Lively chatter and the swell of festive music warmed the cold air. The protagonist had settled into a rhythm passing out food in the soup kitchen, greeting their guests with a smile, when they locked eyes with a certain unexpected visitor.
"T-this isn't what it looks like," their rival stammered.
The protagonist stared back, because how could they not. "I thought your parents were rich," they blurted.
"T-they... They are," they said, face burning red.
"Then why are you here?"
"Hey, you're a hero, right?"
"Well, I mean--"
"I need someone strong to come clean out my garage."
"But I don't--"
"I'll pay you $5."
"..."
"I'll throw in a sandwich if you unclog my toilet."
"... ..."
I love love all your writing and jealous villains / possessive villains always make me kick my feet!! Can I request a hero that’s been under appreciated by the city and getting hurt / almost killed by civilians they were meant to protect? And the villain finds the aftermath? ╰(*´︶`*)╯♡
"My god." The voice was strained. Familiar. Them.
It really wasn't the hero's day, was it? They released a slow, pained breath, pushing themselves gingerly off the grimy, rain-puddled street. "Enjoy the show?"
"What show? You could have taken them. You should have taken them."
The hero grunted. They straightened. They wobbled.
The villain appeared out of the shadows, at their side, in an instant. It took the hero a moment to realise that the villain had placed a steadying hand on their arm.
The villain's face was harsher in the streetlight; all firelit edges, beautifully demonic, orange pinpricks glinting almost red in their furious eyes. Rain spat down, soaking into the villain's hair and clothes. They didn't seem to care.
The hero did a double-take. The flippant comment they'd been about to make died in their mouth.
"How much did you see?" the hero asked.
The villain's jaw clenched. "I just got here."
It was an unexpected confession. On closer inspection, the rapid rise an fall of the villain's chest suggested they'd been running.
"Huh," the hero said.
The villain's gaze raked over them, taking in every bruise and scrape and bit of blood. "You didn't fight back. Why didn't you fight back? You could have pulverised them. Made them fear ever hurting someone again. That's what you do if I attacked you."
The hero shrugged, awkwardly. They eased their arm free of the villain's grip.
"That's not an answer," the villain snapped.
"I would have killed them. Normal people can't deal with my powers."
"So better to let them nearly kill you?"
The hero shrugged again. Everything ached; they weren't especially in the mood for hearing about how wrongly they'd handled getting the flying spit kicked out of them, they weren't in the mood to explain how the villain was different. Even at war, it was easier with them.
"You're in uniform," the villain said. "They knew who they attacked."
"Oh." The hero hadn't realised. The truth of it struck them like a low blow and their shoulders slumped, as if it wasn't already far too late to brace and curl into a foetal position to guard the heart of them. "Right. Yeah. Well, bold move on their part!"
They tried for chipper. They failed completely.
The whole time, they'd been so preoccupied, they'd thought the strangers had no idea. A wave of stupidity, prickling with humiliation, washed over them. Their eyes felt hot.
The hero swore under their threat.
"I'm going to kill them." Possessiveness threaded low and heated through the villain's voice.
"I don't need you to do that."
"I know. It will be my absolute pleasure." The villain grabbed the hero's arm again as the took a step and stumbled. "They shouldn't-"
The hero could feel themselves beginning to shake, a myriad emotions welling up inside them, threatening to explode, as they listened to the villain's insistence that really no one else should be allowed to touch what was theirs.
"I said, I don't fucking need you to do that."
The villain went quiet. Still.
The hero closed their eyes again, already regretting their sharpness. A treacherous tear rolled down their cheek. Christ. That was all they needed, wasn't it? Cherry, meet the top of the garbage pile. They swiped furiously at their face and didn't say sorry. They couldn't say sorry. They'd never stop, they were sure of it.
"What do you need?" the villain asked.
The hero glanced up at them, startled.
It wasn't that the possessiveness was gone from the villain's face, only that the burning of it had finally cleared enough for the hero to see what lay beneath it.
The care, the sincerity, in the villain's question felt like a knockout blow. They didn't know what to do with it. They had no armour for it, no shield.
"What do you need?" the villain asked again, softer, when the hero said nothing. Their other hand rose, cupping the hero's cheek. "You want me to get you home? Your leg's screwed. You can't walk."
"I can walk." The hero looked down at their leg. They could...well, it wouldn't be fun walking. They eyed the villain. "Seriously?"
"Well, I'd prefer to hunt the bastards down and kill them, but I also do an incredible taxi service, yeah."
"Thank you."
The villain looked almost as uncomfortable as the hero felt. They shrugged. Their jaw worked, eyes narrowing when they caught sight of the hero's injuries again. The hero could feel the villain's fingers flexing against their skin with barely leashed violence - and, yet. It was leashed.
The villain dropped their hand.
"My car is this way. Can you - can I - I can help you get there. If I'm allowed."
"You're asking permission to touch me?"
The villain glared at them.
Despite everything, the hero managed a weak smile back. "Yeah," they said. "You're allowed."
The villain nodded, wrapping an arm around the hero, before pulling them up into an unexpected bridal carry. They were strong. All lean muscle and warmth against the hero's frozen body.
"I'm going to get blood on you," the hero said.
"Because nobody has ever bled on me before ever."
The hero huffed.
They let the villain walk them out of the alleyway, brain still sluggishly working its way through all of the implications of the villain's sudden appearance.
They'd come running when - what? When they learned the hero was in trouble? When they learned that the hero wasn't fighting back to the full extent they were capable of?
Thoughts were hard and the villain's car was warm, the heating soon on full blast.
Thank you. It welled in their throat again. The hero choked on it.
They didn't think they'd ever been as well looked after as they were that week.
CW: blood, head wound, hospitalization
Gerard kept a brisque pace in the snow-covered sidewalk, the frigid air colder still as the sun sank into the horizon. It was hardly the time to dawdle, but something in the air seemed not quite right, almost sinister in its unnatural silence.
It was then his eye caught the little droplets of red scattered in the snow, leading up the steps to the main school building. Probably nothing, he told himself. Best keep moving.
He heard a soft whimper.
Reluctantly Gerard ascended the steps to a small bush, behind which lay a prone figure, face-down and much too motionless.
That scarf.
He'd know that obnoxious green scarf anywhere.
"Blair?"
His heart thrummed in his chest. He gently rolled the body over. Blair. The absolute thorn in his side since day one of university.
He shook him briskly.
"Blair!"
Scoff.
"I should leave you like this after the way you embarrassed me yesterday," Gerard said aloud, mostly to himself. "Serves you right."
No response. It settled like a lead weight in his stomach.
Blair's skin was much too gray, much too dull. His breathing, much too weak.
Red... Pooling from the back of his head. He wrapped Blair's stupid scarf around the wound.
He checked his radial pulse. Faint.
Gerard groaned and glanced around for anyone to shove this responsibility onto.
No one. Of course not.
"Blair. BLAIR." He patted his cheek insistently. "Wake up. I am NOT carrying you."
Why wasn't Blair wearing gloves? Or a coat? Where'd he get that head wound?
That wasn't his business, Gerard decided. Well beyond his business.
His rival getting hypothermia, on the other hand...
He called emergency services.
"High than normal call volume. Wait time is 2 hours--"
He screamed a curse.
Moving Blair proved tricky. Not just the dead weight, but he had no way to determine if there was a neck injury on top of the head injury. The stairs would also be tricky.
He needed something to drag him with, and there was really only one thing that would do.
"You'll owe me BIG for this," he grumbled, pulling off his overcoat. He rolled Blair onto the overcoat unceremoniously and began dragging him down the stairs. The snow kept bunching into piles, slowing the forward pull. The cold made Gerard's teeth chatter, and he kept muttering curses with each merciless gust of wind.
He reached his apartment and threw open the door, snowflakes scattering across the front entry. With one final pull Blair was in, and he kicked his legs out of the way to slam the door shut.
"God, even when you're unconscious, you're still trouble," Gerard grumbled, turning on a space heater with shaking hands.
He felt Blair's pulse. Weak, but still there. He assessed the head wound. The bleeding seemed to have slowed. His hands were cold. Gerard pulled him near the space heater and bundled him in a blanket.
With little other option, he gathered first aid supplies. Antiseptic on the head wound, proper dressing.
The warmth was bringing color back to Blair's cheeks. Gerard's eyes pricked with tears, and he picked up Blair's cold hand in his.
"You'll be okay," he muttered. "You'll be back to that obnoxiously chattery self in no time, right? I'd better enjoy the silence while I can."
He laughed at himself for that, and quickly wiped away a hot tear.
A voice in his pocket broke the silence, and he quickly dropped the hand.
"Emergency services. What is the nature and location of your emergency?"
Oh. Right. He'd been on hold. He picked up the phone and explained the situation to the best of his ability, a bit flustered.
Emergency services arrived. Gerard rode with him, because wasn't that the right thing to do?
Blair came to about an hour later.
"Blair!" Gerard started towards him.
A moment of relief cut short.
"Gerard?" Blair spat, a note of disgust.
"Oh, shut up," Gerard grumped. Sat back.
"What the hell are you doing here? And-- wait, is this the hospital?!"
"Well, it's not the morgue," Gerard snapped.
"Why the hell did you ATTACK ME?!"
"Me? ME?!" Gerard held back the urge to strangle Blair. "I just dragged your sorry ass across town, and you're blaming ME?!"
Blair felt the back of his head. "Well, SOMEONE hit my head!"
"It'll be me soon if you don't drop the attitude," Gerard growled. "I didn't do it. I hate your guts, but I would never stoop that low."
"You wouldn't?" Blair quirked his brow skeptically.
"You're so much cuter when you're concussed," Gerard grumbled.
Chattering down the hall.
"Your friends are here," Gerard said. "Maybe ask one of them who had enough of your bull."
He stood to leave, but Blair caught his wrist.
"No. Wait. You really didn't do it?" Blair searched his eyes. "What d'you mean, you dragged me across town?"
Gerard yanked at his wrist. "Let go," he said.
"You brought me here?"
He didn't want to meet Blair's eyes.
"You really brought me to the hospital?"
"You were in front of the school," Gerard didn't answer. Didn't meet his eyes. "Just... Did what anyone would do."
"Yeah. Okay." Blair let go. "...Okay."
"Get better soon, asshole," Gerard said. He stormed out just as the group of well-wishers rushed in.
Arrived home. Realized Blair's stupid green scarf was still on the floor of his apartment.
Blair would definitely come back for it.
He kicked it across the room in frustration. Then proceeded to wash it in cold water.
//AN Sorry for not posting much this last week! I've been struggling to write and not really happy with anything, but I felt I should try to post something. Anyway, I hope you're all doing all right in the New Year. Thank you so much for reading!!!
"Consider it done, my king," said the Right Hand, a slow smile spreading across his face.
"S-Surely you can't be serious, y-your highness," the Advisor balked. "P-please, you must--"
The King grabbed the Advisor by his collar. "When I begged for an audience with my father, when I pleaded with him to spare my mother, what is it you said?"
"T-the king's word is law," the Advisor murmured, a haunted look in his eyes.
The king's hand tightened. "And when my sister and I were banished to the Northern Wastes, what is it you said?"
"The... The's king's word--"
"And when my sister was ill, and I pleaded for my father's mercy, what is it you said?"
"P-please, sire--" The Advisor gagged and kicked as the King lifted him from the ground.
"Be thankful I pity you," he spat. "As spineless and self-serving as you are, be thankful I find you pitiful enough to spare your life." He dropped the Advisor bodily, and he scrambled away on hands and knees.
"Be thankful I'm sparing all your miserable lives," the King said, addressing the throne room of what was once the most powerful subjects in the kingdom.
"My king," said the silver-tongued Duke. "It pains me to hear of the trials you have endured, but not all of us are culpable in your treatment. Perhaps we could--"
The King rounded on him. "You? YOU of all people?"
The Duke huffed. "You intend to make enemies of us? To destroy our lives for petty scores?"
The throne room ignited in cacophony, with constituents screaming in indignation. The Rebels, donned in the armor of a royal guard, sprung to life to quell the screaming masses. The Right Hand went for his sword, but the King shook his head. Subjugated, the throne room silenced once more.
"How readily you have all forgotten," the King said, "whose blood is on my hands. Be forewarned that I do not shy away from spilling more, but I will not be like my father."
He gave the Right Hand a long and weary look. "I... choose to not be like my father."
"You are to be banished to the Northern Wastes," the King continued, voice hard. "You will be given a forenight to collect your valuables, and then will be escorted to the border by my men. Your families will be given the option to join you or to remain here, stripped of their titles."
"How do you expect us to survive?" The General snapped. "Winter is almost upon us!"
"Perhaps it is unkind of me to leave you without options," said the King. "So, you may choose. Execution, or exile? I can promise you a swift and painless death."
"If you think you've heard the last of us, mark my words--" The General began, but the Right Hand removed his blade, and the General silenced with a whimper.
From the scabbard of the blade came a thick, impenetrable mist that permeated the room. The Advisor scrambled to the King's boots on hands and knees, shaking and pleading, "Oh God, spare me, spare me! I'll go to the Wastes! Just no! Please, I have a family! I'll do anything, please!"
The King pulled his boot back and looked away, a mixture of discomfort and disgust. "Right Hand, stop. This wasn't our agreement," he said firmly. Too long, the Right Hand glared back. Though the Right Hand was shorter and of a smaller build, in that moment he was much more imposing than the King.
"It isn't?" He said, a hint of a threat in his voice. "After everything?"
"No. They have families." The King said, voice distant. "I won't be like my father."
The Right Hand laughed mirthlessly, but nevertheless he drew back the mists and put away the scabbard.
"You will all be escorted to your homes to prepare for the long journey," said the King. "If you attempt to flee, you will forfeit your lives."
Most who had seen the mists in battle left quickly, and any who attempted to linger were forced out by the Rebels. Alone with the Right Hand, the King slumped in his throne.
"It's time for me to collect on our bargain," said the Right Hand, breaking the silence.
The King froze, then turned. "After everything?" He breathed. "And-- now? I thought that--"
"I made you king," said the Right Hand, gripping his chin. "I upheld my end of the bargain rather marvelously. Your enemies are in gone, and you bathed in the blood of your father. You have everything you ever asked for."
The King shuddered. Though he hated the man, and did not regret ending his life, the memory of the slick, metallic blood coating his mouth made him sick. His father's blood. The former King.
The Right Hand narrowed his eyes, which began to faintly glow. "I upheld my end of the bargain. Do you intend to keep yours?"
The King grimaced and closed his eyes. "One year."
"One year?" The Right Hand glowered.
"One year. I..." The King struggled for words. "Consider this a revised contract. One year. And I will pay interest."
"I'm not interested in gold," said the Right Hand. "You know that. What else could you possibly offer me?"
The King could not meet his eyes.
"Why are you stalling?" The Right Hand pressed.
The King handed him a slip of paper, then hung his head.
The Right Hand sucked in a breath. Then, slowly, he smiled.
"One year then," he said. He clapped the King on the back. "With interest. It's a deal."
The King covered his eyes with his hands.
"What is your first decree as king?" "My generals and advisors are all banished to the Northern Wastes." "Wh-What?" "My father's empire was a ruthless, evil rule that destroyed the lives of his subjects. All those in leadership are banished. If you return, you will be killed."
The villain sprawled languid, more somber than usual, on the rooftop of a towering business building. Their head rested on the wall leading to the stairwell, legs dangling precariously over the edge. Staring down at the street with an intent that made hero's blood run cold.
"V-villain," Hero murmured with some measure of trepidation.
Villain leaned back, gazed at the hero from upside down, and smiled slow.
"Hero! How on earth did you find me?"
"I'll tell you i-if you come down," Hero said with a note of urgency.
"And why would I do that? I can hear you perfectly fine up here!"
"P-please come down."
"If I didn't know any better, I'd say you were worried about me," the villain said, tapping them teasingly. "Scared of heights? Or think I have something up my sleeve?"
"I know you saw what the mayor said," Hero said. "I... I don't even know where to begin."
"So don't," Villain said. "After all, you agree with him, don't you? You just stood there and let him say everything. Of course you'll deny it and feign being neutral--"
"No, that's not--"
"Because that's so much less messy, isn't it?"
"I--"
"Listen, sit back, grab some popcorn, and I'll make a show of it just for you." They stood, one foot on the edge, one arm holding a pole as they dangled over the rooftop edge. "Your life will be sooo much better if I just--"
"VILLAIN!" Hero yelled. They climbed up and grabbed for their collar, but Villain dodged, spinning gracefully to the other side of the pole. Hero lost their balance, and Villain grabbed at their collar to steady them. "Careful, darling, we're high, high up. You don't want an accident, do you?"
"V-villain, please--"
"Aren't you afraid I'll push you?" Villain said. "Poor, sweet, trusting thing."
Hero sucked in a breath. Looked down below. That was a mistake.
"Villain, please, get down from here," they pleaded. "Please, I need you, please--"
Villain sneered. "You need me? What sentimental hogwash are you spewing now? You've never needed someone like me. Besides, you should worry more about yourself." Villain gripped their collar tightly, eyes wide with a hungry sort of malice. "Aren't you letting your guard down too much?"
With a yank, they swung Hero over the edge, toes barely holding the rooftop's edge.
Hero SCREAMED, panted, scrambling for as much purchase as possible.
"You're pathetic," Villain said. "Weak and trusting and SO easy to manipulate. A good little puppet for the mayor up until now."
"VILLAIN--" Hero screeched, voice cracking.
"But now I hold the strings," Villain said. "And it's time to make you dance."
They shoved Hero's feet off the edge. Kicking air. Crying. "Please please PLEASE--"
"Say it. Say I'm a monster, you COWARD. A filthy creature that needs to be eradicated--"
"V-villain--"
"An infestation on an otherwise fine society--"
"VILLAIN, NO--"
"You coward," Villain spat. "Say it to my face."
"Y-you're not."
"Liar. I'm a monster. Say it."
Tears fell from Hero's face.
"N-no. You're right. I'm a coward."
Silence.
Villain drew them back to the ledge.
"The m-mayor... Is the monster. I s-shouldn't have let it get this bad. We can't let him keep on like this."
There was that same somber look on the villain's face.
"I-I should have stood up to him," Hero sobbed. "I-if you... J-jump... It would end me." They hiccuped and buried their face in their hands. "I... I c-can't... I..."
"Hey, uh..." Villain gripped their shoulders. "Let's get down... Okay?"
"I'm a coward," Hero sobbed. "All this time... I just kept quiet... And for what? I almost lost you."
Villain patted their shoulder gently.
Hero looked up at them with watery eyes.
"I... I care about you. You're so used to being the villain you can't picture anything else."
"Heh." Villain shook their head. Put some distance between them, back turned. "You martyr. I just threatened your life."
"They're calling for your blood and disrespecting your life's work, and I stood by and let them. I betrayed you."
"It... Hurt," Villain said, hugging themselves. Head hung. "More than I care to admit."
"I'll make it right," Hero said. "Most don't see it, but your motives are good. I'll make them see it."
"I'm a villain, darling," Villain said with a sad smile. "My motives hardly matter."
Hero closed the distance and laid a gentle hand on their arm.
"They matter to me."
A very sweet and soft story
A child goes missing late one night after investigating a light emanating from their closet. The Child's teddy bear and the monster that lives under the bed must put aside their differences and form a truce in order to rescue the child.
Hello. I heard you wanted ideas for a snippet so here I am.
Why not write about a supervillain inviting the hero to a dinner to a fancy restaurant. The hero would accept and he would be either dumbfounded or happy to be treated well (or any feeling you would like but something strangely positive). The supervillain would be a gentleman, the hero would be able to eat what he truly wants and not what is cheaper (broke hero perhaps?)…
I feel like I’ve been super specific already so I hope you enjoyed the prompt and if you pick this prompt, hopefully you’ll have a good time writing it.
Dinner with the Villain
This was so fancy to write lol, I love how it was more specific. I hope this is what you had in mind.
Warnings: Poor living conditions
The hero stood outside the restaurant, staring up at the glowing sign with a mix of disbelief and apprehension. Le Clair de Lune was the kind of place they’d only ever seen in movies—crystal chandeliers, white tablecloths, waiters in tailored suits. Not exactly the kind of spot you’d expect to be invited to by your arch-nemesis.
But here they were, clutching the embossed invitation in their hand, the words “Join me for dinner. 8 PM sharp. No capes.” scrawled in the villain’s elegant handwriting. They’d almost thrown it away, convinced it was some kind of trap. But curiosity—and the gnawing hunger that came with living on instant noodles—had won out.
The moment they stepped inside, a waiter greeted them with a polite smile. “Ah, you must be our guest of honor. Right this way.”
The hero followed, their boots squeaking awkwardly on the polished floor. They felt out of place in their patched-up jacket and scuffed jeans, but the staff didn’t seem to notice. Or if they did, they were too professional to comment.
The villain was already seated at a table near the back, dressed in a tailored suit that probably cost more than the hero’s entire apartment. They looked up as the hero approached, a smirk playing on their lips.
“You came,” the villain said, their voice smooth and amused. “I wasn’t sure you would.”
“Yeah, well,” the hero muttered, sliding into the chair across from them. “Free food is free food.”
The villain chuckled, gesturing to the menu. “Order whatever you like. My treat.”
The hero hesitated, their eyes scanning the menu. The prices were astronomical, the kind of numbers that made their stomach twist. But the villain had said whatever you like, and the hero wasn’t about to pass up the chance to eat something that didn’t come out of a microwave.
They ordered the most expensive steak on the menu, along with a side of truffle fries and a dessert they couldn’t even pronounce. The villain raised an eyebrow but didn’t comment, simply sipping their wine as the waiter took the order.
“So,” the hero said once they were alone, “what’s the catch?”
The villain tilted their head, feigning innocence. “Catch?”
“Yeah. You don’t just invite me to a fancy dinner for no reason. What’s your angle?”
The villain leaned back in their chair, their smirk widening. “Can’t a villain simply enjoy the company of their favorite adversary?”
The hero snorted. “Favorite adversary? You tried to blow up my apartment last week.”
“And yet, here you are,” the villain said, gesturing to the table. “Eating my food, drinking my wine. Clearly, you’ve forgiven me.”
“I haven’t forgiven you,” the hero shot back, though there was no real bite to their words. “I’m just… curious.”
The villain’s expression softened, just slightly. “Perhaps I’m curious too. We’re always fighting, always at each other’s throats. I thought it might be… refreshing to see what happens when we’re not.”
The hero didn’t know how to respond to that. They were saved by the arrival of their food, the aroma of perfectly cooked steak making their mouth water. They dug in without hesitation, savoring every bite. It was the best meal they’d had in years.
The villain watched them eat, their expression unreadable. “You know,” they said after a moment, “you don’t have to live like this.”
The hero paused, a forkful of steak halfway to their mouth. “Like what?”
“Like you’re always one paycheck away from disaster,” the villain said, their voice surprisingly gentle. “You’re a hero. You save lives. And yet, you can’t even afford a decent meal. It’s… tragic.”
The hero set their fork down, their appetite suddenly gone. “What are you saying?”
The villain leaned forward, their eyes gleaming. “I’m saying you deserve better. And maybe… I can help with that.”
The hero stared at them, their mind racing. This had to be a trick. Some kind of manipulation. But the villain’s expression was sincere, their offer genuine. And for the first time, the hero wondered if maybe, just maybe, they didn’t have to do this alone.
“Why?” they asked finally. “Why would you help me?”
The villain smiled, a rare, genuine smile. “Because even villains have their soft spots. And because… I think you’re worth it.”
The hero didn’t know what to say to that. So they didn’t say anything. They just picked up their fork and kept eating, the weight of the villain’s words settling over them like a warm blanket.
For the first time in a long time, they felt… hopeful.
Masterlist
Peter stared warily at the creature towering above him, nursing his many wounds. "My ex sent you, I'm guessing," he sighed.
"Yes, Master," the horrible monster said.
Peter cursed. "Okay, fine," he said. He tried to stand on what he thought was the better of his two legs, and fell back in a cry of pain.
The monster gingerly gathered him and picked him up.
"Yeah, could you take me to the hospital?" Peter grunted.
The monster nodded.
Two wolf men blocked their path.
"The boy stays, ugly," one wolf man growled. "Or do you think you can take us both?"
"I'll make you regret interfering with us," the other said. "Just wait until--"
But the second wolf man didn't finish as the monster's fist hit him squarely in the stomach and sent him flying. The other wolf man puffed up and yelped.
The monster held up his fist again, and both the wolf men turned tail and ran.
Peter sighed, non-plussed. "I could've done that," he muttered.
"Yes, master," the monster said.
"Oh, shut up," he pouted.
They reached the hospital, but the monster couldn't quite fit in the entrance.
It was then Peter saw her approach.
"Great work, my lovely," said Angelica. She plucked a gem from the monster's eye.
The monster smiled, then dissolved into a pile of mud. Peter fell unceremoniously on the ground.
"Peter, darling, it's wonderful to see you, truly it is. I've been worried sick," Angelica said. "No phone calls, no notes, nothing."
Peter groaned. "I've been a little busy," he said. "Also I broke up with you. Many times."
"And now you have..." Angelica held the gem and seemed to scrub the air. "What was that, werewolves after you? Bad form, Peter, fighting dogs."
"Well, wolf men," Peter corrected. "They stay in that form all the time." He again tried to stand and regretted the effort.
"Oh, Peter, please try to rest," Angelica sighed. "I'll fix everything." She slipped into the building. Peter could see her talking and gesticulating at him through the glass.
Peter stared up at the sky, willing himself to be struck down by lightning.
A horrible monster has been following you for a while now. It finally has you cornered. You hear it speak. "Master… I've finally found you…"
"You're a bad influence," you said with a fond smile.
"I aim to be," they agreed, matching your smile.
They reached for your hand, but you pulled back.
"I have to go," you said.
"Afraid to stay?" they challenged with a knowing glint.
Just a little writing blog. Thank you for visiting.Please feel free to leave me an ask!
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