
Energetic African American girly 19 living in the USA đșđž đŠ Autistic, Dyslexic, BIG Maladaptive Daydreamer
68 posts
Hi There ,
Hi there đ,
My name is Mohammad, and Iâm reaching out in a moment of desperate need. Iâm a father of three young children living in Gaza, and we are caught in the midst of a catastrophic war. Our home is no longer a safe haven, and the future here seems increasingly uncertain. đ
Iâve launched a fundraising campaign with the goal of raising $40,000 to relocate my family to a safer place where my children can grow up in peace and have a chance at a brighter future. đïžđ”đž
Unfortunately, my previous fundraising efforts were abruptly halted when my account was terminated without explanation. However, I remain determined to keep fighting for my familyâs safety and well-being. đ«¶
If you could take a moment to read our story, consider donating, or simply share our campaign with others, it would make an incredible difference. Every act of kindness, no matter how small, brings us one step closer to safety and a new beginning. đ
Thank you for your time, compassion, and support. â€
https://gofund.me/fd1faea2 đ
Always here to support ÙÙ۳۷ÙÙ đ”đž đ©·
More Posts from Babydollcod
It's 6am and I'm trying not to cry. My chest hurts. Your writing is so poetic and silky smooth, and beautiful. It's like a drug with no cure. I'll never be able to stop reading
thinking about mob baking simon a cake for his birthday (without his prior knowledge) mm good soup
mail-order bride
"you think he likes chocolate, baby?" you ask the cats. they sit side-by-side at the breakfast counter, being good girls as they sit on their chairs and watch you mix batter. "he totally likes chocolate. big boys like daddy love chocolate, don't they, girls?"
you grease two circular pans, pouring the chocolate cake batter into them. you set them in the oven before getting to work on your chocolate buttercream. you're using the new mixer simon bought you--it's beautiful, stainless steel, heavy. when you saw in the store a few weeks ago, you gushed at it, telling simon you saw someone make cinnamon rolls, bread, cakes, all in this mixer, but when your eyes skimmed over the price, you said nothing more, just smiled up at simon and let him lead you over to where the cast iron pans were (you wanted a real one).
a few weeks later, you noticed it on the kitchen counter. sparkling silver, right there, with the whisk attachment on it just waiting for you. and in the cupboard, ingredients--bread flour, powdered sugar, cornmeal, corn starch, dutch process, baking chocolate, whole wheat flour--all for you to play with. and when you baked him the most decadent triple chocolate coffee cake he had ever had, he bent you over the same table his empty plate sat and ate your cunt out with your apron still on. when you kissed him afterwards, he still tasted like chocolate.
you turn off the mixer, reaching in with a spoon to lick the buttercream off of it. you hum with delight, setting it aside, and when the oven timer dings, you pull the cakes out to let them cool.
you wrap simon's present as everything settles. special order, a favor you called into johnny. it's in a nice wooden box, and you tie a big red bow on it, and when you go back into the kitchen, you level and stack the two pieces of cake between buttercream and use a spoon to make a fancy decoration over the top of it.
the front door sounds as you're putting the finishing touches on the cake. you can hear him coming closer, and you gasp.
"no, no, no, don't come in the kitchen yet!"
"wot?"
"just--wait a little bit in the living room, okay?"
"for wot?"
"simon--" you groan. "please? for me?"
you don't hear anything after that except for the tv turning on. when you finish putting the last candles on the cake, you light them, picking up the plate and coming into the living room.
simon looks surprised. he was concentrating hard on the tv, watching the game, but his face relaxes when he sees you holding the cake. the cats perk up from where they're laid down beside him, and their ears flit as you start to sing happy birthday.
his whole face twitches. he stiffens, his palms flat on his thighs as he grips them tight. you set down the cake on the coffee table in front of him, candles glowing as you take a seat next to him. he's still staring at the cake as you finish the song.
"happy birthday, dear simon...happy birthday to you."
you smile at him, wrapping a hand around his bicep, squeezing it gently. you kiss his shoulder before motioning to the cake.
"you can blow them out now, simon," you say softly. "make a wish."
he doesn't move. he stares straight ahead, his eyes fixated on the flickering candles. you reach down and take his hand in yours, intertwining your fingers and hugging his arm. you sit with him quietly, looking at the cake with him, and after a minute or so, you turn back at him.
"simon?" you whisper.
he's crying. you put a hand on the back of his head, scratching his short hair, and you cup his face gently as you wipe his tears. he's silent. the tears come, but he still doesn't move, still won't meet your eyes. you smile, going over to pick up the cake, and you hold it in front of him.
"here...make a wish, simon," you say softly. he picks up his sleeve and wipes his face, leaning over to blow out the candles. you put down the cake, standing up to go get his gift sitting on the kitchen table. when you sit down next to him again, he's still staring at the cake, still trying to pretend his face isn't wet with tears, but he stops wiping them when you place the box in his lap.
he unravels the bow. when he opens the case, he lets out a little chuckle, smoothing his hand over the foam inside.
there are an array of throwing knives laid before him. perfectly crafted, in different shapes and sizes, and when he picks one up and twirls it around between his fingers, the weight of them and the ease at which they move tells him you only picked out the finest quality. they're beautiful, and it's a thoughtful gift, and when he closes the lid on the box, he still can't meet your eyes.
"i'll cut us some cake," you say softly. you busy yourself getting plates and a cake knife from the kitchen, cutting generous slices before handing him one of the plates. he picks up the fork, and when you notice his hand shakes, you take the plate back from him gently and scoop a bite onto the fork for him. you don't say anything, just hold it up to his mouth, and once he takes a bite, you set the plate down and watch as he chews.
when he swallows, you sit again in silence. you reach over and take simon's hands in your own, squeezing them gently before bringing them up to your mouth to kiss softly. when he finally looks at you, all you do is smile.
he hadn't even remembered it was birthday. he never told you when it was, but he supposes you must have been curious enough to look for yourself. he can't remember the last time someone made him cake. he can't remember when he last received a gift, especially one like this. he doesn't know when he last thought himself happy enough to celebrate anything at all, but there is no other way he would've wanted today to go.
joy. you bring uninhibited, unfiltered, all-consuming joy. the way you're smiling at him--he can already see you in the kitchen in that apron, baking this cake, talking to no one but the cats as you carefully decorate it. the way you're looking at him--he knows you dreamed about this all week, scheduling the day so you could have the cake done as soon as he got home.
and chocolate. his favorite. decadent, sweet chocolate--it's still under his tongue, and he wants another bite already, he cannot wait to devour the slice that waits for him on the table.
"happy birthday, simon," you whisper, and when you lean in to hug him, he cradles the back of your head, tangling a hand into your hair as he presses you to his chest. "i love you."
fuck. fuck, fuck, fuck--
"love you, too, baby."
"what did you wish for?" you mumble into his shoulder. simon snorts a little, shaking his head.
"if i tell ya, it won't come true."
"oh, yeah," you giggle. "keep your secrets then."
he doesn't want more; the only thing he wishes for is more time. more time with you. as much as he can get. to live long enough that he gets to see your face for as long as possible.
that whatever he sees for the last time will be you and you only.
It was so beautifully written, it was almost poetic. The part with Johnny sitting next to her has to be one of my FAVORITE parts of this story. The pain and bliss painting line, ugh. You know how to write a story honeyđâïž
Cherry Red, Crimson Blood
Chapter 37: The Silence
Summary: Tensions are at an all time high in the pack as an eerie silence settles over the cottage
Pairing: Poly 141 x reader
Word Count: 6,069 words
Warnings: Angst, heavy emotions, arguing, medical stuff, injuries, descriptions of pain, brief discussion about strangulation, so much crying, Alpha/Beta/Omega dynamics, Alternate Universe, panic attack, PTSD, language
A/N: Uh yeah, this one did emotional damage. Prepare yourselves.
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They stand there watching like four knights in a tower guarding their kingdom. Their eyes are glued ahead, staring through the glass out into the backyard. Theyâre alert and watchful, eyes assessing and scanning for any threats. There are none except for your trembling legs.
They stand there watching like four knights guarding their princess. None of them are brave enough to move, none of them dare break the moment. They canât help but wonder whatâs going on in your head, what drove you to push past the pain and exhaustion to shuffle your way outside.
Panic bubbled in Kyleâs chest when he saw you shuffling your way across the living area. Heâd nearly intervened when you stumbled, but Johnâs hand on his chest stopped him. You were in your own world, oblivious to everyone and everything as you shuffled determinedly toward the back door. Theyâd silently followed you, Johnny and Simon joining them when they descended the stairs.
All youâve done is stand out there. It feels like itâs been an hour, but itâs been less than five minutes. Youâre frozen there, all except for the tremble of your legs and the subtle shake of your shoulders.
Youâre crying.
It hurts his soul. It tears through his very chest as he watches you. He wants nothing more than to run out there and take you in his arms and soothe your tears.
He canât.
He lost those privileges when they left you, when they betrayed you, when they abandoned you. It may have been Johnâs choice, but they were all complacent in it. None of them fought that decision, none of them questioned it. Would John have changed his mind if they did? Could they have avoided all of this if they had just questioned their alpha, their captain?
Not all of it would have been unavoidable.
You would have still been hurt. You would have still been traumatized. There was no guarantee Graves would have held off, even if they came for you in the first place. Things might have been worse. Graves might have gotten impulsive as soon as he realized the outcome of his own situation.
Shepherd fucked him over too in the end.
Things happened the way they did and they canât change that. Thatâs what Christine keeps telling them. The past is the past and you can only work to build the future.
Itâs going to take a lot of work.
âHow long has she been out there?â Christine asks, stepping up next to them.
âAbout four minutes.â Simon answers.
âShe shouldnât be out there like that.â Christine goes to move to the door, but John stops her.
âLet her have a moment.â He says, still staring out the window. âShe needs it.â
Christine lets out a quiet huff but she doesnât move, turning her gaze out the sliding glass door as well.
You continue to stand there, frozen like a statue. Time passes slowly, all of them captivated by the silent moment theyâre witnessing. Itâs almost hypnotic. The fading light, your figure standing there surrounded by grey skies and green earth like some sort of painting.
Pain and bliss.
Thatâs what heâd title it. He knows thatâs what you must be feeling. Pain, visible and invisible from wounds that go far deeper than the flesh. Pain in its purest form as you stand there under heavy grey skies that echo the heaviness in your mind. The bliss echoes from Johnâs words, his reveal of your desire to see the ocean again, to stand on its shores and let its essence consume you.
It all makes sense now. No wonder you would cling to him the most, press your face into his neck and just breathe. His own briney scent was a gateway to what you desired in your landlocked position. How long had you been holding that desire in? Were you disappointed when you rolled up on their doorstep to find yourself still far away from the sea? You hid that desire from the knowledge that, as an omega, your wants and needs would always come last, in the knowledge that their jobs would come first and you would be at the mercy of that job.
His eyes burn with tears as he stares at you.
You begin to tremble more and more the longer you stand there, shifting on your feet. It breaks the haze theyâve all been frozen in, the five of them snapping back into reality. Christine is out the door before any of them can move, hurrying to your side. She wraps an arm around your back, careful not to touch your left arm as she steadies you. Kyle jumps into action automatically after her, hurrying to your new designated room to grab the wheelchair. With how much effort it took to walk out there, you wonât be walking back in.
He wheels it out, holding it still as Christine maneuvers you into it. As much as he doesnât want to, he turns, slipping back in the door as Christine wheels you towards the house. The four of them watch as she passes, time pausing as they stare at you. You donât look up at them, don't acknowledge them at all. Your gaze is turned down in your lap, head lowered as you hunch, shoulders rounded.
Pain and exhaustion are weighing on you from your exertion as Christine takes you back to your room. How heavy the world must seem from the combined weight of your physical and mental injuries. The state of your mind would be one thing, but being stuck in a temporary handicapped state due to your physical injuries must be driving you nearly insane. Thereâs no getting away, no isolation. You canât even walk fully unaided yet.
Thereâs no freedom.
All of them share a look in the heavy silence, understanding without even needing to say a word.

The mug is burning his fingers but he canât bring himself to care. His gaze is locked, mind focused elsewhere. He hasnât moved in so long his joints are aching, but he canât find it in himself to even shift his position.
âDrinking it black?â His fingers twitch as Kyle takes the seat next to him, his own mug of tea in his hands. It clunks as he sets it on the table before he lowers himself into the chair with a sigh. âThatâs low even for you.â
Simon lets out a grunt, eyes still focused out the sliding glass door.
âSheâs fine.â Kyle says, pulling out his phone. âThe Doc wonât let anything happen to her.â
âDonât like that sheâs out there alone.â Simon says, finally releasing the mug, squeezing his burning fingers into his palm.
âTechnically sheâs not alone,â Kyle says, giving him a sideways glance. âWeâve been over this. Weâre perfectly safe here.â
âFor now.â Simon lifts his mug to his lips, ignoring the burn of the tea on his tongue. Heâs long become numb to that sort of pain.
âNo one knows weâre here except Kate and my sister. Neither of them would say anything, no matter what.â Kyle turns his gaze back to the sliding glass door, to your figure huddled in the chair outside. âSheâs where she needs to be right now.â
Footsteps thud down the stairs, John letting out a groan as he reaches the bottom. He takes a moment to stretch before heading for the kettle in the kitchen.
âRough night, sir?â Kyle asks, taking a sip of his tea.
âIâve slept worse.â John grunts, grabbing a mug from the cupboard.
Both of them had tossed and turned last night. Simon had listened to the occasional creak of the bed frame as they turned. He knows thatâs what it was. Theyâre not ready yet. None of them are. Things are too fragile, too frayed.
âAnyone thought about breakfast?â John asks.
âStill some eggs left, and some bread. We need to make a store run soon.â Kyle says.
âToday.â John says, pouring water into the mug. âA lot of things we need to pick up.â He turns to face Simon and Kyle, leaning against the cupboard. âSimon and I will go.â
Simon shifts in his seat, his hand tightening around his mug again. âThatâs not a good idea.â
âWhat, youâre doubting our ability to watch the house?â Kyle says, turning to Simon.
Simon glances at him, his eyes hard. âNo, There should just be an alpha here at all times.â
âReally? Because that sounds a lot like you donât trust Johnny and I.â Kyle says, getting angry.
âEnough.â John says, setting his mug down on the table. âWe keep fighting amongst ourselves, nothing is going to get better. Tensions are high, but none of this is about us. We have to keep our heads on straight for the sake of our pack, and our omega. Simon and I will go to town today. Thatâs final.â
Kyle and Simon both lower their eyes to their mugs of tea as John takes a seat at the table. He is right. Fighting amongst themselves will only make things worse for you. Youâre already struggling, and the bonds fraying further will only cause more damage, more stress for you. Their bonds with you are delicate enough. They canât risk the bonds between themselves getting any thinner. They have to be strong for you. They have to be strong for each other. They have to be strong for the pack. The whole pack.
It falls silent between the three of them as they sit there, sipping their tea. Johnny is the only one still in bed. He cried most of the night last night. Heâs cried most of the night the last three nights. Heâs probably shed more tears than you have.
Simon feels stuck in the middle, like heâs being torn in two separate directions. He got up in the night to free himself from the sounds of Johnny crying just to hear your own quiet sobs through your closed door. Each broken sob had his heart splitting in half, the ache in his chest getting worse and worse. He was sure he was having a heart attack that first night, his chest compressing and squeezing, his hands going numb from how tense his body was.
He wants to reach out and make it better, but he canât bring himself to. Johnny will just shrug him off, and you wonât even look at him. Even John and Kyle are distant, gravitating further and further away. The gravitational field in the center of their pack continues to get bigger and bigger, forcing them further and further away from each other, and none of them know how to stop it. Theyâve lost their point of equilibrium. Theyâre all spiraling further and further away. Eventually that gravitational field will dissipate and theyâll be left free-floating through space and time.
They all turn to look as the sliding glass door opens and you crutch your way in. Dr. Keller is right behind you, closing the back door before guiding you back to your room, the blanket you had been draped in folded neatly over her arm. Youâre moving better, even just in two days since their arrival. Steadier on your feet, walking better with the crutch. You even look a little better, more alive than you were when you arrived here.
They all watch you walk to your room, but you donât spare a glance their way. You havenât looked at any of them in two days. You havenât spoken a word to them, to anyone, in two days.
Kyle gets up to make breakfast as soon as youâve passed, broken from the spell as Dr. Keller gets you settled in your room. Youâre almost hypnotic now, all of their gazes drawn to you as soon as you enter the room. Theyâre all thinking the same thing every time you pass. Maybe this will be the time you finally look at them, when you finally glance their way. What he wouldnât give to have you smile at him, give him that cheeky little grin after sassing him.
Little shit.
His hand tightens around his mug again as guilt floods him. Youâve sunken into an empty shell because of them. They sucked the life right out of you. They dragged you into this and failed to do what they were supposed to do. Anger bubbles in him as he thinks back to that moment. He should have fought back. He should have used his position to change Johnâs mind, or forced him to change it. He should have stepped up for you.
Heâs not your alpha.
He almost wishes he was.
He stares down at the scabbed imprint of your teeth on his skin. He should pick up a bottle of ink in town, tattoo that mark on his skin forever as a reminder of both you and what he did to you.
âHow is she?â John asks when Dr. Keller enters the kitchen. Simonâs shoulders square as she passes him, having been so lost in his thoughts he hadnât even noticed her enter.
Bloody hell, heâs as bad as you.
âAs good as she can be.â She sighs, grabbing a can of soup out of the cupboard. You wonât get the eggs and toast Kyle is making. Your diet consists of soup and only soup.
âHasnât said anything still?â John asks, turning to look at her.
âNot a word.â Dr. Keller shakes her head. âIâd be worried, if it wasnât expected.â She pulls out a pot, opening the can before dumping the contents in. Chicken noodle. The staple soup in your diet. âStrangulation can be a hard thing to recover from.â
âI know.â Simon winces, taking a sip of his tea.
The doctor gives him a sympathetic look. He doesnât want it. âShe had some mild damage done from it, which will take time to heal. And, everyone deals with trauma differently. Silence isnât that unusual of a response.â She puts the pan on the hob, turning the heat on. âIf I was worried, you would know.â
âThank you for looking after her.â John says, nodding at the doctor. âYou didn't have to stay.â
âI made a promise.â She says, stirring the soup. âShe's still my patient, even if the initiative was bogus. I still have a duty to perform as her doctor. Kate wouldn't have chosen me from the start if I was the type to just up and leave as soon as I found out my job wasn't actually real. I care about her a lot, and I want to help her get through this.â
âWe all owe a lot to you.â John says. âWe wouldn't have made it this far without you.â
âNo,â The corner of her mouth twitches. âYou probably wouldn't have.â

Christine lets out a quiet sigh as she steps into your room. You're in the chair by the window, your usual spot when it's too damp and cold to sit outside.
It's dark in the room aside from the light coming through the window. Itâs always dark in the room, except at night when you sleep with the bedside lamp on. She flips that lamp on, not wanting to blind you suddenly with the overhead light. Youâve been blinded by enough bright lights over the last week. Nearly a week and a half. It feels like so much time has passed, yet it still feels like yesterday when she was coming to in her office after being attacked and drugged. The terror sheâd felt upon finding you missing still fills her stomach, and she finds herself getting up in the middle of the night to check and make sure youâre really there.
Sheâs not the only one that does it.
The paper bags in her arms crinkle as she carries them over to you, setting them on the other chair. Your gaze is far away, staring off at the grey, stormy sea in the distance. How fitting the weather is, both for you and the members of the pack. The tension between them is still palpable, all of them moving stiffly around each other. Theyâve lost the natural fluidity of a pack comfortable in their bonds. Theyâre stuck, and they canât, they wonât, heal until you do. They wonât allow themselves to until they know youâre willing to at least try.
âJohn and Simon went to town and did some shopping. They picked up some things for you.â She says softly, breaking the heavy silence in the room.
You donât even turn to look at her.
âMore warm clothes.â She continues, looking in one bag. âAs well as some boots.â She pulls a box out of another bag. âA nightlight, so you donât have to keep using the lamp.â She looks in the third bag, the heaviest one of the three. âAnother stuffed animal.â She says, pulling out a stuffed bear. Itâs a nice thought, but sheâs not sure youâll even want to touch it. âAnd some books.â She says, pulling the stack out of the bottom of the bag.
Thereâs three of them, ones not in the collection on the shelves in the living area. Some of your favorites. Theyâre trying, putting in efforts to try and make you as comfortable as possible in the only ways they can right now. She sets the books on the side table next to you, taking a long look at you as you sit there.
You havenât picked up a book in the two days theyâve been at the cottage, though sheâs not surprised. Youâve been in and out of it, sleeping off the pain medicine, or sitting in a haze, mind far away from the cabin. She wonders where you are, where your mind is going. Out on the water? Out on the beach? Or maybe somewhere back in your memories where itâs safe. Receding back somewhere when life was easier and safer.
Are you thinking of your mother? Are you imagining her here with you?
Her heart hurts for you, being torn away from her at such a pivotal moment in your life. If she had the ability to find her she would. If she could track down your mother and bring her here for you she would.
You begin to sniffle, almost as if you can somehow read her thoughts. The tears are falling, streaming down your cheeks again. She doesn't say anything, she doesnât have to as she stands there beside you, gently stroking your hair. Sheâs seen many things in her time as an omega specialist. Sheâs had patients that have gone through things that would make even the most seasoned doctorâs stomach churn. Sheâs helped omegas that have been pushed to the brink of insanity, omegas pushed to the brink of death. Yet none of them have affected her the way you have. Maybe itâs because sheâs never been quite so invested in an omegaâs life before, never been quite so inserted into an omegaâs reality.
If she was a better doctor, she might have refused to stay here, keeping distance between herself and your pack. Sheâs gotten too close, pushed past the barrier of professionalism. If she was a better doctor, sheâd distance herself, stick to the decorum and expectation of doctor/patient relationships. She knows omega specialists can get too close. Sheâd been warned over and over about how easy it is to invest too much into the lives and well beings of omegas. Thereâs a boundary that must be kept, both for the professional and for the sake of the omega. She wonât be around you forever.
Eventually sheâll have to distance herself. Sheâll have to go back to America, return to her practice. Now that the initiative is over, now that her job doesnât even exist, sheâs running on borrowed time. Sheâll have to leave you at some point, close your case and move on.
When is the question there. When will it be the right time? When will she decide youâve healed enough to be graduated from her care? When will she be confident enough to break the bond that has formed between the two of you.
Will she be able to? Thatâs the deeper question.
Those are thoughts for a different day, she decides, pushing them aside. Instead she pulls you into her side, resting your head against her hip as she continues to stroke your hair.

You look just about as happy to be at the table as they do. It's quiet in the room aside from the clanking of dishes in the kitchen and the occasional sizzle of food in a pan. Your gaze is in your lap, assuming your normal position of a drooping head and rounded shoulders.
Your back and neck have to hurt from being in that position for so long.
The only time you're not in those positions are when you're outside. Then your gaze is out at the sea in the distance. You sit there and stare, almost like a statue. Youâd make for a good painting, seated still enough for long enough a skilled artist could make a masterpiece of it.
He's surprised Johnny hasn't even sketched you like that yet. Perhaps if you can ever come to be more comfortable around them, you'll allow him to paint you. Youâll be taking up residence out there in that chair as often as you can.
Heâs not even sure rain or storm would deter you, if it wasnât for Christineâs intervention.
Kyle sets a plate of chicken on the table as Christine brings over your soup, setting it down in front of you. Always a bowl of steaming hot soup. How youâre existing off of mostly liquids is beyond him. Maybe thatâs why you look so fragile and frail.
âThere you go,â Christine says as she sets a spoon down beside the bowl. Chicken and rice, a changeup from your normal chicken noodle. âI know you donât want to, but you need to. Youâre not going to feel better without food in your system.â
You let out a quiet noise, just barely audible over the shuffling of bodies as they sit at the table. Simon is to your left, Kyle next to him, Christine and Johnny on the other side. Heâs on the opposite end of the table, staring right at you. No wonder you donât want to move from your hunched position.
They keep their eyes off of you as they begin serving themselves. The food theyâve managed to make is decent with the help of their combined cooking skills. Theyâd had a long discussion about the intricacies of British food versus American food the first morning after their arrival. Christine advocated for more American-based dishes, with Johnny taking her side purely out of spite for the three Englishmen.
John has caught Christine sneaking seasoning into the food every so often. He hasnât said a word.
âCome on, eat up.â Christine says, gently nudging your hand where it rests over the spoon.
Your face screws up in a grimace as you stare down at the steaming soup. Itâs a breath before your fingers wrap around the spoon, lifting it to the bowl. Every movement feels practiced and calculated as he watches you sink the spoon into the bowl, just barely sinking below the surface to get just broth. He watches as you lift the spoon, holding it halfway to your mouth. Thereâs a subtle shake to your hand, not much but noticeable to him. You stare down at the spoon for a long moment before lifting it the rest of the way, quickly putting it in your mouth before your hand starts shaking too much.
You grimace as you swallow, a quiet grunt leaving your lips. He canât bring himself to look away as you sit there, taking in a couple deep breaths. He canât bring himself to eat as you stare back down at the bowl, your fingers trembling around the spoon.
Fuck.
You sniffle as you sink the spoon into the bowl once more, the spoon shaking more now as you bring the second spoonful to your mouth. Itâs like watching some kind of sick, twisted childrenâs windup toy as you feed yourself, following the pattern of spoon in soup, soup to mouth, pained grimace, quiet sob. It gets worse and worse with every bite, John barely able to stomach his own food as he watches you with every bite.
You stare down at a chunk of chicken on your spoon, a fearful look on your face. Your hand is shaking enough that soup is dripping off the bottom back into the bowl. Christine had cut the chunks up smaller, yet you stare down at it like it might jump off the spoon and bite you.
Tears start rolling down your cheeks as you bring the spoon up to your lips, forcing it into your mouth. You chew and chew and chew, delaying the inevitable. The face you make as you swallow nearly breaks him. He lowers his gaze to his own plate, barely touched despite the fact he feels like theyâve been eating for a lifetime.
âTake a break.â Christine says quietly, lowering your hand with the spoon back onto the table.
None of them can bear to look at you. Johnny and Kyle are busy staring at their plates as they eat while Simon glares holes into his water glass. Heâs watching you just as closely, heâs just not brave enough to stare at you so openly.
The tears continue to fall as you start feeding yourself again, Christine watching you as your hand begins to shake more and more, the pain starting to get to you. John wants to reach out, to take the spoon and feed you himself, but he canât. Itâs destroying him inside, seeing you struggle so openly. Christine wonât intervene, she wonât do anything as she sits there. Rationally he knows why. You need to get used to feeding yourself again, you need to work past the pain and exhaustion to keep yourself going.
His alpha is screaming.
Your hand is nearly vibrating as you hold another spoonful up, this one full of rice and chicken. You let out a quiet sob as you stare at it. Thatâs going to hurt. He can nearly sense your pain, the agony youâre feeling. Your scent is like a cloud fogging up the air, sour with fear and pain. Itâs sinking right into his brain, his alpha clawing at him to do something. Youâre in such open distress in front of him but he canât move. Heâs frozen, staring at you in shock, unable to look away.
Itâs Simonâs quick reflexes that save you, his hand darting out to flip the spoon onto the table before you drop it on yourself. It lands with a clang, startling all of them out of their ruminations as it hits the bowl of peas, splattering rice and chicken and broth across the tablecloth. Christine is on her feet almost immediately, checking you over for burns from any of it that might have landed on you.
âYou're okay.â Christine says, wiping your face with a napkin as you sob loudly, openly crying now. âIt was a good try. Come on.â
She helps you to your feet, grabbing your crutch before leading you back to your room.
All four of them sit there in silence, still as statues as they process what they had just witnessed.
âFuck,â Kyle breaths, his eyes glued to the half-eaten chicken on his plate.
Johnny starts to sniffle himself, his gaze locked on his own plate. Simon's eyes are on the spoon he'd flipped where it lays on the table.
He had no idea just how bad things really were. He knew they were bad.
He just didn't think they were this bad.

Youâre sitting outside in that chair again. Itâs a lovely morning, cold but the sun is rising up over the hills, casting a pink and orange glow across the sky. You look almost ethereal out there, even if he can only see the back of your head. Your eyes are cast out at the sea in the distance, where your gaze always seems to lie.
His fingers itch in a desire to draw you, the art supplies Simon had picked up for him sitting unopened upstairs. Itâs the first time heâs felt the desire to draw in weeks. Not since your heat when heâd sat there by your side, drawing to keep the thoughts away. The pictures are probably still up on his wall, the pieces heâd done to keep his own distress away. Had you laid there and stared at them after they left you? He can picture you laying there numbly, eyes glazed as you stare at them, picturing yourself far away.
You donât need his drawings now to imagine yourself far away.
Youâre still as a statue as you sit there, the thick blanket heâd picked up in Texas tucked around you. It warms his heart, even if he knows it was Christine who wrapped you up in it. The mug of tea beside you is still steaming in the cool air, untouched as it will remain until Christine eventually brings you back inside where youâll recede to your room to sit in front of the large bay window to stare out at the sea.
He wants to take you.
He wants to load you up in the car and take you the short drive down the road to the beach. He wants to let you stand there in the sand, see the waves as they crash onto the shore. Hell, heâd let you walk into the water, let it soak your shoes and pants. Whatever you need to do, heâd let you do it.
John would have his hide if he left with you like that.
Simon would eat him alive.
He wonât do that, though, mostly because he knows you wouldnât be strong enough to make it down to the beach, nor stand there for a long period of time. Carrying you would be out of the question. Youâd never let him that close.
Instead he takes a gamble, getting as close as he dares as he slides open the door, stepping out into the cool morning. You donât move, donât even look up as he takes a seat in the chair next to you, the one Christine occupies when sheâs out with you. Heâd volunteered to watch you through the door to allow her some time to herself, something she hasnât been getting much of. Sheâs been caring for you nearly 24/7, only getting breaks here and there while you sleep or nap, or on the rare occasion she trusts one of them to watch you. She never complains, but he knows sheâs tired. Anyone would be after everything theyâve been through, after everything sheâs had to see and experience over the last week and a half.
Itâs the least they can do, even if you wonât allow them to do more. They all wish they could. They wish they could ease some of your suffering, take some of the strain off of Christineâs shoulders. Kyle even went so far as to invite his sister to visit over for the weekend in hopes she might be able to lighten the load, and to see if youâll allow her closer than youâre allowing them to get.
He moves cautiously like heâs approaching a wild animal, not wanting to startle you and cause you more pain than you have been in. He can be a bull in a china shop, or he can be silent and deadly. He chooses something in the middle, making his footsteps just loud enough to be heard across the wooden planks of the porch, but he moves slowly enough he wonât startle you as he appears in your peripheral.
Your gaze never leaves the horizon, focused and far away even as he takes a seat next to you. His mug of coffee is warm in his hands, fighting off the chill outside. Itâs a natural response to the sudden temperature change after being inside in the warm house. He almost wishes he had his own blanket, but then again, heâs not sure heâll be outside very long.
Heâs prepared for yelling, screaming, getting hit with your crutch as you tell him off, chasing him back inside. Heâd almost prefer it over the eerie silence. He has to glance at you just to make sure youâre breathing, make sure the blanket is rising and falling over your chest. He follows your gaze out to the sea, sitting there silently as he gazes out at the dark blue water. Silence is hard for him. He can feel it throbbing in his ears, the ringing that fills his head when itâs quiet. He likes noise. He needs noise.
He just wants to hear you speak again.
He needs to hear you speak again.
He wants to talk to you, he wants to say something, he wants to drop to his knees and beg forgiveness. He wants to feel your touch again, even if itâs just a brush of fingers across his hand. He wants to get something out of you, some kind of reaction. Youâre an empty shell, a ghost of what you were.
Tears fill his eyes as he stares out at the blue water. The silence is deafening as he sits there with you, still and quiet.
He might as well be sitting alone.

Itâs the dead of night. The stars are out, or they would be if the clouds werenât blocking them. It makes the world seem so much darker without their light. The fire is out, the curtains drawn closed. The only light is from the porch and the lights on the patio out back. The house is quiet, not even the hum of appliances filling the silence.
Kyleâs breaths are quiet and even, finally asleep after laying awake for far too long. Their backs are turned towards each other, yet the double bed forces them close enough they can feel the warmth radiating from the other. Itâs the only position they can sleep in, even if theyâve woken up cuddling a few times in the night. Itâs almost as if their brains are subconsciously trying to force the bonds back, to force the healing. Itâs as if their instincts are laughing at them for trying to deny what they want deep down.
John lays there in the silence, his mind racing. He canât sleep again for the fifth night in a row. He hasnât been able to sleep since they left weeks ago on their mission to track down the missiles. No, itâs been longer than that. Not since you revealed the cameras to them. How long ago that seems now. How inconsequential it feels. If he knew back then what was going to happen, he would have changed a lot of things.
You canât undo what was done. You can only change what happens going forward.
Things happened the way they happened. Now he has to make up for it. Now he has to prove himself not just as a capable alpha, but as a trustworthy human being. Your omega is screaming. He knows it. He had sensed it at dinner with your quiet sobs, the pain flooding your scent. He can still smell it, the sourness permeating his nostrils and sinking right into his brain. His alpha is still clawing at him angrily for just sitting there, for just letting it happen.
Simon intervened. Simon saved you once again.
He had barely comprehended the quick movement of Simonâs hand as he knocked the spoon out of your grip. Heâd gotten soup on his hand, the droplets visible, yet he hadnât moved as he sat there, letting it burn his skin. Better his than yours. He could almost hear Simonâs thoughts at that moment.
What a good alpha Simon is.
What a failure of an alpha John is.
Your omega must be screaming in your mind, clawing at her cage. Itâs almost like he can hear it rattling in his ears, reminding him of the pain heâs caused you. The pain brought on by his failures.
Something is rattling in his ears, piercing through the silence.
It is a scream.
Itâs your scream.

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Reverse trope prompt: too many beds
tf 141 x reader
SFW - no warnings except for profanity
Full prompt list here by @out-of-jams
Please like, tag, reblog to show the list creator some love if you use the prompts.
Divider by: @saradika-graphics

It felt weird lying in your own bed again.
After spending months holed up in safe houses, huddled together in the field to keep warm or crammed together during transport, you'd become accustomed to having at least one of your team with you while you slept.
You huff, roll over and will yourself to go to sleep. Minutes creep by. Sleep still eludes you.
Maybe it's the quiet that's getting to you, or the absence of their warmth. Or it could be that you miss that sense of security, having a solid, living body lying next to you. Whatever it is, your brain refuses to shut off without it.
You hate to admit it, but you can't get to sleep without the guys.
Crazy as it seems, you miss Gaz burying his cold nose in the nape of your neck, listening to him make those funny little nuck-nuck noises in his sleep.
You miss Ghost's twitching, and how he holds on tight to your hand after he's had one of his nightmares. He won't let go, either, not even after he falls back to sleep.
You miss the way Price sprawls out. At least one of his heavy limbs will end up flung over you at some point, the weight solid and reassuring. You might even miss his snoring, at least until you can't stand it anymore and have to poke him in the ribs to get him to turn over. He always flops back over within minutes and starts snoring again.
Hell, you even miss Soap's sweaty koala bear hugs and sleep talking in Gaelic. The man literally never shuts his bloody gob, not even while sleeping. As annoying as it is, it's also kind of endearing.
Frustrated, you give up and throw back the covers, getting out of your bunk. Wrapping the blanket around your shoulders, you quietly slip out into the hall and head for the rec room. Maybe a warm cuppa of Ghost's earl grey that he keeps stashed in the back of the cupboard will help.
You come up short as soon as you step through the door. Ghost is sitting alone on the sectional sofa, leaned back in the corner watching sports highlights on the telly.
"What're ya doin' up?" he grumbles.
"Can't sleep."
He grunts then motions for you to join him. You slump down next to him and lean into his side, tucking your legs beside you. After a few minutes of soaking in his warmth, you feel your eyes start to droop. It must be having a similar effect on him, because you feel his body go slack, then a minute later, he twitches. You glance up to see that his head's fallen back against the cushions, eyes closed.
You're almost asleep when Gaz wanders into the room. He smirks as he climbs over the back of the couch, wedging himself in behind you. "'M cold," he complains, snuggling in. "Place is like a bloody freezer." He burrows under the blanket with you and buries his cold nose in the back of your hair. "Smell better since ya showered," he teases, making you both snicker.
"Oi," Ghost rumbles out, not bothering to open his eyes. " You two, shuddup."
Gaz breathes out a laugh then goes quiet.
The captain comes ambling into the room on sock feet, wearing a ratty looking robe. He sniffs in amusement at the three of you piled up together. "Well, don't you lot look cozy," he quips, sprawling out in the opposite corner. He throws his legs up beside Gaz. "Make room, Sergeant."
Gaz shuffles around then cuddles back under the blanket. Price crosses his arms over his chest and turns his attention to the telly. His first snore rolls out five minutes later.
"Fuckin' hell," Ghost groans.
Finally, Soap comes shuffling through the door, bleary-eyed, his mohawk sticking out every which way. He jams his fists on his hips, a peevish look on his face. "Ye hens havin' a slumber party an' dinnae invite me?"
Ghost huffs, irritated, and lifts his head to glare at him. The captain snorts, smacks his lips, then picks up snoring where he left off. Gaz pokes his head up to hiss a "Shh!" at Soap.
"Jaysus, sorry. Dinnae mean t'disturb yer beauty sleep, m'laird."
"You're disturbed, ya wanker," Gaz mumbles before nuzzling back into your hair.
"Christ, jus' shuddup an' siddown, Johnny," Ghost growls lowly.
Soap rounds the end of the sectional and plops down next to Ghost, grinning. "Fancy a snuggle, LT?"
"No."
Soap sniffs, pouting until Ghost sighs and jerks his head in a quick nod. "C'mon, then."
Scooting closer, Soap rests his cheek on Ghost's shoulder. "Yer comfy, LT. I could get used t'this."
Ghost rolls his eyes. "Shut yer gob an' go t'sleep, Sergeant."
"Aye, sir," Soap murmurs and settles in.
Price grunts, scratches at his beard, then turns on his side. The snoring stops. Ghost hums and sinks deeper into the cushions. You can hear Gaz now making soft little nuck-nuck sounds behind you. The sound lulls you to sleep.
Some time later, you feel Ghost jerk awake. His hand fumbles under the blanket until he finds yours. You squeeze his fingers, Soap on his other side, murmuring something softly in Gaelic. Ghost eases back into the cushions, his tense body relaxing.
You breathe out a sigh, let your eyes drift shut and immediately fall back to sleep.