
Energetic African American girly 19 living in the USA đşđ¸ đŚ Autistic, Dyslexic, BIG Maladaptive Daydreamer
68 posts
She Better Take That Shit Off And Go Find Some Walmart Version Knockoff Ghost To Go Marry
She better take that shit off and go find some Walmart version knockoff ghost to go marry
simon fell in love years ago, engaged to be married to an old colleague until she went MIA, assumed KIA. It took simon a few dozen bottles of bourbon and a few hundred therapy sessions to move on but he did, with you
let down his barriers enough to welcome the idea of marriage again, planting a big rock on your finger and is currently next to you on the sofa, helping you pick handkerchiefs
and when thereâs a knock at the door, he doesnât stop his conversation with you. only when you hear him open the door and drop the bottle of beer he was drinking
your eyes follow his and youâre grateful that youâre not stood right now. standing on the other side, fully-alive and not missing at all, is his first love. still wearing that ring he gave her
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More Posts from Babydollcod
It's Michael Myers timee đ
friday 13 you know what that means
Mama Mia she's so adorable đ đ



aint she just a cutie-patootie? â¤ď¸
âCow.â You say, blinking slowly as the car passes a field of cows.Â
'Mega is so me. I couldn't stop laughing at this part đ¤Ł
Cherry Red, Crimson Blood
Chapter 36: To The Sea
Summary: It's time to move on. You're not sure where you're going exactly, but anywhere is better than Texas
Pairing: Poly 141 x reader
Word Count: 7,816 words
Warnings: ANGST, injuries, medical stuff, descriptions of pain and injuries, brief discussion about strangulation, mentions of PTSD and nightmares, so much crying, Alpha/Beta/Omega dynamics, Alternate Universe, angst, a very little sprinkle of comfort, language, mentions of medications, still very heavy emotionally
A/N: Not actually a lot of warnings for this one. It's a lot of dialogue and inner monologues. Not a lot happens, just mostly setting the scene for the next chunk of the story. Bring tissues though, the last part of the chapter emotionally wrecked me but also might be the best thing I've ever written.
MASTERLIST | <- Previous | Next ->

Itâs warm outside.Â
Not even the shade from the building can completely shield you from the dome of heat that seems to surround the base. It seeps into the concrete and asphalt that lock it into place, trapping everyone in a bubble that may as well be an oven. Itâs always hot in Texas, though. You hate it. Youâve been spoiled by the cold, rainy seasons in England. Youâd gladly take that over Texas.Â
Youâd take anything over Texas.Â
The heat prickles at your skin, your arm starting to get sweaty in the sling. It had been Dr. Kellerâs idea to keep your shoulder as still as possible so you donât continue to cause yourself pain when you move. It still hurts, but at least you wonât instinctively try to use your left arm now.
Despite the warmth, thereâs still a chill deep in your bones. The warmth of the pain medicine has worn off and youâve been left with the perpetual ice that has seemed to coat your insides. Dr. Keller says it's the stress giving you a fever. Every nightmare, every flashback sends your body temperature spiking, your heart beating right out of your chest. Youâre not out of the woods yet. It can take a long time to recover from that level of distress and the omega taking over. You almost regret it, but there was no guarantee you would have lived either way at that time. You did what you had to do, and it did work out in the end.Â
But at what cost?Â
Dr. Kellerâs phone buzzes in her pocket and she pulls it out, staring down at the screen for a moment. âKyle wants to come by.âÂ
You donât want to see him. You donât want to see any of them.Â
âI think you should see him. Even if itâs just for a moment.â She squeezes your hand. âIâll be right here.âÂ
Itâs a predicament. Dr. Keller supports your decision to keep them away, putting some distance between all of you for the time being. Yet, she also says being close to your pack will help your healing. Having your pack around will help your omega settle once again. She needs that safety, that security before she finally lets go completely.Â
You donât want to be close to them, but you may not have any other choice.Â
You sit there in silence, picking at the fabric of your sweatpants as you wait for Kyleâs arrival. Sweat has started to bead on your back, the day only getting warmer and warmer as the sun moves higher in the sky. You want to go back inside, back into the cool air conditioned building. You want to crawl back onto the hospital bed and lay there for the next few hours.Â
You canât.Â
Footsteps approach, but you donât look up. You know who it is. You donât want to see him.Â
âKyle.â Dr. Keller greets.Â
âChristine.â He says back. It still throws you off, hearing Dr. Keller's first name. She'll always be Dr. Keller to you. Kyle turns his attention to you, still standing a few steps from the bench you're perched on. âHi, love.â He says. The affectionate nickname almost makes you wince. You don't look up at him. You donât want to see his face. âI wanted to stop by and see how youâre doing.âÂ
You don't move, don't give an answer. You don't have an answer to give anyway. You shouldn't have to give an answer.Â
He lowers himself onto the bench, sitting as far away from you as he can. âItâs hot today.â He says, adjusting his hat. Always wearing a hat. Maybe that's why he and Price work so well together.Â
He stares at you for a long moment but you don't bother moving, your gaze still on your sweatpants. They're starting to get a bit warm, even with your perpetual chill.Â
âIâm not here to apologize.â He says, breaking the silence. âYouâve probably heard enough apologies to last you a lifetime.â He shakes his head. âWords canât fix what we did. Nothing can fix what we did, how we left you there. All we can do is give you what you need, try and make you as comfortable as possible.âÂ
Tears burn your eyes as you listen to him. He's not wrong, an apology won't fix what happened. No words will ever be able to fix what they put you through. You're not sure there's anything they could do that would make up for it. An apology still would have been nice, despite the fact you know how guilty he is. Their avoidance of you, their willingness to give you such space in an unknown place just proves how guilty they all are.Â
That doesn't make things hurt any less.Â
You slowly turn away from Kyle, angling yourself towards Dr. Keller.Â
He doesn't say anything further in that regard, taking your movement as an answer to his non-apology. He leans forward instead, resting his elbows on his knees. âI just wanted to let you know that weâre getting ready to leave soon. Weâll be heading somewhere safe, somewhere quiet and secluded. I think youâll like it.âÂ
Dr. Keller had informed you of that earlier after she went to speak to them. They've decided what to do, what's best for the pack again. You might have protested, except for the fact it meant you were getting to leave Texas. Where exactly they're taking you, you're not sure. You just know it's not Texas.Â
âI want you to know that weâre here if you need us.â He stares at you for a moment longer before pushing himself up to stand.Â
If, not when.Â
Maybe they're finally getting the message.Â
Dr. Keller stands, touching your right shoulder gently before she steps away with Kyle, speaking quietly with him, but you can still hear every word in the nearly silent space around you.Â
âIn an attempt to remain a neutral, professional party in this situation, I feel it would be appropriate for me to tell you not to beat yourself up too much about this.â Dr. Keller says. âThe unprofessional side of me has many words Iâd like to say to all of you.â She clears her throat. âThat being said, on a positive note I can say youâre all doing the right thing for once, prioritizing your omega and fulfilling her needs, even if her needs require you to leave her alone for now. I know itâs hard, I know every instinct is screaming at you to help her, but just take comfort in knowing you are helping her. Youâre doing the best thing you can do for her at this time.â Dr. Keller puts a hand on his arm, squeezing it gently. âEven if it is tearing you up inside.âÂ
âThanks, Doc.â He says.Â
âIâll see you soon.â She says, patting his arm before she heads back towards your bench.Â
You turn your head just slightly, not missing the way Gaz lingers for a brief moment before he turns his back on you, walking back down the sidewalk.Â

It hurts.Â
You want to cry with every swallow. No matter how much you chew, it doesnât ease the pain of trying to swallow solid food. Even the worst sore throat youâve ever had pales in comparison to this pain. Tears burn in your eyes as you eat, unable to refuse this time in favor of choking down some liquid nutrients. Even liquids make your throat ache, but they are easy to chug to get it over with at once.Â
This feels like torture.Â
Dr. Keller looks guilty as she spoon-feeds you the soup. Chicken noodle, something simple and easy but still something with some substance. It makes you think back to when you were sick as a child, your mother dutifully feeding you homemade chicken noodle soup until you reached the age you could feed yourself.Â
You do feel like a child again, unable to even hold the spoon. Well, you could hold it, but it would have come at the expense of some burns from how badly your hand was shaking.Â
So instead you sit here, being spoon-fed soup you can barely stand eating.Â
âI know.â She says as a tear finally falls, your inhale shaky from the ache in your throat. âYou need something in your system for the sedative. Itâs a long flight and youâll be sick when you wake up if you donât have anything in your stomach. Thatâs going to hurt a lot worse than eating now.âÂ
Yeah. Youâve already figured that out.Â
âStrangulation is a tough thing to survive.â She says, dragging the bottom of the spoon against the edge of the bowl to wipe off any soup that might drip on you. âThen again, so is getting shot, and distressing to the point of your omega taking over.â She holds the spoon up to your lips, and youâre tempted to refuse. âYouâve survived a lot, more than most could. And to look this good after...âÂ
You blink up at her, teary eyed and sickly looking, exhausted and bruised. Your left eye is still almost swollen shut, and your hair is tangled perhaps beyond saving, tied up in a bun at the top of your head. All just reminders of what you survived, all reminders of what happened to you. Of what was allowed to happen to you.Â
Youâre not quite sure when the last time you had a real shower was either.Â
âI know.â She says, spooning more soup into your mouth. âYou might not feel like it, right now.âÂ
âI want a shower.â You say, your voice still hoarse and cracking through your throat. A real shower might solve a lot of problems for you right now. It wonât fix much, but being truly clean would make a lot of things feel better.Â
âI wholeheartedly agree.â Dr. Keller says.Â
You give her a look. You don't smell that bad. She should know, sheâs the one that cleaned the blood off of you and the one who gave you the sponge bath this morning.Â
She gives you a look back. âI meant it would be nice to take a real shower. Once we get where weâre going, we can work on the logistics of a shower.âÂ
Right. You canât exactly stand for a long time on your own, not to mention the problem of only being able to use one arm without bringing blinding pain upon yourself. Thatâs where the pack would come in handy.Â
The thought of one of them seeing you vulnerable like that, putting their hands on you right now makes your skin crawl.Â
A shiver runs down your spine, your body shuddering uncontrollably. You grunt as your shoulder screams in pain, another electric jolt burning straight through your nerves and down through your feet. Fuck. You mouth the word, squeezing your eyes shut. It makes your stomach churn, the soup starting to burn a path back up through your esophagus.
âBreathe for me.â Dr. Keller says, putting a gentle hand on your right shoulder.Â
In and out. You focus on your breath, the only thing you can do without feeling like youâre going to go insane from the pain. Itâs all you can do in this situation. Itâs the only thing you can do at all. Breathe. Just keep breathing.Â
Sometimes you donât want to.Â
The pain passes as it always does, leaving behind a subtle ache that will linger until the next flare of pain. Itâs a constant, never-ending cycle that you canât escape from. Weeks, Dr. Keller had said. It can take weeks to heal. Youâll be stuck in this cycle for weeks and weeks. What if it never heals? That is a possibility. Itâs always a risk with any injury.Â
What if the rest of your life is like this?Â
Youâre crying again, hot tears blazing a path down your cheeks. They wonât stop, they never stop. Thereâs a constant stream down your face, even in your sleep. Youâve woken to find your face and neck damp from the never ceasing flood of tears.Â
How you canât wait for the time to come when you have none left.
Youâd welcome the numbness at this point, greet it like an old friend and invite it in for tea. Anything over the pain and tears that wonât stop. The depression-fueled numbness that had filled you when Price and Gaz left, then Soap and Ghost would be a welcome relief at this point. Anything would be better than the pain.Â
You almost wish you were in a coma right now. Then you wouldnât feel anything at all.Â
Dr. Keller puts the spoon back into the soup bowl before rolling the table to the side. She puts a hand on your head, gently stroking your hair as you cry. The room is silent aside from your sniffles, Dr. Keller not having to say a single word. The silence is almost a blessing. Youâre tired of hearing words, of hearing people speak. Thereâs nothing anyone can say that will do anything to help you, to comfort you, to make it better.Â
Thereâs nothing anyone can do to make it better.Â
Youâre so tired of being like this.Â

The sedative is kicking in before you even reach the airfield. She can see the way your head is drooping further and further forward in the car, your body jostling without any complaint. It had started kicking in before you even got into the car, as you offered very little resistance when Kyle helped her mauver you into the front seat. She chose Kyle out of everyone to help her in hopes it would be easiest on you. Your claimed alphaâs beta is a good place to start in rebuilding the bonds within the pack, and his calm demeanor certainly helps. He is a caretaker through and through, that beta trait prominent above the others in him. He would have made a good medic, had he gone that route.Â
Your chin drops to your chest as the car comes to a stop in front of the plane, your body slumping to the side against the door.Â
âSheâs out.â Christine says, unbuckling her seatbelt.Â
âMakes this easier.â Kyle says, getting out of the car.Â
They maneuver you into the wheelchair, Christine easing your head onto your right shoulder to avoid aggravating the left. The less pain youâre in when you come out of it, the better, though pain will be unavoidable. Kyle pushes the wheelchair up the ramp of the plane, Christine following close behind. Sheâs glad she gave you the sedative before you left the med center to avoid as much pain as possible. She almost wishes she had given it to you earlier, as getting you into a sweatshirt had been a battle of its own. Though, the longer it stays in your system, the longer youâll sleep through the flight. The longer you sleep through the flight, the longer they can delay the inevitable emotional storm of being enclosed in a tight space with your pack.Â
If youâre lucky, youâll be out of it long enough for them to reach the cottage without incident.Â
John is waiting near the front of the aircraft, his eyes watching carefully as Kyle helps maneuver you into a seat. Even with the turmoil in the pack bonds, an alpha will always feel protective over their omega. Thereâs some things that canât be undone, even in such a fragile state. Some instincts canât be unlearned, no matter what.Â
âI gave her a sedative.â Christine explains as she gets you as comfortable as possible in the seat. âIt wonât last the whole flight, but itâll take a while to wear off regardless.âÂ
âIs that more for her or for us?â John asks.Â
âBoth.â Christine says. âMostly for her. It helps with the pain of moving around, but it will also keep her calm in close quarters like this.âÂ
âHere.â John says, handing her something. Itâs a blanket, brand new by the feel of it. âJohnny made a store run this morning. Itâs going to get cold in here, so he got the warmest one he could find.âÂ
Christine takes the blanket, the fabric thick and soft in her hands. Itâs a touching gesture, speaking volumes of their desire to still care for you despite everything, their willingness to do what they have to, to keep the pack together. âPerfect.â She says, carefully draping it over you and tucking it around you before John gets you secured in the seat.Â
âItâs going to be a long flight.â John says, taking a step back.Â
âIt is.â Christine says, pulling out her thermometer. She takes your temperature, letting out a hum at the number that pops up on screen. âI need to monitor her temperature.â She explains as John gives her a look. âItâs been spiking when she gets stressed.âÂ
âShe's not quite out of it yet, is she?â John asks.
âNot quite.â She says, putting the thermometer back in her bag. âIâve only seen two omegas successfully come back from that point, and I know the number across the board isnât very high. It takes a long time for the body and the brain to get back to normal.âÂ
âAnd on top of everything that happened...âÂ
She stares up at him for a long moment. âSheâs very strong. I knew she was a fighter, but to come out the other side even where she is now...â Christine shakes her head. âI didnât want to say this at the time, but I was expecting the worst. When that call came in about what state she was in...â She bites her lip, holding the emotions back. âHer resilience and fortitude is what kept her alive. That and Simonâs courage to do what needed to be done.âÂ
âI know.â John says, looking past her. âWe all owe a lot to him.âÂ
Christine puts a gentle hand on his arm. âYouâre doing whatâs best for her. No matter how much it hurts, no matter how much it goes against every instinct you have, itâs what she needs.âÂ
âThatâs all that matters to us right now.â John says, staring down at her hand for a moment. âThereâs nothing else we can do, so itâs time we start putting our priorities where they should have been the whole time.âÂ
Christine gives him a small smile. âIâm proud of you for that. It takes a lot to unlearn the things youâve been told since the beginning.âÂ
The corner of Johnâs lips twitch before his face falls into the emotionless mask heâs been wearing for the last few days. âItâs about time we get our heads out of our arses.âÂ
âI canât blame you totally.â She shrugs. âWe were all just doing what the initiative was telling us to do. We couldnât have known. There wasnât any room to question it.âÂ
âI wish we would have figured it out sooner.â He sighs.Â
âThings might have been worse if the truth did come out sooner. If you started digging into the initiative too soon, Shepherd might have gotten antsy and taken more drastic measures to stop the truth from coming out entirely.â She glances down at you. âI think this was all inevitable.â She turns her gaze back to John. âWhat happened, happened. None of us can change that. All we can do is keep moving forward with what we have right now.âÂ
He stares at her for a long moment. âThe more time passes, the more Iâve come to realize why Kate chose you for this position.âÂ
The corner of her lips turns up in a smile. âWell, I am rather good at my job, which, among other things, involves advocating on behalf of omegas.âÂ
John huffs. âWish we would have listened sooner.âÂ
âYou canât change the past.â She repeats, looking down at you again. âBut you can change the future.âÂ

You woke from your sedation about four hours from Helston.Â
Well, âwokeâ might have been too strong of a word for it. Your eyes opened, but you were still hazy, movements sluggish and entirely unaware of the world around you. You floated between sleep and awareness for an hour before finally gaining consciousness completely. Awareness took quite a while to return, though. Not until they were moving you to the car from the plane.Â
Even still youâre groggy, slumped against the door in the back seat of the car. You blink slowly, eyes unfocused as you stare out the window at the blur of green passing by.Â
âHow is she?â John asks from the driver's seat, glancing up at the rearview mirror.Â
âCow.â You say, blinking slowly as the car passes a field of cows.Â
âStill out of it.â Christine answers from the back seat where she's sitting next to you. Your response might have been enough to answer that. âBetter than being in pain, though.âÂ
âHow long will it take for her to get out of it?â Kyle asks.Â
âHopefully sheâll be more lucid by the time we get there, but it could take a few hours for it to completely wear off.â Christine says, wiping a bit of drool from your chin. âProbably not a bad thing. This is a big change, and with everything thatâs happened, itâs going to take some time to settle in.âÂ
âThings are going to be rough.â Kyle says.Â
âYes.â She agrees. âBeing enclosed in a small space with the people you want to see the least in the world isnât an ideal situation. Itâll be an adjustment for everyone. I trust all of your abilities to adapt, though. Just don't go in expecting things to be the way they were.â
John's hands tighten around the steering wheel, his knuckles going white. Kyle cracks his window open, prepared for the thickening of John's scent in the air. Christine knows she hit a nerve, but it needed to be said. Even if you were open to forgiveness right now, even if they had chosen to go after you right away, things still wouldn't be the same. Things won't ever be the same. It is their fault deep at the root of it. Those cameras were put up because of them, you were taken because of them. You were chosen for the âinitiativeâ because of them, because Kate thought you'd fit in well with them. Their decisions shaped your life, and will continue to shape your life.Â
Can you ever come to forgive them? Christine likes to think so. She has the hope that they can put in the work and regain your trust and earn eventual forgiveness. She knows you'll allow them to try once the initial hurt and emotions begin to fade, once the two of you put in enough work to start processing the trauma around the events that happened. It will take time. Probably a long time.Â
She'll be there every step of the way.Â
âAshley did some shopping for us, picked up some stuff to get us until we can get into town.â Kyle says, looking at his phone.Â
âGood.â John says, his shoulders starting to relax. âShould wait a couple days before going. Get settled in.â
âShe's still working on cleaning up. Probably still be there when we get there.â Kyle says, putting his phone back in his pocket.Â
âThat's fine. Weâll probably have to utilize her a bit.âÂ
âDoubt she'll complain.â Kyle says, looking out the window. âBe thrilled to have something to do besides work.âÂ
You let out a quiet groan, shifting against the door. âHurts.âÂ
âI know, honey.â Christine says, carefully adjusting your left arm. âIâll give you more pain meds once we get to the cottage.âÂ
âWeâll be there in half an hour.â John says, glancing up at the rearview mirror again before turning his eyes back to the road.Â
The half hour seems to take the longest as you continue to become more and more lucid and aware. The pain sets in first, your brain picking up on those signals before anything else. Johnâs knuckles are white around the steering wheel as you begin to whine and whimper around every bend in the road and turn he has to make, every jostle of the car. Every instinct in his body tells him to pull over and comfort you, but he canât. Itâs more important to get to the cottage, and thereâs no guarantee youâd even let him. It might make things worse.Â
The last thing you need right now is for things to get worse.Â
Christine breathes a sigh of relief as they pull up to the cottage, glad she can finally get you somewhere more comfortable. Youâve been in far too many uncomfortable positions today, moved around too much. She would have liked to keep you in Texas a couple more days, but she knew as soon as you were able to travel, the better. The sooner they could get off the grid, the better.Â
The sooner they could get out of Texas, the better.Â
Kyle is getting the wheelchair out of the trunk when Johnny and Simon pull up, not having been far behind. They likely took a turn around the back roads to ensure no one was following and to keep things from looking too suspicious.Â
Christine keeps you from slumping out of the car as she carefully opens the door on your side. Youâre more awake than you were, blinking up at her with almost startlingly aware eyes.
âCrutch.â You pout when she pulls the wheelchair closer.Â
She gives you a look. âHoney I'm not sure you could even stand right now.â You may be more aware, but that doesnât mean your body is working as it should.
You let out a defiant noise as you attempt to get your legs out of the car, trying to hide your grunts of pain and discomfort.Â
She's tempted to stand there and let you try, but she knows all hell will break loose if she lets you fall. She's not willing to take that risk, not to mention it will cause you more pain to get you up off the ground.Â
âCome on,â She says, stopping you before you can get your feet under you. âNice and slow.âÂ
You let out a quiet growl of indignation but you allow her to help you, your legs trembling as she eases you up. Kyle is there with the wheelchair, getting it as close to you as possible so she can sit you down quickly.Â
âOw.â You breathe, eyes pinched closed as you breathe through the pain.Â
âI know.â She says, patting your good shoulder lightly. She's glad she put you in the sweatshirt before you left Texas. It's chilly outside, chillier than it was further inland a few days ago.Â
It's hard to believe it's only been a few days since you were taken. Barely even a week. So much happened in such a short period of time. It feels like itâs been weeks since everything started, but then again, it had been weeks since John and Kyle first left. It had been weeks since you had been around your whole pack together by the time you were taken. The deep depression you sunk into before the events of the last week had been draining you slowly for weeks before this. It had started before John and Kyle were deployed, back to that day when you revealed the cameras and the secret you had been hiding from them.Â
How long youâve gone in such turmoil.Â
How far you still have to go.Â
The path up to the door is rocky and uneven, the wheelchair jostling as she pushes it up towards the door. She can picture your face, the way it has to be screwed up in pain. You're silent though, holding it all in. She almost wishes you weren't being silent about it.Â
The door is already open, light shining from inside as she approaches. Kyle is in the house already, having gone ahead to greet his sister. John is right behind the two of you as Christine turns to wheel you up the steps into the house. His eyes are on you, focused and ready should you fall. Â
Christine would never let you fall, and from the way your hand is gripping the arm of the chair for dear life, you probably couldn't anyway.Â
She wheels you through the entryway, the inside warmer thanks to a fire that's burning. It's a nice cottage, far nicer than she had been expecting judging from the outside.Â
Johnny lets out a low whistle as he enters behind John, looking around. âYer parents own this?âÂ
âIt was given to our mum by our grandparents. They did some...renovations before they passed it on.â Kyle says.Â
âYer tellinâ me.â Johnny says.Â
It looks new inside. New wood floors, freshly painted walls. The furniture looks like she would expect to find in an English seaside cottage, though. Kyleâs parents went to France for summer vacation instead of utilizing the cottage, and none of his siblings had wanted to use it, he told them. It looks almost perfect, like it came right out of a home renovation show. Kyleâs sister must have worked some sort of magic to get it this clean.Â
It is a very nice cottage. Itâs small, the door opening right to the main area. Thereâs two couches and a chair in the middle of the room around a coffee table. To the left of the couches is a fireplace, the fire already lit and crackling. It looks original, likely having been untouched in the renovations. Thereâs a door to the left of the fireplace closer to the main entryway. A bedroom maybe? To the right of the front door are two doors, one on the far wall and one facing the front door.Â
The stairs are in the middle of the house, leading up to the second floor where thereâs likely more bedrooms. On the far side of the main area is the dining area and beyond that is a sliding glass door. Around the corner on the far side of the stairs is likely the kitchen. She can see the fridge from where sheâs standing. Itâs new. Very new. Makes her wonder just how long ago it had been renovated.Â
âEveryone, this is my sister Ashley.â Kyle says, introducing the other woman in the room.Â
âHello,â she says, giving everyone a wave and a dazzling smile.Â
Sheâs dressed simply in jeans and a t-shirt, her medium box braids pulled up into a bun on top of her head. They look a lot alike, her and Kyle. Tall and slender and stunning. They have the same smile and the same soft brown eyes. She's wearing scent blockers, but Christine can imagine her having a soft scent like lavender or something fresh like mint.Â
âThere's two rooms down here, and two upstairs.â Kyle says. âThe main bedroom is through there.â He points towards a door to their left. âI figure we'll give that to our omega. The bathroom in there has a walk-in shower.âÂ
âPerfect.â Christine says. That will make getting you in and out of the shower easier at least, and you wonât have to go far to use the bathroom.
âYou should take the other room down here.â John says, looking at Christine. âSo you can be close in case of an emergency.â
And so you don't have to be too close to them, so you wonât feel like theyâre hovering.
He doesn't have to say that part out loud.Â
âI put new sheets on all the beds.â Ashley says. âI also picked up everything Kyle sent on the list. Food, some clothes, some other necessities.â
You let out a quiet groan, Christine patting your head gently. You have to be exhausted and sore after the day. She should give you another dose of pain medicine like she said she would. Youâre going to need it tonight.Â
âLet's get you laying down for a bit.â She says, wheeling you towards the door.Â
Kyle opens it for her, revealing a spacious room with a big window looking out towards the sea. You're going to spend a lot of time in front of that window, she thinks. The bed is in the middle of the room, and thereâs two chairs facing the window. Sheâs almost tempted to sit you in one of the chairs, but laying down will be more comfortable for you right now.Â
You're still too out of it now to care much as she wheels you to the double bed. With Kyle's help they get you horizontal, Christine draping the blanket at the end of the bed over you. Itâs not very soft, but it will do for now. Sheâll have to get the guys to pick up some soft blankets for you when they go to town. She has a whole list of things starting in her head she needs them to pick up.
She leans your crutch against the end of the bed just in case you might need it for an emergency. She hopes youâll yell first, but you always have been stubborn. Being mostly bed-bound has only made that worse.Â
âIâm going to go look through the things Ashley picked up.â She says, patting your leg gently. âGet some rest.âÂ
Christine leaves the door open a crack as she exits, wanting to give you a little privacy as you nap, or at least she hopes youâll nap. Itâs going to be a rough adjustment, and youâre going to need as much rest as you can get.Â
âIâm assuming youâre Christine.â Ashley says, walking up to her.Â
âI am.â She says, giving Ashley a smile.Â
She canât help but get lost in Ashleyâs soft gaze for a moment. The Garrick siblings seem to share the same magnetic energy. Thereâs something almost ethereal about them. She could easily imagine them with glowing halos and angel wings. Itâs almost like sheâs being blessed with the opportunity to look upon her. She could spend an hour staring at Ashleyâs face and not grow tired of looking at her.
âI picked up the items Kyle said you needed.â She says, motioning to the bags on the coffee table, pulling Christine out of her daze. âI couldnât find the exact nutrient powder you asked for, so I got one that was as close as I could find.âÂ
Christine glances through the bags. She was thorough, getting at least two of everything.Â
âI got warmer clothes for her too, since it can get chilly out here this time of year. Just some simple things for now until you guys get into town.â Ashley says. âI did some research too and I read that omegas like comforting things so I picked up some extra blankets and pillowsâ Ashley says, motioning to a couple bags sitting on the couch. âI also picked up this,â She pulls a stuffed dog from one of the bags, holding it up. âIt was the softest one I could find. I thought it might help.âÂ
A small smile forms on Christineâs face, her heart fluttering in her chest from the sweet, thoughtful gesture. Ashley doesnât even know you, nor did she know exactly what happened to you, and yet she went so far as to pick up some comfort items for you. You have nothing right now, only the borrowed clothes on your back. All of your belongings are still on base, all of the things that you had built to make your perfect nest. Would you want any of them still? Or have they been tainted by the events of the last few weeks?Â
That Ashley thought to do this has warmth flooding Christineâs body. You can have some comfort now without having to wait for their trip to town. She almost feels the urge to cry. She wants to hug Ashley, thank her over and over for her kindness. Ashley has no idea how much her small act of kindness means, how much it's going to mean.Â
A smile forms on Christineâs face as she stares at the stuffed dog. âItâs perfect.âÂ

You can hear it.Â
In the distance, the quiet roar reaches your ears as youâre dragged from the sweet arms of sleep. It must be a dream, or perhaps the sedative is still clinging to your mind, making you imagine things.Â
No.Â
Youâd know that sound anywhere.Â
The effort to push yourself up to sit is a momentous one, every cell in your body protesting after a day of being moved and jostled. The last thing you want is to move right now, but you have to.Â
The pain meds have done little to help.
The crutch at the end of your bed must be a thousand miles away as you sit there and stare at it. The ache in your body only increases as you become more and more aware of the pain, almost as if it can tell what it is your mind is planning.Â
The door is cracked open, letting in a slit of light from outside. Itâs dark in the room, the curtains pulled over the window. Itâs a blessing compared to the bright yellow light outside the door. You welcome the darkness as your head begins to throb. You could call for assistance. Youâd get more help than you needed. More help than you want.Â
No.Â
You need to do this.Â
The effort it takes to get standing nearly sends you back onto the bed. The pain nearly blinds you as your feet touch the floor, your body leaning against the side of the mattress out of desperation. If you fall, youâll never be alone again. You canât afford that. You donât want that.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
The breaths out of your nose are short and sharp as you reach for the crutch, fingers trembling in the effort to fight the pain threatening to blind you. Youâre trembling like a leaf in a storm as your fingers finally wrap around the cool metal. The rubber bottom drags across the floor as you tug it over to you, holding it against your chest for a moment.Â
Breathe. Thatâs what you need to do. Breathe.Â
In and out.Â
Nice and slow.Â
The pain is only a memory. The pain is nothing. The memories forming at the edges of your mind will take over and wipe out the pain and the misery. You just have to be sure. You just have to be certain.
You push yourself upright using the crutch, tucking it under your arm. You should go back to bed. You should rest.Â
No.Â
You need to know.Â
You need to be certain.
The first step you take nearly makes you sick.Â
Itâs like watching a baby deer walk for the first time, knees wobbling, feet shaking. You lean heavily on the crutch, your determination the only thing keeping you from tumbling to the floor in a heap. That might almost hurt worse than forcing yourself to stand upright.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
Inch by inch you move across the floor, silently grateful for the socks on your feet. They allow you to slide across the hardwood, but they also pose a threat. Slide too far and youâll lose your feet.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
The determination and your desire for certainty is what keeps you sliding inch by inch across the floor towards that strip of blinding light in front of you. Itâs hovering before you, threatening you. How do you know thereâs not one of them standing guard, waiting for you to try and leave? You canât know. You donât have a clue whatâs waiting on the other side of that door. It could be nothing. It could be your entire pack.Â
Breathe.Â
In and out.Â
You take a moment at the door, resting your aching feet. Your body is throbbing from the effort to keep yourself upright, the sedative still numbing your brain and your movements. Itâs like treading through honey, everything twice as hard as it should be. You can walk. Youâve done it before. You did it in the medical center.Â
You can do it here.Â
You use the crutch to push the door open more, your free arm still tucked in a sling to keep you from moving it. Reaching for it with that arm would have put you on the floor, would have caused more pain than you needed, would have made you fall.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
Breathe.Â
The light burns. Explosions of yellows and whites erupt behind your eyelids as you screw them tight against the sudden onslaught. The sun is in the room, shining its rays directly into your sensitive eyes. Your stomach churns, your fingers tightening around the crutch so tight your knuckles begin to ache. The oppressive light makes you want to recede back into the darkness of the room behind you like a vampire shying away from the light of day.Â
No.Â
You wonât be defeated by the harsh artificial lighting. You need to know.Â
You need to be certain.
The others are moving around. You can hear voices around the corner, voices upstairs with thudding footsteps. The air is thick with a mesh of scents, cleaning chemicals, and the burn of scent blocker. Your nose wrinkles at the sudden onslaught against your senses, your sedated brain making it all seem so much worse.Â
You need to know.Â
The hardwood floors continue and you use them to your advantage as you shuffle your way across the main area. The fire crackles as you pass, the popping of a log making you startle. Your feet slide again, your body pushing up against the crutch to hold yourself steady.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
Your target is dead ahead, a mile away but so close you can almost taste it. Just past the dining table and straight on till morning.Â
Despite your snailâs pace, no one seems to notice you shuffling your way across the house. It should make you upset, the fact that none of them notice you moving around, but instead it makes you glad. Theyâd try to stop you if they noticed you, turn you around and shuffle you back to bed. Or worse, theyâd carry you.Â
How easily you could slip away, though.Â
Well...in theory.Â
Perhaps thatâs why they âre not paying you any mind. How far could you really go in your current state?Â
Why would you want to stray from the only safe space you have?Â
The world outside is more dangerous with the state youâre in. Not just because of your injuries and your status, but also because you know Shepherd is still out there, and for all you know Graves is as well.Â
He could be waiting right outside the door.Â
No.Â
Theyâd know.Â
Theyâd protect you.Â
They failed.Â
You push past the fear in favor of certainty as you push forward, passing the dining table in your slow crawl towards the sliding glass door.Â
It poses an entirely new threat as you stand before it, staring out the darkened glass. You have to get it open. Getting it open takes strength and youâre down to one hand thatâs trying to keep you upright.Â
You have to know.Â
You have to be certain.Â
You lean your weight on the crutch, ignoring the way it digs into your armpit as you reach for the handle. You click the lock, wrapping your fingers around the plastic before pulling. Your body screams with pain as you tug, the door sliding in the track as slowly as you had moved across the small living area. Itâs almost as if it's mocking you.Â
Itâs open only as wide as you need to crutch your way through, doing your best not to knock your left shoulder against the frame.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
Breathe.Â
You can smell it.Â
The salty sea air invades your senses, slipping up through your nose and straight into your brain. Memories come flooding back of childhood vacations back when things were simpler. Back when nothing mattered but the sand and the water and avoiding getting chased by your brothers carrying the piece of seaweed they found.Â
Polkadot bathing suits, bright red to be seen easily. Toes in the water, sand everywhere. The nap in the silent car home.Â
How simple life was back then. How easy life was.Â
Your heart aches for those days again. The days when you could exist without a care in the world, trusting your pack would keep you safe, trusting your family would care for you. Your mind yearns for that sense of safety and security again.Â
The world is grey as you hobble across the porch, the grey seeming to go on forever. You missed it, the chill in the air, the gloomy grey overhead. How you yearned for the gloom of England while stuck in the heat of Texas.Â
Anything is better than Texas.Â
Your forward shuffle pauses at the edge of the deck, your eyes looking out into the grey. Your breath catches in your throat as you stare out into the distance, the ache in your chest intensifying. It blocks out the pain in your body, numbing you to everything else as you stand there, legs trembling from the effort of going the short distance from your room to the end of the porch.Â
You can see it.Â
Emotions swirl inside of you like a hurricane as you stare out where the grey water meets the grey sky in the line of the horizon. Those emotions threaten to choke you as you stand there trembling at the edge of the porch. Thereâs a breeze, a cold one that bites through the fabric of your sweatshirt and into the skin below, but you donât care.Â
You canât care.Â
Your legs shake from the exertion, the neverending exhaustion thatâs settled deep into your bones. Itâs not just a physical exhaustion, but a mental one as well. Itâs been a long week.Â
Only a week.Â
So much has happened in a week.Â
You want to sit. You want to sink down onto the porch and rest.Â
If you fall, youâll never get up again.Â
Thereâs a pain in your chest as your breath catches in your throat. The emotions are whirling, tightening around your chest, squeezing your lungs until they feel like they might pop.Â
Breathe.Â
In and out.Â
You needed certainty. You needed to know.Â
You can hear it. You can smell it. You can see it.Â
A single tear rolls down your cheek as you stare out at the sea.Â

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I am Ehab Ayyad ⤠a palestinian youngman from Gazađđľđ¸, seeking to find safety and peace âď¸for my family if twenty members. We have been â¤đľđ¸đpassing through all forms of torture and pain for almost ten months because of the war on Gaza.
Life is very miserable and tragicâ¤đľđ¸ as we are now deprived â¤đľđ¸đof all means of living. Drink water, healthy food health care and medicineâ¤đľđ¸ have become things đľđ¸đâ¤of the past. We are dying dear friends. That is why I am asking you to help us break through this tough situation.Life in hot tents is incredibly sad and miserable. We are now experiencing the worst circumstances we have ever had in our life. The war has stolen happiness and life from us.
Please don't leave us alone in such dire times. Your kind contribution either through donating whatever you can or sharing my posts will be highly appreciated and valued.â¤đľđ¸đ
https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-my-family-survive-the-war-on-gaza-by-fleeing-to-safety
Love from the USAđŤśđ˝
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.