box with a scrawled B.B. on the side. The lightâs on, but it's dim and only illuminates the box. Still, you try and squint through the dark to find James. Thereâs no sign of him anywhere, you canât help but wonder what the trail of blood on the ladder was.Â
You lean down and pick up the box. âWhatâre you doing?â
You scream, your throat going sore from how much you seem to be doing that tonight. James is on the ladder behind you, a dazed look on his face as he waits for your answer. You tilt your head in confusion, trying to calm your heart from the adrenaline rush that was ten minutes earlier.Â
These are different eyes. This isnât him. Your gaze darts back to the box and you pass it to him. âTake that,â you demand. He doesnât question you, if anything it seems to make him happy. He drops it down the ladder and holds his hand out to help you down.Â
You take it, hissing at how cold his hands are. He only gives you another eerie smirk. Once youâre steady and on the ground, you back slowly out into the hallway. âWhat happened earlier?â
He shrugs, âI donât know. I must have been sleepwalking.â
Your face drops and you scoff, âYou were fucking dragged down the hall and I got locked in the bedroom. You werenât sleepwaking, James.â
He wraps an arm around your shoulder and flips the lights off. Youâre plunged into darkness, a slight whimper ripping its way out of your throat. Youâre forced to rely on his guidance as he leads you down the hall. âYouâre tired, Doll, we should just go to bed.â
You think back to the box, waiting for you in the closet. Thereâs no arguing with him, though. Youâll have to deal with it tomorrow morning. You can only pray that youâre not awoken so violently again.Â
âSweetheart,â you mumble tiredly, swatting blindly at the voice. Thereâs a low chuckle, and then the familiar press of lips against your forehead. âWake up, Iâve gotta go soon.â
Youâre slow to open your eyes, just barely making out Jamesâ blurry shape. âJames,â you mutter, narrowing your eyes to try and force them to focus on his form. âWhatâre you doing?â You asked, words slurring together.Â
He places a tray down on the nightstand and the smells of coffee and pancakes break your dazed trance. You sit up straighter in bed, giving him a confused look. Two years of dating, and a few months of marriage, not once has he greeted you with breakfast in bed.Â
âJames?â you question, he only shakes his head, darting forward to kiss you. Your eyes flutter shut and you find yourself leaning into the touch. It doesnât take long for it to grow heated, his chilled hands drifting under your shirt and tugging you towards him.Â
Youâre finding it easier and easier to simply give in to his whims. Your legs spread over his and you melt into his hold like you were made to fit against him. âShit, Doll,â he huffs against your parted lips, pupils blown wide as he stares up at you. His lips are a pretty pink, swollen, and glistening from your kisses. You almost want to bite them.Â
You hold back the urge, leaning back and giving him a small smile. Itâs enough to make his whole face light up. âYou know how badly I want to stay in bed with you today?â You almost invite him to, but the foggy cloud of an abrupt wake-up finally parts.Â
You remember the box from last night, what you need to do today. So, you pull back from him, his arms releasing you reluctantly. Itâs so peculiar, how his metal hand is warmer than the flesh one. âGoing to work?â
He hums, eyes narrowing in on you suspiciously. You reach for the coffee and take a sip, exactly how you like it. Itâs pathetic that your suspicion grows because you know your husband doesnât know how you take your coffee.Â
âIâll miss you,â you tell him, and itâs the first time you havenât had to force the words out to appease him. It almost feels genuine this time. He gives you a resigned smile, kissing your cheek and leaning back.Â
He pets Alpine, stroking down her smooth white fur and smiling at her too. âIâll see you both later,â he tells you, a promise. You bite your lip and nod. His footsteps echo down the stairs and you leap off the bed, the abrupt move scaring the life out of Alpine. She growls in discontent and stalks off. The door closes and you run to the window, watching the driveway to make sure heâs gone for sure.Â
You race into the hall, throwing the closet door open and dragging the dusty box out. Mildew and mold cling to it, but you donât have time to be concerned with germs. You need answers. You take it downstairs, toss it on the kitchen table, and forget all about your breakfast upstairs.Â
Itâs odd, how much cozier the house has become. Sunlight streams through the windows and warms your seats and couches. You no longer feel eyes in the shadows. A creak is just a creak. Itâs like your fear has just been snatched from you.Â
The thought is enough to unsettle you, but you ignore it for now. Youâll worry about that another day. You toss the lid of the file box inside and what greets you only further irritates you. Piles of unorganized papers and pictures, each of the more faded by time than the other.Â
You pluck out the first one you see and nearly gasp. Itâs James, but not James. A picture of a WWII soldier, in his uniform and posing in front of an army vehicle. He looks just like your husband, but his eyes crinkle a little more when he smiles, his happiness palpable through the picture. Heâs even got a prosthetic arm.Â
You flip the picture over, James âBuckyâ Barnes, is written out in pretty cursive. Directly under it is 1942. You drop the picture, taking a few steps back and shaking your head. âNo, no, nope,â you shake your head, simply ignoring the truth that lay in front of you.Â
Somewhere out there, thereâs an alternative version of your husband who was a WWII veteran and apparently lived in this house. Same fucking name and everything. âOh, fuck me, this is insane.â You glare at the box, not wanting to believe anything youâre seeing.Â
How could your life have devolved into this shitfest, just because you moved into one fucking house? How could one crappy ad in the newspaper have completely turned your life upside down and thrown you into the twilight zone?
You throw yourself into a chair, slumping over the wooden table and taking in grounding breaths. You wanted the truth, youâre going to get it. Even if none of it makes any sense. The next few pictures you grab are all in the same sepia tint. One of him standing in front of the garden, another before a truck, even one in the goddamn armchair currently sitting in your living room. And in each one, he looks as happy as can be. But thereâs something nearly artificial in his smile.Â
You look at the pictures on your mantle and frown. You canât exactly judge him. Youâve got the same smile in all your pictures too. Just slightly off, something about it slightly forced for the sake of the person beside you.
You find one of him with a very unhappy-looking woman. Sheâs pretty, even if she does look a little wicked, and she also looks remarkably like you. What bizzaro world is this? Sheâs nearly identical to you, but she looks goddamn miserable. A hulking blond man has his arm slung around Bucky, fingers just barely grazing the womanâs shoulder.Â
You flip it over and find, Bette, Bucky & Steve at the new house, 1950. Bette, the woman who sold you the house. Who told you what nursing home her kids were sticking her in. You leap up from the table, running to grab your coat and racing out of the house.Â
Bucky glances down at James' phone and grins. He pulls the car into the apartment complex and picks up the call, âHello?â
âWhere are you?â The woman on the other end demands sharply.Â
Bucky sighs, pinching the bridge of his nose and fighting back the spirit surging within him. His left hand twitches without his permission and his eyes narrow in frustration. James was easy enough to subdue last night. He was caught off guard, terrified.Â
Now, heâs pissed off and fighting. Bucky doesnât appreciate the efforts to take control. âI just pulled in. Iâll be up in a minute.â He shuts the phone off and jerks the rearview mirror to face him. The eyes that stare back at him are not his own.Â
âDonât you fucking touch her,â James demands, spitting the words out like he has any sort of power over Bucky.Â
Bucky grins, âWasnât planning on it.â
Jamesâ face falls and his eyes widen with worry. âWhat does that mean?â Bucky flips the mirror back in place, glancing up to the third-story apartment where Martha waits for him. He turns the engine off, slowly exits the car, and makes his way up the stairs.Â
Heâs sure to take his time, enjoying how James grows more and more terrified. It only feeds him, makes him stronger, and grants him more control over him. Heâs getting better at controlling him, finally had enough strength to fully take over last night.Â
Before, he only had the energy to take over the body for a few hours, at most. But the longer he held influence over James, the further his influence spread. Soon, he could leave the house, without having to use Jamesâ body as an anchor. Heâs evolved past anchors and the brick walls that once contained him. He only had one last loose end before he could be with you fully.Â
He knocked on the red door, waiting for Martha to answer. It didnât take long. She threw the door open, face screwed up with rage. âLook who came back. I told you that little bitch of yours wouldnât be good enough for you.â
Bucky kept the look on his face serene. He tried not to show the rage that raced through him at her grating tone. He wanted to rip her tongue out and choke her with it. He wished he could pluck out her eyeballs and serve them to her on a silver platter. A million different ways came to him as he stepped into her apartment.Â
âHello, Martha.â
âThanks for seeing me, Bette.â
Bette kept her hands in her lap, picking at the wrinkles of her skin. âItâs grown so thin,â she looked at you, seeing straight through you. âI used to be like you, so pretty, so young.â
Your face screws up in discomfort and you nod dismissively. âYou know why I want to talk.â
Bette sighs and clicks her tongue. âOh, Bucky,â she says his name forlornly, playing the perfect mourning lover. But you know better, she doesnât mean a damn bit of her grief.Â
âDrop it,â you snap, looking around to make sure no nurses are watching. The white sterile walls of the nursing home loom over you. Betteâs eyes snap towards you, the thin film of dementia disappears and she slumps into her chair.Â
âFine. Dammit, what the hell do you want? You already took my house.â
âYeah, and your damn ghost. I want some fucking answers, Bette.â
She chuckles, the noise bitter and her expression cruel. âYou know, you remind me a lot of Bucky. Got that same kicked puppy look to you that makes me want to smack you around.â Despite your best intentions of remaining passive, you feel your heart twinge in sympathy for Bucky.Â
Betteâs got the same bitter look in her eye that James used to. You donât see much of it anymore. Strange how much your life has changed in just over two weeks. âI thought heâd see you and finally move on. Heâd finally get his damn revenge on me, I mean you look just like me.â
You canât help but agree with her. You slip the picture out of your purse and put it on the table before you. âI saw,â you mutter, glancing down at the uncanny resemblance between you both. âI want to know what happened, Bette. I want to know why heâs stuck in my walls, why heâs stuck in my husband,â you add.
Her eyes widen and her jaw gapes. âHeâs got your husband?â You nod and youâre caught off guard when she begins to cackle. âGod, even dead heâs still the same pathetic, snivelling bastard he used to be.â
You canât help but get angry, you almost want to defend him. Sure, heâs tormented you, but clearly, he had a reason to be bitter about having to look at your face all the damn time. Youâd go crazy too if this was the bitch you were married to.Â
âBette,â you warn, voice low.Â
She huffs and snatches the picture. âNo harm in telling you, I suppose.â She gives you a wicked grin, âNo one will believe you anyway.â
âI met Bucky when I was young, too young. We got married because he was getting shipped off to war. He wanted someone to write letters to, to come home to, and I figured heâd die before I ever saw him again. I could cash in on widowâs benefits. Then the son of a bitch had to go and get honorably discharged for getting his arm blown off.â
Your brows furrow in disgust. Youâve never seen such an evil old woman before. You pray you donât turn into a wicked old hag like her when you get older. âSteve, his best friend, was discharged around the same time as him. Came to live with us for a while so he could get his life in order.â
Bette glares at you and tosses the picture back to you. You catch it before it slides off the table and she keeps going. âSee, some women werenât as loyal as I was. His lady moved on real fast, left him lonely and looking for a warm place to sleep at night. Bucky, well, he just wasnât a man. He obeyed me like a little bitch and took every hit I gave him because he thought he deserved it. Steve never did that, always put me in my place. He was a man,â she hisses out the word and you have the sudden urge to slap her.Â
âOne thing led to another, we were in love and Bucky was in the way. We got rid of him, what else do you want me to say?â
You canât even figure out where to begin. Sheâs fucking despicable. Not only did she not love him, he was utterly devoted to her and she fucked his best friend. Killed him to be with him. Despite this overload of information, only one question comes to you.Â
âWhere did you bury him?â
5 PM
You let out a loud grunt, sweat pouring down your back as you bring the sledgehammer into the brick wall. Thereâs a loud crack and you pause, taking a step back. A moment later a brick slips out of its place. It doesnât take much longer for the others to follow.Â
Thereâs a loud crash as it all comes tumbling down, decades of dust and debris float into the air. It drifts down your nose and creeps into your lungs. You drop the sledgehammer to the cement of the basement with a clatter. You kneel over, waving the dust away and trying to cough it out.Â
Something rolls against the floor, something hollow that clatters against your shoe. You glance down, stunned into silence as a gaping skull stares back up at you. You stumble away from it, nearly kicking it back, and trip right into the warm chest of your husband.Â
Bucky stares down at you, his face blank and devoid of anything you might be able to read. âYou talked to Bette?â
You nod mutely, taking a step back from him. You wince as your heel comes down on something that cracks under your weight. You try to look down, to see what bone youâve just broken, but he stops you. He grabs your chin, tilting your face towards him and forcing you to meet his eyes. âWhat are you going to do?â He demands, he tries to sound strong, but you can hear the fear that trembles under the cool tone.Â
Rest In Peace
Husband, Brother, Friend
James Buchanan Barnes
âItâs a bit morbid isnât it?â You peer up at him and shake your head.Â
âNo, he deserves a proper burial.â You place the flowers on top of the fresh grave and stand. You take a few steps back and Bucky pulls you into his chest. âYou, I mean. I just feel like your memory deserves its rightful resting place.â
He lets out a heavy sigh and you squeeze his hand. âYou think Steveâs in here somewhere?â
You scoff and feel yourself growing angry on his behalf. âHe deserves to rot under a bridge somewhere, along with that bitch.â
Bucky laughs pulling back from you and giving you a wide smile. Itâs genuine, the first genuine smile youâve seen on his face in a long time. âThank you,â he mutters. You shrug, leaning up and pressing a kiss to his cheek.Â
âIâm your wife, Iâm supposed to have your back.â You reach up, pushing a wave back behind his ear. Heâs finally let his hair grow out again. He complains it gets in his eyes when he tries to garden, but you love how it looks on him so he keeps it.Â
His face lights up, the same way it always does when you say youâre his wife. You interlace your fingers together, pulling him away from his grave and back towards the car. Youâre supposed to meet Mrs. Barnes soon, youâre having Thanksgiving dinner at your house tomorrow so the whole family can finally see it.Â
Since the discovery of Buckyâs bones and the literal skeleton in the house's closet, youâve kept family members away from you both for a while. It was a long adjustment period, getting used to the truth and each other. Accepting the fact that James was gone for good wasnât as hard a pill to swallow as it should have been. Â
You have a theory that you both were meant to be with each other, either in the forties or today. Something got messed up in the universeâs timeline and instead, you got James and he got Bette. This paranormal experience must have just been fateâs way of cleaning up what it had ruined so horribly.Â
You look up at Bucky, the way his eyes crinkle even when heâs not smiling, and feel something warm spreading through your chest. You don't mind the cold fingers and chilling touch at night when itâs him youâre sharing it with.Â
You place the turkey down in front of Bucky and he sends you a blissful smile. You canât help but lean over the back of his chair and plant a loud kiss on his cheek. Janey gags, tossing a roll at her older brother. âQuit it, would you, Iâd like to have an appetite.â
You chuckle, taking your seat beside him. Bucky canât help but want to cry. This is what heâs wanted for so long. His family back, the woman he loves to love him back. Itâs what he begged for. The loss of it all had turned him into this bitter, malevolent spirit.Â
As much as heâd like to say he regrets or feels guilt for what he did to Bette, Steve, Martha, and James, he canât. He tormented Steve until he died of a terror-induced heart attack at fifty. Heâd driven poor Bette into the nursing home where her children would let her rot for the rest of her miserable life. Martha wonât be heard from again.Â
And James, poor James. He must have had the worst fate of them all. Itâs been a while since heâs heard anything from James. He searches for him now, his tiny presence lingering somewhere in the back of his mind.Â
Bucky takes your hand, looks at his sisters and mother, and smiles at them. He raises his glass for a toast, slapping at James until heâs forced out of his slumber. Look, he thinks, speaking of all heâs grateful for to you and the other women. They know, he feels James looking through his eyes.Â
He sees the way his family smiles at Bucky, and how much happier they look with him. They know, he tells James, they know Iâm not you. James pounds futilely against Buckyâs walls. He screams and sobs, begging for you to help him.Â
They donât want you, James. They know that the world is better without you. He lets James linger in his misery, he savors his despair, lets it energize him, and then tosses him back to the abyss. James goes quietly, he gave up fighting a while ago.Â
It wouldnât matter anyway. His brief period of rebellion has fed Bucky enough to keep him subdued for the rest of his life. You squeeze his hand, âI love you,â you whisper, passing him the sweet potatoes.Â
He smiles back at you and repeats the same words heâs already said a hundred times to you. This is at it always should have been. Steve, Bette, and James were all stepping stones to get him to you. He wasnât going to let you go now.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the comics/movies Marvel (Winter Soldier), but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
I want you to know Iâm genuinely so proud of you for being able to find the motivation to put out the last chapter. Depression can be a bitch and a half, and congrats on making it through one of the worst months for it. The fact you still pushed through to be able to write shows how strong and talented you are. đ«¶
Also this last chapter was SO well written, you write Arthur so perfectly!!
Oh, gosh, this means the world to me. It's always nice to have words of support, but especially when it's from someone who's practically a stranger. It speaks a lot to your character that you're so kind. I know I've seen you commenting on the story before and I want you to know how genuinely motivating that is when you're in a funk like I was.
I'm so glad you enjoyed the chapter! I can't tell you how many times I came close to just abandoning the fic because it was making me so frustrated. Rewriting it all from Arthur's perspective was definitely super helpful and a lot of fun. I'm happy that you think I captured his character properly, it's always important to me to not make someone as beloved as he is OOC. (An epilogue is in the making btw đ«¶)
Hi! I just wanted to say that I just finished reading broken promises and I LOVED IT. Logan was so so SO well written I could cry!!! You are by far my favorite logan writer and if you ever continued broken promises TRUST i would be the first to read it every time lol!! Regardless, cant wait to see whats next from you <3
YAY! I'm so glad you liked broken promises. I was worried that my stuff for him was going to start sounding repetitive bc it's very easy to do that when you write for the same character so often, but I'm glad everyone seems to be enjoying it.
I don't see myself doing a continuation for it. Mainly because in my mind they traveled around for a while and then discovered Charles' school, but I don't think my writing all that out would be very enjoyable for me or for anyone who reads it.
If requested, I would probably do a few blurbs of them on the road together and her having a taste of the real world for once lmao
hi!! Given my obsession for Hugh jackman I am CRAVING for some Leopold X reader (from Kate & Leopold)! Maybe with some little angst but happy ending??
I love your blog!! Have a wonderful day đœđđ
Leopold Mountbatten x fem!reader a/n: I donât know how controversial this is going to be and I donât care. I could never finish the movie because I hated Meg Ryan in it so much. Itâs so odd, Iâve loved her in everything else sheâs been in but she made it such a hard watch. Maybe itâs because she reminds me of my grandma in the worst way lol, but I finished it for you anon sorry this was a little rushed Anyways, hope you enjoy lovelies Summary: Your neighbor went back in time and dragged someone back with him. He's irritatingly polite and far too interested in your way of life. What are you meant to do when you fall for a man who was never even supposed to meet you?
âHello, madam, please I need your help!â
Youâre used to crazies, it is New York after all. But theyâre not usually shouting at you through your window. Especially not when youâre on the sixth floor. You look away from your coffee and glance towards the fire escape.Â
Thereâs an oddly dressed man with red eyes waving at you through the dirty glass. You offer him a tentative wave back and he nods aggressively. âYes, hello, I need your assistance.â
âUm,â you shake your head, âSorry, I donât have any drugs dude.â
âNo,â he places his hands pathetically on the glass and shakes his head. âPlease, I have been kidnapped.â Finally, you take a step closer to him. You can tell now that his eyes arenât reddened from any medicinal fun, he probably got pepper sprayed.Â
Your friend did it to you once when you tried to surprise her on her birthday and youâll never forget just how awful you looked afterwards. You can see him a bit more clearly now. Whatever odd costume heâs got on, it looks good. Genuine and clean.Â
Not like most of the street performers you see in Times Square. Besides, he doesnât have that maddened look in his eye that makes you worry heâs going to come inside and kill you. Tentatively, you open the window.Â
Heâs leaping through in a second and you jump back with a yelp. He turns towards you and his eyes widen before he quickly turns away. âMy good lady, where are your pants?â
âUh,â you glance down at the oversized shirt youâre wearing and the tiny shorts underneath. Admittedly, itâs a little skimpy, but youâre not walking around naked. Youâve heard of committing to the bit, but this is a bit much. âOn,â you tell him, walking around him and trying to stand close to the phone.Â
âMaâam-â Heâs cut off as someone slams their fist on your front door. You keep a weary eye on the man while you unlock your door.Â
âHey,â Stuart smiles at you. His eyes drift slightly past your shoulder and he goes barging into your apartment. âLeopold! What did I say?â
You huff and glare at Stuartâs frantic back. âThis is yours?â Stuart nods and rushes Leopold out the door. You donât miss the pleading, while slightly scandalized, look he sends you.Â
You slam the door closed behind them, shaking your head and going back to your morning paper. You doubt youâll be seeing him around again.Â
You know, itâs just your luck that your upstairs neighbor is a scientist, one who happens to dabble in the art of time travel. And itâs just your luck that he had to fall down a damn elevator shaft.Â
Now, according to him, you have to care for someone from a different century so he can make it back to his time portal in, well, in time. This is fucking ridiculous. âIâm going to kill you, Stuart.â
âLook, theyâre going to take my phone but he really cannot-â
It goes silent on the other end. You shout his name a few times but hear nothing in response. You assume the hospital staff has finally gotten sick of his shenanigans and has taken his phone. You slam your handset down with a huff and look towards the living room. Leopold hasnât sat down since you walked in and itâs unsettling.Â
âSo,â you start and his attention snaps towards you. â1876, huh?â
He nods and you roll your eyes with a scoff. âOh, this is insane. This is insane,â you mutter to yourself, walking towards Stuartâs door. Leopold gives you a concerned look before quickly following after you. Thereâs a part of you, and you hate that part, that actually believes some of this.Â
Stuart is a brilliant, though flawed, scientist. You donât doubt that he might have actually unlocked the secret to traveling back to the past, but itâs such an insane idea to try and wrap your head around.Â
âCome on, weâre leaving.â You know that Stuart doesnât want him out of the house. Tough. Youâre not going to just stay inside and wait until he can supposedly go back to the past. You donât give Leopold any time to process your answer, already out the door and heading towards the stairs.Â
âYou know,â he starts as he catches up to you. âYou are quite rude.â Your first instinct is to snap back at him. But you take a breath and stop yourself.Â
Youâre desensitized, ridiculously used to just how awful New Yorkers can be to each other. And whether this man is truly from the past or not is up for debate. But he is polite and earnest, and you have no reason to be a bitch to him.Â
âIâm,â the words are hard to come by but you force them out anyway, âIâm sorry.â He looks genuinely surprised by the apology and it only makes you feel worse. âThis is just an insane idea to try and grasp.â
He chuckles softly, smiling as he glances down at his feet. âYes, how do you think I feel?â
Youâre sure itâs not his intention, but you only feel like more of an ass. If this is hard for you, whatever he's going through is a hundred times worse. You werenât forcefully ripped out of your own time and shoved into another you donât understand. Heâs still trying to comprehend the television.
Though, youâre sure being a scientist has helped him in marginally understanding how all of this is possible. âHow do you like the future?â It sounds awkward and stiff, but you havenât had to talk to anyone in a really long time.Â
Your interactions are pretty limited at the book shop considering no one ever comes in. They all order online nowadays and all you really have to worry about is organizing shelves. Youâre embarrassingly rusty when it comes to conversing.Â
And his propensity towards eloquence only makes you feel worse. âI must admit, some of your inventions have been quite fascinating. Iâm especially fond of your showers.â
Your face scrunches slightly at the mention of hygiene and you nod, âI bet.â Before either of you can attempt to salvage this horrible attempt at conversation your phone starts ringing. âHold on one second,â you tell him. You walk a few feet away from him but you can still feel his eyes boring into your back as you move away.Â
âHello?â
Thereâs a frantic shout of your name down the line and then the distinct jingling of keys. âI need you to cover the shop. Marcy just went into labor and Iâve got to go!â Paul doesnât give you a chance to respond before he hangs up.Â
Your jaw gapes and you stare down at your phone with shock. You know Paul and his wife had been expecting, but had it really already been nine months? Has your life become so monotonous and dull that nine months doesnât even register for you?
Itâs a depressing thought. One youâd rather not linger on. âWhat was that?â
You scream, though the people passing by donât pay you any mind, and jump away from Leopold. âJesus, where the hell did you come from?â
Leopold flinches away from you and his face is just as aghast as yours. âGood heavens, what is the matter with you? Do you respond to anything as a sensible woman might?â
âI resent that.â You tell him bitterly. Though, he does make a good point. Youâve been on edge constantly. You always seem to be more anxious than you are happy. Itâs not a good state to perpetually exist in. âI need to go into work.â
You donât want to outright say that he needs to go back to the apartment. It feels a little mean, but youâre hoping heâll catch onto your tone of voice.Â
His entire demeanor perks up and he smiles at you. âWonderful, I am dreadfully curious as to what you do.â
You open your mouth to correct him, let him know heâs not coming. But heâs staring at you with such hopeful eyes that you cannot find it in yourself to turn him down. He seems so excited, youâre sure he wonât be when he gets to your cluttered little bookshop. You let out a weary sigh, âFine. Okay.â
You walk towards the curb, hoping to hail a cab. But Leopoldâs hand gently wraps around your elbow and tugs you in the opposite direction. Your eyes widen in response to his boldness. You thought touching a woman he wasnât courting would cause someone like him to combust. Seems he didnât mind breaking the rules sometimes.Â
You make a mental note of that for later. You donât know what youâre going to do with the information, but you find it intriguing. Maybe the modern world was rubbing off on him more than heâd like to admit.Â
âWe should take this,â he stops you in front of a horse-drawn carriage and you immediately begin to shake your head.Â
âNo, Leopold, these are just tourist traps-â
He doesnât let you finish, opening the carriageâs door and gently nudging you inside. âNonsense! This is far more enjoyable than those yellow monstrosities.â
âTaxi,â you correct. You turn towards the carriage driver and give him directions to your bookshop. âInk and Tea on Fifth.â He nods and the carriage rolls forward with a lurch. You grip the cushioned seats and pray you donât get motion sickness.Â
âInk and Tea?â Leopold inquires. âAre you a journalist?â
You smile and shake your head. âNo, nothing so fancy. I just help take care of an old bookshop. They were supposed to extend the shop when it first opened. They were going to build a space for people to get pastries or drink tea, but it never happened and the owner was too lazy to change the name.â
It feels a little humiliating to be talking about your minimum-wage job to a renowned scientist. Heâs invented or is going to, elevators. He doesnât care about your stupid shop. But he doesnât look particularly judgy of you. If anything he seems to be endeared to you the more you talk.Â
Normally, youâre oblivious to these sorts of things. But itâs nearly impossible for him to hide. Heâs not shy with his attraction, never taking his eyes off of you and hanging onto your every word. Youâre not used to such outward attention.Â
You look out of the carriage, pretending to take in views youâve already seen a thousand times. âThis city is incredible,â he wonders aloud. His awe is palpable.Â
Your nose wrinkles and you shrug. âItâs dirty and the people are intolerable.â
âMust you always be so pessimistic?â You snap your mouth shut and feel embarrassment creeping around you. Youâve never had someone point out when youâre being negative, but he has a point.Â
You used to view the city through the same rose-colored glasses. Somethingâs broken inside you in recent years that has just taken the joy out of life. Everything is grey to you now, until Leopold, nothing spectacular has ever really happened to you.Â
The carriage comes to a stop outside the shop before you can respond to him. You want to deny what he says, but you canât. Your attitude is almost always unnecessary. You think sometimes you might just be trying to see if everyone feels as miserable as you do or if thereâs just something wrong with you.Â
âCome on,â you tell him, getting out and paying the driver. He wanders towards the shop, eyeing the displays in the window curiously.Â
âThese are wonderful,â he tells you, pointing to the way youâd made the books look like theyâre floating above the shelves. It was just some silly little thing youâd tried to get more people in the shop. Itâd worked for about a month.Â
âI did that,â you unlock the door to the shop and open it for him. But he doesnât walk in immediately, instead, he lingers in the doorway. He offers you a soft smile and you canât help but return it.Â
âYouâre more creative than you give yourself credit for.â
Your eyes widen as you watch him walk inside. He keeps making these oddly astute observations about you and itâs throwing you off your game. You barely know this man and youâve always been good at keeping yourself aloof and vague. Yet, he seems to read you like youâre wearing your heart on your sleeve.Â
âFeel free toâŠâ heâs already made himself comfortable somewhere in the back and you trail off. âLook around,â you finish lamely. His form is lost somewhere in stacks of books and cluttered shelves.Â
You know most of the classics and history books are kept towards the back. You wonder if heâs reminiscing or getting a headstart before he gets back to his time. You smile at the thought and walk behind the counter, sitting on the stool and preparing to finish off the rest of the day.
Leopold is still somewhere lost to you an hour later. Occasionally youâll hear a page flip or the clatter of a book being reshelved, but there are no other signs of life. Not until the bell above the door rings.Â
âClark,â you smile, sitting up straighter as your friend walks through the door. âWhatâre you doing here?â
He gives you a crooked grin and shrugs. Just over his shoulder, you can see Leopoldâs head pop over a shelf, he looks between you both, eyes narrowing with disdain. âPaul told me youâd be here, figured you might want some company.â
âActually-â you start, but another voice cuts you off.Â
âLeopold Mountbatten,â he comes around the corner, hand outstretched as he comes in between you and Clark. âAnd who might you be?â
Your brows furrow in confusion at the interaction. Leopold seems oddly hostile and Clark looks strangely caught off guard. âUm, Clark. Nice to meet you, man.â He shakes Leopoldâs hand but his grip is weak and it only lasts for one awkward half-second.Â
Itâs uncomfortable to watch them try and interact and it only gets worse when they turn towards you. Clearly, they want you to tell them who the hell the other guy is. But you feel like that might just make the situation worse.Â
Besides, you were pretty content with it just being you and Leopold, you donât need Clark coming in here and riling things up. âYou know, Clark, Iâm set here. You can just go home.â Your tone leaves no room for argument but you know he wants to.Â
âAlright, Iâll just call you later, I guess.â He throws one last skeptical look at Leopold before finally slinking back out of the shop.Â
âNeither of you should be alone without a chaperone present.â Leopold bluntly scolds you without even waiting a second before Clark is gone. It catches you off guard and you scoff.Â
You motion between the two of you, âWe donât have a chaperone.âÂ
Leopold shrugs, âYes, well, Iâm not courting you.â It shouldnât, because heâs right, but that stings. He is attractive, surprisingly so. You have this odd belief that anyone from his century had to be at least a little ugly. But heâs near perfect.Â
Hearing him tell you so bluntly that youâre not courting hurts a little. Though, you canât blame him. You must be dramatically different than the women heâs used to. From your manners to how you dress, youâre practically an alien.Â
You stand up from behind the counter and walk towards the cart of books that need to be shelved. âClark is a friend. Nothing more.â Youâve never once been romantically interested in your friend. Heâs attractive, but heâs not really your type.
Apparently, British men from the nineteenth century are. Which does not bode well for your romantic prospects once Leopold is back home. âIt is plain for anyone to see how he wants you. Donât let yourself be blinded by naivete.â
âNaivete?â you scoff and turn around to glare at him. âDonât pretend to know anything about me, alright? Iâm not some maiden in a frilly dress who needs a chaperone.â You can see that your words affect him. He looks a little taken aback by your anger and so are you.Â
Itâs misplaced. Youâre not mad at him, just mad that you even like him. âJust go read or something, Leopold.â You dismiss him more rudely than necessary and hide yourself behind a few shelves. The rest of your workday is spent in a tense silence that makes your stomach churn.Â
Youâre nearly ready for bed when something slips under your door with a slight whoosh. You turn towards it, frowning when you see a little envelope with a wax seal on the ground. You pick it up and let your finger slip under the paper, opening it to find a letter with your name on it inside.Â
The handwriting is impeccable, with a gracefulness to it that youâve never seen before. You donât have to read for very long to know who it's from. Leopold writes poetry about the color of your eyes and the way your lips curl when you smile. And then he ends it with a vague, nearly ominous, invitation to dinner.Â
You canât help but smile to yourself, changing out of your pajamas and slipping into something a little nicer. A few minutes later youâre climbing out your window and taking the stairs up the fire escape to the roof.Â
You donât believe your ears at first, thinking the music must be coming from another apartment. But when you make it up to the roof thereâs a violin player there waiting for you. He smiles happily at you as you approach.Â
You spin in a slow circle, taking in the sheer amount of flowers littered around the roof. You donât know how he managed to afford all of this. He transformed the barren and empty rooftop into your own little paradise. Candles lit and a live musician playing for you.Â
Youâve never had anyone do something like this for you, ever. Itâs a little hard to accept that someone would be willing to put this much effort in for you. âI wasnât entirely sure you would come.â
You turn around and Leopold is waiting behind you, that familiar smile playing on his lips. You arenât aware of the grin forming on your face in response. You donât have much control over that when youâre with him.Â
âWhy wouldnât I?â
He looks like he wants to respond but at the last moment thinks better of it. He instead pulls your chair out for you, helping you into your seat. âThis is nice,â that feels too underwhelming a word for such an incredible gesture.Â
You sigh and frown as you try and find the right words. You donât notice him sitting down across from you. You only look up when you feel him placing his hand on your own. âItâs alright,â he assures you.Â
Itâs still so odd how he can know you so well after such little time. âThis is incredible,â you tell him, undeterred by his attempts to soothe you. âNo oneâs ever done something like this for me.â
He looks like he takes personal offense to that and it makes you laugh. âYou deserve far more than this. Sadly, it seems Stuartâs pockets do have limits and Iâm afraid I would have put him into debt if Iâd gone any further.â
You have the perfect mental image of Stuart coming back from the hospital only to find his science project has robbed him. It makes you laugh and you squeeze his hand once before drawing it back into your lap. He lets his touch linger on you for a long moment, seemingly reluctant to pull away.Â
âNo,â you tell him, âthis is perfect.âÂ
You fall into a comfortable silence for a little while. Conversation mostly drifting toward what his life was like as a duke. You donât have much to say about your own life. Itâs been incredibly normal and youâre a little sad to find that you donât have one good thing to share with him.Â
Nothing comes to the front of your mind.Â
Inevitably, you drift into the topic youâd both been so adamantly avoiding. âHas Stuart said when youâd need to return?â
Leopoldâs grip on the fork tightens and for a moment he refuses to meet your eye. âMonday, Iâm afraid.â
âOh,â your eyes widen and you feel something burning at the back of your throat. Monday, the same Monday thatâs two days away.Â
âDance with me,â the suddenness of the demand catchers you so off guard that you forget the tears. He stands, holding out his hand to you. You almost say no, you canât remember the last time you danced and you doubt itâs going to be pretty.Â
But he whispers your name and something about his tone tells you to take the chance while you have it. You slip your hand into his, letting him pull you to your feet. He doesnât sweep you off your feet and dance the night away.Â
Instead, he holds you close and you sway together. Like moving even an inch away from each other would hurt. âYou could come with me,â he tells you. And you know immediately what heâs talking about.Â
You also know it could never happen. Going to the nineteenth century is insane. Even considering it should be enough to have you sent to a psych ward somewhere. Especially not for a man youâve known for less than a month.Â
You try and tell him that you canât, but he stops you. âI know, a preposterous idea. I just wanted to think about it.â You look up at him and find that you canât take that away from him. Thereâs nothing wrong with imagining what it could be like with him. Even when you know it can never happen.Â
You dance like that for a little while longer, swaying against each other while the violin plays in the background. He whispers your name and when you gaze up at him this time, thereâs a certain look in his eye that you know is reflected in your own.Â
He dips down, lips caressing yours gently before heâs pushing more firmly against your own. The world stops. Cliche, youâre aware. For the first time in years, though, youâre alive. You feel something other than the dull monotony of life. You feel excited and terrified all at once. Because you know you can never have this feeling again.Â
You will never meet another man like Leopold who ignites this spark of life and passion within you. Never has a man been able to make you doubt every decision youâve ever made with just a kiss, but here he is.Â
Your arms lift like you might try and draw him in closer. His hands come up, taking yours in his gentle hold and squeezing. He pulls away from you and reality comes crashing back down. Youâre not in love, you canât be. Youâve only just met him a few days ago.Â
Yet, here you are, wondering if you might actually want to leave everything behind to be with him like the great romances authors write about. He smiles at you and thereâs a bittersweetness to it, a final farewell that you know will break whatever is left of your heart.Â
He lifts your knuckles to his lips, pressing his lips against them like he never wants to part. âGoodnight,â he whispers your name and backs away from you. You watch him go, watch him leave, unable to muster up any words for him.Â
You canât think of anything that would ease this gnawing ache inside of you. Nothing to soothe the pain for either of you. You let him go because you know if you asked him to stay he would. And how selfish of you would it be to let history unravel simply because you fell in love?Â
Monday. It is Monday. Youâve been coming to terms with that all weekend. You don't want to think about the fact that Leopold will be gone tonight. Your time together was so brief but you feel like youâre never going to get over losing him.Â
Before the night was over on Sunday, a note was slipped under your door. This handwriting was messy, it made you think someone other than Leopold had written it down, but you donât know who it could have been.Â
It was a date and time, jump off the Brooklyn Bridge at this time on Monday night. Only an idiot would jump off a bridge because of an ominous note slipped under her door. But you havenât been able to take your eyes off of it, not since you first picked it up.Â
Leopold had invited you to go with him. And while you might not have said no, the insinuation was clear. Your eyes dart to your clock. If you left now, you could still make it in time. What an absolutely ridiculous thought.Â
So, why are you running out the door without locking it? Why do you not care who slips into your home now? Thereâs this sense of finality within you that lets you know youâre never going to see that place again and thatâs okay.Â
You never truly felt comfortable in your life. You always thought a part of yourself was missing. Or that you were always running late for something. You think you understand what you were feeling now.Â
The thing youâve been searching for your whole life wasnât halfway across the world, a hundred thousand miles from you. He was on the wrong side of time, or you were, at least.Â
You manage to snag a taxi to get to the bridge but thereâs a traffic jam. Youâre forced to jump out of the car and run through the different lanes of blocked traffic. People shout at you. Your cab driver screaming after you about your fare. You donât care, the only thing you can think about is the note crumpled in your hands and the clock counting down how long you have to jump.Â
Youâll either be on the news tomorrow as an unfortunate suicide. An idiot who accidentally threw herself off the wrong side of the bridge. Or, youâll see Leopold again.Â
You reach the ledge and you canât hesitate. If you do, you wonât jump in time. You close your eyes, holding your breath like youâre jumping into your neighborâs pool. Air rushes around you, whipping at your hair and skin violently.Â
Itâs not until you hear someone shouting down at you that you realize youâre not dead. Youâre lying in the middle of a dirt road, a group of people staring down at you with concern in their eyes.Â
You only have to take in the clothes theyâre wearing to know youâve made it. Before they can react youâre leaping to your feet and running off. You know youâre near the Brooklyn Bridge, or where itâs supposed to be at least. You know enough about the area to remember where Leopoldâs house is supposed to be.Â
Youâre covered in sweat and red mud. The people you pass by in the streets hide behind their hands and whisper about you. Youâre not making a good impression on your future neighbors, thatâs for sure. But, honestly, all you care about is making it back to him.Â
You see people congregating outside his uncleâs home. You know thereâs a party inside, that heâs supposed to be announcing who his wife will be. You barrel through the people outside, shoving through the crowd and running up the steps of the house.Â
You can hear Leopoldâs voice as you run, âThe woman Iâm going to take as my wife is-â
Thereâs a loud gasp as you come panting into the room. You canât catch your breath long enough to speak but it doesnât matter. The crowd is parting around you and Leopold is smiling down at you. He says your name and thereâs nothing else that matters about the world around you. Not when you finally found each other.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Kate & Leopold, but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
I donât trust Sylvie, obviously the biggest rule in Fallout is not to trust anyone. And the fact that Cooper doesnât trust her but trust her with us likeâŠbitchđ
Sheâs about to sell us for our organsđ
He is such a little bitch
No spoilers but how could anyone who grins lecherously ever be trustworthy I mean câmon Cooper
Poly!Ghostface x fem!reader
a/n: Iâve wanted to write for Scream for forever and have never gotten around to it. Well, itâs slasher season baby! I finally have my reason. (When I tell you that this movie was my sexual awakening as a child, I mean it. Thatâs not necessarily good, but itâs true. )
Summary: Visiting a Halloween carnival with your two best friends doesnât seem that bad until you reach the haunted house. Youâve never been able to explain your fear of demons to anyone before, you have no idea where it comes from. But you do know, going into a hell themed house with teenagers screaming shitty Latin at you is one of your worst nightmares. You think everythingâs okay until, suddenly, your nights are filled with visits from a strange shadowy entity and you donât recognize the look in Stuâs eyes anymore. (Part of my Halloween Palooza)
âHey! Demons are a perfectly rational thing to be afraid of.â
Billy scoffs and rolls his eyes, nudging you further toward the haunted house. âAlright, alright, would you calm down and just move it.â You stare into the gaping jaw of the devil that serves as the entrance to the house. You know this is all just a way for people to make a quick buck.Â
Thereâs not going to be anything in there except teenage actors and shitty SFX makeup. But that doesnât make the looming doorway any less menacing. It doesnât make your heart stop racing or your breathing any easier.Â
Billy frowns as some people shove past you all, tired of waiting for you to move inside. They cut the line and you canât help but be grateful. Your nails dig into your palms until you feel the warmth of blood and have to swallow down bile.Â
Stu and Billy both lean towards you, varying looks of confusion on their faces. âHoly shit,â a grin breaks out on Stuâs face and he smiles widely at you. âYouâre terrified, arenât you?â He pokes you like you might be a statue, unmoving and solemn.Â
You stumble back and are effectively broken out of your terrified stupor. You swat at Stuâs wandering hands and glare at him. âShut the fuck up,â you snap. But in your anxious state, it all comes out as one jumbled mess.Â
Billy lets out a disappointed sigh and gives you a funny look. âAlright, letâs just go. Youâre not going in and itâs stupid to just stand out here all night.â Stu opens his mouth to argue but Billy shoots him a sharp look. You hate how sensitive they think you are. You can handle one stupid fucking haunted house. Youâre not completely useless.Â
Still, you practically gulp as the Devilâs eyes bore into yours. You feel like your soul is being sucked out through your feet, leaving you startlingly cold. âI,â you clear your throat, waiting until it feels strong enough to speak. âI can do this,â you grit out, sounding like youâre trying to convince yourself more than them.Â
Stuf lets out a brief chuckle and Billy throws his elbow into his gut. Stu doubles over dramatically and you canât help but laugh a little. Billy gives you a raised brow and you nod your head. âI just need a little nudge,â you mutter, glancing back at the house.Â
Stu grins and creeps behind you. âI got you babes,â he tells you in a ridiculous voice. You barely have a second to process whatâs happening before heâs lifting you up and practically tossing you inside. Immediately, thereâs a fake chainsaw in your face and a screaming Bubba Sawyer. You stumble back with a gasp, falling into Stuâs open arms.Â
âHowâs that for a nudge?â Billy mutters as he brushes past you. You grab onto the back of his shirt and follow behind him. He glances over his shoulder at you with a knowing smirk and continues forward. None of the scares get him, but they get you.Â
The actors catch onto that. They also catch onto how fake and dramatic Stu is. Half of them target you for a good scream and the other half avoid you because of how obnoxious heâs being. You can already tell how bored BIlly is. Thereâs not enough gore in here for him.Â
He needs more blood splatter and fresh corpses, while youâre pleasantly surprised by the contents of the house. Youâd really been dreading the demonic themes, but it seems like thatâs not a huge factor. So far itâs just a few overzealous teens and some spiders on a string.Â
Sure, itâs still scaring the bejeezus out of you. But thereâs a difference between a quick scream and a deeply rooted phobia.Â
You donât know when this supernatural fear of yours began. Maybe your parents let you traumatize yourself with the crucifix scene in The Exorcist too young. But you know itâs been with you nearly your entire life.Â
You think youâre safe, that you can just relax and let yourself have fun, then you reach the final door. The lights are flickering so hard you think you might have a seizure, but you can see enough to know whatâs before you. A red, rotted door, with three upside-down nines barely hanging onto it.Â
âOh god,â you whisper and you think the boys canât hear you. But then you feel Stuâs hands suddenly clamping around your neck and you leap into Billy with a shrill scream. Billy flinches away from the noise, turning to glare at you.Â
Stu doubles over, laughing his ass off at your expense and grinning wildly at you. âJesus, weâre not even in there yet. What is wrong with you?â He says it like a joke but you can hear the truth of it lingering. It stings, the slight cruelty in his tone.Â
Thereâs nothing wrong with being afraid of something. Fear is healthy. The absence of fear is idiocy. You shove past Billy and turn to Stu with a mean glare. âIâm going to go in here and when I get out, Iâm fucking leaving you.â
You shove the door open and take a step inside. You put on a brave face for about five seconds before you turn to see if theyâll follow you. You see just a glimpse of them before the door creaks closed. Billy is leaning against the wall, watching you with a half-amused expression. But Stu looks odd.Â
That doesnât even seem like the right word. His face is completely devoid of any emotion. He looks expressionless and youâve never seen Stu like that before. Whether itâs for good reason or not, heâs always making a face. Right now, you donât even recognize him. Were it not for the outfit he was wearing you would think someone else had snuck up behind Billy.Â
The door is closed before you can call out to him and you find yourself plunged in complete darkness. Thereâs no noise for a long few moments. You canât tell which way is the door and which is the exit.Â
At first, you worry you went in the wrong direction and entered an empty part of the house. A sudden cackle breaks through the air, and you leap forward, stumbling into the wall. You can already feel your heart beginning to race. Even though you can hear the static of a speaker and you know, deep down, that it's fake, youâre frozen in fear.Â
Thereâs a brief flash of light, just enough for you to see torn wallpaper and upside-down crosses. And something standing in the corner. âAll alone?â A voice rasps and you whimper, pressing yourself up against the wall. You canât tell if your eyes are open or closed, itâs too dark to know. You hope theyâre closed. Whateverâs about to happen is going to traumatize you, you just know it.Â
A door creaks behind you just as the lights begin flickering on and off. Through brief flashes of illumination, you see something running towards you. Theyâre screaming Latin at you, water hits your face and you begin screaming uncontrollably. Footsteps pound towards you, egging on the racing beat of your heart.Â
A jarring grip lands on your shoulder and you swing out wildly. Your fist connects with something hard and you hiss in pain. Thereâs a brief pause where the only thing you can hear is your panting.Â
âOw!â Someone snaps, an irritated raspy voice. The lights flick on and you squint against the sudden glare, blinking rapidly to try and lessen the burn on your eyes.Â
Billy and Stu stand on either side of you, astonished looks on both of their faces. A teenage boy in a shitty priest costume and red face paint stands before you. Heâs rubbing his eye and cussing at you. âYou fucking punched me!â
âYou ran at me!â You yell back immediately, glaring at the little asshole. âI donât think youâre supposed to touch me.â
He glares at you through one eye and points to Stu and Billy. âI didnât!â He shouts and you flinch back, grimacing. âYour fucking friend did.â You clench your eyes shut, taking in a deep breath. Both you and Billy turn slowly towards Stu. His face is as red as the kidâs as he struggles to contain his laughter.Â
âUnbelievable!â You snap at him, slapping his shoulder roughly. He jolts, narrowing his eyes down at you.Â
âHey!â He protests, âI was joking around. Youâre the one that punched him.â He points the blame to you and you canât argue. You did, technically, punch him. But itâs Stuâs fault. If he hadnât snuck up on you, you would have just kept on screaming. You never would have touched the kid.Â
In awkward silence, you walk the boy out of the haunted house and buy him a cold drink to press against his steadily swelling eye. You can see purple shining through the fading paint and grimace. He throws himself down on a wooden picnic table and sighs forlornly.Â
âThanks a lot, lady,â he mutters bitterly. Stuâs lips twitch as he watches the kid tug at his costume. You glare up at him and shove him away. He stumbles behind the table shooting you a sharp glare. Youâre taken aback by the look.Â
Itâs not like youâve never gotten a little pushy with him before. His love language was manhandling. But the look on his face is unrecognizable. Youâd thought youâd imagined it earlier, how off he had seemed. But itâs not fake now. Youâre looking it clearly in the eye and you canât deny the truth of it.Â
âIâm gonna sue,â the kid grumbles and youâre snapped out of your stare-off. You try and shake off the chilling feeling of unfamiliarity but itâs nearly impossible. Youâre still wound up from the haunted house, youâre sure youâre just imagining things.
Billy shoves his shoulder and the kid falls back onto the table. âYouâre not suing.â
He puffs his chest up and glares at Billy, âI could.â
Billy places his hand on the table, leaning in on the kidâs space until heâs flinching back. You avert your eyes, uncomfortable with the sudden display of dominance. Yet, you donât stop him from bullying the kid out of a lawsuit. âYou wonât,â Billy tells him, a clear threat.Â
The kid gives a shaky nod of his head, but Billy still doesnât let up. Thereâs a slight curl of malice to his lips, you glance over to Stu for support. His attention is rapt upon Billy, something like hunger in his eyes. You feel like youâre watching two lions corner a gazelle, you can practically see the boyâs hands trembling from fear. Â
âAlright,â you clear your throat and tug Billy back by the shirt. He resists you at first and you know he only backs off because he wants to. Itâs not for you. You look at the boy and give him a weak smile, âI really am sorry,â you can hear Stu laughing behind him and roll your eyes. The kid takes the drink off his eye and glares at you.Â
âYeah, whatever lady. Why donât you take a valium or something and chill the hell out?â He gets off the bench and brushes past you, shaking his head. You glance down at your fist and hiss at the pain shooting along your fingers. The skin of your knuckles is split and aching from hitting him.Â
Billy huffs out a laugh and takes your hand in his. âReally got him, didnât you?â
âI didnât mean to,â you argue petulantly.Â
Stu finally collects himself and rejoins you both, throwing his gangly body on the wooden picnic table. âWhy donât you tell his face that?â He practically snorts, looking down at your hand and then laughing all over again. Itâs really not that funny. Even Billy looks confused by his boisterous nature.Â
Heâs a dick, but this is a lot. You and Billy exchange a confused glance before looking back at Stu. But heâs silent now, already staring back at you both. Again, chills go up and down your arms at the empty look in his eyes. His lips are smiling, but his eyes are devoid of anything.Â
âMaybe we should just go home.â You suggest, trying to keep the suspicion out of your tone. âCarnivalâs a bust,â Billy exchanges one last look with you before nodding.Â
âWe still doing movies at Stuâs?â You desperately want to say no. Right now, all you want is to get as far away from him as possible. Earlier, with them and the kid, thatâs normal. Theyâve always had a bit of a mean streak when it comes to people weaker than them.Â
The way his eyes are boring into you right now is anything but normal. Youâve never felt quite so uncomfortable near him, but you canât ignore the feeling. Every primal instinct of survival is screaming at you to run, but you canât. You canât say no. All you do is nod, tongue glued to the roof of your mouth. Stuâs eyes brighten slightly at your words, but itâs still nothing compared to how it should be.Â
You get ahead of Billy, not wanting to walk next to Stu. All you need is a good nightâs sleep and youâll be over this whole thing. Still, you canât shake the feeling of too many eyes lingering on you as you make the trek to the car. The wet straw beneath your feet swallows the sounds of your steps and you try not to be discomforted by the quiet. Itâs a carnival, where did all the people go?
The black-and-white static of the TV is the only thing to illuminate the room. It shines upon your face, makes it so you can only see in that square of light. You assume Billy is on the ground, passed out. And Stu is probably curled up in the overstuffed armchair.Â
Yet, you canât look. As much as you try to crane your neck, try and find some comfort in their presence, you canât move. Your body is pinned down by a weight you canât see, only feel. This isnât sleep paralysis. Itâs like being held down by someone stronger and bigger than you.Â
You have no control over your body. You have no control over anything. Your breathing kicks up, coming in short panicked bursts. Your eyes roll around wildly, trying to find something, anything, to focus on.Â
You find yourself depressingly devoid of any distractions. Until a shadow creeps along the ceiling. At first, you think itâs just your eyes playing tricks on you. Like when you stare at one spot in the dark for too long and start to see impossible shapes.Â
But this is different. No matter how many times you blink or look away, it keeps moving. You whimper as it crawls over you. It dangles from the ceiling. You see nothing, only feel its eyes on you. There is no clear shape lurking within it, just malevolent malice.Â
It drops down behind the arm of the couch and you open your mouth to scream, hoping to wake one of the boys. Nothing comes out but a strangled gasp of air. You struggle for noise but the more you try, the harder you find it to bring air in.Â
Your eyes swim as you go lightheaded. You almost miss the tendrils creeping over the fabric of the couch. You almost donât see it covering your feet. You wish you had missed it. You wish you just closed your eyes and never opened them again. But itâs like something is keeping those pried open too.Â
You canât feel your legs. Thatâs the weight. Itâs not someone holding you down. Your body is completely limp. Itâs as though your bones were replaced with metal, youâre sinking so far into the cushions theyâre rising around you. Even your fingers are too heavy to twitch.Â
You begin to feel it in your head, a sudden sinking feeling as it tips further and further back. Soon, you can only watch the shadow through your peripheral. Cold terror washes over you and fills your veins with something ill.Â
It covers your legs like a veil, slithering on them. Your thighs shoot apart and the blanket goes flying across the room. You can only let out a choked whimper as it dives between your parted limbs.Â
You shoot up with a gasp, sunlight peers through Stuâs living room windows, filling the room with much-needed warmth. You glance down, fisting the blanket and tugging it up to your chest in relief. Your heart is still racing and thereâs sweat caked along your neck. But you can move your body freely again. It must have just been an awful nightmare.Â
You glance to the side and nearly scream. Stu lounges in the armchair, Billyâs still asleep on the ground. Stu stares right at you, empty eyes, wide smile. âGood dream?â he inquires, but the tone of his voice tells you he already knows the answer.Â
You swallow, fighting the sandpaper feeling of your throat and shaking your head. âNo,â you croak, afraid to speak much louder than a whisper.Â
His smile widens and you feel your head feeling heavy again. âI love a good nightmare,â he admits, like itâs an awful secret. He leans back in the chair and turns towards the TV, mindlessly flicking through the channels.Â
With his gaze off you, you glance down and pull the waistband of your shorts down. You swallow down your tears and bile. Your underwear, like you feared, is gone. You glance towards Stu and narrow your eyes at the back of his head. You have an idea who took them.
Your parents are out of town for the week. Normally that means Billy and Stu infesting your home like pests. Theyâre being oddly evasive when you call, though. Not that youâre complaining. You havenât been interested in being around Stu since the carnival.Â
He makes you feel unsafe. As much of a dick as he could be, never, have you ever feared him before. But you do now. Youâre terrified of him. Even thinking about him makes you want to get up and check your closets for unwanted intruders.Â
However, as much as his absence is a relief, it brings with it its own problems. Nothing with Stu can ever be easy, can it?Â
You keep having the same nightmare. Except each night it gets closer and closer. You feel more of it than you ever want to. Theyâre turning into uncomfortably sexual dreams. You wake up wet and without any underwear. You canât blame Stu for that when heâs not even in your house, though. Which leaves you fucking petrified when you wake up.Â
Because you know, deep down, you know someone wasnât in your house. Something was, though. A heavy presence lingers over you during the day and makes you terrified to walk around the open spaces of your home. Youâd lock yourself in your room all week if you could, but even that doesnât feel safe.Â
The door slams behind you and you jolt forward with a scream. You stare at your backdoor with a horrified expression, glaring at it like it might start talking and reveal its secrets. Your house is old, thereâs nothing odd about doors occasionally closing on your own.Â
Except, that hadnât been open. Youâve kept it firmly locked all week, terrified of a possible home invasion. You need to stop watching scary movies on your own.Â
You pull your knees into your chest, staring at your door until youâre satisfied itâs not going to slam shut again. Slowly, you turn back towards your TV and keep watching the only good sitcom you could find at this time of night.Â
The second you let yourself get comfortable, however, you hear your bedroom door upstairs slam shut, followed quickly by rushing footsteps. Your eyes widen in terror and you mute your TV, glaring up at the ceiling and hoping you just imagined it.Â
Footsteps behind you, running across the linoleum. You whip around, nearly shrieking when you spot something black darting into your pantry closet. You scramble for the phone beside you. You slam 911 into the keypad and press it against your ear, keeping your eyes riveted on the pantry closet.Â
Thereâs a steady beep on the other end. The lineâs dead. Someone cut your phone line. Thatâs okay. You can work with that. You can beat something real, but youâve got no hope against something otherworldly.Â
You stand slowly, unmuting the TV so the laugh track will cover your movements better. You creep towards your linen closet, reaching for the bat your dad keeps in there for this very reason. Heâs got different weapons placed all over the house and you blame him for some of your paranoia. But right now, youâre eternally grateful for the protection itâs providing you.Â
You slip into the kitchen, sliding quietly across the tiles on your socks. You position yourself behind the pantry door, your hand shaking as you reach for the handle. Just as you rip it open, the lights go out.Â
You scream wildly, waving the bat around with as much force as you can, hoping to just hit something solid. Glass crashes against the floor and you feel the bat connecting with something. The lights flip back on and your motherâs vase is shattered along the ground. Thereâs no sign of the intruder and you think you might throw up when you hear more footsteps upstairs, two sets this time.Â
But then someone darts through the living room, another flash of black before theyâre gone. Three? How are you supposed to handle three?
Something titters behind you, bordering on a giggle, and you whip around, bat waving through the air recklessly. No one was there, no sign anyone was. And thereâs no possible way for you to have missed them running past you. Thereâs nowhere to go or hide.Â
You think of the shadow youâve seen in the closet and the lights flicker like theyâre agreeing with you. The thing thatâs been haunting your nightmares, itâs in the house with you. The lights flicker again and your stomach drops to the floor. Your heart is in your throat as you hear your voice chanted from upstairs. Â
Itâs like staring at the Devilâs eyes at the circus again. You feel like thereâs something being taken from you. You feel cold, empty, like youâre missing something you need. Somethingâs toying with you. Making you itâs twisted little plaything.Â
You can feel the tears clawing their way up your throat. The call of your voice gets louder and louder until it feels like it's being screamed straight into your ears. You want to run, want to fight, want to do anything but stand here and you canât.Â
You canât move. Itâs just like your dreams. Your bones are metal and you are stuck. Thereâs a rough shove to your back, though you donât feel physical hands on you. And then someoneâs moving you, your legs are puppeteered as youâre directed up the stairs.Â
You stub your toes on every step, crawling up them like a child learning to use them for the first time. Every time you slow down or try and stop, youâre dragged forward again. Your bedroom door creaks open and warmth carves its way down your cheeks.Â
You stumble inside, the bat thudding to the floor as your hand goes limp around the handle. You want to call out to the entity, but your jaw is wired shut. You stand in the middle of your room, sobbing and terrified and completely alone.Â
Your closet door slowly creaks open and you brace yourself for the worst. Billy comes flying out, shouting nonsense at you as you scream until your throat feels bloody. Stu follows behind him, ripping off his stupid mask and giving you a wide-eyed look.Â
You crumple to the floor, covering your head and crying as you come down from the fear that you are being haunted. Stu kneels before you, hands gentle as they take your arms away from your head.Â
He looks like Stu now. He looks like the boy you grew up with. His eyes are full of worry as he pushes wet strands of hair off your cheeks. âHey, hey, alright,â he tugs you into his chest and you throw your arms around him wildly. You cling tightly to him, taking in heaving breaths and trying to find some comfort from his touch.Â
âYou fucking dicks,â you sob into his sweater. âI thought I was going to die.â
Billy scoffs as he stares awkwardly behind him. âYeah,â he mutters bluntly, âI can tell.â He watches you cry for a little while longer before he gets irritated. âHey, this was supposed to be fun. Would you lighten up?â
You suck in a deep breath, astonishment at what he just said temporarily stopping the tears of terror. You rip yourself away from Stu, ignoring the way his hands linger. âExcuse me?â You demand, glaring up at Billy.
He shrugs, âIt was just a prank, chill out.â
You scoff, taking in a sharp breath and nodding your head. âRight, no, youâre right. Itâs not like my friends used my biggest fucking fear against me!â You shout, shoving him backward. He stumbles into the corner of your desk and you glare at him and Stu.Â
âYouâre horrible fucking friends, you know that.â You storm out of your room and pause at the top of the stairs. They linger in your doorway. Stu looks like a kicked dog and Billy looks like heâs about to blow the hell up.Â
âI donât even know how you guys pulled all that shit off, but fuck you.â You give them both an astonished glare before shaking your head and going back down the stairs. âI hate you,â you scream, your voice shrill and full of uncontrollable rage.Â
Billy almost follows after you, probably to give you a shit apology and then let everything smooth over naturally. But he stops, foot hovering over the top of the stairs. He glances back at Stu and frowns, âWhat the hell did you do?â Stu gives him a confused look and Billy glares. âShe wasnât supposed to be terrified for her life, fuckwad. What the hell did you do to her?â
Stu shrugs and gives him a too-wide grin and for the first time, Billy finds himself disturbed by his friend. âMagicianâs secret man, cannot, will not tell.â He zips his mouth shut and tosses the key, winking at Billy. Billy gives him a disgusted scoff and follows after you. They can hear you ranting in the kitchen, slamming your drawers shut, and shouting vile insults at them.Â
Stu watches Billy go down the stairs, his smile slowly fading from his face. Something dark passes over Stuâs face, something wicked, something unnatural. Perhaps it was all just a trick.Â
Or maybe that kidâs Latin wasnât so fake after all.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Scream, but this writing is my own all rights reserved © not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
Had my first shift at my new job today
Manager is already trying to overschedule me
and an old man grabbed my arm in the creepiest way possible - he squeezed it, that's not necessary đ
hoping to have something posted for you guys tomorrow
Belle ll 21 II she/her ll Current Obsession: Charles-RDR2 ll Requests CLOSED Masterlist ll Nameless blogs = blocked ll Ao3 ll
248 posts